Report
2023
Catalysing change and harmonizing impact: 20 years of donor coordination
2023 was a milestone year for the GDPRD as we celebrated our 20th anniversary.
Tristan Armstrong
Former GDPRD Co-Chair, 2021-2023, Australia
Conrad Rein
Former GDPRD Co-Chair, 2020–2023, European Commission
Federica de Gaetano
Current GDPRD Co-Chair, Italian Agency for Development Cooperation (AICS)The aid and development landscape has changed significantly over the past two decades.
GDPRD milestones
The GDPRD’s 20th anniversary was an opportunity to reflect on these issues and consider the Platform’s role in supporting donors to respond more effectively. View our history.
A specially commissioned background paper catalysed discussions on shifting donor approaches to food systems and rural development.
The 2023 Annual General Assembly (AGA) discussed the evolution of the aid effectiveness agenda and emerging trends shaping official development assistance (ODA) in food systems and rural development.
Bruce Campbell
Current GDPRD Co-Chair, Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation (SDC)20 years of bringing donors together
- 2003: GDPRD founded by the World Bank, Germany’s BMZ, FAO, the Canadian International Development Agency, the Netherlands and IFAD. BMZ and FAO served as Co-Chairs.
- 2005: Adoption of the Platform Governance Charter and establishment of the Steering Committee.
- 2006: First GDPRD AGA in Brussels.
- 2007: Introduction of the Platform Charter, formation of the Board, and selection of the Steering Committee and Chairs.
- 2009: L’Aquila Summit on Food Security, convened in Italy by the G8, leads to the initiation of a UN task force addressing food security challenges.
- 2020: AGA shapes GDPRD’s contributions to the UNFSS. IFAD hosts the GDPRD Secretariat.
- 2023: 20th anniversary of the GDPRD.
Trends shaping development assistance
- Climate change, conflict, and fragility are contributing to a global surge in hunger and malnutrition, triggering forced displacement and migration.
- New donors are emerging, and South-South and Triangular Cooperation initiatives are multiplying, founded upon long-standing collaborations in agricultural technology, involving countries such as Brazil, China and India.
- Finance and financing mechanisms must increase and diversify to meet the growing challenges in food systems, agriculture and rural development.
- A greater focus on gender equality and opportunities for youth can support more inclusive strategies to bolster food production, enhance nutrition and accelerate rural development.
2023 was an action-packed
year for the Donor Platform
Platform highlights
Australia, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, the European Commission, Finland, France, Germany, International Fund for Agricultural Development, Ireland, Italy, the Netherlands, Switzerland, United Kingdom and United States
Global Donor Working Group on Land meetings
Thematic Working Group on Rural Youth Employment meetings
Sustainable Development Goal Two Roadmap Working Group meetings
From strategy to action: Key events in 2023
THE CATALYTIC POWER OF DONORS
In 2023, we continued to respond proactively to emerging issues through the activities of three new workstreams on sustainable and blended finance, donor coordination and data.
These areas are interconnected and improvements in all three are needed to move beyond reactive crisis response and build long-term resilience in the global food system. This approach reflects a more strategic and results-focused engagement with the food and rural development agenda.
Sustainable and blended finance
Every dollar of donor investment can trigger four times that amount in commercial financing. By leveraging blended mechanisms and innovative funds, we can unleash the catalytic power of public resources to drive transformative change in food systems and rural development.
Carin Smaller
Shamba Centre for Food & Climate
Andrea Zinn
Aceli Americas, Aceli AfricaThis workstream explores ways in which donors, philanthropic organizations and public funds are:
- leveraging their funding for greater impact
- increasing allocations to food systems from thematic programmes on climate, nature, gender and SMEs
- working with private capital to providers to increase investment in sustainable food systems
- assessing the performance and “additionality” of blended capital funds.
In 2023, the GDPRD and the Shamba Centre for Food & Climate completed an enquiry into how donors, philanthropic organizations, public funds and blended capital funds can make their funding more effective to achieve SDG 2. (See full list of stakeholders engaged)
Our official side event at the UNFSS+2 Stocktaking Moment on 24 July 2023 explored how donors and public funds are working continuously to enhance the impact of their investments to achieve the SDGs and transform food systems.
The enquiry’s findings were presented and discussed at our 51st Session of the Committee on World Food Security side event on 23 October 2023 and a High-Level Session on Sustainable Finance: Making donor funding more catalytic at the AGA.
The final report, Unleashing the Catalytic Power of Donor Financing to Achieve Sustainable Development Goal 2, was released in March 2024. It presents a unique opportunity for donors, development finance institutions and their beneficiaries in developing countries to make widespread changes by implementing its recommendations.
