This report assesses progress made since the 2015 peer review of New Zealand, highlights recent successes and challenges, and provides recommendations for the future. The report was prepared with reviewers from Canada and Portugal and with support from the OECD Secretariat. Indonesia served as Observer to the review.
New Zealand has built a strong vision for its engagement in the Pacific, backed by political leadership and an emphasis on partnership and shared values. New Zealand’s programme has a strong focus on the Pacific, where it is increasingly drawing on Māori custom and knowledge to inform its partner-led approach. Increased international climate finance commitments for 2022-25 have also helped to reinvigorate the development co-operation programme, including much-needed human resources in the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Trade (MFAT). Looking ahead, a refreshed strategic framework, greater transparency to support accountability and public engagement, predictable and increased resourcing, and stronger quality assurance and learning from results will all help to translate this momentum into greater impact.
A streamlined policy framework would provide a clearer steer for MFAT, stakeholders and partners on New Zealand’s goals. The increased focus on New Zealand’s engagement in the Pacific as an integrated cross-government priority has brought development and diplomatic efforts in the Pacific closer together. Several recent policy statements and strategies – including a series of Cabinet papers, MFAT’s Policy Statement on International Cooperation for Effective Sustainable Development (ICESD) and the 2022 climate finance strategy – have set the tone from the top. They could now be pulled together into a clearer statement of New Zealand’s goals. A planned refresh of MFAT’s strategic framework in 2024 provides an important opportunity to strengthen the links between development co‑operation and the rest of the ministry’s work in the Pacific and beyond.
Ongoing adjustments to internal governance and decision-making structures are an opportunity to ensure country level perspectives inform decision making. The establishment of a set of Governance Groups within the ministry after 2018 has helped to draw different perspectives into decision making and to separate strategic steering from implementation. MFAT now has an opportunity to build on this, by ensuring the groups have the mandate, mix of skills and expertise needed to deliver intended advisory and quality benefits and to support more efficient ways of working. Given the realities of working across large distances in the Pacific, learning from recent crises and the importance of country presence to New Zealand’s partner-led approach, MFAT should consider whether further delegating decision making on programming to posts could be useful. Empowering and resourcing posts to engage in the increased opportunities for policy dialogue created by budget support and climate finance will also be important.
MFAT will need to match its strategic goals with human resource planning to meet evolving priorities and demands. New Zealand government officials are well regarded in partner countries for their technical knowledge and openness. In recent years, MFAT staff have faced sustained periods of heavy workloads and there is a sense that the ambition set at the political level has not been matched by human resourcing. Successive crises have also put further pressure on staff welfare, undermining programme delivery and eroding institutional knowledge. Strategic workforce planning would help to mitigate these challenges and safeguard the integrity of New Zealand’s programme.
A more systematic approach to integrating cross-cutting issues and safeguards would support quality. A strong focus on inclusion and addressing inequalities guides New Zealand’s development co‑operation, as set out in the 2021 ICESD Policy Statement. In practice, complex processes and guidance, a lack of clarity about what is expected of staff at different points in the activity cycle, and limited access to expertise is hampering MFAT’s ability to deliver on key issues such as gender equality, human rights, climate and environment and youth. Training, communication on mainstreaming and safeguarding priorities, and strengthened capabilities should accompany a simplified and more consistent approach.
Continuing efforts to build a cross-MFAT culture of evidence and learning would support a greater focus on outcomes. Pressure on staff time and uneven understandings of results measurement among development and diplomatic staff are key challenges in the use of results frameworks and monitoring. Training for all MFAT staff backed up by internal, senior-level communication that links results to the higher‑level outcomes that MFAT seeks to deliver would be useful. Encouraging a focus among staff on generating information that is useful and actionable, the systematic use of monitoring and evaluation evidence in Governance Group decision making, and investing in more cross-programme learning, would also help to build a culture of generating and using learning for improved decision making. Involving partners and other parts of government in generating and discussing evidence would also support learning.
Demonstrating results is important to create influence with partners and build public support at home for New Zealand’s development co‑operation policy. The development of publicly accessible four-year plans since 2021 has been a positive change. Nevertheless, public information on New Zealand’s development projects and investments is still limited, despite its importance for building accountability at the country level, between New Zealand and its partners, and with citizens at home. High‑level commitment within MFAT on the relevance of transparency, together with dedicated resources, will be important to support progress. A comprehensive communication strategy is needed to pull different efforts together and to help build understanding among New Zealanders of how development co‑operation investments contribute to New Zealand’s goals.
New Zealand’s strong partner-led approach would be enhanced by stepped up efforts to empower local actors and to protect and promote civic space. New Zealand’s effective use of budget support, including in times of crisis, reflects a strong focus on building robust bilateral partnerships underpinned by agreed priorities. Complementing this with continued investments in institutional strengthening and in protecting and promoting civic space in partner countries would further improve the extent to which New Zealand’s development co-operation is both sustainable and locally led. MFAT could build on its recently revamped support to CSOs by continuing to explore how to fund local CSOs more directly.
To deliver additional climate finance effectively, MFAT should focus on identifying what works and where, and scale up. The government announced New Zealand’s increased international climate finance commitment in 2021, and a new strategy was released in August 2022. Important efforts are now under way to build an effective monitoring and evaluation framework to guide these investments. This is particularly critical given the challenges of delivering finance effectively in Pacific small island developing states (SIDS). It will be important for New Zealand to share this learning with other actors, including other Development Assistance Committee (DAC) members. New investments should also be based on analysis to identify co-benefits from the outset. Stepping up support to partner countries to better access and co‑ordinate climate finance will also be important for the sustainability and impact of investments.
A medium-term plan to increase official development assistance (ODA) would help protect recent investments and meet escalating needs. New Zealand ranks 22nd among 29 DAC member countries for its ODA volume. Whilst ODA reached 0.28% of its gross national income (GNI) over 2018-21, New Zealand’s ODA to GNI ratio remains below the DAC average of 0.33% and well below the UN target of 0.7%. Given the time it takes to programme and implement development investments, deciding to sustain recent climate finance commitments now will be critical to avoid a sharp decrease in funding from 2025‑26, and the significant impact on programming this would entail. Developing a medium-term plan to increase ODA, with actionable targets, would protect longer term investments and better position New Zealand to catch up with the OECD DAC average.