Title: Presentation Outline
1Presentation Outline
- Shantana R. Halder Reviewing Existing services
for the ultra poor - Imran Matin, Shantana R. Halder Combining
Methodologies for Better Targeting Some
preliminary findings from BRACs CFPR Programme - Shantana R. Halder Impact of BRACs Development
Programmes on the Extreme Poor
2- 1. Reviewing Existing services for the ultra poor
- Survey was done in September 2001 as a part of
background information collection for CFPR - 14 regions/districts
- 106 Thanas
- Information collected from 801 Senior Non- BRAC
NGO officials of 383 NGOs
3Average Thana Detail
- 194 villages
- 268 households/village
- 73 poor
- Over 13 NGOs/Thana
- Highest NGOs in Rajbari district
- 55 NGOs/Thana
- Working area 257 sq. km./NGO local office
- Village coverage 35 per NGO
- Av. members per NGO 3410
- Table 1 in text
4Average Thana Detail
- 85 of the NGOs are local (operating in 1 Thana,
32 NGOs are in 2 Thana) - NGO Village coverage
- 100 villages in 45 Thanas
- 8 villages without NGOs
- NGO membership overlapping 15
- Table 1 in text
5NGO programmes
- Av. 3.4 programmes per NGO
- MF 89
- Training 53
- Edun- 48
- Health 47
- IGA 46
- Social dev. 28
- Others - 31
- Table 2 in text
6Programmes for the Ultra Poor
- 20 surveyed NGOs have some programmes for UP
- UP programme in 75 (79 out of 106) Thanas
- No UP orgrammes in Shariatpur and Thakurgaon
- High UP provisions in most economically
distressed areas (Gaibandha, Jamalpur and
Rangpur) - Table 3 in text
7Programmes for the Ultra Poor
- Relief
- Resettlement in Govt. khash land
- Income and Employment generation
- Health
- Education
- Social development
- Special programmes
- Annex 2
8Relief
- Large number of local, national and intl. NGOs
- Food and non food consumption support
- Support for house building and repairing
- Support for treatment inc. free medicine
- Latrine and tubewell installation and repair
- Annex 2
9Resettlement in Govt. khash land
- Social Organisation for Voluntary Advancement ,
Shamata, Rajbari Unnayan Sangstha and Daridra
Manab Kallyan Sangstha in Rajbari and Friend
Program in Kurigram/Lalmonirhat - Proshika advocacy for khash land
- Annex 2
10Income and Employment generation
- Provision of small scale credit for different
quick high return schemes - Specially designed sector programmes for the
ultra poor (Roadside plantation, Agroforesty) - MF with provision for vocational training
- SDP in Kotiadi of Kishoregonj provide direct
employment to the ultra poor. - Annex 2
11Health
- NGOs providing training provide health awareness
- Treatment (including food)
- Chinna Mukul in Kurigram and World Vision of
Bangladesh in Kalkini, Madaripur - Nutrition for pregnant women and children (TMSS
in Gaibandha and Proshika in Gopalgonj, VORD in
Pangsha, Rajbari, Ganashasthya Kendra in Sherpur)
- Free or subsidized treatment as part of relief
and rehabilitation - (Proshika in Gopalgonj, AVA in Jamalpur and
Udayan Swabalambi Sangstha in Gaibandha) - Water and sanitation programme
- (Hitaishi Bangladesh in Kaligonj of
Kurigram/Lalmonirhat) - Programme for the orphans (Islamic relief )
- Annex 2
12Education
- Free education support to the children from ultra
poor households - (Uddog, Hachina Machir Welfare Association and
Atmwa Unnayan Sanhstha in Gaibandha district, AVA
and Swanirbhar Bangladesh in Jamalpur and VORD in
Rajbari, Modern Rural Progressive Society in
Kurigram/Lalmonirhat, Swanirbhar Bangladesh,
Swanirbhar and Nari Uddogh Kendra in Kishoregonj,
Ganashasthya Kendra in Sherpur) - Education programmes with free books
- Grameen and Proshika, and a local level NGO, GGS
in Gopalgonj - Annex 2
13Social development
- Social development is mutually supportive to
economic and social change - Any NGO intervention working for economic or
social change will, therefore, have had some
direct or indirect impact on social development - ASOD in Islampur, Jamalpur and Gram Unnayan
Kendra in Roumari, Kurigram working directly for
social development. - Annex 2
14Special programmes
- View in Kurigram sadar, works for rehabilitation
of street prostitutes and also on womens and
children trafficking - Sonali Kallyan Sangha in Jhinaigathi, Sherpur
provides economic support for the freedom
fighters - Uddog in Palashbari, and Atmwa Unnayan Sangstha
in Gaibandha district works with disabled people
and provides them with education, treatment,
vocational training - Grameen Nishwa Prokalpa in Melandaha, Jamalpur
- Annex 2
15Major challenges
- No clear-cut definition of the target group
- Inappropriate targeting due to lack of skill and
knowledge on targeting methodology - NGO programmes and membership overlapping
- Shortage in funds
- Programme lack multidimensional focus
- Shortage in skilled manpower.