Donor coordination for food systems transformation
In the coming years, donors will need to balance short-term crisis response with investments that support longer-term development and resilience. Donor resources will need to be optimized through greater policy coherence and coordination, to create resilient and secure food systems for the future.
Juan Echanove
Food and Water Systems, CARE
Iris Krebber
Former GDPRD Co-Chair, UK Foreign, Commonwealth & Development Office
Nadine Gbossa
International Fund for Agricultural Development, and United Nations Food Systems Coordination HubThis workstream unpacks the challenges countries face in addressing the national pathways for food systems transformation, explores how donors and development partners can better coordinate their assistance at the country level, and identifies key areas such as data, finance and policy innovation where coordination is most needed.
- The report “From Rhetoric to Reality: Donor coordination for food systems transformation” drew on interviews with experts from partner country governments, international organizations, United Nations and donor agencies, and presents eight concrete recommendations.
- The report and its findings were discussed at a high-level dialogue, Donor Coordination for Food Systems Transformation: A forward agenda co-hosted by the GDPRD, IFAD and the European Commission.
Better data for food systems and rural development
In 2022, the 50th session of the Committee on World Food Security called for better and more harmonized data and its widespread use in setting policies.
This workstream is working towards an action plan for the data community, focused on improving information sharing, convening dialogues and workshops to advocate data use in decision-making, and strengthening country capacity.
The event Assessing the Data “Quantum” Leap in Agriculture and Food Systems on 13 February 2023, together with the European Commission, IFAD and the Global Partnership for Sustainable Development Data, took stock of current data initiatives on agriculture and food security.
Following the event, the GDPRD published a report, New Strategic Directions for Data in Agriculture and Food Systems, presenting the event’s deliberations and key findings.
Annual General Assembly: 20 years of rural development and aid effectiveness
H.E. Jeanine M. Cooper
Minister of Agriculture, Republic of LiberiaDiscussions explored the potential of food systems approaches to reinvigorate rural development, the importance of enhanced access to data and information for land governance and secure tenure, innovative strategies for donor funding in food systems, and the opportunities presented by mechanical and technical jobs for rural youth.
Setting the scene of the AGA discussions by Brian Baldwin, Senior Advisor to the GDPRD, Development and Agricultural Policy Advisor.
In the High-Level Session on Food Systems Approaches and Shifting Development Agendas, H.E. Jeanine M. Cooper, Minister of Agriculture, Republic of Liberia, emphasized the need for peace and stability for development.
Breakout sessions examined key issues that will shape donors’ work in the coming decade:
- food security and nutrition
- environment, climate change and biodiversity
- aid effectiveness, coordination and alignment
- conflict, resilience and fragility.
Conclusions fed into a panel discussion that explored how and why donors need to rethink the way that they work.
Mia Beers, Deputy Assistant Administrator of the Bureau for Resilience, Environment, and Food Security (USAID) noted that multiple crises – conflict, climate change, COVID-19 pandemic compounded by inflation and rising interest rates – have pushed more communities into hunger and multiplied the challenges for those seeking to help them. She argued that to avoid further crises, which could reverse a decade of progress, more donor coordination and continuing commitment to systemic change is needed.
Special sessions at the AGA focused on sustainable finance, land governance and rural youth employment, highlighting new and emerging strategies and approaches by donors.
High-Level Session on Sustainable Finance: Carin Smaller and Oshani Perera presented the findings of a study by the Shamba Centre and the GDPRD, into ways to make donor funding more catalytic.
Reflecting on the discussions at the AGA and the implications for donors, Maximo Torero Cullen, Chief Economist at FAO, urged donors to focus their efforts on the places where need is greatest.
Read the summary report.
The discussions highlighted the continued relevance of the GDPRD as a space where donors can shape coordinated and harmonized approaches to emerging crises.
The GDPRD continues to provide a space for thematic working groups to improve donor coordination in three priority areas.
The Global Donor Working Group on Land
Land governance and secure tenure are crucial preconditions for addressing a range of SDGs, including food and nutrition security, economic development, and peace and stability.
Gemma Betsema
Netherlands Enterprise Agency
Karol Boudreaux
United States Agency for International DevelopmentCo-Chairs:
Gemma Betsema, Netherlands Enterprise Agency
Chantal Wieckardt, Netherlands Enterprise Agency
Land governance and secure tenure are crucial preconditions for addressing a range of SDGs, including food and nutrition security, economic development, and peace and stability. Highlights in 2023 include:
- A special session on Land Governance Tools and Approaches in Support of Climate Action at the AGA on 26 October 2023, highlighting the role of land tenure and governance issues in realizing climate goals.
- A special session on Land Governance Tools and Approaches in Support of Climate Action at the AGA on 26 October 2023, highlighting the role of land tenure and governance issues in realizing climate goals.
