|
David Roodman 12/10/2007
Because of its ambition, the aid effectiveness literature appeals to those hoping for clear answers on whether aid "works." On balance, the quantitative approach to exploring grand questions about aid effectiveness, which began 40 years ago, was worth trying and may be worth pursuing somewhat further. But the literature will probably continue to disappoint as often as it offers hope. The biggest challenge is to go beyond documenting correlations to demonstrating causation -- to show not just that aid went hand-in-hand with economic growth, but caused it. Aid has eradicated diseases, prevented famines, and done many other good things. But given the limited and noisy data available, its effects on growth in particular probably cannot be detected. For a more technical look at the aid debate, especially the relationship between aid and growth, check out this companion paper, Through the Looking-Glass, and What OLS Found There |
Research TopicsCGD Experts |