Quest for development: An examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in Nepal

This paper examines the national planning process and the effectiveness of foreign aid for the development of Nepal from 1956 to 2019 using archived planning documents, international publications, and facts gleaned from conversations with planning officials. The existence of the National Planning Co...

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Main Authors: Mohan B. Dangi, Erica Schoenberger, John J. Boland, Ram P. Chaudhary
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-01-01
Series:Sustainable Futures
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666188821000101
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spelling doaj-6db6f730ef614264a6aa459aec021e2f2021-05-14T04:20:02ZengElsevierSustainable Futures2666-18882021-01-013100051Quest for development: An examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in NepalMohan B. Dangi0Erica Schoenberger1John J. Boland2Ram P. Chaudhary3Department of Geography and City & Regional Planning, California State University, Fresno, 2555 E. San Ramon Avenue, M/S SB69, Fresno, CA 93740, USA; Corresponding author.Department of Environmental Health and Engineering, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USADepartment of Environmental Health and Engineering, The Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, USAResearch Centre for Applied Science and Technology, Tribhuvan University, Kirtipur, NepalThis paper examines the national planning process and the effectiveness of foreign aid for the development of Nepal from 1956 to 2019 using archived planning documents, international publications, and facts gleaned from conversations with planning officials. The existence of the National Planning Commission predates the establishment of the Ministry of Finance in Nepal. However, the lack of coordination between the two agencies has turned the former into a weak organization by preventing it from executing its budget. In each of the national plans, there is recognition of failures, underachievement, and low capacity in administering foreign aid-funded projects. The stated targets of the plans are rarely met while areas without strategic objectives sometimes surpass expectations. Plans have been neither visionary nor realistic and are not implemented effectively. While 90% of peasants were engaged in agriculture contributing 59% of the national economy, they did not receive significant attention for a long time. Foreign aid has increased greatly in Nepal since the 1950s and the country continues to be very dependent on it. But there have been questions about donors’ tardiness in releasing committed funds as well as the country's ability to execute aid-funded projects. There is a lack of capacity and accountability in both the government and the donors. Consequently, aid cannot fulfill its economic mission and meet the conditions tied to its continuance until the country can be administratively strong enough to conduct development projects alone. Recommendations are offered for changes and innovations within the structure of Nepal's government which would modify the role of the National Planning Commission, rationalize the planning process, harness the technical capability of the country, and move responsibility for plan implementation to the ministries most able to perform effectively.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666188821000101National planningNational Planning CommissionFive-year or three-year plansEffectiveness of foreign aidDevelopment in NepalBikas [development]
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohan B. Dangi
Erica Schoenberger
John J. Boland
Ram P. Chaudhary
spellingShingle Mohan B. Dangi
Erica Schoenberger
John J. Boland
Ram P. Chaudhary
Quest for development: An examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in Nepal
Sustainable Futures
National planning
National Planning Commission
Five-year or three-year plans
Effectiveness of foreign aid
Development in Nepal
Bikas [development]
author_facet Mohan B. Dangi
Erica Schoenberger
John J. Boland
Ram P. Chaudhary
author_sort Mohan B. Dangi
title Quest for development: An examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in Nepal
title_short Quest for development: An examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in Nepal
title_full Quest for development: An examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in Nepal
title_fullStr Quest for development: An examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in Nepal
title_full_unstemmed Quest for development: An examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in Nepal
title_sort quest for development: an examination of more than a half-century of national planning and foreign aid practice in nepal
publisher Elsevier
series Sustainable Futures
issn 2666-1888
publishDate 2021-01-01
description This paper examines the national planning process and the effectiveness of foreign aid for the development of Nepal from 1956 to 2019 using archived planning documents, international publications, and facts gleaned from conversations with planning officials. The existence of the National Planning Commission predates the establishment of the Ministry of Finance in Nepal. However, the lack of coordination between the two agencies has turned the former into a weak organization by preventing it from executing its budget. In each of the national plans, there is recognition of failures, underachievement, and low capacity in administering foreign aid-funded projects. The stated targets of the plans are rarely met while areas without strategic objectives sometimes surpass expectations. Plans have been neither visionary nor realistic and are not implemented effectively. While 90% of peasants were engaged in agriculture contributing 59% of the national economy, they did not receive significant attention for a long time. Foreign aid has increased greatly in Nepal since the 1950s and the country continues to be very dependent on it. But there have been questions about donors’ tardiness in releasing committed funds as well as the country's ability to execute aid-funded projects. There is a lack of capacity and accountability in both the government and the donors. Consequently, aid cannot fulfill its economic mission and meet the conditions tied to its continuance until the country can be administratively strong enough to conduct development projects alone. Recommendations are offered for changes and innovations within the structure of Nepal's government which would modify the role of the National Planning Commission, rationalize the planning process, harness the technical capability of the country, and move responsibility for plan implementation to the ministries most able to perform effectively.
topic National planning
National Planning Commission
Five-year or three-year plans
Effectiveness of foreign aid
Development in Nepal
Bikas [development]
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2666188821000101
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