Have people answer two ways:
1) assume essentially no change in the type and quality of projects funded
2) assume some wise politicians make some realistic improvements in transparency, and accountability. The equivalent of No Child Left Behind for foreign aid.
Rather than argue over whether such a thing is possible I think that assuming the aid would be spent on whatever would do the most good would be the least convenient posisble world, and the one that gives us the opinion we’re after here. Together with the opinion on the realistic case this tells us both what we think of the concept of aid if it works and what we think of it in practice.
Have people answer two ways: 1) assume essentially no change in the type and quality of projects funded 2) assume some wise politicians make some realistic improvements in transparency, and accountability. The equivalent of No Child Left Behind for foreign aid.
Rather than argue over whether such a thing is possible I think that assuming the aid would be spent on whatever would do the most good would be the least convenient posisble world, and the one that gives us the opinion we’re after here. Together with the opinion on the realistic case this tells us both what we think of the concept of aid if it works and what we think of it in practice.
Why not just assume magical space fairies come down to earth and solve poverty? It’s a more realistic expectation.
“Why not just assume magical space fairies come down to earth and solve poverty? It’s a more realistic expectation.”
Right, like with the No Child Left Behind system, “still waiting for the magical space fairies to wisely make schools accountable since 2001.”