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Apples, Pears and Poverty Reduction: An Assessment of British Bilateral Aid

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posted on 2024-09-06, 06:28 authored by Simon Maxwell
Summaries Aid quality is often investigated using cross?country statistical methods. The article takes a more institutional approach. It reviews British bilateral aid, in order to investigate the complex interaction between policy and practice in aid for poverty reduction. There has been a stated desire to increase the poverty focus of the programme. However, it is difficult to trace the effect of a new policy in the statistics. More important has been the influence of an external factor, the increase in the demand for emergency aid. This has risen from 2 per cent to 14 per cent in a decade, increasing the poverty focus of the programme, but for the ‘wrong’ reason. At the same time, the share of technical cooperation has increased sharply: it is hard to trace the poverty?reducing impact of this form of aid. Statistical analysis which ignores policy shifts and changes in aid composition may be misleading.

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Institute of Development Studies

Citation

Maxwell, S. (1996) Apples, Pears and Poverty Reduction: An Assessment of British Bilateral Aid. IDS Bulletin 27(1): 109-122

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IDS Bulletin Vol. 27 Nos. 1

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Article

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© 1996 Institue of Development Studies

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    Volume 27, Issue 1: Poverty, Policy and Aid

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