Author(s)
Rouis, MustaphaKeywords
DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCEDISBURSEMENTS
DISBURSEMENT
OVERSEAS ASSISTANCE
INTERNATIONAL AID
RESULTS
PLEDGES
BILATERAL AID
INCOME
HIPC
OVERSEAS DEVELOPMENT ASSISTANCE
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
DEVELOPMENT FINANCE
BILATERAL DONORS
AID FINANCING
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT FINANCE
FOOD AID
LEVEL OF COMMITMENT
OIL PRICES
MONETARY FUND
ADJUSTMENT
HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE
FINANCIAL INSTITUTIONS
FINANCIAL INSTITUTION
INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT
AID FLOWS
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
INVESTMENT PROJECTS
FINANCIAL CRISIS
DEVELOPMENT FINANCE INSTITUTIONS
ECONOMIC GROWTH
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
INSTITUTIONAL FRAMEWORK
NONGOVERNMENTAL ORGANIZATIONS
ECONOMIC CRISIS
AID COORDINATION
COMMODITY
REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT
CURRENT ACCOUNT BALANCES
AID AGENCIES
DEVELOPMENT BANK
IMPORTS
RESULT
AID
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16170Abstract
The World Bank's 2010 study, Arab
 Development Assistance: four decades of cooperation, and the
 subsequent note, Arab donors respond favorably to the global
 financial crisis (Rouis 2011), showed that the three Gulf
 countries - Kuwait, Saudi Arabia, and the United Arab
 Emirates (UAE) have provided generous aid financing over the
 years. This paper, which extends the analysis to 2010 for
 Arab overseas development assistance (ODA) and to 2011 for
 the assistance provided by the Arab regional financial
 institutions, confirms that this generosity continues in the
 wake of the global economic crisis and the events of the
 Arab Spring movement. The paper shows that Arab assistance
 has been responsive in addressing critical development and
 humanitarian needs in developing countries. There are
 preliminary indications that Arab donors and financial
 institutions have made some adjustments in response to the
 needs of the Arab countries going through the unprecedented
 political transition sparked by the Arab Spring. Arab donor
 countries and financial institutions have responded
 favorably and promptly during the global economic and
 financial crisis. Their increased assistance to countries
 affected by the Arab Spring has yet to materialize beyond
 the stage of pledges and commitments.Date
2013-10-16Type
Publications & ResearchIdentifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/16170http://hdl.handle.net/10986/16170
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 IGOCollections
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