Difference between revisions of "Results-Based Aid"
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Revision as of 15:22, 18 June 2012
Results-based aid is a form of Payment by Results and generally refers to the linking of official development assistance (from bilateral or multilateral development agencies to developing country governments) to verifiable results in the form of outcomes at the national level. For example, a results-based aid agreement might have payments linked to performance against one or more outcome indicators, or the successful implementation of a government program. Possible outcomes might include the number of people with a defined improvement in access to energy.
Definition
Results-based aid can be characecterized by the following principles:
- Disbursement of funds is contingent on the delivery of pre-determined results in the form of national-level outcomes.
- There is recipient discretion over how results are achieved.
- Independent verification acts as the trigger for disbursement.
Examples
Results-based aid is a very new concept in the energy sector, with even less implementation experience than with results-based financing, which applies at a level below. Nevertheless, there is strong and growing interest in results-based aid instruments in two areas: i) bilateral development assistance; ii) under the area of climate finance.
Examples of results-based aid instruments include:
- Cash-on-Delivery Aid (COD Aid), a modality proposed by the Center for Global Development[1] whereby donors would pay for development outcomes against (ideally) a single indicator, with minimal involvement in how the target is met;
- Certain forms of climate finance, such as payments under the UN program for Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Forest Degradation (REDD+), and those being proposed under Energy+.
There is some development experience with results-based aid, such as variable or performance-related tranche payments under Development Policy Loans or the Immunization Services Support program of the GAVI Alliance[2], but energy sector experience is very limited.
Limitations
Criticisms of results-based aid include the onus on the recipient country government to pre-finance the delivery of outcomes, the lack of donor control over the use of disbursed funds (particularly under the COD Aid approach), the risk of incentivizing the delivery of a single outcome at the expense of others (and the associated risk of perverse outcomes), and the potentially high costs of monitoring and verification.
References
- ↑ Nancy Birdsall and William D. Savedoff. 2010. Cash on Delivery: A New Approach to Foreign Aid. Center for Global Development, Washington DC
- ↑ Mark Pearson, Martin Johnson, and Robin Ellison. 2010. Review of major Results Based Aid (RBA) and Results Based Financing (RBF) schemes. DFID Human Development Resource Centre, London