Title: RURAL SUPPORT PROGRAMMES APPROACH
1THE RURAL SUPPORT PROGRAMMES OF PAKISTAN
2Why Poverty ?
- The public sector makes huge investments but does
not create a grassroots mechanism for delivery of
services - As a result, Government services do not reach
the people especially the poor - Commonly the public sector does not effectively
involve poor communities when planning or
delivering development
3RSP Mission
- To harness peoples potential to undertake
development activities by investing in grassroots
institutions of the poor for Poverty Reduction. - .. using social mobilisation as a tool .
4Why RSPs
- Autonomous and sustainable support
organisations (RSPs) critical to undertake
social mobilisation of the poor - Social mobilisation requires an institutional
mechanism which has the credibility of the
Government and flexibility of an NGO - Participatory, grassroots organisations of the
poor are a proven, powerful tool for poverty
alleviation and social protection - Poverty targeting is KEY to identify the poorest
- Grassroots social mobilisation organisations can
make public service delivery more efficient and
accountable
5What are RSPs ?
- Registered under Companies Ordinance, Section 42
- Four RSPs set up with Provincial and Federal
Government seed funds (NRSP, GBTI, PRSP, SRSO) - High level Federal Provincial ownership with
Government officials on RSP Boards - Also other development professionals on Boards
6RSPs in Pakistan-94/125 districts and 2/13 FATA
Agencies/Areas
AKRSP
SRSP
FATA
RSP Network
GBTI
NRSP
PRSP
BRSP
SRSO
TRDP
SGA
7Social Mobilisation Process
- Series of Dialogues to assess peoples
willingness to form Community Organisations (COs)
to undertake development work - Poverty ranking of all HH in village to ensure
inclusion of poor in COs - CO forms and selects activists, start regular
meetings and savings programme
8The Process.. contd.
- CO prepares Micro-Investment Plan
- Accordingly the RSP provides technical,
financial support and .. - Facilitates linkages with line agencies other
service providers (eg Banks, NGOs, etc)
9Three-Tiered Social Mobilisation
LSO
VO
CO
CO
10 Membership 2.48 million (32 women) 2.2 million
hholds
Rs 2.04 billion Saved (Rs 439 million womens)
Health Workers Trained 15,250 (12,908 TBAs)
- Skills Training
- Vocational Technical
- -leadership management
- 1.09 million
- (398,314 women)
Micro Health Insurance 1.34 million (326,617
women)
142318 COs (42040 WCOs ie 32)
Education Community Schools 1475 with 57,134
students
Credit Disbursed cumulative Rs 40.84 billion (Rs
12.2bill women)
Community Infrastructure Schemes 79,726 Rs
9.194 billion cost (2.7 million h.holds
benefiting)
Credit Beneficiaries 2.4 million ( 0.721 million
women)
As of Dec 2008
11The RSP Network (RSPN)
- A national level Network of 9 RSPs registered in
2001 as a non-profit company - RSPN Board RSP Chairpersons RSP Chief Executive
Officers other development professionals,
private sector representatives academics - Provides strategy support to RSPs eg in social
mobilisation, womens programmes, impact studies,
etc - Does national level coordination between RSPs
- Policy work with government on poverty strategies
- Documents and disseminates community development
best practice - Donor coordination and fund management for RSPs
12GOVERNMENT-RSP PROJECT PARTNERSHIPS
- Social Mobilisation HRD all projects, PPAF
- Infrastructure Khushhal Pakistan Programme,
Khushhal Pakistan Fund, PPAF, National Water
Course Lining (govt.) - Vocational Technical Training
- Health Basic Health Units managed by RSPs under
Chief Ministers and Peoples Primary Healthcare
Initiatives (PRSP in Punjab and SRSO, AKF, SRSP) - Education PESRP Punjab, Dir, SMC formation,
Community Schools - Agriculture Crop Maximisation, Area Devt.
Projects, Integrated Pest Management (PRSP) - Livestock PM Livestock Project, Area Devt
Projects - Micro-Finance Habib Bank, PPAF, State Bank
- Disaster and Rehabilitation earthquake, floods
- Governance CCBs Councilors Training
13RSP Impact studies
- Northern Areas economy experienced growth in per
capita incomes of 84 from 1991 to 2001 (Source
Govt of Pakistan, FBS AKRSP, Farm Household
Income Expenditure survey) - Incomes of CO members 15-20 percent higher than
those of non members in Northern Areas. (Source
Reducing Poverty sustaining growth, 2004) - NRSP, membership in COs resulted in 8 percent
higher incomes annually. (Source Khan 2002,
Partnership with communities for IWRM) - 68 NRSP respondents ate better than before, 50
felt improvements in health and 82 experienced
sustained increase in incomes after accessing
credit. (Source UNDP supported, Pakistan
National HDR 2003)
14thank you
15Micro-Investment Plans
16(No Transcript)
17Grameen Foundation Poverty Score Card
- A simple scorecard designed by Mark Schreiner
- A single all-Pakistan scorecard
- Estimates poverty likelihood (not expenditure)
- Designed to make sense to non-specialists and to
be quick and low-cost, allowing scoring in the
field - Consists of
- 10 indicators (none derived from census data)
- All weights are zero or positive integers
- Scores range from 0 (most likely poor) to 100
(least likely poor) - Scores converted to estimated poverty
likelihoods via a look-up table
18The Poverty Score Card (Mark Schreiner)
19Results of Poverty Score Card (5 RSPs)