This chapter scrutinizes the fragmentation of the OIC aid system. It is argued that this fragmentation is a result of the asymmetrical intergovernmental relationship between a small number of aid donors (notably the hydrocarbon-rich Gulf States) and a large and increasing pool of aid recipients. The chapter illustrates that this process is empowered by the asymmetrical setting of the OIC (there are very few donors with whom to compete), donors have “bilateralized” the multilateral by supporting their own “aid recipients”. This has progressively fragmented the OIC aid system. In parallel, because borrowers and aid recipients dominate the OIC arena numerically, their increasing demands have enhanced donor organization proliferation, to the detriment of a cohesive OIC aid system. The combination of these two trends explains why the OIC system is fragmented, structurally underfunded, and difficult to reform. These consequences constitute a challenge that the OIC must address going forward. © Author
Year
2019
Country
Switzerland
Language
English
Abstract
English
ISSN/ISBN
978-3319925608
No. of Pages
388
City
Cham
Edition
1
Select type of work
Name of the Publisher
CIS Program Old
Name of the Book
CIS publications
Yes
CIS Thesis
No
Chapter Pages
131-147
CIS Cluster
QF Thematic Areas
CIS Program