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Aid in Transition - EU Development Cooperation with Russia and Eurasia (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2015)
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Aid in Transition - EU Development Cooperation with Russia and Eurasia (Paperback, Softcover reprint of the original 1st ed. 2015)
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This book is the one of the first to address aid effectiveness as a
political and comparative economics question. Since the collapse of
the Soviet Union and the transition of its republics to market
structures and more representative forms of government, the
European Commission has recognized the necessity of a closer
economic cooperation with Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan, the three
largest economies of the former Soviet Union. This book suggests
that the foreign aid of the European Union provided a set of reform
incentives to post-Soviet planners. It created the grounds for the
institutional and social transformation of the bureaucracy at both
central and regional levels by integrating it into the aid
allocation process. In Russia, Ukraine and Kazakhstan, the observed
subordination of NGOs to the developmental priorities of the
bureaucracy occurred at the expense of diversity and political
openness. Nevertheless, this reality led to the emergence of
transnational sovereignty partnerships that reduced poverty for the
general population and motivated both bureaucrats and entrepreneurs
to cooperate. Empirical models alone are not sufficient to
delineate all the aspects of principal-agent relationships in
post-Soviet bureaucracies. This is why formal modeling and analysis
of qualitative data are extremely useful. Evaluation reports
indicate the problems and challenges faced by aid bureaucrats and
suggest that the weakly institutionalized environments of Ukraine
and Central Asia/Kazakhstan are less conducive to aid effectiveness
than the heavily bureaucratized environment of Russia. The proposed
incentives system for the allocation of foreign aid links EU
foreign policy with bureaucratic decision-making and reflects the
choice sets of the donor and the recipient. Multilevel definitions
of aid effectiveness are provided in the course of the book
chapters.
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