It is with great pleasure that i stand witness to today’s event
WORKSHOP ON MANAGING AID EFFECTIVELY: LESSONS FOR CHINA? Beijing, 27-28 March 2008 Integrating the Paris Declaration Principles into Development Programming: the United Nations Experience in China Renaud Meyer Deputy Country Director Ladies and Gentlemen,
On behalf of the United Nations, I would like to start by thanking DFID and CIDA the
co-organizers of this workshop for inviting the United Nations and giving me the
opportunity to share with you the experience of the UN on the important topic of aid
effectiveness. As many previous speakers have highlighted, there are no lessons to
be given. Nevertheless, I believe there are experiences to be shared. I am happy to
present some of them based on our work in China, both from UNDP and the UN more
The Paris Declaration was a milestone in establishing a global commitment to clear
guidelines for improving aid effectiveness—now the challenge is to also deliver on
that commitment. This is no small task, since the development challenges we must
address are as many as they are complex, and a large number of aid organisations
will be needed to respond to them all. But tackle them we must, if we are to reach the
Millennium Development Goals in the seven years that we have left.
In the last few years, the resources pledged to supporting global development efforts
have been on the rise, and as much as donors should be thanked for this, it is also
expected that they will be making good on those pledges. Since 2002, donor
promises to step up their Official Development Assistance have in part been met.
Flows reached almost $78 billion in 2006, up from $57.5 billion in 2002. Yet, on closer
scrutiny, the bulk of this increase is debt relief – and the actual resources that
countries can programme to meet their development needs has risen little in real
terms. But any amount of resources will not be sufficient unless both development
agencies and recipient countries also learn new ways to translate them into genuine
impact. This is the core of the development effectiveness agenda, and the UN has a
particular responsibility for honouring it by creating new approaches to increase
transparency, accountability and results. This responsibility derives from our mandate
and raison d’etre and has the people and their well-being at its core, delivering results
to improve people’s lives in developing countries while at the same time ensuring
highest cost-efficiency standards so to reassure taxpayers from donor countries on
the added value of the UN development assistance.
China is a wonderful place for us to develop these new approaches, given its
extraordinary record of translating pragmatic experiments and step-by-step reform
into stellar growth and tangible results. Aid effectiveness needs to be more than a
mere slogan or a narrow concern of donor bureaucracies, and in our work here we are
called on regularly to demonstrate that our ideas and recommendations are indeed
resulting in benefits for the people of China. And as much as this complicates our lives,
In responding to the Paris Declaration, the UN has repositioned its development
assistance along its five main principles: national ownership; alignment;
harmonization; managing results; and mutual accountability. I will address them one
The continued focus on national ownership in the UN reflects a wide consensus that
sustainable development must be rooted in national leadership and local vision and
action. As a result of stronger national ownership and greater coherence with national
sector plans and budgets, UN organizations are aligning their financial contributions
to sector plans and budgets. For example, my Organization, UNDP is increasingly
changing its model of funding from stand-alone thematic projects to joint funding
modalities, including sector budget support, pooled and basket funds. UNDP strives to
only allow stand-alone projects when they are of an innovative character, such as pilot
activities, and are compatible with sector level arrangements.
National ownership is a hallmark of all the UN’s work in China. In the spirit of the
alignment principle, we are constantly looking to integrate our assistance into China’s
own development agenda, through a consultative process that encompasses
discussions at all levels, from grass-roots field work and surveys through our annual
review of the UN Development Assistance Framework (UNDAF) with senior
representatives of all our government counterparts. The UNDAF itself, which is the
coordinating document for all UN activity in China, serves as an accountability
instrument by which the UN is answerable to China for the progress we are achieving,
has proven to be highly effective in this respect.
Harmonization among the donors is a theme that the UN is emphasizing. We
recognize that for the UN to be an effective coordination champion among the donor
community, it should first start by achieving greater coordination within UN agencies.
Globally, the UN is piloting a considerably more integrated approach in 7 pilot
countries, Albania, Cape Verde, Mozambique, Pakistan, Rwanda, Tanzania, Uruguay
and Vietnam, where the One UN experience is implemented. In so doing, the focus is
changing from individual agencies to team interventions, shared knowledge and joint
accountability. We hope that this model for Delivering as One will increase the impact
that the UN can have, and that the UN can set a good example for other donors when
it comes to coordination of resources and knowledge.
