The record of aid to fragile and poorly-performing states is the real test of aid effectiveness. Rich countries can justify aid to fragile states both through altruism and self-interest. But, with some exceptions, donors have appeared at the wrong times and with the wrong attitudes, even sometimes undermining development progress. State failure has dimensions of both will and capacity. Failure demands constructive engagement by donors, in some cases to save people in weak states from their leaders, and in all cases to save the states from circumstances which they cannot control. This paper examines the aid relationship with respect to three weak countries. Burma presents a case of comprehensive failure of political will and capacity, but isolating the regime, as some donors have chosen to do, will only perpetuate the plight of the population. Rwanda provides an alarming example of donor complicity in state collapse. The country has now rebounded from the terrible genocide of 1994, but some donors still cannot set aside their political and cultural biases. Zambia has lived through many years of bilaterally-assisted economic mismanagement, and also proved to be a ...
- Publisher:
-
UNU-WIDER
- Series:
- WIDER Discussion Paper
- Volume:
- 2007/01
- Title:
- Aid to Fragile States: Do Donors Help or Hinder?
- Authors:
- Stephen Browne
- Publication date:
- May 2007
- ISBN Printed:
- 9291909718
- ISBN Web:
- 9291909726
- ISBN 13 Print:
- 9789291909711
- ISBN 13 Web:
- 9789291909728
- Copyright holder:
- © UNU-WIDER
- Copyright year:
- 2007
- Keywords:
- fragile states, state failure, conflict, development aid, donors, donor coordination, capacity development, leadership, least developed countries, human development, Millennium Development Goals
- JEL:
- O19, F35, H56, O57
- Project:
-
Conference on 'Aid: Principles, Policies and Performance'
- Sponsor:
- The governments of Denmark (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Finland (Ministry for Foreign Affairs), Norway (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Sweden (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency-Sida) and the United Kingdom (Department for International Development).
- Format:
- online and printed copies