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Improving Incentives in Donor Agencies (First Edition)

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Under the Paris Declaration, donors and partner countries commit to “reform procedures and strengthen incentives - including for recruitment, appraisal and training - for management and staff to work towards harmonisation, alignment and results”. This commitment was based on the recognition that the needed changes to behaviour will not happen automatically as there are a number of up-front and long-term costs - institutional, financial and political. The importance of appropriate incentives in influencing managers and officials - and even more importantly political leaders - to bring about the necessary changes has been emphasised in a number of partner countries included in the Evaluation of the Paris Declaration.

If incentives are to shift across the board, determined leadership, reinforced by pressure from well-informed stakeholders in partner and donor countries, will be needed. This publication adddresses this need and aims to provide donor agencies with guidance on how to improve aid effectiveness, and to assist them in identifying their strengths, weaknesses and gaps in incentives for promoting aid effectiveness.

English Also available in: French

Acknowledgements

The Report on Incentives for Aid Effectiveness in Donor Agencies was prepared by the Joint Venture on Managing for Development Results, chaired by Joan Boer (Permanent Representative of the Netherlands to the OECD) and Bruce Purdue (Asian Development Bank), under the auspices of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) Working Party on Aid Effectiveness, an international partnership hosted by the DAC.

English Also available in: French

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