Grading the QDDR with the Five ‘A’s

EDITOR’S NOTE: Though believing the release of the Quadrennial Diplomacy and Development Review’s findings will be anti-climactic, Todd Moss says he is still keen to see what the report contains. The vice president for corporate affairs and senior fellow at the Center for Global Development intends to judge QDDR on five A’s: answers, authority, autonomy, access and appointments.

After an 18-month process, the QDDR, laying out U.S. capabilities and the roles of the State Department and USAID, is due “soon.”  After so much anticipation and drama, I suspect the release will be an anti-climax. Nevertheless, I’m still keen to see what it says.  I’ll be judging the results based on a few broad questions: Does the QDDR move U.S. development policy toward the high bar set by Secretary Clinton’s rhetoric of “elevating development” within the so-called 3Ds?  Are the steps outlined likely to make USAID, as promised, the “world’s premier development agency”? How faithful is the QDDR to the strategy laid out by the PPD?  In particular, here is my report card, the Five “A”s:

Related CGD entry: 

Will the QDDR Recognize that Development and Diplomacy are Distinct Disciplines?

Re-published with permission by the Center for Global Development. Visit the original article.