Nancy Birdsall presented Cash on Delivery Aid at a recent seminar for the UK Department for International Development. Attendees, including DFID staff and participants from think tanks and NGOs in the UK, provided good feedback on COD Aid, which DFID plans to pilot this year. The presentation is now posted on our website. See Nancy’s blog post about the seminar here.
DFID remains committed to increasing results-based aid; this summary of the agency’s recent aid review describes a results-based aid program designed to get more girls to complete secondary education in Ethiopia. The program will follow the COD Aid model, by “offering local schools a financial reward for every extra girl that completes secondary education.” As a part of the aid review, DFID also produced country summaries of where it will work and the results that funds are expected to achieve.
Andrew Rogerson of the OECD Development Assistance Committee has published this draft brief, What if Development Aid Really Rewarded Results? Revisiting the COD Aid Model, in which he discusses how COD Aid differs from existing forms of aid and what it means for aid effectiveness. Read Nancy’s blog post about the brief here.
This European Report on Development about financing for social protection examines a new application of COD Aid in detail, and concludes that “If there are financing needs for social transfers in your strategy, then COD-aid could possibly be a way of engaging the donors, without inviting them to share the driver’s seat.”
We ran out of copies of Cash on Delivery: A new approach to foreign aid with an application to primary schooling and printed a second edition with a new preface. Read the entire preface in this blog post. |