AN OVERVIEW OF THE SPANISH AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO-OPERATION (AECID)



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SPANISH AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO-OPERATION AN OVERVIEW OF THE SPANISH AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO-OPERATION (AECID) October 2009 1

SPANISH AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO-OPERATION General information about AECID Semi-autonomous aid agency attached to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Co-operation through the State Secretariat for International Cooperation (SECI). SECI is main policy-making body, assisted by DG for policy planning and evaluation (DGPOLDE) AECID was created in November 1988 (based on prior cooperation entity) Regulated by the Statute of 28 October 2007 (R.D. 1403/2007) The Law on International Co-operation (Law Nº 23/1998) in matters of development states that the AECI is the management body of the Spanish policy on international cooperation in matters of development, notwithstanding the competences allocated to other Ministerial Departments (art. 25 LCID) III Master Plan for Spanish Cooperation provides broad policy orientations for the period 2009-2012 In February 2009, AECID presented proposal for first Management Contract which serves as one year operational plan 2

AECID within the Spanish aid system Source: DAC Peer Review of Spain, 2007 Note: At time of review, AECID had not been created, but its situation within the system remains the same 3

AECID s organizational chart Governing Board (Permanent Commission) President (SECI) Technical Cabinet Directorate for Geographical Sectoral Directorates and Multilateral Cooperation Latin America and the Caribbean Africa, Asia and Eastern Europe Director AECID Directorate for Cultural and Scientific Relations Humanitarian Aid Office Office of the Fund for Water Secretary and Sanitation General Cooperation Technical Cooperation Offices Cultural Centers Training Centers 4

The overall context of Spanish development cooperation Spanish aid has risen rapidly since 2004 because of government commitment and strong public support; goal is for ODA to reach 0.7% in 2012 Spain seeks to be leading donor in efforts to improve aid effectiveness (Paris Declaration ) Improved strategic framework (II and III Master Plans, country and sector strategies, etc.) 6.000,00 5.000,00 4.000,00 3.000,00 2.000,00 1.000,00 0,00 Spanish aid since 2005 Ayuda Oficial al Desarrollo neta (Mill. ) 2005 2006 2007 2008p 2009e Note: 2008 is preliminary and 2009 is estimated 5

AECID s relative weight in Spanish aid has increased since 2004 (25% 35% of total) 2.000.000.000 Evolution of Bilateral ODA by AECID, 2004-2007 40,0% 1.500.000.000 30,0% Euro 1.000.000.000 20,0% AECID/CSA (%) 500.000.000 10,0% 0 2004 2005 2006 2007 Central State Administration AECID AECID/CSA 0,0% In 2009, AECID has a budget of close to 1,000 mln. euro, although it manages and monitors much more 6

Spanish Cooperation s geographic priorities (according to III Master Plan) Group A - Wide-ranging partnerships Least Developed Countries, Low Income Countries or Lower Middle Income Countries, where there are opportunities to establish a long-term partnership framework which will enable large amounts of ODA to be channeled and a wide range of instruments to be used. Group B - Focused partnerships: Least Developed Countries, Low Income Countries or Lower Middle Income Countries, where the cooperation program does not allow an A-type partnership. Those partnerships will have greater development impact if the partnership is focused on a single or a few key sectors, but with a single approach and a selective use of instruments. Group C - Partnerships for consolidating development achievements: Countries with which it is possible to establish specific partnership strategies to promote development by strengthening inclusive public policies, promoting South-South cooperation, triangular cooperation and the provision of global public goods. 7

Group A Wide ranging partnerships Group B Focused partnerships Group C Partnerships for consolidating development achievements 8

36 OTC Technical co-operation offices 18 CULTURAL CENTRES OVERSEAS DEPLOYMENT OF AECID 4 TRAINING CENTRES 20 Latin America 7 Sub-Saharan Africa 7 Arab countries 3 Asia 1 Europe 10 Latin America 2 Sub-Saharan Africa 6 Centers receive funding from AECI in Brazil, Miami (USA), Cordoba and Rosario (Argentina), Guatemala and Nicaragua. 4 Latin America SPANISH AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO-OPERATION 9

How are AECID s resources used (1) Overall volume and regional distribution Most of AECID s aid is channeled bilaterally Multilateral ODA has increased substantially Latin America continues to be the main regional priority But, ODA to Sub- Saharan Africa grew more rapidly in this period. 100% 75% 50% 25% 0% AECID: ODA, 2004 and 2007 Volume (Mill. ) 2004 2007 Bilateral 275.1 652.3 Multilateral 0.05 95.8 2004 2007 Latin America Mediterranean Subsaharan Africa Asia-Pacific Europe 10

How are AECID s resources used (2) Geographic priorities 7 of Top 10 country recipients are from Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) 2 are from Mediterranean region (MED) Only 1 is from Subsaharan Africa: Mozambique Notable increase in the average volume of country programs (from less than 9 million euro in 2004 to 19 Meuro in 2007) Main recipient countries/territories (Mill. ) 2004 2007 Region Peru 9,9 22,2 LAC Morrocco 15,3 21,9 MED Bolivia 10,5 20,4 LAC Guatemala 5,9 19,9 LAC Colombia 5,2 19,5 LAC Palestine 11,7 19,3 MED Mozambique 9,2 18,3 AFR Equador 6,1 17,0 LAC El Salvador 7,3 16,9 LAC Nicaragua 6,3 16,8 LAC 11

How are AECID s resources used (3) Sector priorities and progress on targets AECID has strong focus on social sectors, particularly education and governance Increasing attention to productive sectors and the environment Women in development is growing rapidly AECID has tripled its emergency assistance Progress on II Master Plan targets is good in general, but more efforts needed to increase aid to poorest countries, concentrate ODA in priority countries and to assure MDG-relevance Main sectors of AECID's ODA (Mill. ) 2004 2007 Socal infrastructure and services 145.7 366.5 Education 52.1 94.0 Health 22.2 39.4 Governance 30.3 99.5 Productive sectors 28.3 45.6 Environment 9.9 30.9 Women in development/gender equality 3.2 24.7 Emergency and humanitarian aid 19.5 64.3 Progress on II Master Plan targets 2004 2007 Latin America (max. 40%) 43.5 40.2 Least Developed Countries (at least 40%) 20.7 31.9 ODA to priority countries (70%) 70.3 62,0 Basic Social Sectors (20%) 18.0 21.1 MDGs 45.4 42.7 12 On Target?

How are AECID s resources used (4) Instruments The multilateral channel has grown substantially but it is still small proportion of total Almost 1/3 of bilateral ODA goes through NGOs (this is very high relative to other donors) Program aid (budget support and sector wide-approach) has increased but it is still modest comparted to total ODA Instruments (% of ODA) 2004 2007 Multilateral organizations 0.0 14.6 Development NGOs 31.0 32.7 Program aid 0.0 2.4 13

Implications of the Paris Declaration for AECID Ownership: strengthen capacity of partner countries to make decisions on their needs and how AECID can best contribute (this goes beyond governments) Alignment: aid programming should adapt to national and sector development and anti-poverty strategies Harmonization: AECID needs to work more closely with other donors and development actors to reduce overlap, excessive administrative costs for partner countries, etc. Results: Agency s activities need to be more and more oriented on development results (as well as organizational results that contribute to that goal). This is not just a technical change; it requires a cultural transformation in the Agency. Mutual Accountability: AECID must be held accountable not only to Spanish Parliament and citizens, but also to partner countries for the results of the actions it takes or supports. Partner countries will also be accountable to AECID. 14

SPANISH AGENCY FOR INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT CO-OPERATION More information at: www.aecid.es