Foreign Aid in Global Development: Empowerment or Entrapment?
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This paper explores the paradoxical nature of foreign aid as both a catalyst for global development and a mechanism of dependency. The article offers critical insights by integrating and interrogating competing perspectives on aid effectiveness, sovereignty, and global power dynamics through carefully selected case studies. Drawing on development theories and case studies from Rwanda, Bangladesh, and Vietnam, it demonstrates how aid can empower states when aligned with national priorities, institutional capacity, and local ownership. Conversely, the paper also illustrates how aid is often entangled with geopolitical agendas, conditionalities, and authoritarian consolidation. This study, as such, highlights emerging alternatives such as unconditional cash transfers, participatory financing, and reparative justice as potential reforms. It calls for a reimagining of aid as a vehicle of equitable global partnerships rather than a tool of donor dominance.