16Conclusion
- 20 of the existing NGOs (most of them are local
based) have some provision for the ultra poor and
most of them are local - They offer some sort of fixed term grants or some
specific services like consumption support in a
disastrous situation, subsidy for treatment in a
particular health centre, waving the tuition/
examination fees of children of the ultra poor
households, providing small-scale loan for
cow/goat rearing, helping in asset leasing
arrangements and so on. - Few NGOs have comprehensive programme
- CFPRP is different from other existing NGO
programmes/approaches - CFPRP has provisions for working in all different
fronts of poverty. It combines both the
protectional and promotional measures to protect
creation and reproduction of their poverty at any
front.
17BRACs Programme for the Poorest
- Income Generation for the Vulnerable Group
Development (IGVGD) - Agroforestry
- Challenging the Frointiers of Poverty Reduction
(CFPR).
18IGVGD
- Integrated package of food distribution, savings,
micro-credit provision, social awareness-building
and skill development training and essential
health care interventions - IGVGD is very successful and cost-effective in
reaching the ultra poor - Female coming from male headed households can
participate more fully in the IGVGD programme.
19Why CFPR?
- A quarter of the IGVGD women the female-headed
households did not gain any long term benefits.
They usually return to their destitution after
the food ration cycle - They need a critical push
20The CFPR/TUP approach
- The whole idea behind the CFPR/TUP approach is to
enable the ultra poor develop new and better
options for sustainable livelihoods. And this
requires - A combination of approaches (promotional, such as
skills training and protective, such as asset
grants and stipends, health care services) - Attacking constraints at various levels
(household and the wider environments of
institutions, structures and policies) - Working within a multi-agent framework
(strengthening institutions of the poor that can
leverage their own agency and poverty focussed
advocacy by institutions representing the poor,
such as BRAC).
21CFPR beneficiaries selection criteria
- Have to meet at least two of the criteria
- Dependence upon female domestic work or begging
- Owning less than 10 decimals of land
- No adult active male members in the household
- Children of school going age have to take up paid
work - In addition, two pre-requisites for participation
in the programme are - There should be at least one adult, active woman
in the household capable of getting involved in
an income generating activity. She may be
physically handicapped, but as long as she can
get involved with an IGA, she will be included in
the programme. - No household member should not be member of any
credit NGO.
22- 2. Combining Methodologies for Better Targeting
Some preliminary findings from BRACs CFPR
Programme - Objectives
- to introduce the targeting methodology used in
CFPRP Programme - to see the effectiveness of the approach used
for targeting
23Selection process of TUP
24Combining approach and knowledge
25Household Groups
26Group Differences--- How well does the Programme
criteria fare?
27Group Differences How well did the Programme
target?
28Conclusion
- Programme combines levels of geographical
targeting, community and programmes local
knowledge of the areas and indicator based
targeting - Programme was extremely successful in its
objective of not only coming up with good
targeting indicators but in ensuring their
application - Cost of targeting per beneficiary was US 6.27.
293. Impact of BRACs Development Programmes on the
Extreme Poor
- IASs Methodology
- Three IASs in 1993/94, 1996/97 2001
- Representative sample to all BDP beneficiaries
- Both Survey PRA methods applied
- With-without before-after methods
- Measure household, individual and village level
impacts
30Who are the extreme poor and how to define
Extreme poverty?
- Using (CBN) method the extreme poor are those
who could not afford to consume the prescribed
1805 kcal. - Extreme poor are of two types
- EP1 - consume lt1600 kcals
- ER2 - consume 1600-1805 kcals
- Use panel data
31Conceptualizing the Impact
- Changes in Income/expenditure poverty (poverty
mobility) - Changes in accumulation of physical assets
- investment on primary secondary education
32Analysis of poverty trends
33Poverty mobility
34Impact of BRAC
- Highest reduction in demographic and economic
dependency and womens fertility for the EP1 BRAC
hhs - Highest increase in primary and secondary
enrollment for the EP2 BRAC hhs - Highest increase in av. aggregate hh education
level for EP1 and EP2 BRAC hhs - Highest increase in house value and its share to
hh non-food expenditure for EP1 BRAC hhs - Highest gain in land for EP2 BRAC hhs (negative
for EP comparison) - Net-worth increase (incl. land value) was highest
for EP1 BRAC hhs (negative for EP comparison)