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In February 2003, leaders of the major multilateral
development banks and international and bilateral
organizations, and donor and recipient country representatives
gathered in Rome for the High-Level Forum on Harmonization
(Rome-HLF). They committed to take action to improve the
management and effectiveness of aid and to take stock of
concrete progress before meeting again in Paris, February
2005, for the Joint Progress Toward Enhanced Development and
Effectiveness: Harmonisation, Alignment and Results
(Paris-HLF).
The challenge for the multilateral and bilateral donors, as
well as partner countries, is to harmonize their operational
policies, procedures, and practices and to align their support
with country-owned poverty reduction strategies or other
development frameworks. The work involves group efforts to
identify those elements that all agree are good practices, and
then individual efforts by each institution or country to
align their policies and procedures as close to those good
practices as they can, with much more attention to enhancing
country systems for all development expenditures. This
practical reform agenda covers a broad range of activities:
country strategies, analytic work, technical assistance,
operations, and regional and global activities. Many
country-level harmonization activities are summarized in the
Country Implementation Tracking Tool.
Harmonization has the potential to not only reduce the
costs of aid, but to increase the benefits of aid, indeed to
increase the impact of all government expenditures. The
cumulative effect could change the way development business
gets done in the 21st century.
Paris
High-Level Forum (2005)
The Paris High-Level Forum was hosted by the French
Government on February 28 - March 2, 2005 and attended by
development officials and ministers from ninety one countries,
twenty six donor organizations, representatives of civil
society organizations and the private sector. In the
concluding statement - the Paris Declaration on Aid
Effectiveness, the Ministers as well as the Heads of
multilateral and bilateral development institutions committed
their countries and institutions to far-reaching and
monitorable actions to significantly increase aid
effectiveness. Special reference is made in the document to
the need for harmonization in emergency and complex situations
such as the tsunami disaster and fragile states.
The Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness is presented in
three sections, viz. the Statement of Resolve set out in
Section I, the Partnership Commitments stated in Section II
and twelve Indicators of Progress listed in Section III.
Before September 2005, the five preliminary targets to be
achieved by 2010, will be reviewed, and specific quantitative
targets for the remaining seven indicators will be adopted.
Two rounds of monitoring of these commitments are envisaged
before meeting in a developing country in 2008 to review
progress in implementing this Declaration.
Commitments from the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness
include:
- Developing countries will exercise effective leadership
over their development policies, strategies, and to
coordinate development actions;
- Donor countries will base their overall support on
receiving countries' national development strategies,
institutions, and procedures;
- Donor countries will work so that their actions are more
harmonized, transparent, and collectively effective;
- All countries will manage resources and improve
decision-making for results;
- Donor and developing countries pledge that they will be
mutually accountable for development
results.
Rome
High-Level Forum on Harmonization (2003)
In February 2003, leaders of the major multilateral
development banks and international and bilateral
organizations, and donor and recipient country representatives
gathered in Rome for the high-level forum on harmonization.
They committed to take action to improve the management and
effectiveness of aid, and to take stock of concrete progress,
before meeting again in early 2005.
The Forum's concluding statement, the Rome Declaration,
sets out an ambitious program of activities:
- Ensure that harmonization efforts are adapted to the
country context, and that donor assistance is aligned with
the development recipient's priorities.
- Expand country-led efforts to streamline donor
procedures and practices.
- Review and identify ways to adapt institutions' and
countries' policies, procedures, and practices to facilitate
harmonization.
- Implement the good practices principles and standards
formulated by the development community as the foundation
for harmonization.
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