http://chineseinput.net/에서 pinyin(병음)방식으로 중국어를 변환할 수 있습니다.
변환된 중국어를 복사하여 사용하시면 됩니다.
Dennis D. Trinidad 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2007 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.31 No.2
The article examines the recent changes in Japan’s official development assistance (ODA) in Southeast Asia in response to domestic and international challenges after the cold war. It argues that Japan is in a position where it has to choose between “spending” and “earning” strategies in the disbursement of aid. Influenced by external and internal developments, Japan has tilted toward a “spending” approach over the last decade. Due to a limited ODA budget, Japan has to optimize the use of aid and disburse it more strategically. Also significant is the noticeable across-the-board increase in the grant allocation to Southeast Asia and Vietnam’s emergence as a major recipient.
Institutional Mismatch and Chinese Aid in the Philippines: Challenges and Implications
Dennis D. Trinidad 경남대학교 극동문제연구소 2016 ASIAN PERSPECTIVE Vol.40 No.2
Why is Chinese aid attractive to some recipient countries and controversial in others? This study advances the idea that Chinese aid is more attractive in countries that lack or have weak Development Assistance Committee-based aid institutions. When there is a mismatch between a non-DAC donor and a recipient country’s aid regimes, legal and political problems may arise, as the case of Chinese aid to the Philippines in 2000s demonstrates. As a recipient country, the Philippines is more accustomed to DAC-based rules and practices governing development aid processes, while as a donor country, China’s aid institutions evolved outside the DAC club. The controversies that subsequently arose from institutional mismatch created a public perception that Chinese aid was illegal and prone to corruption, undermining China’s aid objectives.