Development co-operation report 2014 mobilising resources for sustainable development
The Development Co-operation Report (DCR) is a yearly report by the Chair of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) that addresses important challenges for the international development community and provides practical guidance and recommendations on how to tackle them. Moreover, it reports the...
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Formato: | Libro electrónico |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
[Paris, France] :
OECD
2014.
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Colección: | Development Co-operation Report,
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Ver en Biblioteca Universitat Ramon Llull: | https://discovery.url.edu/permalink/34CSUC_URL/1im36ta/alma991009706137206719 |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Foreword; Credits; Table of contents; Acronyms and abbreviations; Editorial: More and better financing for development; The world is changing and so must development co-operation; Countries are in charge of their own development; Green finance is development finance; Executive summary; How to fund sustainable development?; ODA still matters; Development will increasingly be sustained from within; Next steps; Chapter 1. How to better mobilise resources for sustainable development; Box 1.1. The changing development lexicon...; A broader agenda will require broader finance
- Where will the financing for the global Sustainable Development Goals come from?In my view: Korea's use of ODA can guide other countries in their development; Smart ODA can have a multiplier effect; Box 1.2. The DAC's work on new measures of development finance; The time for ideas is now; Notes; References; Part I. Existing sources of financing for sustainable development; Chapter 2. Keeping ODA focused in a shifting world; Box 2.1. The vocabulary of official development assistance; There are large differences in developing countries' needs and access to finance
- Figure 2.1. The relative weight of ODA in external financing to developing countries, 2000-11Figure 2.2. Sub-groupings of ODA-eligible countries; Figure 2.3. ODA-eligible sub-groups at a glance: Characteristics and finance flows; The relative importance of ODA is diminishing, but not everywhere; Figure 2.4. External finance to developing countries, 2000 and 2011; Least developed countries are the most dependent on ODA; Middle-income countries still face many development challenges; In my view: The Structural Gap approach offers a new model for co-operation with middle-income countries
- ODA growth is slowing in those countries that need it mostFigure 2.5. How is ODA growing across the country groups?; In my view: Half of all ODA should go to the least developed countries; Official finance must be used to its greatest potential; Box 2.2. Concessional development finance provided by non-DAC countries; Key recommendations; Notes; References; Chapter 3. Growing dynamism in South-South co-operation; South-South co-operation is remodelling the development finance landscape; Currency swaps capture new opportunities for mutual benefits; Box 3.1. What are currency swaps?
- Table 3.1. Some recent South-South currency swap arrangementsIncreasing South-South investment flows reflect deeper integration; South-South co-operation includes skills and trade, not just finance; Figure 3.1. Growth in South-South foreign direct investment, 1990-2009; Civil society is strengthening South-South co-operation; South-South co-operation is founded on equity and mutual benefit; Key recommendations; Notes; References; Chapter 4. The growing development potential of other official flows; Other official flows are gaining importance in the development finance landscape
- Box 4.1. What are "development finance institutions"?