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Archive for the ‘MFAN News’ Category

From Paper to Product: Key Benchmarks for Effectively Implementing the President’s Development Policy

Tuesday, December 14th, 2010
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obama-signs-billWith his speech laying out a new U.S. approach to development at September’s UN Millennium Development Goals Summit, President Obama has outlined a future in which development serves as a core pillar of U.S. foreign policy, delivering greater results for people in poverty around the world and for U.S. taxpayers.  The President’s policy provides a long-overdue roadmap for more strategic, effective, accountable U.S. foreign assistance, and puts forward a mechanism for regularly refreshing our development approach through the establishment of a U.S. Global Development Strategy.

As with most ambitious policy pronouncements, the true test will come with implementation.  We are pleased to see explicit mention of the President’s commitment to “working closely with Congress to establish a shared vision of the way forward on global development,” including a desire to be given more flexibility for funding allocations in exchange for greater accountability to Congress.  It is now time to delineate a clear mechanism for doing so.  MFAN continues to believe that the only durable vehicle for this “grand bargain” is new legislation to replace the outmoded Foreign Assistance Act, now 50 years old and trapped in the Cold-War era.  This bargain should reflect a shared vision of the management of U.S. foreign assistance and a balance between granting the Executive Branch authorities that it needs to respond to a rapidly changing world and securing the rightful role of the Congress as a partner in setting national priorities and ensuring accountability to American taxpayers, with special emphasis on poverty reduction and economic growth, greater transparency and effectiveness, a strengthened development agency, and greater participation by civil society in developing countries.  Done purposefully, inclusively, and transparently, a modern, up-to-date legislative framework that reflects current global realities and challenges would reestablish confidence in foreign assistance as an indispensible aspect of the U.S. approach to global development and foreign policy at a time of constrained budgets.

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MFAN Principal Calls for Strengthening US Civilian Power

Thursday, December 2nd, 2010
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MFAN Principal Bill Anderson, Visiting Professor at Virginia Tech’s School of Public and International Affairs and career Foreign Service Officer at USAID, urges the Obama administration to move beyond resources to ensure that efforts to strengthen USAID, the State Department, and other foreign assistance programs are not lost in the new political and economic environment. In an op-ed for The Hill, Anderson writes that many of the current reforms underway, including those led by USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah, need bipartisan political support to be truly lasting. He also argues for civilian and military leaders to work closer together to keep the momentum for reform going. See key excerpts below:

“While the president has called for sufficient funding for foreign aid programs and diplomatic initiatives, focusing squarely on funding may minimize the daunting task of rebuilding lost human capital (such as engineers and agricultural specialists) and basic operating systems to plan, design, implement and evaluate U.S. foreign assistance. The wide range of reforms launched by USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah are an excellent first step, but they will require bipartisan political support to modernize, streamline and strengthen U.S. aid efforts. When effectively delivered, U.S. assistance will accelerate inclusive growth, reduce poverty, improve people’s lives, support stability and build democratic governance in fragile states. Those results support American security and contribute to our prosperity.”

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MFAN Co-Chairs: It’s Time to Finish the Job on Foreign Aid Reform

Tuesday, November 30th, 2010
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In a new op-ed for Devex, MFAN’s Co-Chairs David Beckmann and George Ingram make the case to keep up the momentum for foreign aid reform, underscoring that reform is a bipartisan issue with support from both sides of Pennsylvania Avenue. The full op-ed is posted below. To comment on the piece, please email Rolf Rosenkranz at rolf.rosenkranz@devex.com or Jenni Rothenberg at jrothenberg@modernizingforeignassistance.org. Devex members can also sign in to post a comment by clicking here.

George Ingram1David Beckmann1

It’s Time to Finish the Job on Foreign Aid Reform

By the Rev. David Beckmann and George Ingram

With the leak of a summary of Secretary of State Hillary Clinton’s Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review last week – and President Obama’s announcement of America’s first-ever government-wide global development policy in September – the Obama administration has moved another step closer to an overhaul of the U.S. approach to global development, something no administration has been able to accomplish in the last 50 years.

The fact that we have come this far shows there is a broad, bipartisan consensus in Washington on the need to make U.S. foreign aid more effective, particularly because it is so critical to ongoing national security efforts, but also because we need our development dollars to go further in a time of tight budgets. The administration and Congress now must work together to finish the job, and turn these bold proposals into lasting policies and structures.

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MFAN Principal J. Brian Atwood Elected Chair of OECD’s Development Assistance Committee

Monday, November 1st, 2010
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November 1, 2010 (WASHINGTON)This statement is delivered on behalf of the Modernizing Foreign Assistance Network (MFAN) by Co-Chairs David Beckmann and George Ingram:

We offer heartfelt congratulations to our fellow MFAN Principal and friend J. Brian Atwood for his unanimous election as Chair of the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) of the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD).

As the highest international body coordinating development policy across governments and civil society, the DAC will benefit greatly from the development expertise Brian gained as Administrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, Under Secretary of State for Management, President of the National Democratic Institute and Citizens International, and Dean of the Humphrey Institute of Public Affairs at the University of Minnesota.  Brian’s cross-sectoral leadership experience is exactly what is needed to bring public and private entities together to deliver better results for people mired in poverty, hunger, and disease.

The foreign assistance reform community is particularly pleased that Brian will bring his deep commitment to aid effectiveness to his new position.  He has been a leading advocate for more strategic, effective foreign assistance for decades.  His leadership as a founding principal of MFAN helped shape the network’s reform agenda, and his voice has helped drive that agenda forward, culminating in President Obama’s landmark new development policy that included several of MFAN’s priorities.

We thank Brian for his deep commitment to helping the world’s most vulnerable people realize a better future and for his leadership with MFAN.  We look forward to working with him in his new position.

For additional information, please contact Sam Hiersteiner at 202-295-0171 or shiersteiner@gpgdc.com.

Best of @ModernizeAid Tweets

Monday, September 27th, 2010
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Twitter logoLast week, the Twitterverse witnessed a spike in global development topics thanks to the UN Millennium Development Goals Summit and the Clinton Global Initiative; see #MDGs, #USMDG2010, and #CGI for more.  MFAN live tweeted important speeches—particularly President Obama’s speech outlining a new U.S. Global Development Policy—and worked to keep the conversation going, while highlighting reform-related messages.  See below for a collection of our best tweets and click here to follow us!

  • HFAC Chairman Berman applauds President Obama’s new development policy, calls foreign aid reform top priority for both:http://bit.ly/bSUHSf 3:58 PM Sep 23rd
  • Shah: “This is not just about defense & diplomacy: this is about taking development seriously as core part of our natl interests”#UNWeekDML
  • Shah: The world is changing in a pretty fundamental way & we need to think about where the opportunities are #MDGs #usaid Thu Sep 23 2010 11:18:42
  • “But the purpose of development, and what’s needed most right now, is creating the conditions where assistance is no longer needed.” #MDGs 1:59 PM Sep 22nd
  • “First, we’re changing how we define development…Development is helping nations to actually develop-moving from poverty to prosperity.”1:57 PM Sep 22nd
  • “Today, I am announcing our new U.S. Global Development Policy–the first of its kind by an American administration.” @BarackObama 1:56 PM Sep 22nd
  • Obama’s new development policy will create a U.S. Global Development Council representing the private sector & civil society #MDGSummit 12:31 PM Sep 22nd
  • President Obama’s new development policy set to call for U.S. Global Development Strategy #UNGA #MDGSummit #aidreformMDG 12:09 PM Sep 22nd