Aid Effectiveness: Human Rights as a Conditionality Measure
Abstract
The ’conditionality hypothesis’ proposed by Burnside and Dollar (2000) suggests that aid is only effectivein augmenting growth in the presence of a sound policy environment. This hypothesis was so influential that its
policy recommendation, to provide aid conditional upon recipient domestic policies, is currently the dominant
ODA allocation criterion. However non-economic dimensions of development (political and institutional) are
increasingly seen as fundamental. For this reason, this paper focuses on the relationship between repression
and corruption, and argues that the measurement and monitoring of human rights provision in particular, is
a useful tool in gauging the likely effectiveness of aid, based on the finding that countries with better human
rights performance experience positive growth, reflecting stronger governance.