Blending Top-Down Federalism with Bottom-Up Engagement to Reduce Inequality in Ethiopia
Keywords
SERVICE QUALITYMODERN CONTRACEPTIVE USE
POLICY RESEARCH WORKING PAPER
RURAL AREAS
SOCIAL IMPACT
WAR
HOUSEHOLD LEVEL
POLITICAL INSTABILITY
CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS
COLLUSION
CITIZENS
POLITICAL LEADERSHIP
DEMOCRACIES
SANITATION
FEDERAL GOVERNMENT
RULING PARTY
INTEGRITY
POLITICAL PARTY
CORRUPTION
POLITICAL LEADERS
SOCIOECONOMIC FACTORS
GENDER PARITY INDEX
PUBLIC SERVICE
SCHOOL ATTENDANCE
DEMOCRACY
POLITICS
SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT
RURAL POPULATION
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
PRIMARY EDUCATION
ETHNIC GROUPS
MODERN CONTRACEPTIVE METHODS
SKILLED BIRTH ATTENDANCE
ORGANIZATION
PUBLIC HEALTH
HEALTH CARE SERVICES
MINISTRY OF HEALTH
NATURAL RESOURCE
MORTALITY
WARS
POLICY RESEARCH
SKILLED BIRTH ATTENDANTS
BASIC SERVICES
STATE UNIVERSITY
SERVICE DELIVERY
PATRONAGE
URBAN AREAS
CIVIL SERVANTS
SERVICE PROVIDERS
MOTHER TONGUES
SOCIETAL GOALS
KNOWLEDGE
MOTHER
ANTI-CORRUPTION
POLICY DISCUSSIONS
CONTRACEPTION
ACCOUNTABILITY
GRASS-ROOTS
ANTENATAL CARE
RURAL WELFARE
VIOLENCE
STRATEGIES
PUBLIC POLICY
SOCIAL SECTOR
MATERNAL HEALTH
NATIONAL LEVEL
INFORMATION SYSTEM
PUBLIC SERVICES
WOMEN
ECONOMIC GROWTH
SKILLED HEALTH PERSONNEL
FEDERAL GOVERNMENTS
CHILD MORTALITY
LAW
INITIATIVES
DISCRETION
LAWS
MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS
DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES
INVESTMENT IN EDUCATION
MILITARY REGIME
CHRONIC POVERTY
SCHOOL AGE
PROGRESS
GRAFT
GOVERNANCE
SERVICES
TELEVISION
TRANSPARENCY
LABOR MARKET
PLACE OF RESIDENCE
CONTRACEPTIVE USE
HUMAN CAPITAL
MARRIED WOMEN
STRATEGY
DEVELOPMENT POLICY
OFFICIAL POLICY
BANK
POLICIES
PRIMARY SCHOOL AGE
COMPLAINTS
MATERNAL HEALTH SERVICES
PRACTITIONERS
PUBLIC HEALTH SERVICES
REPRESSION
NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
NUMBER OF CHILDREN
INCOME INEQUALITY
MORTALITY RATE
SOCIAL COHESION
SKILLED ATTENDANTS
HUMAN RIGHTS
POLITICIANS
GOVERNMENT
POPULATION
GENDER PARITY
PUBLIC OFFICIALS
RESPECT
SOCIAL DEVELOPMENT
BASIC SERVICE
COLLAPSE
CITIZEN
BASIC INFRASTRUCTURE
SECONDARY ENROLMENT
CONTRACEPTIVE ACCEPTANCE
RURAL COMMUNITIES
MODERN CONTRACEPTION
LOCAL COMMUNITIES
POLICY MAKERS
ETHICS
POLITICAL PARTIES
HUMAN WELFARE
HOUSEHOLD SURVEYS
STUDENTS
HUMAN DEVELOPMENT
SERVICE
ORGANIZATIONS
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
CULTURAL CHANGE
RECIPIENT COUNTRIES
GOVERNMENTS
HEALTH CARE
DEVELOPMENT GOALS
SERVICE PROVISION
LEADERSHIP
HEALTH SERVICES
RADIO
NATIONAL GOVERNMENT
POLICY
MODERNIZATION
CITIZENSHIP
PRIMARY SCHOOL
GRASS- ROOTS
HUMAN SETTLEMENTS
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23475Abstract
Donors increasingly fund interventions to counteract inequality in developing countries, where they fear it can foment instability and undermine nation-building efforts. To succeed, aid relies on the principle of upward accountability to donors. But federalism shifts the accountability of subnational officials downward to regional and local voters. What happens when aid agencies fund anti-inequality programs in federal countries? Does federalism undermine aid? Does aid undermine federalism? Or can the political and fiscal relations that define a federal system resolve the contradiction internally? This study explores this paradox via the Promotion of Basic Services program in Ethiopia, the largest donor-financed investment program in the world. Using an original panel database comprising the universe of Ethiopian woredas (districts), the study finds that horizontal (geographic) inequality decreased substantially. Donor-financed block grants to woredas increased the availability of primary education and health care services in the bottom 20 percent of woredas. Weaker evidence from household surveys suggests that vertical inequality across wealth groups (within woredas) also declined, implying that individuals from the poorest households benefit disproportionately from increasing access to and utilization of such services. The evidence suggests that by combining strong upward accountability over public investment with extensive citizen engagement on local issues, Ethiopia’s federal system resolves the instrumental dissonance posed by aid-funded programs to combat inequality in a federation.Date
2015-12Type
Publications & ResearchIdentifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/23475http://hdl.handle.net/10986/23475
Copyright/License
CC BY 3.0 IGORelated items
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