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El. knyga: Tournament Approaches to Policy Reform: Making Development Assistance More Effective

  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Oct-2010
  • Leidėjas: Brookings Institution
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780815703778
  • Formatas: PDF+DRM
  • Išleidimo metai: 01-Oct-2010
  • Leidėjas: Brookings Institution
  • Kalba: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9780815703778

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"While much foreign aid achieves commendable goals, some is ineffective. In this volume, Clifford Zinnes argues that a donor's intrinsic informational limitations on the local context as well as inability to control the progress of interventions mean that lack of success is not rooting in insufficient funding but in maladapted institution designs of interventions that don't foster local ownership. He indentifies and assesses a newly emerging class of foreign aid delivery that promises to overcome these obstacles. The approach is based on ""prospective inter-jurisdictional competition"" (PIJC). Beneficiary groupsoften local-level governments, supported by their private sector and civil societyact as teams and compete against each other under explicit predefined rules and objectives to design and implement interventions under their own aegis to achieve the highest quantitatively measured performance, either relative to others (""tournaments"") or against a preset benchmark (""certification""). Teams that cooperate internally are the likeliest to win the rewards, which, aside from the longer run benefits of the intervention itself, might include more substantive financial or technical assitance from the sponsor.

Since only groups serious about reforming choose to play, Zinnes says the incentives generated by the ensuing ""race-to-the-top"" competitiion create local ownership, encouraging recipients to draw on their own knowledge. Moreover, since all teams that competeand not just those who ""win"" donor rewardsbenefit from their own reform efforts, he argues that this approach can leverage aid resources more than a conventional bilateral aid agreement. Zinnes presents a dozen recent applications of the approach, including those sponsored by the World Bank, USAID, the United Nations, the Ford Foundation, and others. He also recommends improvements and ways to scale up PIJC-based projects in applications ranging from protecting the environment and reducing red tape through to raising literacy and co-opting warlords.

"
Foreword xi
Acknowledgements xix
Abbreviations and Conventions xxi
Introduction
1(21)
Challenges to Effecting Change
2(3)
The PIJC Concept
5(4)
Overview of PIJC in Developing and Transition Countries
9(10)
Caveats and Contents
19(3)
The PIJC Approach
22(32)
Canonical Steps in a PIJC Application
22(10)
Decomposition of the PIJC Mechanism
32(7)
Types of PIJC Incentive Mechanisms
39(6)
Monitoring and Evaluation in the PIJC Approach
45(3)
A Framework to Assess PIJC Experience to Date
48(3)
Selection and Organization of Case Studies
51(3)
Review of Certification Experience
54(45)
Simple Certification
55(27)
Pecuniary Certification
82(17)
Review of Tournament Experience
99(52)
Pure Tournaments
99(25)
Mixed Tournaments
124(27)
Review of Other Relevant Experience
151(15)
Synthesis and Analysis
166(85)
Influence of PIJC Design Characteristics on Project Outcomes
167(30)
Comparing the Effectiveness of Alternative Project Designs
197(14)
Sustainability and Scalability of PIJC Applications
211(18)
Role of Initial Conditions and Other Requirements for Successful PIJC Applications
229(5)
Selecting the Appropriate Incentive Design
234(17)
Conclusions and Scope for Future Applications
251(96)
Clarifying the Fundamental Issues
251(4)
Pros and Cons of the PIJC Approach
255(32)
Simplifying the PIJC Approach
287(3)
Areas for Follow-Up Research and Testing
290(7)
Appendixes
Inventory of Projects
297(21)
Technical Exhibits for the Detailed Case Study Assessments
318(7)
Russian Fiscal Tournament Indicators
318(2)
Nigerian Scorecard Assessment Calculation
320(1)
Summary of Municipality Ranking Variables, Mancomunidades Project, Honduras
321(4)
Anatomy of a PIJC Application
325(11)
Mathematical Treatment of PIJC Leveraging of Sponsor Funds
336(11)
References 347(8)
Index 355
"Clifford F. Zinnes is a senior fellow at the IRIS Center in the Economics Department and a faculty affliliate at the Maryland School of Public Policy, both at the University of Maryland. Focusing on aid effectiveness, as a practitioner of the ""new"" institutional economics, Zinnes also writes on the shadow economy, environmental protection, and failing and fragile states. While at Harvard University for more than a decade, he taught and conducted field work in a dozen countries, including Romania, where he coauthored several laws related to privatization, water management, and environmental protection."