Title: Vinod Thomas,
1Evaluation for Stronger Results
- Vinod Thomas,
- Director-General, Evaluation
- Third International Roundtable Managing for
Development Results, Hanoi - February 6, 2007
2Results in a World of Multiple Players
Aid Effectiveness
Source F. Bourguignon, Presentation at IEG
Meeting (October, 2006)
3Differing Results at Project and Country Levels
- Project ratings show upward trend since the early
1990s, reversing a long decline - In one-third of cases, Country Assistance
Strategy (CAS) outcome ratings were
unsatisfactory when project ratings were
satisfactory
Project and CAS Outcome Ratings () Project and CAS Outcome Ratings () Project and CAS Outcome Ratings ()
CAS project portfolio outcome CAS outcome ratings CAS outcome ratings
CAS project portfolio outcome Satisfactory Unsatisfactory
Satisfactory 56.0 33.3
Unsatisfactory 2.7 8.0
Source IEG databases and staff estimates, July 2006 Source IEG databases and staff estimates, July 2006 Source IEG databases and staff estimates, July 2006
4Wide Variation in Results in Policy Areas
- Quality-Quantity disconnects Primary education
support gave high priority to increasing
enrollments, but less to learning. - Donor disconnects In fragile states, donors
often have not shared a common purpose, hence
policy coherence has been hard to achieve. - Policy disconnects In many countries benefits
from trade liberalization have not been
sustainable due to lack of complementary policies.
5Evaluation Helps Track the Results Chain
6Role of ME in Development Support
- Poverty reduction strategy papers and MDGs need
ME systems. - Programmatic lending relies on country systems to
collect performance indicators and monitor and
evaluate programs. - Country ME capacity essential component of
development communitys results-based agenda. - Participatory approaches increase the need for
country-level ME capacity.
7How ME Help Track Results
- Enhance transparency and support accountability
relationships. - Support evidence-based policy-making in the
national budget cycle and national planning. - Support government agencies in service delivery
and the management of staff.
8ME Limitations
- One size does not fit all.
- Project-level and country-level objectives need
to be aligned. - Measuring results requires clearly defined,
realistic objectives. - Data manageability and quality crucial for
measuring outcomes. - ME systems alone cannot improve performance.
9Challenges to Results-Oriented Evaluation
- With the emphasis shifting to programs, can ME
address attribution of results as well as
accountability? - How does country capacity influence the design,
implementation and utilization of ME? - Has the results agenda increased ME capacity and
harmonization within the development community?