TY - JOUR AU - Henderson,J. Vernon AU - Lee,Yong Suk TI - Organization of Disaster Aid Delivery: Spending Your Donations JF - National Bureau of Economic Research Working Paper Series VL - No. 17707 PY - 2011 Y2 - December 2011 UR - http://www.nber.org/papers/w17707 L1 - http://www.nber.org/papers/w17707.pdf N1 - Author contact info: J. Vernon Henderson Department of Economics Box B Brown University Providence, RI 02912 Tel: 401/863-2886 Fax: 401/863-1970 E-Mail: j_henderson@brown.edu Yong Suk Lee Dept. of Economics Williams College Williamstown, MA 01267 E-Mail: Yong.S.Lee@williams.edu AB - This paper analyzes how different organizational structures between funding and implementing agencies affect the quality of aid delivered and social agendas pursued across neighboring villages in a set disaster context. We model the implied objective functions and trade-offs concerning aid quality, aid quantity, and social agendas of different types of agencies. We analyze three waves of survey data on fishermen and fishing villages in Aceh, Indonesia from 2005-2009, following the tsunami. Different organizational structures result in significantly different qualities of hard aid, differential willingness to share aid delivery with other NGOs in a village, and differential promotion of public good objectives and maintenance of village religious and occupational traditions. This is the first time these aspects have been modeled and quantified in the literature. Some well known international NGOs delivered housing with relatively low rates of reported faults such as leaky roofs and cracked walls; others had relatively high rates. For boats, some had very high rates of boat “failure”, boats that sank upon launch, were not seaworthy, or fell apart within a month or two. We also document how a social agenda of particular agencies to promote greater equality can be thwarted and distorted by village leaders, potentially increasing inequality. ER -