Denmark’s new aid transparency package: 5 key features

Danida's website. Photo by: Devex

To demonstrate its committment to aid transparency, Denmark is going beyond business as usual with a newly unveiled set of initiatives that could serve as a model to other donors.

On Tuesday, Jan. 29, the Danish government unveiled what it calls a transparency package for its aid agency, Danida. It makes good on promises made in the aid reform legislation passed in 2011 that entered into force Jan. 1, 2013.

“Citizens in the poorest countries in the world and Danish citizens have the right to insight into the work of Danida,” said Minister for Development Cooperation Christian Friis Bach in a statement.

The transparency package is expected to help rein in fraud related to its projects in beneficiary countries such as Afghanistan, which this year will become Denmark’s largest recipient of annual aid, with 530 million Danish kroner ($95.5 million) each year from 2013 to 2017. In a press release, Friis Bach stressed that Denmark will hold Afghanistan to its promise to achieve tangible progress in areas such as the fight against corruption.

“There will be consequences for our development assistance if the Afghans do not deliver on their commitments,” the minister said.

As part of Denmark’s push for more aid transparency, a section on the foreign affairs ministry’s website allows visitors to:

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