Research reports and studiesDecember 2019Rachael Calleja and Annalisa PrizzonCable car over Santiago, Chile. Photo: Rob Cousins/Panos PicturesChile’s development assistance landscape includes a low dependency on aid flows and fully restored relationships with 'developed' countries following its transition to democracy in the early 1990s. Chile has experienced the transition from aid in full, completing this process with its formal graduation from the list of overseas development assistance (ODA) eligible countries in January 2018.This report analyses how Chile managed its transition from aid, the type of cooperation the country had expected from development partners since the early 1990s, and the future of development cooperation beyond ODA.The Chile study forms part of a larger project that sets out to investigate country experiences of and key lessons from the transition and graduation from ODA. The other country studies are Botswana, Mexico and the Republic of Korea.Read the research Moving away from aid: the experience of ChileDocumentpdfRelated Moving away from aid: the experience of BotswanaThis report examines how Botswana has managed the transition from aid.Research reports and studies9 December 2019 Moving away from aid: the experience of MexicoThis report examines how Mexico has managed the transition from aid.Research reports and studies9 December 2019 Moving away from aid: the experience of the Republic of KoreaThis report examines how the Republic of Korea has managed the transition from aid.Research reports and studies9 December 2019 Moving away from aid: lessons from country studiesSummarising key lessons from the transition and graduation from overseas development assistance.Research reports and studies9 December 2019See more:aideconomic developmentdonorsgovernanceChile