Title: Fighting corruption Strategies that work
1Fighting corruptionStrategies that work
- Presented by Geir Sundet, PADCO/REPOA
- OECD/TI Development Partnership Forum
- Improving Donor Effectiveness in Combating
Corruption - Paris 9-10 December 2004
2Fighting corruptionStrategies for the real world
- Fighting corruption what works and what doesnt
- A case study Expenditure Tracking in Uganda and
Tanzania - Two challenges connecting the dots and coming to
grips with realities
3Fighting corruptionWhat doesnt work
- Establishing Anti-Corruption Commissions and
formulating and adopting National Anti-Corruption
Strategies - Good for fostering national debate, focusing
public attention and tracking progress - but
- Experience shows that stand-alone anti-corruption
initiatives rarely have much impact
4 and what does
- Enabling monitoring from below
- Access to information
- Political space to demand accountability
- Achieving a positive feed-back loop
- Reconciling paper with realities
- Where does the money go?
- Are the intended beneficiaries aware of their
entitlements?
5A case study
- Comparing the Ugandan and Tanzanian experiences
of Public Expenditure Tracking
6Public Expenditure Tracking Surveys (PETS)
- Following the money - A PETS
- Compares budget allocations to actual spending
- Is the most effective check we have on whether
resources reach the intended beneficiaries
7The Ugandan experience
- PETS provided the impetus for improved monitoring
of funds, public display of budgets and financial
entitlements and training of stakeholders to
claim their entitlements - The impact At the time of the first PETS, in the
early nineties, only 13 of capitation grants
reached primary schools, in 2001 more than 80
reached the schools.
8The key to the Ugandan success
- Stakeholders were made aware of their
entitlements and empowered to claim them - Transparency of entitlements and flow of funds
public postings down to school level - Capacity building for school committees
9The Tanzanian experience
- To date three PETS have been conducted
- 1999 - Health and Education Financial Tracking
Study - 2001 - Pro-Poor Expenditure Tracking
- 2004 - Primary Education Tracking Study
10What the studies found
- How much of the money reached the intended
beneficiaries? - Education (discretionary funding) 43 (1999), lt
50 (2001) - Health (discretionary funding) 12 (1999), lt50
(2001) - Primary school Capitation Grant
(non-discretionary) 54-64 (2004)
11What impact have the studies had?
- Unlike the Ugandan case, the Tanzanian studies
have not triggered a national debate about how to
ensure that money reach the intended
beneficiaries - There has been no documented improvement in the
proper use of funds for service delivery - The 2004 tracking study is still fresh, but so
far the policy response has been muted
12Lessons
- Studies on their own cant be expected to have
an impact - For monitoring and oversight to have an impact,
the outputs, indicators, numbers need to be put
in a context that is useable and understandable - The people must be part and parcel of the
monitoring process
13Studies on Their Own Arent Enough
Inform national policy process by providing data
on actual expenditure of funds
The people teachers, parents, NGOs, media, MPs
engaging in monitoring and policy debate
Expenditure tracking and Access to information
Inform people of their entitlements and empower
them to monitor use of funds
14How to do things betterTwo challenges
- 1. Connecting the dots simplifying processes
and establishing linkages - PER, PRS, PRBS, LGRP, PFMRP, etc are these
processes effectively linked on the horizontal
plane, or are they parallel, vertical constructs? - Do projects and programmes operate within
official government structures? - Does anyone see the big picture?
15- 2. Strengthen monitoring and access to
information - Assess strength of routine monitoring systems
- Enable tracking of indicators over time and
across geographical areas - Use PETS and civil society monitoring intiatives
as controls on formal monitoring systems - The simplest intiatives are often the most
effective village notice boards, public postings
of budgets and expense statements empowering
people to hold authorities and service providers
accountable
16The Tanzania Governance Noticeboard
- A USAID sponsored initiative by PADCO and REPOA,
a Tanzanian think-tank, to facilitate effective
use of existing data and indicators in the
national policy process - A database and a website to collect and present
strategic data, facilitating comparative analysis
and informed policy dialogue - Training of NGOs, media and Parliament in the
use of the Noticeboard, leading to more
sophisticated and effective policy monitoring,
advocacy and oversight
17TzGN the outreach component
- Support to develop workable models and practices
for financial transparency and access to
information at district and village level - Piloting approaches for NGOs to engage in
expenditure tracking and to enable communities to
know and demand their entitlements - Training of NGOs in expenditure tracking and
other methodologies for monitoring of expenditure
and service provisioning
18Track our progress!
- www.repoa.or.tz/noticeboard
19Merging the circleThe Importance of Making
Information Accessible
A C C E S S T O I N F O R M A T I O N
P U B L I C O V E R S I G H T
Public Institutions Transparent procedures
Result Improved standards of Transparency and
Accountability, improved service delivery,
and strengthened public legitimacy
Stakeholders Informed citizens
20Merging the circleThe social contract
S E R V I C E P R O V I S I O N
P A Y M E N T O F T A X E S
Public Institutions Transparency
Accountability
Result Economy, Efficiency and Effectiveness
in Service Delivery
Citizens Information Empowerment
21if the need for accountability is addressed most
effectively from the bottom uphow is this
reflected in our programmes?