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Development Assistance Committee

Acting under the auspices of the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD), the Development Assistance Committee (DAC) collects and analyzes development data and provides a forum where the world's major bilateral aid donors meet to discuss, review, and coordinate aid policy with the objective of expanding the volume and effectiveness of official resource transfers to developing nations. The DAC does not disburse aid but seeks to harmonize and encourage the development assistance policies of its members.

Originally conceived in January 1960 as the Development Assistance Group, the organization was reconstituted as the DAC following the creation of the OECD in 1961. As of 2004, membership of the DAC comprises twenty-two member states (Australia, Austria, Belgium, Canada, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Ireland, Italy, Japan, Luxembourg, the Netherlands, New Zealand, Norway, Portugal, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, United Kingdom, United States) and the European Commission. The World Bank, International Monetary Fund (IMF), and United Nations Development Program (UNDP) hold observer status. Thus, although all DAC members belong to the OECD, not all OECD members belong to DAC.

The DAC's main achievement has been the evolution of codes of best practice that member countries are expected to observe in the framing and implementing of official development policy. Adherence to these guidelines is monitored through triennial peer reviews of donor countries' performance. These reviews examine, inter alia, the volume of aid, the general configuration and trajectory of national development policies, and the organizational coherence of national development strategies; they also make recommendations for improvement. Most of the DAC's work is undertaken by committees and working groups composed of officials from national capitals. The DAC also relies on the support of the OECD's Development Cooperation Directorate (DCD). This directorate, consisting of approximately forty officials, is split into four divisions: The Review and Evaluation Division, which supervises the process of peer review and provides ongoing monitoring of the aid programs of DAC members; the Policy Coherence Division, which examines the differing dimensions of poverty and their relationship; the Policy Coordination Division, which evaluates aid effectiveness and the connections between different policy areas; and the Statistics and Monitoring Division, which is responsible for collating and disseminating data on official development assistance.

The DAC has been criticized because it does not provide an official voice for developing countries and the persistent failure of most of its members to meet the target, initially set by United Nations Conference on Trade and Development (UNCTAD) in 1968, of allocating 0.7 percent of their GDP for official development assistance. Moreover, the role of the DAC is increasingly compromised by competition from other multilateral institutions and the growing significance of private capital flows to developing nations.

RichardWoodward

Further Readings and References

Fuhrer, H. (1996). The story of official development assistance: A history of the Development Assistance Committee and the Development Co-operation Directorate in dates, names and figures. Paris: OECD.
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development. (2000). Development Assistance Committee in dates. Paris: Author.
Organisation for Economic Co-operation and

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