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Aid and Sanctions
Kenneth Kletzer, University of California Santa Cruz
ABSTRACT: Foreign aid donors and recipient governments often have conflicting objectives. Foreign
donors may attempt to influence the policies of recipient governments by offering aid or
threatening to suspend aid to sovereign states. This paper considers the credibility of such
inducements and the conditioning of aid flows on policy behavior by national governments in the
presence of opposing objectives. Aid can be conditioned on past policy actions of the recipient
and used to influence the distribution of government resources in a simple repeated agency model.
In equilibrium, aid flows are backloaded and reward recipient governments for donor-preferred
policy actions. The model is extended to a stochastic setting to allow for asymmetric information
between donors and recipients regarding government resources and accumulation of private of
foreign assets. This allows for unobserved capital flight implicitly financed by foreign aid inflows
by constituents favored by the government. Conditional aid is still feasible and can be enforced
by aid suspensions in the presence of potential capital flight.
SUGGESTED CITATION: Kenneth Kletzer,
"Aid and Sanctions"
(April 1, 2005).
Department of Economics, UCSC.
Paper 603.
http://repositories.cdlib.org/ucscecon/603
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