援助项目的竞争性扩散:一个模型

G. David Roodman
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引用次数: 33

摘要

援助项目的激增可能会使受援国政府在报告要求、捐助者访问和其他行政开销方面负担过重,从直接生产用途中吸走了稀缺的国内受援国资源,如税收收入或熟练政府官员的时间。但更大的监督也可能改善对项目的管理,促进发展。我提出的援助项目模型反映了这一问题的两个方面。它提出了国家一级治理和项目一级治理之间的区别。捐助国可以通过要求受援国监督其活动来将项目一级的治理提高到国家一级的基线水平之上,尽管在国家一级治理已经很高的地方这样做的好处较少。该模型假定较大的项目对受援国监督活动的要求按比例减少。比较统计分析表明,为了最大限度地促进发展,在援助数额较高的地方,项目应该更大,以避免使受援国的行政能力负担过重;由于同样的原因,在接受者资源较少的地方;在国家治理良好的地方,因为监管的边际效益较低。多捐助者概括表明,那些不完全利他的捐助者,最关心自己项目的成功,往往会陷入竞争性扩散,其中每个捐助者将其援助预算细分为更小的项目,以提高这些项目中受援国资源的边际生产率,并从其他捐助者那里吸引受援国。这种低效率是由于捐助者之间缺乏对受援国资源的市场。在纳什均衡中,竞争性扩散降低了整体发展。但是最小的(自私的)捐赠者可以获利。这将使它们不愿与其他捐助国合作以遏制竞争性扩散。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Competitive Proliferation of Aid Projects: A Model
The proliferation of aid projects may overburden recipient governments with reporting requirements, donor visits, and other administrative overhead, siphoning off scarce domestic recipient resources, such as tax revenue or the time of skilled government officials, from directly productive use. But greater oversight may also improve the administration of projects, increasing development. I present a model of aid projects that reflects both sides of this coin. It posits a distinction between national-level governance and project-level governance. A donor can raise project-level governance above the baseline national level by requiring oversight activities of the recipient, although the benefits from doing so are less where national-level governance is already high. The model assumes that larger projects demand proportionally less oversight activity from the recipient. Comparative statics analysis suggests that to maximize development, projects should be larger where aid volume is higher, to avoid overburdening recipient administrative capacity; where recipient resources are scarcer, for the same reason; and where national governance is good, since the marginal benefit of oversight is then lower. A multi-donor generalization shows how donors that are imperfectly altruistic, caring most about the success of their own projects, will tend to sink into competitive proliferation, in which each donor subdivides its aid budget into smaller projects to raise the marginal productivity of the recipient’s resources in those projects and attract them away from other donors. The inefficiency arises from the lack of a market among donors for recipient resources. In a Nash equilibrium, competitive proliferation reduces overall development. But the smallest (selfish) donors can gain. This would discourage them from cooperating with other donors to contain competitive proliferation.
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