Managing Aid
Practices of DAC Member Countries
Development co-operation donors are held accountable for the way they manage aid and the development results they achieve. They want to see more partner country ownership, greater use of partner country systems, and work better together. This involves decentralising responsibility, concentrating efforts, managing for results, creating new systems, changing staff profiles, and building capacity in donor and partner countries. This book outlines what individual donors are doing to fulfil their development co-operation ambitions and their part of the international agreements – reached in Paris in 2005 (Paris Declaration) and Accra in 2008 (Accra Agenda for Action) – to make aid more effective.
Also available in: French
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Annex B
OECD DAC Statistics: A Brief Introduction
As part of its core task of monitoring its members’ aid efforts, the Development Assistance Committee has mandated its Secretariat in the OECD’s Development Cooperation Directorate to collect data on aid flows. To the extent possible, this includes flows from non-DAC bilateral donors, and from multilateral donors. The data collection is the only reliable source of internationally comparable data on aid.
Also available in: French
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