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Multilateral Aid 2010

image of Multilateral Aid 2010

More than 200 multilateral donors receive or serve as a channel for 40% of all aid. To help meet the challenge of ensuring effective and co-ordinated multilateral aid efforts, Multilateral Aid 2010 covers trends in and total use (core and non-core) of the multilateral system, with a special focus on trust funds from the United Nations Development Program (UNDP) and the World Bank. It explores development perspectives of the climate change funding architecture and provides an overview of the response of multilaterals to the financial and economic crisis.

While the OECD’s annual Development Co-operation Report serves as a key reference for statistics and analysis on the latest trends in international aid, the Multilateral Aid report – as the name implies – takes a specific look at trends in multilateral aid only.

English Also available in: French

Non-core funding of UNDP and the World Bank

This chapter provides an overview of the role of non-core funding in the functioning of UNDP and the World Bank, primarily as it relates to trust funds. The World Bank Group is the largest single recipient of non-core funding (USD 2.7 billion in 2008) and UNDP is the second largest UN agency recipient (USD 1.8 billion in 2008). Non-core funding – often in the form of multi-donor trust funds – to UNDP and the World Bank accounts for 30% of total DAC non-core aid to the multilateral system and constitutes an important share of total resources entrusted to these agencies

English Also available in: French

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