A CGD blog. Afghanistan has seen the most rapid increase in life expectancy worldwide 2004-2010, a rise from 42 to 62 years driven by a drop in child mortality of 100,000 kids each year.
Charles Kenny
Books, Papers and Articles
Charles Kenny writes about global development — what’s working, what isn’t, and how the world can do better. An economist who spent fifteen years at the World Bank, he is now a senior fellow at the Center for Global Development in Washington, DC.
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A CGD working paper with Bill Savedoff. A common objection to results-based programs is that they are somehow more vulnerable to corruption. This paper explains why results-based approaches to foreign aid may be less vulnerable to corruption than the traditional approaches which monitor and track the purchase and delivery of inputs and activities. The paper begins by classifying different corruption costs and specifically distinguishes the problem of diverted funds from the costs associated with failing to generate benefits. It then characterizes the key differences between traditional input-tracking programs and results-based approaches in terms of how they are supposed to work, the implicit risks that preoccupy designers, how they function in practice, and what this means both for the scale of corruption and the realization of benefits. It then considers the conditions under which one approach or another might be more appropriate. The paper concludes that input-tracking approaches are vulnerable to corruption because they have high failure costs and a weak track record for controlling diverted funds. By contrast, results-based approaches are less prone to failure costs and limit the capacity of dishonest agents to divert funds unless those agents first improve efficiency and outputs.
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Legal discrimination on the grounds of gender shouldn't be more acceptable than on grounds of race. For @BW.
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There are people in the US living on less than $2 a day. Let's have a basic income grant. For @BW.
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A @BW article arguing the rise of divorce is good for women worldwide.
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Trust in gov't is down worldwide, suggesting it is more than the financial crisis. Time for more transparency.
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Yay! Kenya's found more water. Boo! the problem is getting it where its needed.
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Military power doesn't get you the kind of respect it used to –which is good news– in @BW.
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A CGD blog. A year ago, ActionAid Italy and and BOND came out with a report on aid agency independence. Comparing the performance of independent aid ministries with aid agencies that function under another ministry (foreign affairs, as it might be), the report made the case that there is …