Is Foreign Aid Fungible? Evidence from the Education and Health Sectors

This paper adopts a new approach to the issue of foreign aid fungibility. In contrast to most existing empirical studies, panel data are employed that contain information on the specific purposes for which aid is given. This allows linking aid that is provided for education and health purposes to recipient public spending in these sectors. In addition, aid flows that are recorded on a recipient's budget are distinguished from those that are not recorded on budget, and the previous failure to differentiate between on- and off-budget aid is shown to produce biased estimates of fungibility. Sector program aid is the measure of on-budget aid, whereas technical cooperation serves as a proxy for off-budget aid. The appropriate treatment of off-budget aid leads to lower fungibility estimates than those reported in many previous studies. Specifically, in both sectors and across a range of specifications, technical cooperation, which is the largest component of total education and health aid, leads to, at most, a small displacement of recipient public expenditures.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Van de Sijpe, Nicolas
Format: Policy Research Working Paper biblioteca
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2013-01
Subjects:ACCOUNTING, ADMINISTRATIVE COSTS, AID, ALLOCATION, ARTICLE, BIRTH RATE, BOND, BUDGET CONSTRAINT, BUDGET DOCUMENTS, BUDGET PROCESS, BUREAUCRATIC QUALITY, BUYBACKS, CAPACITY BUILDING, CD, CONDITIONALITY, COUNTRY ECONOMISTS, COUNTRY RISK, CREDITOR, DATA ANALYSIS, DATA AVAILABILITY, DEBT, DEBT CONVERSIONS, DEBT FORGIVENESS, DEBT RELIEF, DEBT SERVICE, DEVELOPING COUNTRIES, DISBURSEMENT, DISBURSEMENTS, DOMESTIC REVENUE, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMIC POLICY, ECONOMIES OF SCALE, EDUCATION EXPENDITURES, EDUCATION SPENDING, EQUIPMENT, EXCLUSION, EXPENDITURE, EXPENDITURE CATEGORIES, EXTERNAL DEBT, EXTERNAL FINANCING, FACE VALUE, FEMALE, FINANCES, FISCAL AFFAIRS, FISCAL BEHAVIOR, FISCAL FEDERALISM, FISCAL POLICY, FUNGIBILITY, FUNGIBILITY OF AID, FUNGIBLE, GENERAL BUDGET SUPPORT, GLOBAL DEVELOPMENT FINANCE, GLOBALIZATION, GOVERNMENT BUDGETS, GOVERNMENT CAPACITY, GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURE, GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES, GOVERNMENT FINANCE, GOVERNMENT FINANCE STATISTICS, GOVERNMENT SPENDING, GROWTH RATE, HEALTH EXPENDITURE, HEALTH EXPENDITURES, HEALTH SECTOR, HEALTH SERVICES, HEALTH SPENDING, HOSPITALS, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, INCLUSION, INSTRUMENT, INTERGOVERNMENTAL GRANTS, INTERNATIONAL BANK, INTERNATIONAL COMPARISONS, INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT, INVESTMENT PROJECTS, LEVEL OF DEBT, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, LONG-TERM EXTERNAL DEBT, LOWER TAXES, MARGINAL EFFECTS, MEDICINES, MILITARY EXPENDITURES, MINISTRY OF FINANCE, MONETARY FUND, MORTALITY, NET BORROWING, NET PRESENT VALUE, POLITICAL ECONOMY, POLITICAL RISK, POLLUTION, POSITIVE COEFFICIENT, PRESENT VALUE, PROGRAMS, PROVISION OF GOODS, PUBLIC DEBT, PUBLIC EDUCATION, PUBLIC EXPENDITURE, PUBLIC EXPENDITURES, PUBLIC HEALTH, PUBLIC INVESTMENTS, PUBLIC POLICY, PUBLIC SECTOR, PUBLIC SPENDING, RULE OF LAW, SECTORAL ALLOCATION, SECTORAL DISTRIBUTION, SECTORAL EXPENDITURE, SECTORAL GRANTS, SOCIAL EXPENDITURE, SOCIAL EXPENDITURES, SOCIAL POLICY, SOCIETIES, SOCIETY, STD, STRUCTURAL ADJUSTMENT, TAX, TAX BASES, TAX REVENUE, TOTAL DEBT, TOTAL EXPENDITURES, TRANSPORTATION, TREASURIES, TYPES OF EXPENDITURES, UNCERTAINTY, UTILITY FUNCTION, WORTH,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2013/01/17205596/foreign-aid-fungible-evidence-education-health-sectors
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/13148
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!