Which Donors, Which Funds? [electronic resource] : The Choice of Multilateral Funds by Bilateral Donors at the World Bank. / Reinsberg, Bernhard.
Material type: TextPublication details: Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2015Description: 1 online resource (38 p.)Subject(s): Accountability | Accounting | Administrative costs | Agreements | Aid | Aid financing | Aid institutions | Aids | Allocation decisions | Bank | Banks and banking reform | Bilateral agencies | Bilateral aid | Bilateral donor | Bilateral donors | Climate change | Coastal & marine environment | Compromise | Conflict | Conflict and development | Conflict resolution | Constraint | Corporate law | Developed country | Development assistance | Development banks | Diseases | Divergences | Donor | Donor countries | Donor country finance and financial sector development | Donors | Economy | Employment | Environment post conflict reconstruction | Expert | Food security | Foreign aid | Foreign policies | Foreign policy | Foundations | Gender | Gender & health | Governance | Governance arrangements | Government | Health services | IFC | IMF | Interest | International affairs | International bank | International community | International development | International negotiation | International studies | International trade | Investment | Law and development | Lead | Leads | Lending | Member states | MIC | MICs | Middle-income countries | Middle-income country | Multilateral agencies | Multilateral aid | Multilateral development banks | Nation | Partner countries | Partnership | Partnerships | Peace | Portfolio | Privatization | Probability models | Public services | Reconstruction | Resource mobilization | Risk | SI | States | Tactics | Taxation | Technical assistance | Terrorism | Transaction costs | Trust | Trust funds | UNDP | Union | United nations system | University | Value | Voluntary contributions | World developmentAdditional physical formats: Reinsberg, Bernhard: Which Donors, Which Funds? The Choice of Multilateral Funds by Bilateral Donors at the World BankOnline resources: Click here to access online Abstract: The rapid growth of trust funds at multilateral development organizations has been widely neglected in the academic literature so far. Using a simple illustrative model, this paper examines the choice by sovereign donors among various trust fund options. The authors contend that the choice among the different trust funds involves a fundamental trade-off: larger funds provide donors with the benefit of burden sharing. Conversely, each donor can better assert its individual preferences in a fund with fewer other donors. The theoretical considerations yield testable implications on a range of factors affecting this fundamental tradeoff, most notably the area of intervention of the trust fund and competing domestic interests of donor countries. Using a sample of World Bank trust funds, the paper examines the participation decisions of Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development/Development Assistance Committee donors over the past decade. In line with the theoretical argument, preference homogeneity among donors as well as indicators for global activities and fragile states assistance are robust determinants of participation in (large) multi-donor funds. In contrast, donors tend to prefer single-donor trust funds in areas in which their national interests dominate. Although they could use bilateral aid for the same purpose, they often prefer to channel their contributions through trust funds at multilateral agencies. Donors thereby reduce their own administrative costs, while benefiting from the expertise of the multilateral agency. These findings confirm prior qualitative case studies and evidence from donor reports, suggesting that reduced reliance on single-donor trust funds-a costly instrument from the perspective of multilateral agencies-can improve the development effectiveness of aid.The rapid growth of trust funds at multilateral development organizations has been widely neglected in the academic literature so far. Using a simple illustrative model, this paper examines the choice by sovereign donors among various trust fund options. The authors contend that the choice among the different trust funds involves a fundamental trade-off: larger funds provide donors with the benefit of burden sharing. Conversely, each donor can better assert its individual preferences in a fund with fewer other donors. The theoretical considerations yield testable implications on a range of factors affecting this fundamental tradeoff, most notably the area of intervention of the trust fund and competing domestic interests of donor countries. Using a sample of World Bank trust funds, the paper examines the participation decisions of Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development/Development Assistance Committee donors over the past decade. In line with the theoretical argument, preference homogeneity among donors as well as indicators for global activities and fragile states assistance are robust determinants of participation in (large) multi-donor funds. In contrast, donors tend to prefer single-donor trust funds in areas in which their national interests dominate. Although they could use bilateral aid for the same purpose, they often prefer to channel their contributions through trust funds at multilateral agencies. Donors thereby reduce their own administrative costs, while benefiting from the expertise of the multilateral agency. These findings confirm prior qualitative case studies and evidence from donor reports, suggesting that reduced reliance on single-donor trust funds-a costly instrument from the perspective of multilateral agencies-can improve the development effectiveness of aid.
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