- Involvement in the Global Land Agenda, towards more coordinated action for raising the importance of land globally, to mobilize new, concrete and visible political commitments.
- Create a global forum on tenure security for dialogue and strategic direction; establish an accountability mechanism to track progress; and catalyse and increase funding for tenure security.
- An updated Land Portal database, now with a data set of 3,871 projects that combine data from Land Portal’s projects database, the former GDWGL’s Land Governance Programme Map and the International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI).
The Thematic Working Group on Rural Youth Employment
Established in 2018, the group seeks to support youth in finding their rightful place in rural economies.
Frank Bertelmann
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)
Elisenda Estruch Puertas
International Labour Organization
Sven Braulik
Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ)Co-Chairs:
Elisenda Estruch Puertas, International Labour Organization
Frank Bertelmann, GIZ
Sven Braulik, GIZ
Creating decent employment and income opportunities for rural youth and engaging them in policy processes is key to making them agents of change in rural economies. In 2023, the group celebrated its fifth anniversary.
Highlights in 2023 include:
- A special session on Leveraging Change for Rural Youth Employment and Food Systems Transformation at the AGA on 27 October 2023.
- A webinar ahead of COP28 on Green Jobs: A better future for rural youth on 16 November 2023.
- Building connections with like-minded institutions. The Young Professionals for Agricultural Development, the KfW Development Bank and the Institute of Development Studies participated actively in the group’s activities. The group also engaged with the African Union Commission.
An informal group of senior officials from different donor agencies that share a common vision for eliminating rural poverty, hunger and malnutrition through sustainable agriculture.
Ammad Bahalim
Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Ron Hartman
International Fund for Agricultural DevelopmentCo-Chairs:
Ammad Bahalim, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Sung Lee, United States Agency for International Development
More than 600 million people will remain chronically hungry worldwide by 2030. Achieving the goal of zero hunger by 2030 will require sustained commitment, investment and collaboration by governments, donors, the private sector, civil society and other actors at global, regional and national levels. The group works towards developing consensus among donors on a road map for achieving SDG 2.
Highlights in 2023 include:
- Launch of Hesat2030: A global roadmap to end hunger sustainably, nutritiously and equitably on 25 July 2023 at the UNFSS+2 Stocktaking Moment side event Achieving Sustainable Food Systems in a Time of Multiple Crises: A new global roadmap. The GDPRD is a key partner of Hesat2030 and will engage with the project through the SDG 2 Roadmap Working Group.
- An emerging area for the group is the use of artificial intelligence (AI) for food systems.
- The Ceres2030 report continues to influence and shape thinking in the donor and development community. There is a particular interest among members in looking at climate change and 1.5 °C in the context of SDG 2.
Outreach And Communications
We amplified our member engagement and outreach through a dynamic social media presence in 2023. Key highlights include a new Instagram page to connect with a wider audience, interviews with members, and the promotion of flagship reports and events across various platforms. Read more.
The Donor Platform website underwent significant improvements, with new knowledge hubs and microsites for workstreams. User engagement soared, with website visits and unique visitors increasing by over 55% and 81% respectively. An expanded Food Systems Recommendations Database now includes 55 reports and a dashboard spotlighting featured, trending and latest reports.
Looking Ahead to 2024
Key activities planned for the year include a review of donor funding modalities at the country level, coordination gatherings ahead of significant global events (such as the G7, G20, United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change COP and others), the establishment of a multi-donor working group on sustainable and blended financing in agriculture and food systems, and the organization of seminars and roundtables on various development topics.
The 2024 AGA will focus on the theme of financing food systems transformation and rural revitalization.
Conrad Rein
Former Co-Chair, European Commission, 2020–2023
Tristan Armstrong
Former Co-Chair 2021-2023 AustraliaBack to top
The 2023 Annual Report of the Global Donor Platform for Rural Development (GDPRD) was produced by the GDPRD Secretariat in accordance with IFAD’s Guidelines for Publishing. The report was drafted by Mandakini D. Surie and graphically designed and laid out by Andrea Wöhr (WOERDESIGN). The digital report was created by Marco Schiavone, Toni Guga and Caroline Almeida of Schiavone & Guga. Photo credits: Cover: ©IFAD/Nguyen Hoang Sanh. Panels: ©IFAD/Ueslei Marcelino | ©IFAD/Barbara Gravelli | ©IFAD/Imani Nsamila | ©IFAD/Jjumba Martin | ©IFAD/ Didor Sadulloev | ©IFAD/Ueslei Marcelino | ©IFAD/Roger Anis
© 2024 Secretariat of the Global Donor Platform for Rural Development, hosted by IFAD.