Title: Involving Parliaments in Poverty Reduction
1Involving Parliaments in Poverty Reduction
CIS Roundtable on Parliaments, Governance and
Poverty Reduction Istanbul, Turkey 23-24 March
2004 Katrina Sharkey (PRMPR)
2Focus of Presentation
- Parliamentary Involvement
- Context Institutionalizing participation in
PRSPs - Why Involve Parliaments a summary
- Some Entry Points for Parliaments
- Design Phase
- Implementation Phase
- Comparative Involvement of Parliaments
- Lessons learned
- Bank and non-Bank work with parliaments
- Conclusion
3Context
- 2000 2003 period highlights relevance of
broad-based participation - Consultation vs. Participation
- Stakeholder Involvement
- Intra-governmental
- Societal
4Institutionalising the PRSP within government
POLICY FORMULATION
INTEGRATION
EVALUATION
COORDINATION
MONITORING
DECENTRALIZATION
5Institutionalising the PRSP outside
governmentThe participatory process
Government
Parliament
Consultation/ working groups
Intermediary organizations
Citizens
Alison Scott DfID, UK, 2002
6Core Functions of Parliaments
- Legislative Function
- Passing laws
- Participation in policy making
- Oversight Function
- Holding Governments to account
- Representative Function
- Representing constituents, giving voice
7Why Involve Parliaments in the PRSP? Reasons
relate to 3 functions of parliament
legislative, representative, oversight
- ENDS
- To enhance country ownership
- To enhance Government Accountability
- MEANS
- To increase and institutionalize participation
- To strengthen ME systems via local and existing
institutions
8Limited Involvement to date
- Mainly government MPs and not parliament
- 2002 Progress Report
- Parliaments overlooked in design process
- 2003 Progress Report
- indicates increasing involvement
- Implementation gaps emerging
- Donor partners and NGOs concerned about impact on
governance
9The PRSP Policy Process locating entry points
for Parliament
10Examples of how Parliaments can be included
- Consult MPs early in the process (Niger, Albania)
- Link involvement to the budget process (e.g. BiH
Tanzania) - Facilitate information flows to Parliaments where
Executive does not (e.g. Ghana)
- Use committees and sub-committees (e.g. Albania,
Serbia) - Engage MPs and committees in policy dialogues
with the WB (e.g. Mozambique, Nigeria)
11Parliamentary Involvement in PRSP Policy Cycle
- PRSP Working Groups
- MPs are members of WGs
- Examples Montenegro, BiH
- Presented to Parliament
- More Draft or Full PRSPs being presented to
Parliament. - Examples Niger, Tajikistan and Ethiopia, Vietnam
- Policy Prioritization
- Limited given Parliaments constitutional role
vis-Ã -vis the Executive. - Examples Kyrgyz Republic, Nicaragua
- Review by Committee
- Some PRSPs being given more detailed review.
- Examples Mozambique, Malawi, Ghana, Ethiopia,
- Monitoring and Evaluation of PRSP by Parliament
- Limited involvement to date
- Emerging area of concern
- Georgia case of good practice
-
12Sharkey and Dreger, Parliamentary Involvement in
the PRSP World Bank (2003)
13Global Snapshot of Parliamentary Involvement
- Albania
- Ad hoc committee on PRSP to be established to
increase parliamentary involvement - Georgia
- Parliament to evaluate status / development /
achievement of PRSP objective will receive
quarterly reports to allow impact - Burkina Faso
- PRSP presented to both houses of Parliament for
ratification prior to submission to Bank and Fund
- Tajikistan
- Participation of MPs in PRSP preparation working
groups - Parliamentary approval of PRSP
- Uganda
- Presentation and discussion of the PRSP in
Parliament shortly prior to submission - Mauritania
- Reps from Upper House were members of the working
committee monitoring PRSP process - Debates of poverty in parliament
- Parliamentary approval of PRSP
- Azerbaijan
- MP participation in some 15
- PRSP working groups PRSP committee
- FR Yugoslavia
- Creation of Standing Committee on PRSP
- Strengthened links with Finance and Budget
Committee - Nicaragua
- Forestry policy consultations between Ministry of
Agriculture / Forestry NA commission on
Environment / Natural resources
14Building Capacity to support Parliamentary
Involvement
- World Bank and IMF and donors realize need for
parliamentary involvement to sustain mechanisms
for participation and oversight - PRSP Trust Fund supports capacity development of
Executive, Parliament, Civil Society - Weak parliamentary capacity (Members, staff)
often inhibits parliaments involvement - WBI and PREM supporting efforts to raise
awareness within and outside Bank
15Lessons Learned First Generation
- Knowledge and Awareness
- MPs in many countries still learning about PRSP
- Parliaments missed opportunities in design phase
- Participation Gap but some parliaments flexing
Constitutional muscle (Ghana, Nigeria, BiH,
Albania)
16Lessons Learned Second Generation
- Issue identification Action-oriented
- The budget cycle, linked to the PRSP, provides
best opportunities for sustained input of
Parliament - Challenge is in sustained follow-up, including
with staff - Capacity building / skills training
- Macro and Finance issues
- Sectoral issues
17Bank and Non-Bank Approaches to support
parliamentary involvement
- Through Lending
- e.g PRSCs and IDF Grants
- Through WBI-PREM
- Awareness raising and action-oriented capacity
enhancement activities - External Partners
- PNoWB taps WB/IMF donor expertise
18Conclusions
- If PRSP is to have meaningful country ownership,
participation is to be institutionalized, receive
genuine political support Parliament needs to be
involved - Given parliaments constitutional mandate, PRSP
process creates obvious entry points for its
meaningful involvement in design and oversight of
poverty reduction - Parliament itself should determine level of
involvement, not donors