ID | 140334 |
Title Proper | Aid, accountability and institution building in Ethiopia |
Other Title Information | the self-limiting nature of technocratic aid |
Language | ENG |
Author | Abegaz, Berhanu |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | Forty billion dollars of ODA over the past two decades has reduced destitution in post-socialist and post-conflict Ethiopia. It has also boosted the technocratic capacity of exclusionary state institutions, while doubly enfeebling the fledgling private sector and independent political and civic organisations. This aid–institution paradox is a product of an alignment of donor–recipient strategic interests. The five major donors pursued geopolitical and poverty reduction objectives; and the narrowly based ruling elite sought total capture of the state, ownership of the development agenda and use of pro-poor growth to leverage large aid inflows and to seek domestic political legitimacy. By coupling poverty reduction with adequate space for inclusive market, civic and political engagement, a farsighted coalition of donors could have complemented capacity building with the promotion of state resilience. Scaled-up aid can still be delivered, as in Eastern Europe, conditional on meaningful mutual accountability and the rule of law. |
`In' analytical Note | Third World Quarterly Vol. 36, No.7; 2015: p.1382-1403 |
Journal Source | Third World Quarterly Vol: 36 No 7 |
Key Words | Ethiopia ; Aid ; Accountability ; Institution Building ; State Resilience |