One
facet of the recent big pledging conferences, like the one of yesterday in London,
convened to mobilise resources for Syrian refugees, is that most of promises never
materialise. Countries make commitments, and in some cases, very substantial
ones. But the disbursements, in many cases, are well below the pledges. And in
other cases, countries do announce contributions that never materialise.
One
of the reasons is that the monies that are declared during the conferences have
never been discussed with the country´s finance minister. They come out of the
foreign minister´s mouth. He or she might be a very influential and strong
politician. But in the end, funds are the prerogative of finance ministers.
I
have seen many disappointments after these types of meetings. One gets the
impression that the call was very successful only to realise later on that most
of funds never materialise. That creates frustration. It also gives room for
very serious misunderstandings between the authorities from the receiving
countries and the intended beneficiaries. The latter do not see the support
promised and then get to believe that the money was misappropriate by the
administering authorities.
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