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Document Abstract
Published: 1999

The Shift from Development to Emergency Assistance and its Impact on Poverty and Nutrition

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Increasing amounts of bilateral and multilateral aid are being used to respond to macroeconomic shocks, political instability and natural disasters. This paper sets out a conceptual framework for considering the consequences of this trend. There are three levels of analysis: provision; coverage; and assessment of impact. In developing this framework, the paper argues that differences in their mode of delivery and time scale of their operation point to a prima facie case for believing that this shift is likely to be inimical to long term poverty reduction. Second, responses to shocks are not always pro-poor. Third, the assessment of impact is dependent on the specific objectives that have been set and the magnitudes of the linkages between an intervention and outcomes of interest. [author]

Paper prepared for the IDB Conference on Social Protection and Poverty, on February 4 and 5, 1999

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Authors

J. Hoddinott

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