Independent review of the value added of the Central Emergency Response Fund (CERF) in Bolivia

Author(s)
Taylor, G.
Publication language
English
Pages
29pp
Date published
15 Jul 2011
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Development & humanitarian aid, Funding and donors
Countries
Bolivia

The CERF has become a significant resource for natural disaster response and
has been called upon frequently since its inception in 2006. The CERF was the
largest humanitarian donor to Bolivia in 2010 and is the second largest to date in
2011. Although relations between humanitarian actors in the government, UN
and INGOs are relatively open, the broader political context and the nature of
funding flows mean that, in the event of a natural disaster, there is no single, jointly
constructed response plan to which the CERF contributes. By extension, the CERF
is not highly relevant to INGOs, given their access to alternative humanitarian
funds. For UN Agencies and government, however, (‘technical’ ministries and sub
national government in particular) it is recognised as highly important source of
funding. The CERF is perceived to fill a number of gaps and there is anecdotal
evidence to suggest that it was used for a range of important interventions for
flood-affected populations in 2010, whether or not these interventions were the
most time critical.