Case Study
Making Poverty Reduction Work: OECD'S Role in Development Partnership
OECD's contribution to the international effort to achieve the MDGs
56 pages
This report highlights the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development's (OECD) contributions to achieving the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).
Contributing to global development is a key objective of the OECD, as an intergovernmental agency as well as through its collective membership. The OECD brings to the table:
- Full range of policy experience and its special brand of capacity building;
- Over 90 percent of the worlds official development assistance (ODA);
- 80 percent of the worlds foreign direct investment (FDI) flows, of which over a third goes to developing countries;
- Analysis and ways to join government policies to support development;
- Policy dialogue with partners in a non-negotiating context;
- Information to shape and monitor public opinion.
The report states that OECDs brand of development partnership, with its network of policy practitioners, non-negotiating discussion fora, practical tools and soft law instruments, can be effective in achieving the MDGs. The OECD contributes by:
- Ensuring fundamental conditions for economic growth;
- Improving policy implementation and policy synergies in member countries;
- Helping countries to mobilize resources to achieve the MDGs;
- Strengthening capacity in partner countries.
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