Policy Research Conducted at the C.D. Howe Institute:

  • How Canada Can Improve Its Development Aid: Lessons From Other Aid Agencies, C.D. Howe Commentary 232, April 2006 (with Danielle Goldfarb) (View Paper)

    Abstract: With renewed world attention on foreign aid and poverty reduction, the Canadian government has committed to dramatically ramp up its aid budget over the near-term. This paper draws on the development literature and compares the practices of the Canadian International Development Agency to other widely-respected aid agencies of similar size, to offer some policy recommendations.
          Our findings reveal that Canadian aid might be made more effective through the following changes: 1) decentralizing staff and decision-making authority to the field; 2) making a strategic decision to either invest more in-house research capacity (innovate) or more effectively harnessing outside research (implement); 3) continuing to concentrate aid in fewer countries and in fewer priorities (including internal benchmarking against alternative concentration measures developed in the paper); and 4) setting explicit targets and timelines to completely untie aid from the requirement to purchase from Canadian suppliers.

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