Publication
Jan 2014
This brief explains why results-based payment systems in foreign aid are likely to be less vulnerable to corruption than traditional input-tracking approaches. The authors argue that by paying recipients of foreign aid for attaining agreed-upon results, it is possible to make programs achieve more and limit the impact of corruption on development.
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English (PDF, 4 pages, 128 KB) |
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Author | Charles Kenny, William Savedoff |
Series | CGD Briefs |
Publisher | Center for Global Development (CGD) |
Copyright | © 2014 Center for Global Development (CGD) This work is made available under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 3.0 license. |