Osondu Ogbuoji
1, Gavin Yamey
1*1 Center for Policy Impact in Global Health, Duke Global Health Institute, Durham, NC, USA.
Abstract
Over just a six-year period from 2005-2011, five aid effectiveness initiatives were launched: the Paris Declaration
on Aid Effectiveness (2005), the International Health Partnership plus (2007), the Accra Agenda for Action
(2008), the Busan Partnership for Effective Cooperation (2011), and the Global Partnership for Effective
Development Cooperation (GPEDC) (2011). More recently, in 2015, the Addis Ababa Action Agenda (AAAA)
was signed at the third international conference on financing for development and the Universal Health Coverage
(UHC) 2030 Global Compact was signed in 2017. Both documents espouse principles of aid effectiveness and
would most likely guide financing decisions in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG) era. This is therefore a
good moment to assess whether the aid effectiveness agenda made a difference in development and its relevance
in the SDG era