Official development assistance (ODA) has had an indisputable instrumental value in supporting developing countries’ progress on their development paths. Yet, because it has been allocated, ex ante, in a scattered and uncoordinated manner (the Arlequin syndrome) and not been scaled up enough or targeting deliberately the root causes of underdevelopment – including the imperative of structural transformation and a focus on people’s agency – it has, over time, had diminishing returns, runs the risk of having a limited impact and thus falling into irrelevance. It is, therefore, high time to revisit and reinvent the way ODA is conceived and delivered.
The real instrumental value of ODA lies in its ability to contribute to mitigating risks created by global trends and in investing in global goods and global commons that other forms of development financing are unlikely to address. These include:
Redirecting and focusing ODA on these blind spots would contribute to accelerating, or rather stimulating, the achievement of the Sustainable Development Goals.
The impact would be even greater if developed countries were to fulfil their promise to provide ODA equivalent to 0.7% of their gross national income (GNI) as recommended in 1969 in the Pearson Commission’s Partners in Development report – a target built on the DAC’s 1969 definition of ODA and a suggestion taken up in a resolution of the UN General Assembly on 24 October 1970 (UN General Assembly, 1970[1]).