Briefing Paper
The financing of development cooperation at the United Nations: why more means less
Mahn, Timo CasjenBriefing Paper (8/2012)
Bonn: German Development Institute / Deutsches Institut für Entwicklungspolitik (DIE)
Dt. Ausg. u.d.T.:
Finanzierung der Entwicklungszusammenarbeit der Vereinten Nationen: steigende Beiträge, aber weniger Multilateralismus
(Analysen und Stellungnahmen 8/2012)
Global development challenges such as climate change require concerted action among nations in today's networked world. Of itself, the UN's universal membership offers a highly appropriate multilateral framework for this purpose and gives its development system a special legitimacy,
which also extends to setting norms and standards. But current financing practices are putting pressure on UN development cooperation: more and more, donors are bilaterally earmarking contributions for projects that they prefer, thus profiting from the UN "brand" without directly contributing to the cost of its multilateral mandate in the form of core contributions.
The problem is aggravated when competing UN agencies offer financial incentives which encourage potential donors to expand their "bilateralized" portfolios. Given that these incentives are subsidized from core budgets, the provision of future core contributions thus becomes less attractive to donors. Complete bilateralisation of the UNDC therefore becomes a plausible scenario if current development trends continue to result in a downward spiral of dwindling core contributions.
Clearly, something must change. Unfortunately, individual donors have few incentives to make a fundamental change in their behaviour.
One way to prevent a mass movement of donors onto the bandwagon of bilateral earmarking would be a 'codex of good donorship' which should rest on three pillars:
- a "critical mass" of core funding with respect to each donor's financial wherewithal;
- a system-wide obligation of full recovery of costs for programme support and management regarding earmarked projects, with standards for cost classification to be used by the Secretariat for monitoring; and
- financial commitments for 3-5 years instead of the present practice of annual stop-and-go support for long-term development processes in programme countries.
Contact
Cornelia Hornschild
Publication Coordinator
E-mail Cornelia.Hornschild@idos-research.de
Phone +49 (0)228 94927-135
Fax +49 (0)228 94927-130
Alexandra Fante
Librarian/ Open Access Coordinator
E-Mail Alexandra.Fante@idos-research.de
Telefon +49 (0)228 94927-321
Fax +49 (0)228 94927-130