One of my favorite economists, Nancy Qian, reviews the literature on foreign aid. This is probably one of the better and more serious reviews out there, and should be read.
- Aid flows have remained relatively constant during the period of 1960-2013
- The countries that comprise the top donors also remain mostly unchanged
- The composition of the top foreign aid recipients changes significantly over time [and] …much of the change in recipient composition seems aligned with foreign policy concerns of donor countries rather than changes in poverty levels in the recipient countries.
- Annual aid to the poorest twenty percent of countries of the world comprise only 1.69% to 5.25% of total global aid flows.
- A significant portion of aid is spent in donor countries.
Also, she picks up on the silliness of asking the question “does aid work?”
I focus my discussion on the need for future research to shift away from
examining aggregate aid towards more narrowed definitions because aggregation exacerbates several fundamental difficulties of empirical research. First, aggregate ODA is difficult to interpret as it is comprised of many different types of aid (e.g., debt relief, cash transfers, food, etc.). Each type of aid faces different measurement issues and, more importantly, each affects a different set of outcomes.
That is, it depends what you mean by “aid” and what you mean by “work”. It might even depend on what you mean by “does”.
86 Responses
Does government aid work? It depends. “Essential reading on foreign aid” http://t.co/zaUCgPxeoC
RT @wmyeoh: Essential reading on foreign aid from @cblatts http://t.co/FskJRpKvAQ Foreign aid suits the donor country more than the recipie…
Essential reading: Aid to the poorest 20% of countries of the world comprise only 1.7-5.2% of total global aid flows http://t.co/s33DY88BiV
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/t7dW42GU2p
RT @glassmanamanda: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/NQ6AZVrm0g
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @glassmanamanda: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/NQ6AZVrm0g
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
“Essential reading on foreign aid” via @digg http://t.co/AtOtR4Myjf
RT @scott_weathers: Essential reading on foreign aid, @cblatts HT @brettkeller http://t.co/YelAtBBmU6
RT @scott_weathers: Essential reading on foreign aid, @cblatts HT @brettkeller http://t.co/YelAtBBmU6
Essential reading on foreign aid, @cblatts HT @brettkeller http://t.co/YelAtBBmU6
Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/Umrlm7eUR4
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
This validates the point that you raised in your forthcoming book: Essential reading on #ForeignAid http://t.co/jxyQGIc8J3 @XahidAbdullah
“she picks up on the silliness of asking the question “does aid work?” @cblatts reviews Qian reviewing foreign aid http://t.co/oKsceaBwMd
RT @wmyeoh: Essential reading on foreign aid from @cblatts http://t.co/FskJRpKvAQ Foreign aid suits the donor country more than the recipie…
Essential reading on foreign aid from @cblatts http://t.co/FskJRpKvAQ Foreign aid suits the donor country more than the recipient.
RT @richard_tusabe: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/9MqwUzqdUW
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/FmjjrbGI47 via @Inoreader
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/SY7u1mRykz
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
Nancy Qian: “aggregate ODA is difficult to interpret as it is comprised of many different types of aid” http://t.co/TJQPBQUD0v via @cblatts
RT “@cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/Q60P37sf7C”
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/9MqwUzqdUW
RT @intldogooder: Essential reading on foreign #aid from @cblatts http://t.co/dKA9B64PYo HT @WhyDev No big surprise – $ stays in donor coun…
Essential reading on foreign #aid from @cblatts http://t.co/dKA9B64PYo HT @WhyDev No big surprise – $ stays in donor countries
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
“…change in recipient composition seems aligned with foreign policy concerns of donor countries” http://t.co/Xa3dQF7eMx #foreignaid
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
Isn’t all aid ultimately spent in donor countries? In the end, all we can donate is a claim on our goods and services. The interesting question is who gets to decide which goods and services are supplied, and to whom.
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
RT @cblatts: The best analysis of foreign aid you’ll read this year http://t.co/gcCj3YmnS9
This is brilliant! Essential reading on foreign aid: http://t.co/hdYXNXJvvA
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
Does does do what does says on the tin..
$20,000 for the review – Mr Gates.
Any entrants to the Gates mega bucks essay that copy and paste her bibliography should be disqualified. May be she put in false page numbers so such disreputable characters get caught for plagiarism. Type, type, type, nearly finished; only three weeks to go. Wait a minute, just prefix the review with a page saying don’t do this and offer to share the prize 50-50 with the reviewer.
“The silliness of asking the question ‘does aid work?'” Making Progress on Foreign Aid by Nancy Qian. http://t.co/6TVBUFLVMm – @cblatts
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/ZGkD2cYcLx
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
Blattman: Essential reading: Annual aid to poorest 20% of countries comprise only 1.69% to 5.25% of total global #aid
http://t.co/OHa3WMk3XH
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @WhyDev: Essential reading on foreign aid – “A significant portion of aid is spent in donor countries”. http://t.co/fd3wRHRSnt
Great research for those interested in aid effectiveness RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/ldcvxLwHtx
Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/yLeYPG3MsL
Essential reading on foreign aid – “A significant portion of aid is spent in donor countries”. http://t.co/fd3wRHRSnt
@cblatts quite weak on aid allocation: no recognition of large donor heterogeneity and ignores most recent good work on this.
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/pOX2vZrm5P”
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
@cblatts Seems sensible. And resonates nicely with point 4 (‘whether aid works’) of this recent piece http://t.co/kIpDZDNmDh #plug
RT @rivefuentes: Essential reading on foreign aid (and @cblatts asks the meaning of “does”) http://t.co/hrflIbxyc1
Essential reading on foreign aid (and @cblatts asks the meaning of “does”) http://t.co/hrflIbxyc1
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/us7xE8H7FW
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01
RT @cblatts: Essential reading on foreign aid http://t.co/EQ41Nmjo01