This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical framework with a conflict of interest between the donor and the recipient government. Aid conditionality is modelled as a limited enforceable contract. We define conditional aid policy to be self-enforcing if, at any point in time, the conditions imposed on aid funds are supportable by the threat of a permanent aid cutoff from then onward. Quantitative results show that the effectiveness of unconditional aid is low while self-enforcing conditional aid strongly stimulates the economy. However, increasing the welfare of the poor comes at high cost: to ensure aid effectiveness, less democratic political regimes receive permanently larger aid funds
peer reviewedConditionality, and the extent to which it should be associated with development aid, h...
Aid conditionality has emerged as a dominant tool by donor countries in nation building efforts in t...
Is debt relief the best instrument to increase the consumption of the poor in HIPCs? To answer this ...
This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical growth framework with a conflict of...
This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical growth framework with a conflict of...
This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical framework with a conflict of intere...
In spite a vast amount of both theoretical and empirical work on foreign assistance and development,...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Does aid conditionality—the setting of policy goals in exchange for access to aid—promote reform? Ma...
This paper re-examines the theoretical aid-growth nexus by expounding on the issues relating to poli...
Since the late 1970s, aid donors have overtly addressed general macroeconomic policy and structural ...
This paper analyzes the conditions under which reputation concerns induce donors and recipients to r...
My dissertation is an advocacy of the idea that if aid proved to be ineffective, it is partly becaus...
We consider in this paper a repeated moral hazard model where a donor, characterized both by altruis...
We consider in this paper a repeated moral hazard model where a donor, characterized both by altruis...
peer reviewedConditionality, and the extent to which it should be associated with development aid, h...
Aid conditionality has emerged as a dominant tool by donor countries in nation building efforts in t...
Is debt relief the best instrument to increase the consumption of the poor in HIPCs? To answer this ...
This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical growth framework with a conflict of...
This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical growth framework with a conflict of...
This paper analyzes optimal foreign aid policy in a neoclassical framework with a conflict of intere...
In spite a vast amount of both theoretical and empirical work on foreign assistance and development,...
Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign donors may a...
Does aid conditionality—the setting of policy goals in exchange for access to aid—promote reform? Ma...
This paper re-examines the theoretical aid-growth nexus by expounding on the issues relating to poli...
Since the late 1970s, aid donors have overtly addressed general macroeconomic policy and structural ...
This paper analyzes the conditions under which reputation concerns induce donors and recipients to r...
My dissertation is an advocacy of the idea that if aid proved to be ineffective, it is partly becaus...
We consider in this paper a repeated moral hazard model where a donor, characterized both by altruis...
We consider in this paper a repeated moral hazard model where a donor, characterized both by altruis...
peer reviewedConditionality, and the extent to which it should be associated with development aid, h...
Aid conditionality has emerged as a dominant tool by donor countries in nation building efforts in t...
Is debt relief the best instrument to increase the consumption of the poor in HIPCs? To answer this ...