Image by Jennifer A. Patterson / ILO
  • Report
  • 4 November 2020

Adapting aid to end poverty: Delivering the commitment to leave no one behind in the context of Covid-19: Executive summary

Executive summary

Downloads

The Covid-19 pandemic is having a devastating impact on human development around the world. In the short term, millions of people have lost their lives, livelihoods, incomes and months of education. But the impacts are likely to reverberate for years, including on the education, job prospects and the wellbeing of an entire generation. This is likely to impact the poorest people hardest – pushing some people even further behind. Official development assistance (ODA) is needed now more than ever, and it needs to support a recovery that is inclusive, sustained and resilient.

Our analysis of the data shows that despite warm words from donors and pledges to focus on the poorest people and places, patterns in ODA allocation have shifted little over time. Now is an opportune moment to reflect on how ODA might refocus to ensure it is most responsive to the immense harm caused by the Covid-19 pandemic, in both the short and long term, and reaches those that need it most.

The Covid-19 pandemic has increased the incidence of extreme income poverty in both low-income and middle-income countries. However, as the data shows, it is the poorest countries and fragile states that have fewer financial resources to emerge from this crisis quickly. ODA resources will be more important than ever before, and it is incumbent on the international donor community to ensure that ODA does not decline as a consequence of the crisis.

So how can ODA be most responsive to this new context? What does the data tell us? Addressing this crisis means addressing long-term challenges and imbalances in the allocation of ODA. Here we pose key questions and outline our recommendations for donors.

Recommendations

Where does ODA need to be strongly focused to leave no one behind?

The current pandemic, and the economic and social crises it has sparked, is exacerbating long-term challenges in development. The commitment to ‘leave no one behind’ is an ambitious one, but one that must be met. To do so, ODA needs to be refocused on the places and people that need it most, to close the gap between the poorest people and the rest of the world.

  • In practical terms, this means accelerating ODA growth to the poorest countries , those facing the biggest financing challenges to meet the SDGs. Bilateral donors need to increase spending in these countries in line with historic commitments. While this is not a new recommendation, it remains an area where action is needed. Many of the countries identified as at risk of being left behind pre-Covid-19 are the same post-Covid-19; this is now even more urgent.
  • International financial institutions (IFIs) and development finance institutions (DFIs) play an increasingly important role as providers of development finance and by channelling bilateral ODA resources, so it is important they strengthen their focus on the poorest and most marginalised .

Women have been particularly hard hit by the crisis and were already some of the people most at risk of being left behind. Strengthening gender-responsive ODA will have an outsized impact in the long and short term.

  • Practically this means focusing more ODA on women , particularly those outside the formal economy.
  • This is important for all actors, not just those in the ‘traditional’ aid community – IFIs, DFIs and other financial institutions should strengthen support to sectors and interventions that will have a positive impact on women .

What does ODA most need to focus on to leave no one behind?

Some investments will be particularly important not just to support human development but also to build the human capital and resilience to crises that will be key to sustained progress out of poverty. Over the medium term, investments in the core human capital areas of social protection, education, skills and jobs will become more important than ever.

While spending on health is experiencing a significant uptick at the moment, in the longer term underinvestment in critical human capital sectors that are central to economic development, such as education, skills and jobs, will undermine future economic growth potential, especially in the poorest countries and among the most disadvantaged populations. This is of particular concern in the context of high unemployment levels, especially among young people, and major demographic shifts in some of the world’s poorest countries.

Investments in the climate and environment have, to date, not been central in ODA allocations to the world’s poorest places. Yet these investments are central to economic development, the health and wellbeing of communities, and long-term resilience, and they will have a high development impact in the poorest communities. The Covid-19 crisis has also exposed some countries’ vulnerabilities to models of growth dependent on natural resource extraction.

  • Strengthening investments in education, skills and livelihoods and building resilience with effective social protection systems are at the core of a smart, long-term aid strategy. Bilateral donors, alongside domestic government spending, often provide important support to these sectors in the poorest countries; increasing and better targeting that spending to the poorest countries will be vital.
  • There is a window of opportunity to use ODA to catalyse inclusive green growth and resilience , and all donors should strengthen the focus on climate and the environment in ODA allocations to the poorest countries. This is an area where IFIs and other financial institutions could also play a significant role.
  • While the current focus on health as a priority sector is both expected and appropriate, a more balanced portfolio of ODA spending is needed in the medium to long term with a particular focus on areas of underinvestment. This is also about coordination, particularly in a context of falling resources – with different institutions and actors playing to their respective strengths and working effectively together.

How does ODA need to be delivered to leave no one behind?

How aid is delivered is important and can strengthen countries’ ability to respond to the crisis and fund effective development in the longer term. The Covid-19 pandemic has increased uncertainty for the next few years, and countries will need to be much more adaptive and responsive to quickly manage changing circumstances and mitigate negative impacts. In that context, pre-existing trends of declining levels of concessionality in ODA and indications of declining bilateral ODA volumes, especially in a context of rising debt vulnerabilities, are a cause for concern. The shift towards finance from IFIs in the context of the Covid-19 response will further accentuate the shift towards loans.

Practically, this means that:

  • Aid-delivery modalities that are flexible and allow for local decision-making on spending priorities will be more important than ever. Increasing the use of budget support and other flexible funding mechanisms where appropriate will be a vital part of a sustainable, locally owned and effective recovery.
  • Given that IFIs and other institutions will play a more important role, and that they will seek more resources to do so, they need to step up i n providing more concessional resources targeted to the poorest countries and people . The major concerns about debt vulnerability strengthen the case for this step up.

Bilateral donors must reverse the trend of rising ODA loans, and less concessional forms of finance, particularly to the least developed countries (LDCs), to ensure that the risks of future debt crises are minimised. This is particularly important for the poorest countries and those that already have high debt burdens.