The Development Compact: A Theoretical Construct for South-South Cooperation

Abstract: India’s development cooperation efforts began soon after the country gained its independence in 1947. Indeed there are some incidences that date back to even pre-independence days. India is strong believer of the fact that developing countries should not be entirely dependent upon assistance from the developed world; they must pool their own resources and capabilities to help each other. This discussion paper examines the larger framework of Indian external assistance through the concept of ‘development compact’. The new development compact is between actors of the South, rather than the North-South exchange that characterised earlier arrangements; it is no longer about the imposition of conditionalities for recipient countries but more on the principles that govern SSC such as mutual gain, non-interference, collective growth opportunities and indeed an absence of conditionalities. The modern concept of a development compact provides for development assistance that works at five different levels, namely, trade and investment; technology; skills upgrade; LoCs and finally, grants. The engagement of emerging economies with other Southern countries has provided a major pull factor for wider engagement across these five elements, which emphasises the comprehensive support for economic development. These factors are discussed in this discussion paper to provide an analytical taxonomy with some illustrative evidence from Indian experience. 

Post Description

  • Publication year: 2016
  • Publication Type: Research Paper (Discussion Paper)
  • Form of Cooperation: Comprehensive (Lines of credit, grants and loans, and technical assistance)
  • Cooperation Context: Multilateral
  • Sector: Multi-sectoral
  • The Institution (Publication): Research and Information Systems for Developing Countries
  • Author (and co-authors): Sachin Chaturvedi
  • Keywords: South-South development cooperation; Development compact; Trade and investment; Development finance; Lines of credit (LOCs); ITEC Program
  • Link: RIS site link

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