ABSTRACT

This book turns the argument about aid effectiveness on its head. Since development assistance is inherently self-interested, a source of soft power, political manipulation and commercial opportunity, its real effectiveness could arguably be judged by the strength of donor influence and not by development impact. Its subjective nature means that its impact on development is often weak, mainly short-term and confined to limited and specific contexts.

Aid as influence was prevalent during the Cold War era. The connection is equally strong in this century’s newly bipolar world in which the contest is between western donors led by the United States, and China which is spending hundreds of billions of dollars on infrastructure as a means of influence in the global South. Influence permeates both bilateral and multilateral aid and in parallel with official aid, the rise of global philanthropy has seen it taken up by some of today’s billionaires.

The response by donors to the growing havoc caused by the three Cs – conflict, climate change and COVID-19 – confirms the main findings of the book, which concludes by outlining what aid without influence would look like. This book draws on the author's 40 years of experience of the aid industry and will be essential reading for development students, practitioners and policy makers alike.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction

Defining aid and its purposes

chapter 2|25 pages

The rationale for aid

chapter 3|20 pages

US aid

Weaponised development assistance

chapter 4|22 pages

China's aid as influence

chapter 5|13 pages

UK aid and influence

From ‘superpower’ to perfidious Albion

chapter 6|22 pages

Influence and multilateral aid

chapter 7|17 pages

Influence through conditionality

chapter 8|18 pages

Private aid and influence

chapter 9|27 pages

Aiding fragile states

chapter 10|9 pages

The future of aid