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Aid and Growth in Fragile States

The literature on aid has come a long way in recent years, and as a result we now know much more about aid effectiveness than possibly ever before. But significant gaps in knowledge remain. One such gap is the effectiveness of aid in the so-called ‘fragile states’, countries with critically low policy and institutional performance ratings. The current paper addresses this void by examining possible links between aid and economic growth in fragile states. It finds that: (i) growth would have been 1.4 percentage points lower in highly fragile states in the absence of aid to them, compared to 2.5 percentage points in other countries; (ii) highly fragile states from a per capita income growth perspective can only efficiently absorb approximately one-third of the amounts of aid that other countries can, and; (iii) while from the same perspective most fragile states are under-aided, to the extent that they could efficiently absorb greater amounts of aid than they currently receive, many of the highly fragile states are substantially over-aided in this sense. The overall conclusion is that donors need to look very closely at their aid to the sub-set of fragile states deemed in this paper as highly fragile.
Publisher:
UNU-WIDER
Series:
WIDER Research Paper
Volume:
2008/03
Title:
Aid and Growth in Fragile States
Authors:
Mark McGillivray and Simon Feeny
Publication date:
January 2008
ISSN Web:
1810-2611
ISBN 13 Web:
9789292300432
Copyright holder:
© UNU-WIDER
Copyright year:
2008
Keywords:
foreign aid, economic growth, fragile states, policies, absorptive capacity
JEL:
E60, F35, O11, O40, O43
Project:
Fragility and Development
Sponsor:
UNU-WIDER gratefully acknowledges the financial contributions to the project by The Australian Agency for International Development (AusAID), the Finnish Ministry for Foreign Affairs, and the UK Department for International Development—DFID.
Format:
online

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