Title: INFLUENCING POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES AND NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLANS
1 INFLUENCING POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGIES AND
NATIONAL DEVELOPMENT PLANS A ZAMBIAN CIVIL
SOCIETY EXPERIENCE By Miss. Ivy Mutwale, CSPR
2WHAT IS CSPR?
- Network of CSOs working together for poverty
eradication - Network came together in 2000 when Zambia was
required to prepare PRSP - Membership organization comprising over a hundred
CSOs in six provinces Lusaka, Luapula, Western,
N/Western, Southern and Eastern
3CSPR Cont.
- Main programmes Research and Policy Analysis,
Information Management Networking (IMN), Civic
Engagement and Advocacy (CEA) and Governance and
Institutional Development (GID) - Members have independent activities aside of
Network activities strength in joint voice on
poverty issues - One core activity of the CSPR is to monitor the
implementation of the Pro-Poor National
Development and advocacy around this
4Our Mission To actively and effectively
contribute to poverty eradication and pro-poor
development in Zambia through advocacy for
responsive policy formulation and implementation,
promotion of civic engagement in development
processes, production of poverty related evidence
and data and provision of a platform for
information and knowledge sharing at local,
district, national and international levels.
- Our Vision for CSPR A leading Civil Society
Network contributing to pro-poor development at
all levels in Zambia - Our Vision for Zambia A Zambia in which all
Zambians enjoy all basic needs
5CSPR AT WORK
6 A Governments Invitation to the Table A Civil
Society Engagement Strategy
- PRSP IMPLEMENTATION
- Notable Achievements include
- relevant guiding document for poverty reduction
- attempt to match resources for development
- participatory process
- Notable problems include
- Debt repayments HIPC insufficient
- Donors non fulfillment of pledges
- Competing demands on domestic revenue. Etc
- Inadequate political will
- 2004 was to be final year of 1st PRSP extended
to 2005. PRSP incorporated in the TNDP i.e.
PRSP/TNDP - 2005 PRSP review and new PRSP linked to NDP
- PRSP FORMULATION
- Government consultations through sector working
groups - Civil society consultations through thematic
groups - CSPR report - A PRSP for Zambia A civil
society perspective - Final PRSP (launched in 2002) reflects a fairly
good amount of civil society concerns for
fighting poverty a good starting point
7 Monitoring Evaluating the PRSP
- Q Is the PRSP achieving what it set out to
achieve? - Very Important part of the process
- Why
- Past experiences in programme implementation
not good - Lack of effective monitoring can result in low
levels of implementation, wrong beneficiaries,
undesired impacts, misallocation and misdirection
of resources etc - How -
- Expenditure tracking Monitoring the PRSP monies
- Poverty Monitoring Monitoring the results of
PRSP Implementation (output and impact). - Participatory approaches bringing on board the
poor!! (civil society has a key role to play in
Monitoring and advocacy around results of
monitoring)
8Critiques of PRSPs
- Rushed during formulation and slow in
implementation. - Capacities of implementers and SAGs need to be
improved - Unpredictable resource environment
- Same Macro framework underpinned by
neo-liberalism (market prices, privatisation
etc) - Still top-down rather than bottom up
- Participation of non state actors is often
limited - Participation of the poor (intended
beneficiaries) tends to be through
representatives.
9Light at the end of the tunnel?
- Generally PRSPs were received with some hope that
they could actually reduce poverty. - Do Governments have the political will to use the
PRSPs to actually benefit the poor or are PRSPs
being used only for HIPC and donor support? - There is hope if donors fulfill their pledges,
and on time - End of the tunnel will be dark if the IFI
financing tools remain unchecked PRGF of IMF
and PRSC of World Bank (a reformulation of
discredited SAP policies?) - CSPRs advocacy is targeted at these issues
10 Towards a New Plan and a Civil Society
Process Civil society engagement
in the NDP process
- April, 2005, govt roadmap for formulating FNDP
presented to Civil Society. - July 2005, a national inception workshop
- Thematic and provincial groups
- August, 2005, Consensus Building Workshop
- A Fifth National Development Plan for Zambia
2006-2010 A Civil Society Perspective
launched and presented to Government through the
Ministry of Finance and the SAGs. - July, 2006, Government draft FNDP document
- Civil Society Indaba held on 12th July, 2006
- CS response to draft presented at the Government
National Stakeholders Workshop held on 24th July
11KEY OBSERVATIONS, ACHIEVEMENTS AREAS OF
IMPROVEMENT
- Observations
- need to show linkages with some key previous and
on-going plans - Link the FNDP targets to those of the Millennium
Development Goals (MDGs) - Specify further some broadly reflected strategies
- draft plan did not incorporate the provincial
recommendations - Monitoring and Evaluation institutional framework
in the document does not explicitly show clear
linkages from the sub-district structures - government must exhibit the highest show of
political will -
12Areas of Improvement (i) should clearly state
the priority PRPs(ii) M and E institutional
framework should explicitly show clear linkages
from the sub-district (iv) align all existing
policies to the NDP
- Achievements
- process was consultative
- concrete document to guide national development
- monitoring framework outlined in the document
- Inclusion of some relevant chapters e.g
disabilities
13ALIGNING NATIONAL PLANS TO MDGs
- set of goals that can be achieved if a government
invests in ensuring the fulfillment of the basic
needs of its people - if realised, could put Zambia on the right path
to the MDGs. - There is focus, agreement and endorsement
- PRSP, TNDP and FNDP in Zambias case
(short/medium term plans) are the operational
framework for achieving the MDGs. - MDGs long term goals (2000-2015)
- PRSPs strategies for countries to use as means
to attaining the MDGs.
14 Link between MDGs and FNDP?
- even though government alludes to the fact that
they hope to move closer to achieving the MDGs by
implementing the NDP, they do not show how they
intend to do so - budget of the NDP falls far short of FNDP
- FNDP budget to the social sector is estimated at
800million dollars per year, while the MDGs
costing study estimates that Zambia will need to
spend 1.5 billion dollars per year on social
sectors alone - deficit of about 700million dollars!
- Need to ensure the estimate is based on MDG
attainment
15For Zambia to attain the MDGs
- MDGising the National Policies
- Increased Investments in infrastructure
- Prudent Financial Management
- Scaling of external assistance and fulfillment of
the important international development compact - Donor Alignment and Conditionalities
- need to triple up efforts if we are to attain
the Goals by 2015
16Conclusion
So we urgently need you to do what you do best
Political will shifts only if there is national
and local mobilization by the public, and only
when leaders are held accountable. What would
really make a difference is if, at the local
level, the Goals achieve a critical mass of
support and even become vote-getters. You can
and must help make that happen. If we do not,
millions of people will die, prematurely and
unnecessarily. Thatshould be a call to action.
UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan
- People driven Planning and Budgeting Key to
Pro-poor National Development!!