Treasury minutes on the third to the thirteenth reports from the Committee of Public Accounts session 2010-11

Treasury minutes on the third to the thirteenth reports from the Committee of Public Accounts session 2010-11

Author: Great Britain. Treasury

Publisher: The Stationery Office

Published: 2011-02-16

Total Pages: 72

ISBN-13: 9780101801423

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The reports published as HC 470 (ISBN 9780215555106); HC 440 (9780215555144); HC 471 (9780215555205); HC 439 (9780215555243); HC 538 (9780215555434); HC 424 (9780215555496); HC 553 (9780215555502); HC 503 (9780215555571); HC 573 (9780215555595); HC 610 (9780215555656); HC 594 (9780215555717), session 2010-11


Treasury Minutes on the Twenty Second, the Thirty Third and the Thirty Eighth to the Forty First Reports from the Committee of Public Accounts Session 2010-12

Treasury Minutes on the Twenty Second, the Thirty Third and the Thirty Eighth to the Forty First Reports from the Committee of Public Accounts Session 2010-12

Author: Great Britain. Treasury

Publisher:

Published: 2011-09-15

Total Pages: 48

ISBN-13: 9780101817929

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On cover: Government responses. The reports published as HC 801 (ISBN 9780215556448); HC 764 (ISBN 9780215559258); HC 833 (ISBN 9780215559760); HC 1035 (ISBN 9780215560407); HC 1050 (ISBN 9780215560346); HC 1036 (9780215560506). Dated September 2011


DFID

DFID

Author: Great Britain: Parliament: House of Commons: Committee of Public Accounts

Publisher: The Stationery Office

Published: 2012-02-03

Total Pages: 56

ISBN-13: 9780215041524

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The DFiD's transfer programmes deliver cash, food and assets, such as livestock, directly to people living in poverty. Transfers can be used to tackle a range of issues, such as hunger and malnutrition, or access to health and education services, in a variety of contexts. In 2010-11 the Department spent £192 million on social protection programmes, which includes its transfer programmes. The evidence heard suggests transfer programmes are effective in targeting aid, and ensuring the money goes directly to the poorest and most vulnerable people. It is therefore surprising that the use of transfer programmes has not increased. The Department only plans to support transfer programmes in 17 of its 28 priority countries. It does not have an overall strategy for the use of transfers and its decisions on where to support transfer programmes look reactive. The decision as to whether or not to propose a transfer programme is taken by staff working in the country and it is not clear why there are extensive programmes in some countries and none in others. The Department does not collect data on all the costs of the transfer programmes it supports and the Department is therefore unable to say whether it is lifting more people out of poverty for every pound spent on transfers compared to other programmes. The Department's long-term objective is for the governments of recipient countries to take on the responsibility of owning and funding transfers as part of a sustainable social security system. However, the Department has not been clear about how individual programmes will be sustained