In China, given the size of the UN system with 21 residing Agencies and more than
700 staff, increasing coordination is a must and coordination should not be limited to
substantive content of development activities but also look into operational issues
where differences in rules and regulations complicate matters. Supported by the UN
Resident Coordinator function, UN Agencies are increasingly pooling resources in
areas such as procurement, recruitment and financial transactions in an effort to
consolidate and streamline operational work.
On the programmatic side, a number of initiatives have been launched to strengthen
cooperation in key programme areas. These are:
1. The UN in China now responds jointly to the challenge of HIV and AIDS through a
joint programme that spans all the agencies that used to work separately in this
field. This joint programme was launched in December 2007 and is already
2. Drawing on the MDG Fund established with the support of the Spanish
government, the UN China Country Team is launching joint programmes on
climate change; youth employment; and the special needs and potential of ethnic
3. All UN agencies actively participate in Theme Groups set up along each of the
national priorities outlined in the UNDAF framework, exchanging knowledge,
coordinating efforts and creating joint initiatives.
As harmonization and alignment increases, the crucial question becomes how UN
country teams manage for results, both at the agency level and the country level, to
make a genuine difference across a variety of local contexts. • At the agency level, the UN has developed results based management and
reporting frameworks, backed up by IT systems that help increase transparency
and enables instant snapshots of how resources are being used.
• At the country level, the UN increasingly works to build national capacity in
developing and tracking development indicators that support local priorities by
identifying challenges and monitoring impact, including the reporting of progress
Regarding mutual accountability between donors and recipients, the United Nations
can, as a neutral partner, help governments in reviewing implementation of the Paris
Declaration at the country level as part of the effort to ensure the countries’ own
Delivering on the Paris Declaration matters. It is an ongoing process, and moving
forward, the UN needs to deepen efforts in several areas. At the country level, the UN
needs to work still harder on coordination between agencies, since recent efforts have
been positive but also shown clearly the many improvements that remain to be
achieved, especially on the operational aspects in harmonizing rules related to
finance, human resources, etc…. At the agency level, we need to strengthen our own
capacity, as the skills, experience and expertise demonstrated by our staff in fulfilling
the new roles expected by governments and donors are increasingly important
As I have emphasized in these brief remarks, China is proving to be fertile soil for our
efforts, thanks to the ever-present need to demonstrate results. But in addition to that,
there are two elements that add to China’s tremendous importance in the global drive
for effectiveness as we try to fully attain the MDGs.
1. One is China’s own process of reform and development, which has been marked
as much by a willingness to learn from the examples of others as it has by the
strong determination to find Chinese solutions to Chinese problems. Rather than
accept policy prescriptions from outside, China’s reformers took the pieces that
made sense and rearranged them to fit into their own particular context as it
evolved. This, surely, must be the true meaning of national ownership: learning
from friends with open-minded humility, but reserving the right to decide for
2. The second element is China’s gradual transition from recipient of aid to
non-recipient, and the growing importance of the country in trade, investment and
intergovernmental partnerships with developing nations across the globe.
a. Thanks to it unique experience, China can provide invaluable advice to
other countries faced with similar choices and challenges on the path
towards prosperity. With very strong emphasis on south-south cooperation,
the UN stands ready to support this transfer of knowledge through a
b. For the same reason, China is uniquely placed to convene developing
countries in the global dialogue on aid effectiveness. By virtue of its
experience as well as its size and global economic and political importance,
China can be a critical facilitator in bridging the perspectives of developed
and developing countries to arrive at workable solutions.
To conclude, donor countries, development agencies and recipient countries all have
a tremendous responsibility to improve our performance and use the increasing
resources for the benefit of the poor and vulnerable. The UN has a particular role to
play in this, and I hope that you will continue to scrutinize our work to ensure our own
promises are matched by the material change and improvements that we help deliver.
In the continuous learning process that this entails, China has the potential to play a
unique role by sharing its experiences and engaging wholeheartedly in the
development effectiveness dialogue. The UN is honoured to be supporting China’s
deepened involvement in this critical effort, as we move beyond the halfway mark to
the MDGs target with an ever increasing responsibility to make every aid dollar count
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