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AID PROGRAMME (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   089809


Aid directions for depression days / Thomson, Scott   Journal Article
Thomson, Scott Journal Article
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Publication 2009.
Summary/Abstract The ortigin of NZAID lie in the need for expertise, experience, continuity and accountability in aid provision, These had been difficult to achieve under the old arrangements focused on the Ministry of Foreign Affairs' Aid Division. Most diplomats viewed aid work as a temporary distraction from diplomatic postings, not as a career choice. The establishment of a career service was designed to rectify this situation, rather than to ensure a political compromise in 2002. In aid provision there are no quich fixes.Fifty years of experience has shown how hard it is to generate life enhancing economic activity in the pacific islands. The government should tread warily in the field, and should not ignore voluntary sector experience. This article cricises the government's new approach to aid provision.
Key Words Foreign Aid  New Zealand  Aid Policy  NZAID  Aid Organisation  Aid Programme 
Aid Agency 
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2
ID:   178065


Debunking myths about China: the determinants of China’s official financing to the Pacific / Grieken, Bob Jurriaan Van; Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw   Journal Article
Grieken, Bob Jurriaan Van Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract With China rapidly expanding its aid programme in the Pacific Islands region, there is a growing concern among established powers about China’s sway over the aid-dependent Pacific Island states. Systematic studies of China’s development finance to the small island countries are, however, rare and generally limited to mapping Chinese finance flows in the Pacific. This study seeks to contribute to the literature on China’s development efforts in the Pacific Islands region. Drawing on project-level data from AidData for the period 2000–2014, this paper disaggregates China’s official financing into its constituent parts and systematically explores the determinants of China’s Official Development Assistance (ODA) and its commercially-oriented finance flows to the Pacific. The panel data analysis finds that, contrary to popular belief, China does not reward voting compliance in the United Nations nor is its allocation of financing to the Pacific influenced by the countries’ level of indebtedness.
Key Words China  Pacific  Aid Programme  Official Financing 
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