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Vietnam: the Making of Recipient Ownership and Responses to Swedish and Japanese Aid

In: Aid Relationships in Asia

Author

Listed:
  • Le Thanh Forsberg

    (Lund University
    Stockholm School of Economics)

Abstract

Vietnam, although a one-party state, has become a favourite aid recipient for many multilateral and bilateral donors, making Vietnam today the world’s third largest aid recipient, after Iraq and Afghanistan, and the World Bank’s second largest borrower. Aside from its good performance in poverty reduction and economic growth, Vietnam is popular because it is perceived as an ‘effective’ user of aid. In fact, Vietnam is often identified as a ‘best practice’ example of government ownership of the development agenda and aid management (GRIPS 2002; UNDP 1996, WB 2002). Vietnam has been selected a pilot recipient country to implement the Paris Declaration on Aid Harmonisation and Effectiveness, and a survey among donors claims that 65% of donors are aligning their aid to the government’s strategies (Jacquemin and Bainbridge 2005, p.4). The UN Resident Coordinator in Vietnam, John Hendra, recently categorised Vietnam as ‘the world leader in aid effectiveness’ (Vietnam News on 29 December 2006).

Suggested Citation

  • Le Thanh Forsberg, 2008. "Vietnam: the Making of Recipient Ownership and Responses to Swedish and Japanese Aid," Palgrave Macmillan Books, in: Alf Morten Jerve & Yasutami Shimomura & Annette Skovsted Hansen (ed.), Aid Relationships in Asia, chapter 10, pages 191-208, Palgrave Macmillan.
  • Handle: RePEc:pal:palchp:978-0-230-38917-5_10
    DOI: 10.1057/9780230389175_10
    as

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