This is a joint post with John Norris of the Center for American Progress.
Last week, my colleague John Norris from the Center for American Progress, or CAP, and I kicked off a new Working Group, ‘Aid Priorities amid Declining Resources.’ This effort is meant to address a concern close to all of us working in foreign policy and international development – how best to address anticipated cuts to the international affairs budget which will take place under almost any scenario imaginable at this point.
Several years ago, the aid reform and effectiveness movement took shape in an environment ripe with hope for change. Calls for reform were finally gaining momentum and getting results, and the administration seemed keen on revamping both our foreign policy architecture and how we deliver U.S. assistance around the globe. The administration not only conducted the first ever Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review, it also undertook a presidential review of its global development policy.