This chapter explains the incentives facing donors that lead them to fragment their foreign aid effortis over a large number of recipients, sectros, and projects. It summarizes cross-country evidence suggesting that fragmentation may reduce quality of the public administration in aid recipients, distort public expenditure allocations, and impair progress on public budgetary management reform efforts
Aid fragmentation and a lack of donor coordination have been widely recognized as principal problem...
Aid flows continue to be volatile and unpredictable, even though it is widely accepted that this ero...
This paper examines the phenomenon of aid fragmentation and donor proliferation in Uganda. As the de...
This chapter explains the incentives facing donors that lead them to fragment their foreign aid effo...
This study tests two opposing hypotheses about the impact of aid fragmentation on the practice of ai...
This paper measures and compares fragmentation in aid sectors. Past studies focused on aggregate cou...
We present a model with two donors-principals that provide funds to a unique recipient-agent. Each d...
The existing research on foreign aid offers inconclusive evidence on the factors that make aid effec...
Aid fragmentation is widely recognized as being detrimental to development outcomes. We reinvestigat...
Aid Fragmentation and Effectiveness: What do we Really Know? (With Katja Michaelowa, Axel Dreher, an...
The problem of the proliferation of the number of aid donors and aid channels continues to worsen. I...
Recent debates have focused on the negative role of the proliferation of foreign aid facilities and ...
Abstract The existing research on foreign aid offers inconclusive evidence on the factors that make ...
Scholars and policymakers have long agreed that the fragmentation of foreign aid impedes its effecti...
The problem of the proliferation of aid donors and channels continues to worsen. It undermines the ...
Aid fragmentation and a lack of donor coordination have been widely recognized as principal problem...
Aid flows continue to be volatile and unpredictable, even though it is widely accepted that this ero...
This paper examines the phenomenon of aid fragmentation and donor proliferation in Uganda. As the de...
This chapter explains the incentives facing donors that lead them to fragment their foreign aid effo...
This study tests two opposing hypotheses about the impact of aid fragmentation on the practice of ai...
This paper measures and compares fragmentation in aid sectors. Past studies focused on aggregate cou...
We present a model with two donors-principals that provide funds to a unique recipient-agent. Each d...
The existing research on foreign aid offers inconclusive evidence on the factors that make aid effec...
Aid fragmentation is widely recognized as being detrimental to development outcomes. We reinvestigat...
Aid Fragmentation and Effectiveness: What do we Really Know? (With Katja Michaelowa, Axel Dreher, an...
The problem of the proliferation of the number of aid donors and aid channels continues to worsen. I...
Recent debates have focused on the negative role of the proliferation of foreign aid facilities and ...
Abstract The existing research on foreign aid offers inconclusive evidence on the factors that make ...
Scholars and policymakers have long agreed that the fragmentation of foreign aid impedes its effecti...
The problem of the proliferation of aid donors and channels continues to worsen. It undermines the ...
Aid fragmentation and a lack of donor coordination have been widely recognized as principal problem...
Aid flows continue to be volatile and unpredictable, even though it is widely accepted that this ero...
This paper examines the phenomenon of aid fragmentation and donor proliferation in Uganda. As the de...