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The National Endowment for Democracy's Administration of Its Grants Program

Published: May 14, 1986. Publicly Released: May 14, 1986.
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Highlights

GAO discussed its review of the National Endowment for Democracy's procedures for grantee selection, monitoring, and evaluation in its overseas grants program. GAO found that, during its first 2 years of operation, the Endowment: (1) generally relied on its grantees to monitor and evaluate their own programs; (2) awarded 88 percent of its fiscal years 1984 and 1985 funds to four core grantees representing labor, business, and the two major political parties; (3) spent more time monitoring its small discretionary grantees than it did on its core grantees; and (4) viewed its function as primarily a funding conduit for the four core grantees. In 1985, Congress: (1) eliminated funding earmarks to labor and business grantees; (2) imposed a 25-percent limit on awards to any one grantee; (3) placed the Endowment under the Freedom of Information Act; and (4) required the Endowment to coordinate its programs with the Department of State. GAO noted that: (1) the Endowment Board issued a policy statement recognizing its responsibilities as a recipient of congressionally appropriated funds, but the statement did not contain implementation procedures; (2) planning and project selection, grantee information verification, and evaluation of completed projects require particular attention; and (3) State was generally satisfied with the initial implementation of the consultation agreement.

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