Contracting for Development: The Role of For-Profit Contractors in U.S. Foreign Development Assistance
By (Author) Ruben Berrios
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
28th February 2000
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
International economics
International relations
338.9173
Hardback
184
Width 140mm, Height 216mm
369g
Development assistance, long seen as a giveaway to developing countries, is, according to Berros' assessment, actually a giveaway to large for-profit U.S. contractors. Berros shows that a small but influential number of contractors continue to be awarded most of the contracts, both in value and number, despite their average or substandard performance. Berros documents the commercial considerations that drive U.S. development assistance. The increasing delivery of development aid in the form of contracts has led contractors to increase their weight and influence on USAID's programs. As Berros contends, the reasons for giving aid often have little to do with helping other countries, because, instead, it ends up mainly helping U.S. firms. Little is known about contracting for development. The contracting process is often neither open nor competitive. Despite the talk of restructuring, USAID continues to award contracts that are unfavorable to the agency. Berros documents the practices of private sector contracting, how they compete for USAID contracts, how they fit into the stated aims and needs of the agency, and what their performance evaluations say upon completion of contracts. Berros also provides a sweeping review of U.S. development assistance policies, the trend toward privatization, the rhetoric about reinventing government, and the issue of past performance. A controversial assessment, this will be of interest to scholars, researchers, and policy makers involved with U.S. developmental strategies.
.,."a timely monograph that not only casts a much-needed critical eye on the growth of the contracting process within the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), but also uses theories of optimal contracting to reveal the properties of different types of contracts. Berrios has set a high standard for a topic that should be of interest to both policy makers and scholars."-Political Science Quarterly
...a timely monograph that not only casts a much-needed critical eye on the growth of the contracting process within the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), but also uses theories of optimal contracting to reveal the properties of different types of contracts. Berrios has set a high standard for a topic that should be of interest to both policy makers and scholars.-Political Science Quarterly
[F]oreign aid continues to be one of the least understood aspects of U.S. foreign affairs. Contracting Development: The Role of For-Profit Contractors in U.S. Foreign Development Assitance provides a better understanding of the complexities of the significant and growing consulting market in development and how these firms fo business iwth the U.S. government. As such, Berrios has provided the reader with an informed analysis of contracting for delivering foreign assistance.-Journal of Third World Studies
"Foreign aid continues to be one of the least understood aspects of U.S. foreign affairs. Contracting Development: The Role of For-Profit Contractors in U.S. Foreign Development Assitance provides a better understanding of the complexities of the significant and growing consulting market in development and how these firms fo business iwth the U.S. government. As such, Berrios has provided the reader with an informed analysis of contracting for delivering foreign assistance."-Journal of Third World Studies
..."a timely monograph that not only casts a much-needed critical eye on the growth of the contracting process within the United States Agency for International Development (USAID), but also uses theories of optimal contracting to reveal the properties of different types of contracts. Berrios has set a high standard for a topic that should be of interest to both policy makers and scholars."-Political Science Quarterly
"[F]oreign aid continues to be one of the least understood aspects of U.S. foreign affairs. Contracting Development: The Role of For-Profit Contractors in U.S. Foreign Development Assitance provides a better understanding of the complexities of the significant and growing consulting market in development and how these firms fo business iwth the U.S. government. As such, Berrios has provided the reader with an informed analysis of contracting for delivering foreign assistance."-Journal of Third World Studies
RUBN BERROS has been working as a researcher and educator in development for nearly two decades. He has published numerous journal articles and book chapters on development issues. He currently teaches economics at the Duquesne University School of Business