Norway

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Norway
Commitment to Development Index 2013
Norway
The Commitment to Development Index
(CDI) ranks 27 of the world’s richest
countries based on their dedication to
policies that benefit poor nations. Looking
beyond standard comparisons of foreign
aid flows, the CDI measures national
policies in seven areas that are important
to developing countries: aid, trade, finance,
migration, environment, security, and
technology. This report reviews Norway’s
performance on the 2013 CDI.
For more details, visit cgdev.org/cdi.
Denmark
Sweden
Norway
Luxembourg
Netherlands
Finland
Ireland
United Kingdom
New Zealand
Belgium
Austria
Australia
Portugal
Germany
Canada
Spain
France
Italy
United States
Switzerland
Greece
Hungary
Poland
Slovakia
Czech Republic
Japan
South Korea
Overall Score
Norway’s 2013 CDI Performance
Instructions:
n Overall rank 2013:
3
Show Guides layer
n Overall score 2013:
6.2
Norway
Average scores
Best scores
Overall Aid Trade Finance Migration
Environment Security Technology
Select magenta circle
n Change since 2003: -0.1
Sweden
Denmark
Change its diameter to the
South Korea
(using 2013 methodology)
country’s score X 20
theNorway
bar to intersect
Norway ranks 3rd overall Adjust
in 2013.
ranks the
circle using the Direct Selection
12
10
8
6
4
3
5
7
9
11
13
number one on migrationTool
and. security and in
the top ten on aid, finance, and technology.
Norway
New Zealand
Repeat.
It gives the largest amount
of foreign aid
as a share of its income among the CDI
countries, promotes productive investment in
Finland
poor countries, and scores high on financial
Slovakia
transparency, admits a large number of legal
immigrants from developing countries, and
contributes significant personnel to UN and
Norway
internationally sanctioned security operations.
But Norway also produces the largest amount
Norway’s change over time, 2003–2013 (5 = 2012 average)
of fossil fuels per person of any CDI country,
bringing down its score on the environment
11
component. The Norwegian government also
10
9
employs some of the most restrictive trade
8
7
barriers against poor countries, finishing
6
near the bottom in trade.
5
www.cgdev.org/cdi
4
3
2
Norway Country Report
Aid
Finance
n Score: 10.6
n Rank: 4
n Score: 5.9
n Rank: 7
Strengths
Strengths
- High net aid volume as a share of the economy (0.99%; rank: 1)
- No tied or partially tied aid (0%; rank: 1)
- Political risk insurance agency provides wide coverage and
screens potential projects for violations of human, labor, and
environmental rights
- Active participation and leadership in extractive industries
transparency initiatives such as the Extractive Industries
Transparency Initiative (EITI) and the Kimberley Process on
blood diamonds
- Scores above average in the Financial Secrecy Index for regulations
in place to promote transparent financial transactions within its
jurisdiction (rank: 7)
- Provides assistance to companies looking for investment
opportunities in developing countries
- Vigorous prosecution of home-country bribe payers
Aid quality is just as important as aid quantity, so the CDI measures
gross aid as a share of GDP adjusted for various quality factors: it
subtracts debt service, penalizes “tied” aid that makes recipients
spend aid only on donor goods and services, rewards aid to poor but
relatively well-governed recipients, and penalizes overloading poor
governments with many small projects.
Weaknesses
- Allows project proliferation; small average project size (rank: 20)
- Does not report private charitable giving
Trade
International trade has been a force for economic development for
centuries. The CDI measures trade barriers in rich countries against
exports from developing countries. It also penalizes costly importation
processes and restrictions against purchasing services from foreigners.
Rich-country investment in poorer countries can transfer technologies,
upgrade management, and create jobs. Conversely, policies that permit
financial secrecy of companies and banks can facilitate illicit activities
and financial flows abroad. The CDI rewards policies that support
healthy investment in developing countries and promote transparency
in financial transactions at home.
Migration
n Score: 1.2
n Rank: 26
Strengths
- Low tariffs on textile (3.6% of the value of imports; rank: 1)
- Low tariffs on clothing (1.8% of the value of imports; rank: 1)
- Few documents required for importation (7 documents; rank: 6)
Weaknesses
- High tariffs on agricultural products (86.4% of the value of imports;
rank: 25)
- High tariffs on wheat (133.3% of the value of imports; rank: 27)
- High tariffs on beef (307.9% of the value of imports; rank: 27)
- High tariffs on other meats (274% of the value of imports; rank: 27)
- High tariffs on dairy (107.8% of the value of imports; rank: 25)
- Many limitations on the importation of services (Services Trade
Restrictions Index score: 23.3; rank: 21)
The movement of people from poor to rich countries provides unskilled
immigrants with jobs, income, and knowledge. This increases the flow
of money sent home by migrants abroad and the transfer of skills when
the migrants return.
n Score: 9.6
n Rank: 1
Strengths
- Large number of immigrants from developing countries entering
Norway (rank by share of population: 1)
- Bears large share of the burden of refugees during humanitarian
crises (rank: 2)
Weaknesses
- Small share of foreign students from developing countries
(64.8%; rank: 16)
Center for Global Development
Norway Country Report
www.cgdev.org/cdi
Environment
Rich countries use a disproportionate amount of scarce resources,
and poor countries are most vulnerable to global warming and
ecological deterioration, so the CDI measures the impact of policies
on the global climate, fisheries, and biodiversity.
