Effective aid achieves global health goals. Ineffective aid achieves partial and/or incomplete or unsustainable results that create dependency on the donor aid, waste resources, and cost lives. Effective aid ensures that the country can sustain the improvements and becomes independent of that aid after the project ends. In this book, you will learn not only to tolerate poor performance but ensure you, as a global health professional deliver effective performance.
CITATION STYLE
Beracochea, E. (2015). Global health and aid effectiveness: The MDGs and the paris declaration. In Improving Aid Effectiveness in Global Health (pp. 3–18). Springer New York. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-4939-2721-0_1
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