Aid Continues to Promote Donor Interests, new International Report Reveals
The reality of aid in 2008 is that it fails to promote human development for the eradication of poverty, according to an
international report released in Australia today.
The Reality of Aid 2008: an independent review of poverty reduction and development assistance examines government aid
practices and their impact on the lives of the poor and marginalised populations in developing countries. The report
reveals that donor governments have failed to deliver on even the most modest commitments on aid effectiveness made in
the Paris Declaration three years ago.
“International aid continues to stray from its more altruistic objectives to instead be a vehicle for promoting donor
country interests in developing countries”, said Ms Lara Daley, the Director of AID/WATCH, Australia’s independent aid
monitor.
“The result is an unequal aid system that too often is donor-driven, lacks democratic ownership in developing countries
and leaves little room for human rights”.
Aid practices such as donor-led technical assistance, imposed policy conditions and the promotion of donor trade and
investment agendas undermine the ability of parliaments and citizens in the poorest developing countries to set their
own development priorities.
The report finds that opportunities to reverse these directions are being frittered away in endless technical debates on
aid management, while resources and reforms that might improve conditions for poor people to claim their right to
education or access to health care, receive scant attention.
“Australia, a signatory to the 2005 Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, is among the donor countries which continue
to rely on high levels of expensive technical assistance in aid delivery and who use aid payments to leverage change in
recipient countries. In 2008-09 up to $100 million of the Australian aid budget will be tied to
performance outcomes in developing countries”, said Ms. Daley.
The report calls for the elimination of all forms of tied aid and aid conditionality. Instead greater transparency in
international aid and the strengthening of democratic and local ownership will ensure the participation of people on the
ground in determining their own development futures.
ENDS