Passing The Buck: The Economics Of Localizing International Assistance

Author(s)
Venton, C.C., Warria, C.K., Cullen, B., et al.
Publication language
English
Pages
38pp
Date published
01 Nov 2022
Type
Research, reports and studies
Keywords
Local capacity, Development & humanitarian aid, Funding and donors

A study by the Share Trust and the Warande Advisory Centre estimates the economic implications of shifting 25% of Official Development Assistance (ODA) - aligned with Grand Bargain and USAID commitments - from international to local intermediary structures.

The analysis estimates that local intermediaries could deliver programming that is 32% more cost efficient than international intermediaries, by stripping out inflated international overhead and salary costs. Applied to the ODA funding flows allocated to UN/INGOs in 2018 ($54bn), this would equate to US$4.3bn annually. The shift in funding is modeled using equitable rates, rather than business-as-usual rates which currently impede local actors from meeting the needs of their communities, resulting in an additional redeployment of $680m per year in salary and overhead costs to local actors.

The report also outlines a possible transition fund to help with this 25% shift over the course of 8 years.