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Posts Tagged ‘Pakistan’

CGD Ramps up Pakistan Development Study

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010
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CGDAs part of its new U.S. Development Strategy in Pakistan program, MFAN Partner the Center for Global Development just launched a monthly newsletter highlighting current work the study group has put together, as well as news shaping the complex situation.  CGD’s U.S. Development Strategy in Pakistan group has developed several open letters — penned by CGD President Nancy Birdsall — and papers and blog posts that use Pakistan as a lens to talk about foreign assistance reform and ways in which the U.S. could deliver more accountable, effective aid.  In an Open Letter to Ambassador Richard Holbrooke, Special Representative for Afghanistan and Pakistan, Birdsall cites many of the principles of aid reform, including transparency and coordination when making the case for a new aid model.

This month read about basic principles for effective development aid in Pakistan, development investments in the FATA region,  the U.S. aid program as described by Sen. Kerry and Lugar, and policymakers’ solution to Pakistan’s energy crisis.  Sign up to receive the newsletter each month by clicking here.

Politico Features Story on the Great Pakistan Aid Debate

Wednesday, May 12th, 2010
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David Rogers’ piece in Politico yesterday took a substantive look at the debate over aid to Pakistan.  Rogers fleshes out the nuanced relationship between development assistance and national security interests that inform major policy decisions, while also addressing internal priorities that are impacting the way the aid is delivered.

The full piece is worth a read, but excerpts follow:

“The opportunity for aid in Pakistan is not to fundamentally change the country,” she [Jacqueline Novogratz] said. “It’s an opportunity to build a real sense of trust in ways that we have not done a good job of in the past. If we can show this over time, then things will change.  If we took a longer-term view, it could actually lead measurably to our security, specifically going after local leaders, investing in them as partners, a multiyear commitment.”

“Recent AID documents indicate close to $3 billion, or 40 percent of the $7.5 billion, is expected to be targeted to a variety of energy and agriculture projects. Education is a third major priority, and the U.S. has begun pumping millions into an existing Pakistan income support program aimed at poor women.”

“But the months of discussion — capped by a March “strategic dialogue” meeting in Washington — appear to have changed the dynamic 180 degrees. Now the complaint heard most is not about conditions but about how slowly the dollars have flowed.”

Lew and Shah Brief on Recent AfPak Trip

Monday, April 19th, 2010
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Last week, Deputy Secretary Jack Lew and USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah briefed the press at the State Department on their recent trip to Afghanistan and Pakistan.  Lew and Shah remarked on the coordination among government ministries and local citizens, as well as the U.S. civilian-military programs.  While both acknowledged the security challenges of development work in the region, they noted specific areas where development has begun to transform local communities.  Watch the press brief below and follow this link for full text: http://www.state.gov/video/?videoid=78481442001

Noteworthy News – 4.16

Friday, April 16th, 2010
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This weekly posting includes key news stories and opinion pieces related to foreign assistance reform and the larger development community.

  • Pakistani prime minister: U.S. aid money goes through (FP Blog-Josh Rogin, April 12) Regardless, Gilani said, the decision has been made. “We have convinced the government of the United States that the money should be given directly to the Pakistani organizations,” he told a group of reporters during a Monday lunch at Washington’s Four Seasons Hotel. Gilani is in town for the Nuclear Security Summit and met with President Obama Sunday.
  • IMF widens pool for crisis funds to include emerging economies (The Washington Post, April 13) The International Monetary Fund on Monday tripled the amount of money it can deploy in a crisis, drawing more heavily on commitments from emerging economies such as China and Brazil to establish a pool of more than half a trillion dollars that officials hope will help deter future problems.  The new loan pool “will make an important contribution to global stability,” Dominique Strauss-Kahn, IMF managing director, said in a written statement after the fund’s executive board agreed to the arrangement.
  • Maternal Deaths Decline Sharply Across the Globe (The New York Times, April 14) The study cited a number of reasons for the improvement: lower pregnancy rates in some countries; higher income, which improves nutrition and access to health care; more education for women; and the increasing availability of “skilled attendants” — people with some medical training — to help women give birth. Improvements in large countries like India and China helped to drive down the overall death rates.
  • OECD Says Development Aid Keeps Rising Despite Crisis (Wall Street Journal, April 14) Governments in developed countries continued to increase the amount of aid they gave to poorer countries in 2009, despite the financial crisis, the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development said.  According to the Paris-based think tank, most governments are on course to meet the targets set at the summit of the Group of Eight leading nations in Gleneagles, Scotland in 2005.
  • The Next Empire (The Atlantic Monthly-Howard French, May 2010) In its recent approach to Africa, China could not be more different from the West. It has focused on trade and commercially justified investment, rather than aid grants and heavily subsidized loans. It has declined to tell African governments how they should run their countries, or to make its investments contingent on government reform. And it has moved quickly and decisively, especially in comparison to many Western aid establishments.


QDDR Blog Series: MFAN Principal Liz Schrayer & John Glenn on Smart Resources

Monday, March 29th, 2010
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The seventh installment in MFAN’s QDDR blog series comes from MFAN Principal Liz Schrayer, executive director, and John Glenn, policy director, both of the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition (USGLC).  To see other posts in the series, click on the following names - George IngramNoam Unger, David BeckmannRitu Sharma & Nora O’Connell, Ray Offenheiser, Jennifer Potter.

USGLC “Smart Power Requires Better Resources”

By Liz Schrayer & John Glenn

Last year, in the U.S. Global Leadership Coalition’s “Report on Reports:  Putting Smart Power to Work,” we highlighted several key expert consensus points for the incoming Administration, including – first and foremost – the need to formulate a comprehensive global development strategy.  Since then, both the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR) and Presidential Study Directive on Global Development (PSD-7) have set out to tackle many of these points:  elevating and streamlining U.S. foreign assistance structures, integrating civilian and military instruments to deal with weak and fragile states, and considering the appropriate balance of authorities and resources between the State and Defense Departments.

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