International audienceThis article revisits the inter-country aid allocation by a donor who must distribute a given aid amount and is sensitive to needs and governance considerations. Against conventional wisdom, if the donor has strong enough aversion to poverty, the share of a country whose governance has improved is reduced. Yet, the poor will still be better off. These results continue to hold when aid effectiveness depends on intrinsic governance and the volume of aid received, and when a more general dynamic specification is considered. Finally, using our approach, the allocation rules in international organisations appear as clearly privileging governance over needs
In the "efficient" allocation of aid, aid is targeted disproportionately to countries with severe po...
This paper re-asserts the importance of certain old-fashioned questions relating to international ai...
Previous studies of aid allocation have concluded that foreign aid is allocated not only according t...
International audienceThis article revisits the inter-country aid allocation by a donor who must dis...
International audienceThis paper addresses the impact of aid supply on aid effectiveness. First, we ...
We model the aid allocation process as a rent-seeking contest between two countries and investigate ...
International audienceUsing an approach that embodies an explicit tradeoff between need and governan...
AbstractThe argument that aid can bolster growth and poverty reduction only in a conducive policy en...
SummaryThis paper addresses the impact of aid supply on aid effectiveness. First, we review theoreti...
Abstract of associated article: A core result of the aid allocation literature is that the quality o...
Development assistance is increasingly used to fund the provision of global public goods. However, i...
Donor countries have a poor track record of meeting their foreign aid commitments. Yet the discrepan...
In this study, we derive a poverty-minimizing allocation rule, based on which we assess the poverty-...
In the "efficient" allocation of aid, aid is targeted disproportionately to countries with severe po...
This paper re-asserts the importance of certain old-fashioned questions relating to international ai...
Previous studies of aid allocation have concluded that foreign aid is allocated not only according t...
International audienceThis article revisits the inter-country aid allocation by a donor who must dis...
International audienceThis paper addresses the impact of aid supply on aid effectiveness. First, we ...
We model the aid allocation process as a rent-seeking contest between two countries and investigate ...
International audienceUsing an approach that embodies an explicit tradeoff between need and governan...
AbstractThe argument that aid can bolster growth and poverty reduction only in a conducive policy en...
SummaryThis paper addresses the impact of aid supply on aid effectiveness. First, we review theoreti...
Abstract of associated article: A core result of the aid allocation literature is that the quality o...
Development assistance is increasingly used to fund the provision of global public goods. However, i...
Donor countries have a poor track record of meeting their foreign aid commitments. Yet the discrepan...
In this study, we derive a poverty-minimizing allocation rule, based on which we assess the poverty-...
In the "efficient" allocation of aid, aid is targeted disproportionately to countries with severe po...
This paper re-asserts the importance of certain old-fashioned questions relating to international ai...
Previous studies of aid allocation have concluded that foreign aid is allocated not only according t...