The First Tranche

Welcome to the First Tranche, the AidData blog--a forum for analysis and discussion of information about development finance, and how it can be used to improve development practice and research. The First Tranche publishes independent views and analysis from a variety of bloggers who are interested in aid transparency, aid effectiveness, and better/more accessible aid information.
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The First Tranche | a blog by the staff of AidData

Monday, June 27, 2011


Experimenting with Aid Information

Randomized controlled trials have garnered increasing attention in the development community, particularly with the high-profile work of economists Esther Duflo, Abhijit Banerjee, and their colleagues at the Jameel Poverty Action Lab at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. Randomized controlled trials provide a method of research to social scientists that allows for the isolation of causal mechanisms while minimizing risks to human subjects (Green and Gerber 2003). This summer, a group of 15 students from BYU will be travelling to Uganda to work as research assistants on a randomized controlled trial led by AidData principal investigators Michael Findley and Daniel Nielson. We will be studying how to improve the transparency and effectiveness of the aid sector in Uganda. I will be joining the group as a representative of the College of William and Mary.

Of the roughly $150 billion in foreign aid committed to developing countries annually, studies suggest that it is often the case that a relatively small portion of this money actually reaches the intended beneficiaries. Often, a large portion of the diverted money is lost to corruption and bureaucratic inefficiency (Svensson 2000, Knack 2001). Of the money that does reach the right hands, it often ends in unsustainable projects that do not produce the intended results due to inefficiencies or project abandonment, or other factors.

Breakdowns in the service provider-recipient relationship contribute to the capture of foreign aid funds by corrupt officials and bureaucratic inefficiencies. One problem occurs in information provision. It is not a lack of information driving this breakdown, but a failure to centralize these sources in a useful way. Studies have suggested that individuals and organizations with access to useful information are far more likely to play an effective oversight role (Miller 2005, Gordon and Huber 2002). Often times, the most useful information regarding where aid is needed and whether aid dollars are being spent effectively is held by citizens in developing countries. However, these citizens generally lack the tools and access needed to provide direct feedback on project status or impact.

Our project this summer will investigate the use of crowdsourcing to solve this information breakdown. Crowdsourcing refers to leveraging the wisdom of the crowd to answer a question or solve a problem that would traditionally be posed to a specific actor. For example, in the business world, companies may use crowdsourcing to poll consumers to name a new product. AidData will be partnering with UNICEF and Ushahidi to run a randomized controlled trial in Uganda to test which incentive mechanisms (e.g. reimbursement, social networks, public praise, immediate feedback, and entry into a lottery providing prizes to the winners) are most effective in recruiting Ugandan citizens to provide useful information on development needs and outcomes. The application of incentive mechanisms will be randomized across districts in Uganda, so that results can be compared against control districts to isolate the effect of the treatment. This randomized controlled trial will provide insight into the causal mechanisms that drive improvement in the effectiveness of foreign aid provision, and I am excited to have the opportunity to work on the project.

Alena Stern ’12 is an AidData research assistant at the College of William and Mary

Tuesday, June 14, 2011


Where does aid go? Mapping the African Development Bank’s Activities

More news for those who like their data served up on beautiful maps. AidData has been working with the African Development Bank (AfDB) to map the Bank's activities on the continent. You can check out the results so far with this map, created with support from Esri. The Bank launched it at their Annual Meetings last week in Lisbon, where it also reaffirmed its commitment to increasing the transparency of its work.


The map shows the AfDB's ongoing operations in three countries: Cameroon, Morocco, and Tanzania. This represents a subset of the more than 2,000 activities financed since 2009, and represents newly geocoded project data (in addition to the AfDB projects that were coded last summer as part of the Mapping for Results partnership with the World Bank, which can be seen through the Development Loop app). With the map, you can zoom in on each country and explore the Bank’s activities by sector, against underlying maps of key development indicators by subnational region (including poverty, malnutrition, and infant mortality rates).



To create the map, AidData researchers identified the latitude and longitude of the location(s) where each project is being implemented, using the geocoding methodology developed jointly with Uppsala University in Sweden.

Launch of the Make Aid Transparent Campaign

A coalition of over 60 civil society groups from over 25 countries launched the Make Aid Transparent campaign last week. The campaign calls on governments and other aid donors to publish more and better information on aid.

At the centre of the campaign, whose members include Oxfam, Save the Children, ONE, and around 30 groups from developing countries, is a petition asking governments to make their aid more transparent and an animation which explains why they should do so.

Amy Barry, Campaigns Director at Publish What You Fund, said: “Governments have promised to make their aid more transparent but so far they haven’t done enough. At the High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness at the end of the year their promises will be tested. This campaign will demonstrate public demand for aid transparency from citizens in both donor and recipient countries.”

The first petition handover is envisaged for early July in Paris, at a meeting of the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development. Other activities and actions will take place through the year, with the campaign culminating at the High Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness in Busan, Korea from November 29 – December 1.


Thanks to Claudia Elliot from Publish What You Fund for this post. To sign the petition, click here.