Transition Financing
Building a Better Response

While many determining forces in fragile and conflict-affected countries are outside donor control, decisions about which activities to finance and how to finance them influence these countries’ path out of conflict. This is because financing is about much more than the flow of resources: it affects behaviour, aid architecture, power and influence, priorities, and capacity development. And because it signals approval or disapproval, there is no neutral choice: a financing decision has consequences that go far beyond the timescale and scope of the funded activity.
This report will help OECD DAC members and partners to map out more effective, rapid and flexible transition financing. This includes improving current policies and practices in financial flows, implementing procedural and cultural changes in donor administrations, and maximising use of the instruments available for in-country transition financing. The report also addresses improving the operational effectiveness of pooled funding instruments, clarifying the link between funding instruments and national ownership, and adopting a new approach to identify and prioritise specific transition needs.
Also available in: French
- Click to access:
-
Click to download PDF - 3.26MBPDF
-
Click to Read online and shareREAD
Donor policies and procedures
The analysis presented in this chapter is based on a mapping of donor policies, procedures and operational set-ups for financial allocations to conflict-affected situations, as well as interviews with key informants among DAC member states and observers. The aim is to (i) clarify how policies, structures and decisionmaking procedures impede or enable donors’ ability to ensure rapid and flexible financing for transition and (ii) analyse various funding instruments and modalities for transition financing. This chapter outlines key findings and emerging good practice around decentralised decision-making, joint responsibility and whole-ofgovernment approaches to transition challenges, as well as pooling of resources for joint purposes.
Also available in: French
- Click to access:
-
Click to download PDF - 277.03KBPDF
-
Click to Read online and shareREAD