As the U.S. Agency for International Development pivots to the mantra of “100 percent sustainability,” early this week, a Devex feature analysis found that the world’s biggest bilateral donor agency seems off track on its target to channel 30 percent of mission program funding to local organizations by fiscal 2015. That target, which agency officials now refer to as “aspirational,” was a key goal post of then-USAID Administrator Rajiv Shah’s USAID Forward reform drive.
USAID’s just released data reveals that the agency directed 16.9 percent of mission program funding to local organizations in fiscal 2014, well below its 30 percent local spending target the following year. USAID’s local spending share in fiscal 2014 fell slightly from 17.9 percent in fiscal 2013 — the first time that that the agency has recorded a drop in its local spending share since USAID began reporting that figure.
While the latest data suggests that USAID’s 30 percent local spending target may be out of reach at least in fiscal 2015, deeper analysis of the country-level data reveals significant variation in how the agency’s missions worldwide performed on the 30 percent target. Here are three key trends we uncovered over the course of our analysis.