n Score: 2.8
n Rank: 26
Technology
Rich countries contribute to development through the creation
and dissemination of new technologies. The CDI captures this
by measuring government support for R&D and penalizing strong
intellectual property rights regimes that limit the dissemination
of new technologies to poor countries.
n Score: 5.7
n Rank: 6
Strengths
- Excellent compliance with mandatory reporting requirements under
multilateral environmental agreements relating to biodiversity
(rank: 10)
Strengths
Weaknesses
Weaknesses
- High fossil fuel production rate per capita (104.1 tons of carbon
dioxide equivalent; rank: 27)
- High fishing subsidies (rank: 27)
- High consumption of ozone-depleting chemicals per capita
(rank: 20)
- Offers patent-like proprietary rights to developers of data
compilations, including those assembled from data in the
public domain
- Allows patents on plant and animal varieties
- Pushes to extend intellectual property rights in bilateral trade
treaties (“TRIPS Plus” measures) that restrict the flow
of innovations to developing countries
Security
Since security is a prerequisite for development, the CDI rewards
contributions to internationally sanctioned peacekeeping operations
and forcible humanitarian interventions, military protection of global
sea lanes, and participation in international security treaties. It also
penalizes arms exports to poor and undemocratic governments.
n Score: 7.4
n Rank: 1
- Significant government support for R&D (rank: 7)
- Provides patent exceptions for research purposes
For More
Visit cgdev.org/cdi for the complete 2013 edition of the Commitment
to Development Index. There, you can explore the numbers with our
interactive graphing tool, view additional publications and background
papers, and dive deeper into the CDI methodology by downloading our
data and code.
Strengths
- Significant personnel contributions to UN and internationally
sanctioned peacekeeping and humanitarian interventions over
last decade (rank by share of GDP: 1)
- Participates in major international security treaties and regimes
Weaknesses
- Relatively small contribution to the UN Peacekeeping Operations
budget (rank by share of GDP: 22)
Center for Global Development
Norway Country Report
www.cgdev.org/cdi
Commitment to Development Rankings, 2013
Overall
1
2
3
4
5
5
7
7
9
10
10
12
13
13
13
16
17
18
19
19
21
22
23
24
24
26
26
Country
Denmark
Sweden
Norway
Luxembourg
Netherlands
Finland
Ireland
United Kingdom
New Zealand
Belgium
Austria
Australia
Portugal
Germany
Canada
Spain
France
Italy
United States
Switzerland
Greece
Hungary
Poland
Slovakia
Czech Republic
Japan
South Korea
Aid
3
1
4
2
5
9
6
7
15
8
18
13
16
12
14
19
11
20
17
10
21
24
27
26
22
25
23
Trade
12
6
26
15
5
8
14
7
1
18
10
2
17
11
4
13
16
20
3
24
23
19
9
22
21
25
27
= top third
= middle third
Finance
2
2
7
25
16
1
14
6
22
9
23
8
10
21
13
4
10
12
15
27
19
18
5
25
20
24
17
Migration Environment Security
18
12
2
2
3
27
1
26
1
7
21
15
19
13
19
21
4
5
16
15
4
11
8
12
8
19
3
10
9
20
4
17
6
6
24
14
22
5
7
5
10
22
3
27
9
12
16
23
17
11
24
14
14
13
20
23
17
9
18
16
15
20
8
25
2
11
24
6
21
27
1
10
26
7
25
23
25
18
13
22
26
Change
Technology 2012-2013
2
0
17
0
6
0
21
0
12
1
7
0
23
2
20
-1
19
-3
18
0
8
4
16
-2
4
1
13
4
11
-1
9
-4
3
-1
22
0
15
0
14
1
25
0
24
0
27
0
26
0
10
1
5
0
1
1
= last third
The above table lists ranks for each of the 27 CDI countries across seven policy areas. The final column shows the change in each country’s
overall rank since 2012 (using 2013 methodology).
About the CDI
The Commitment to Development Index has been compiled each year since 2003 by the Center for Global Development (CGD),
an independent think tank that works to reduce global poverty and inequality through rigorous research and active engagement
with the policy community. CGD Europe director and senior fellow Owen Barder directs the Index, building on the previous work of CGD
former senior fellow David Roodman. Petra Krylova is the CDI coordinator. Collaborators have included William R. Cline on trade;
Theodore H. Moran and Petr Janský on finance; Jeanne Batalova, Kimberly A. Hamilton, and Elizabeth Grieco on migration; Amy Cassara
and Daniel Prager on environment; Michael E. O’Hanlon, Adriana Lins de Albuquerque, Mark Stoker, and Jason Alderwick on security;
and Keith Maskus and Walter Park on technology. The Index is supported by the CDI Consortium.
Center for Global Development
Independent Research and Practical Ideas for Global Prosperity
www.cgdev.org
1800 Massachusetts Ave., NW • Washington DC 20036, USA
Tel: 202.416.4000 • Fax: 202.416.4050
London: c/o BMGF, 80-100 Victoria Street, London, SW1E 5JL, UK
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