Decentralized provision of disaster aid: aid fragmentation and the poverty implications

Manabu Nose1
1The University of Tokyo, Tokyo, Japan

Tóm tắt

Từ khóa


Tài liệu tham khảo

Annen, K., & Kosempel, S. (2009). Foreign aid, donor fragmentation, and economic growth. The BE Journal of Macroeconomics,9(1)

Annen, K., & Moers, L. (2017). Donor competition for aid impact, and aid fragmentation. World Bank Economic Review, 31(3), 708–729.

Antman, E., & McKenzie, D. (2007). Earnings mobility and measurement error: a pseudo-panel approach. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 56(1), 125–161.

Azam, J. P., & Laffont, J. J. (2003). Contracting for aid. Journal of Development Economics, 70(1), 25–58.

Barankay, I., & Lockwood, B. (2007). Decentralization and the productive efficiency of government: evidence from Swiss cantons. Journal of Public Economics, 91, 1197–218.

Bardhan, P. (2002). Decentralization of governance and development. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 16(4), 185–205.

Bardhan, P. (2016). State and development: the need for a reappraisal of the current literature. Journal of Economic Literature, 54(3), 862–892.

Bardhan, P., & Mookherjee, D. (2005). Decentralizing antipoverty program delivery in developing countries. Journal of Public Economics, 89, 675–704.

Besley, T., & Coate, S. (2003). Centralized versus decentralized provision of local public goods: a political economy approach. Journal of Public Economics, 87(12), 2611–2637.

Bourguignon, F., & Platteau, J. P. (2017). Does aid availability affect effectiveness in reducing poverty? A review article. World Development, 90, 6–16.

Boyland, M., Nugroho, A., & Thomalla, F. (2017). The role of the Panglima Laot customary institution in the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami recovery in Aceh. In R. Djalante, M. Garschagen, F. Thomalla, & R. Shaw (Eds.), Disaster Risk Reduction in Indonesia, Chapter 14. Germany: Springer.

Burnside, C., & Dollar, D. (2000). Aid, policies, and growth. American Economic Review, 90(4), 847–868.

Chen, S., Mu, R., & Ravallion, M. (2009). Are there lasting impacts of aid to poor areas? Journal of Public Economics, 93(3–4), 512–528.

Conley, T. G., Hansen, C. B., & Rossi, P. E. (2012). Plausibly exogenous. Review of Economics and Statistics, 94(1), 260–272.

Corden, W. (1984). Booming sector and Dutch disease economics: survey and consolidation. Oxford Economic Papers, 36(3), 359–380.

Crost, B., Felter, J., & Johnston, P. (2014). Aid under fire: development projects and civil conflict. American Economic Review, 104(6), 1833–56.

Dang, H. A., Lanjouw, P., Luoto, J., & McKenzie, D. (2014). Using repeated cross-sections to explore movements into and out of poverty. Journal of Development Economics, 107, 112–128.

Deaton, A. (1985). Panel data from time series of cross-sections. Journal of Econometrics, 30, 109–126.

Fisman, R., & Gatti, R. (2001). Decentralization and corruption: evidence across countries. Journal of Public Economics, 83(3), 325–345.

Foster, A. & Rosenzweig, M. (2001). Democratization, decentralization and the distribution of local public goods in a poor rural economy. Penn Institute for Economic Research Working Paper 01-056, University of Pennsylvania.

Frankenberg, E., Gillespie, T., Preston, S., Sikoki, B., & Thomas, D. (2011). Mortality, the family and the Indian Ocean tsunami. Economic Journal, 121(554), 162–182.

Frankenberg, E., Sikoki, B., Sumantri, C., Suriastini, W., & Thomas, D. (2013). Education, vulnerability, and resilience after a natural disaster. Ecology and Society,18(2)

Frankenberg, E., Smith, J., & Thomas, D. (2003). Economic shocks, wealth, and welfare. Journal of Human Resources, 38(2), 280–321.

Gadenne, L., & Singhal, M. (2014). Decentralization in developing economies. Annual Review of Economics, 6, 581–604.

Galasso, E., & Ravallion, M. (2005). Decentralized targeting of an antipoverty program. Journal of Public Economics, 89, 705–727.

Glewwe, P., & Hall, G. (1998). Are some groups more vulnerable to macroeconomic shocks than others? hypothesis tests based on panel data from Peru. Journal of Development Economics, 56, 181–206.

Henderson, V. & Lee, Y. (2015). Organization of disaster aid delivery: spending your donations. Economic Development and Cultural Change, 63(4), 617–664.

Knack, S., & Rahman, A. (2007). Donor fragmentation and bureaucratic quality in aid recipients. Journal of Development Economics, 83(1), 176–197.

Kyriazidou, E. (1997). Estimation of a panel data sample selection model. Econometrica, 65(6), 1335–1364.

Maloney, W., Cunningham, W., & Bosch, M. (2004). The distribution of income shocks during crises: an application of quantile analysis to Mexico 1992–95. World Bank Economic Review, 18(2), 155–174.

Nunn, N., & Qian, N. (2014). US food aid and civil conflict. American Economic Review, 104(6), 1630–66.

Oates, W. E. (1972). Fiscal federalism. New York: Harcourt Brace.

OECD. (2005). Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness: Ownership, Harmonisation, Alignment, Results, and Mutual Accountability. Paris: OECD.

Ray, D. (2010). Uneven growth: a framework for research in development economics. Journal of Economic Perspectives, 24(3), 45–60.

Ravallion, M. (2014). On the role of aid in the Great Escape. The Review of Income and Wealth, 60(4), 967–984.

Schultz, T. W. (1975). Human capital and disequilibrium. Journal of Economic Literature, 13, 827–846.

Svensson, J. (1999). Aid, growth and democracy. Economics and Politics, 11(3), 275–297.

Svensson, J. (2000). When is foreign aid policy credible? Aid dependence and conditionality. Journal of Development Economics, 61(1), 61–84.

Svensson, J. (2006). The institutional economics of foreign aid. Swedish Economic Policy Review, 13(2), 115.

Tiebout, C. M. (1956). A pure theory of local expenditures. Journal of Political Economy, 64(5), 416–424.

Weingast, B. R. (2009). Second generation fiscal federalism: The implications of fiscal incentives. Journal of Urban Economics, 65(3), 279–293.

Wooldridge, J. (2002). Inverse probability weighted M-estimators for sample selection, attrition, and stratification. Portuguese Economic Journal, 1, 117–139.

Wooldridge, J. (2015). Control function methods in applied econometrics. Journal of Human Resources, 50(2), 420–445.

World Bank. (2008). The impact of the conflict, the tsunami and reconstruction on poverty in Aceh. Washington, DC.

World Bank. (2016). Shock waves: managing the impacts of climate change on poverty. Washington DC