Development Aid, Drought, and Coping Capacity
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
Rustad, Siri Aas; Elisabeth Lio Rosvold & Halvard Buhaug (2020) Development Aid, Drought, and Coping Capacity, Journal of Development Studies 56(8): 1578–1593.
Climate
change is a major threat to sustained economic growth and wellbeing in the
Global South. To what extent does official development assistance (ODA) strengthen
recipient communities’ capacity to cope with climatic extremes? Here, we
investigate whether inflow of development aid mitigates adverse health impacts
of subsequent drought among children under 5 years of age, drawing on survey
data of nearly 140,000 respondents across 16 countries in Sub-Saharan Africa in
combination with georeferenced data on World Bank-sponsored ODA projects and historical
weather statistics. A coarsened exact matching analysis reveals little benefit
of development aid on child nutritional status under normal meteorological
conditions. However, among children exposed to drought, prior aid allocation is
associated with significantly reduced weight loss. While the merit of ODA in
facilitating long-term growth remains debated, this study finds consistent
indication that multilateral development aid improves recipient communities’
capacity to cope with future drought.
Read the article here (Open Access)