Multilaterals

More from the Series

Blog Post
Renewing US Multilateral Engagement for a More Effective Approach to Fragile States
April 21, 2021
Even before the Biden-Harris administration took office, they made clear that one of their top international priorities would be renewing the United States’ commitment to multilateralism. Within the international financial institutions (IFIs)—the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund (IMF)—...
Blog Post
Go Big on IDA, but Leave Out the Private Sector Window
April 12, 2021
Recently, my colleague Clemence Landers argued that International Development Association (IDA), the largest source of concessional loans and grant finance for the world’s poorest countries, needs to “go big” in its next replenishment.
Blog Post
Multilateral Reform: Rethinking Humanitarianism Episode 6
January 04, 2021
As we close out a year in which the UN marked its 75th anniversary, we’re taking a hard look at whether reform of multilateral agencies has a chance. Two guests with extensive backgrounds in diplomacy and international service join co-hosts Heba Aly and Jeremy Konyndyk on this sixth episode of Rethi...
Blog Post
Reinvigorate Multilateralism by Replacing its Operating Principle
October 26, 2020
The global policy debate on multilateralism has taken an intriguing turn during recent months and its focus has been widened, raising the question of how, under the current global geopolitical realities, a reinvigoration of multilateralism could realistically be achieved.
WORKING PAPERS
Finance for International Development (FID): A New Measure to Compare Traditional and Emerging Provider Countries’ Official Development Finance Efforts, and Some Provisional Results
April 09, 2020
In this working paper we present a new indicator—Finance for International Development (FID)—that attempts to fill this gap by measuring in a comparable way the flows of official, cross-border concessional finance provided by 40 major economies
Blog Post
The Incredible Shrinking US Multilateralism
February 13, 2018
In 1944, the United States created a blueprint for economic statecraft that relied heavily on a new class of multilateral institutions to pursue US interests in the world. The blueprint itself is now under serious duress in the “America First” strategy of international engagement of the ...
Blog Post
Congress Wants to Take a Closer Look at Multilateral Institutions
October 05, 2017
In Congress, support for aid is often bipartisan, and the seriousness and quality of thinking about aid reform is often very high. Case in point on both fronts is new legislation introduced by US Senators Bob Corker (R-Tenn.) and Chris Coons (D-Del.) that would create the architecture and ...