The President of Rwanda Paul Kagame has told delegates at the 4th High Level Forum on aid effectiveness in Busan, South Korea that it would be futile to talk about competent use of aid without addressing impediments to its effectiveness.
Below is an elaborate speech President Paul Kagame has presented at the Busan forum.

It’s a pleasure for me to be here today and contribute to this important discussion. On placing aid properly among tools for effective sustainable development.
It is most relevant that we are having this conversation in Korea which in the last half century has moved from an aid recipient country to an industrial nation that is now supporting others to develop.
Other countries in asia have made similar transistion.
Over the same period about a trillion dollas in development aid has been transferred to Africa but real percapita income today is less than it was in 1970’s and more than half the population, 500million still live in poverty.
At this rate most African countries may not meet many of the Millenirum development goals. Its evident that inspite of the many Aid commitments we make and meet periodically to review we aren’t getting the desired results in Africa.
At the same time in the last 2decades African countries have registered average annual economic growth of between 5-8% despite low foreign investments and global economic crisis.
Such evidence of good returns even on minimal investments indicates that Africa has a great promise.
These two contradictory realities are pertinent to our discussions on aid effectiveness and beg serious questions;
Why has massive aid been largely ineffective and little investment productive?
How can we translate aid commitment into aid effective development outcomes that will drive our graduation to self sufficiency?
A fundamental shift in thinking on the use of available resources including aid is necessary and I believe we cannot talk about competent use of aid without addressing impediments to its effectiveness.
As the history of Asia amply illustrates, it’s sound economic policies and investment capital that propelled millions of Asians to prosperity.
We should therefore, be talking about aid effectiveness in tandem with trade and investment and would add a fair framework with clear rules and proven best practices.
There is no contention about principles of aid effectiveness that were adopted in previous conferences; Country ownership,alignment with coutries priorities, accountability and more.
In my opinion, what we need to overcome are structural and attitude-related barriers that hinder the realisation of what should otherwise be obvious.
For instance, in Paris we committed, and reaffirmed in Accra, to channel Aid through country systems so as to strengthen national capacity to execute development plans, to budget efficiently and deliver services.
It was also meant to build the foundation for enhanced capacity and accountability towards development results. In practice, the status quo still prevails.
In fact, there is still resistance on the part of some donor countries to channel their aid through national systems, which raises important issues of effectiveness and accountability.
While donors may not be entirely to blame for bypassing these systems where they are weak, or non-functional, why not use aid to build up and strengthen such critical systems?
Case in point the partnership between Rwanda government and Mr. Tony Blair’s African governance initiative which uses embedded support to balance first implementation of development programs and transfer skills other partners e.g UK, EU, AFDB and WB have also trusted our systems by choosing budget support options and as a result subjecting the resources to accountability mechanisms
In the process they have become stakeholders with interest in seeing our systems improved. We have continued to work together on this and the good results we are witnessing should even satisfy the most skeptical partners.
However, when multiple and parallel execution modalities and systems are employed, there is a significant impact on the effective allocation and use of public resources, which he said may undermine the relationship between governments and their citizens if they are not seen to be credible or responsive to people’s needs.
When a country is not managing resources at its disposal, how can it be held to account? Responsibility ownership and accountability cannot be separated.
We have been able to agree on crucial importance of mutual accountability in the development effectiveness agenda.
Developing countries are accountable for delivering results on national priority development targets.
Donors have a responsibility to implement commitments made at international forums such as this. In reality the principle of mutual accountability has not been applied equally or fairly.
While there are more demands on developing countries to account, there has been some reluctance from some donors to do the same.
And often this is accompanied by the introduction of issues unrelated to aid performance either as an excuse not to act or to delay commitments.
Similarly, there is real danger that the huge industry that has been built around aid can become a permanent feature of our development process and perpetuate dependency, thereby directly undermining the very national systems that should instead be strengthened.
Developing countries spend more time and energy agreeing on procedures and accounting to donors and an ever-increasing number of related non-state actors than in actual development work, often responding to endless questioning that no answers can fully satisfy.
The need to remove barriers to effective use of aid means that we must urgently fulfill the commitments we made and targets we set in the Paris declaration but this will only be done if Aid is conceived as more than mere charity and rather as investment for mutual gain.
Better use of Aid leads to more people living healthy and productive lives which ultimately translates into greater global demand and is also good for business.
In my view this is what Aid effectiveness truly means; creating conditions for results that evenetually render it unnecessary. History is replete with examples from across the world that illustrate this -so its possible.
Since we have converged in Asia, let me point out the need for a shift in the aid regime to broaden beyond traditional donors and urge emerging economies to take on more responsibility.
There are advantages to be gained from this. The countries that have recently achieved from prosperity understand well what it takes to get out of poverty and have relevant lessons for developing countries and donors alike regarding what works best.
This shift inevitably means strengthening South-South Cooperation and bringing it from the margins to the centre of international development frameworks. This should shape future development discourse and could be the lasting legacy of Busan.
There is no substitute for a well governed state in driving effective development. Such a state can coordinate and implement its own development programs and has the capacity to open frank dialogue with partners.
Systems that function and deliver give donors confidence and earn partner countries respect all crucial prerequisites for development.
Aid can be effective in achieving our development objectives if we allow greater trust in our partnerships and recognize that this is shared responsibility built on common values and goals.
Our aim should be to make this busan conference comeout with clear out with clear commitments, actions, and targets to enhance mutual respect and inclusive global partnerships by building on previous commitments on aid and development cooperation.
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