A Rethink on the Use of Aid Mechanisms in Health Sector Early Recovery
Author: P. Vergeer, A. Canavan and I. Rothmann
Date: 2009
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37 pages
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What role should aid mechanisms play in the early recovery of weakened health sectors? This paper, published by KIT Development Policy and Practice, argues that flexible, experimental solutions are best suited to achieving the multiple objectives and delivery strategies of a developing health system. Aid effectiveness in this area has lagged because of an over-emphasis on gradually transitioning from 'humanitarian' mechanisms to 'developmental' ones, rather than a simultaneous approach. Although management concerns and design questions always influence aid delivery, they are even more central in early recovery situations. Progress will result from deeper coordination of the aid mechanisms deployed, and the use of key donor comparative advantages in technical and operational areas.
Agreed principles of aid effectiveness for the health sector were laid out by the International Health Partnership in 2007, with the aim of meeting Millennium Development Goals for health. Many different aid mechanisms have been deployed in fragile state contexts in recent years. The strengths and weaknesses of these mechanisms are evaluated based on case studies from the varied contexts of Sierra Leone, South Sudan, Liberia and Timor-Leste. The mechanisms have included general budget support, a multi-donor trust fund, extension of humanitarian aid in an NGO context and technical assistance. Interviews conducted with key informants and relevant secondary sources provide the evidence for the cases.
At the early recovery stage, health sectors in fragile states require both ongoing delivery of basic services and assistance in rebuilding. Relief and development objectives often differ, with the former generally more state-avoiding and the latter often tied to a relevant Ministry of Health.
A single aid mechanism may be inappropriate for this multi-faceted agenda. Other findings include the following:
A paradigm shift is necessary to build an integrated mix of modalities to effectively accommodate state, non-state, system-building and service delivery objectives in early recovery contexts. The current approach of gradual movement from relief delivery to system building is not working.
Access full text: available online
Source:
Vergeer, P., Canavan, A., and Rothmann, I., 2009, 'A Rethink on the Use of Aid Mechanisms in Health Sector Early Recovery', KIT Development Policy and Practice, Amsterdam
Author:
P Vergeer
, pvergeer[at]ihug.com.au