Focus on Results: MCC’s Model in Practice

Type Journal Article - MCC Monitor
Title Focus on Results: MCC’s Model in Practice
Author(s)
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2015
URL https://www.cgdev.org/sites/default/files/CGD-MCC-Monitor-MCC-10-Focus-Results.pdf
Abstract
When MCC was founded, there was widespread skepticism about the effectiveness of foreign
assistance. Many observers, both external and internal to development institutions, agreed that
too much aid was being spent on poor projects in service of poorly defined objectives with
correspondingly little understanding of what these funds were achieving. As a result, between 2002
and 2004, when MCC was being created, there was bipartisan support for the new agency to focus on
achieving measurable results.
In practice, the broad idea of measurable results fairly quickly became operationalized by MCC as
raising local incomes. The MCC model sought to enhance the impact of foreign assistance projects
by focusing on this single, measurable objective—poverty reduction through economic growth.
While this goal could be achieved through many kinds of activities, MCC committed early on to
funding only those that would achieve this objective in a cost-effective way. That is, investments
should be expected to raise local incomes by more than the total cost of the program.
Overall, MCC’s approach to results is designed to increase the effectiveness, transparency, and
accountability of how foreign assistance is delivered, such that more programs would succeed.
Equally important, for those programs that fall short of expectations, better understanding and
documentation of why they deviated from expected results would help improve future investments.
This paper looks at how well MCC has actually deployed each of its main approaches to results.
Based on our review, we have concluded that MCC’s Framework for Results is an important feature
that should be preserved and is worthy of emulation by others. Indeed, during its second decade
and beyond, MCC should strengthen its adherence to the results-focused policies and practices that
make it such a distinctive donor.

Related studies

»