The Indian Constitution envisions a Welfare State under the DPSP. Donor agencies play a vital role in financing and technical support for these welfare measures.
Increasing Dependence Reduces Community Participation
Top-Down Project Design, with limited grassroots consultation.
Erosion of Local Ownership – Beneficiary communities become recipients, not stakeholders
Conditionalities restrict local policy space. Eg- IMF’s 1991 Structural Adjustment Programme reduced social sector expenditure
Dependency Syndrome – Over-reliance on external funding discourages domestic resource mobilization and self-reliance. (A.G.Frank – “development of underdevelopment.”)
Marginalization of Traditional Knowledge – Donor-driven modern approaches often ignore indigenous practices and local innovation.
Transparency and Accountability Gaps – lack of clear monitoring frameworks or open reporting mechanisms limits public scrutiny and impact evaluation.
Foreign Influence – Eg-Concerns were raised about World Vision India allegedly promoting religious conversion using foreign funds.
Positive Role of Donor Agencies in Development
Resource Mobilization – World Bank funding for the National Rural Health Mission (NRHM)
Capacity Building – – DFID’s Bihar Rural Livelihood Project (JEEViKA) strengthened the capacity of SHGs and Panchayats.
Donor agencies often introduce bottom-up approaches and emphasize stakeholder consultation.
Catalyzing Policy Reforms – Eg- IMF’s fiscal frameworks encouraged better macroeconomic management post-1991 reforms.
Promotion of Human Development – – UNICEF and UNFPA have supported India’s Reproductive and Child Health Programme (RCH-II) and Poshan Abhiyaan.
Strengthening Civil Society – – UNDP’s Disha Project (with IKEA Foundation) enhanced employability of 1 million rural women across 10 states.
Donor agencies are “integral cogs in the wheel of good governance”. A balanced partnership with government is crucial make development inclusive, sustainable and rapid..