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PRSP Learning Event

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Title: No Slide Title Author: Jonathan Warn Last modified by: Alison Evans Created Date: 3/30/2002 4:45:15 PM Document presentation format: On-screen Show – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: PRSP Learning Event


1
PRSP Learning Event
  • In-week Russia/Ukraine - April 10th 2002

2
Origins of the PRSP Idea
  • Poor record on poverty reduction in 1990s
  • (Africa, Transition countries especially)
  • Findings on aid effectiveness (aid undermining
  • govt. systems capacity, limits of
    conventional
  • policy conditionality, nb of ownership)
  • Justification for big increase in multilateral
  • funding for debt relief (HIPC II)

3
Core PRSP Principles
  • Country-led, country-owned
  • Based on broad-based participation
  • Comprehensive macro, structural, social
  • Medium to long term perspective
  • Results-oriented
  • Donor partnership under government
  • leadership

4
Whats new?
  • Costed poverty reduction strategy linked to macro
    fiscal framework
  • Reducing the disconnect between policy results
  • Opening up the policy process to broad-based
    local participation
  • Working behind Govt. leadership/new aid
    delivery/partnership possibilities

5
Relevance in MICs?
  • 500 million living on lt 2/day 12 of poorest
  • people reside in MICs
  • Costed policy framework linked to resource
  • allocation universally relevant
  • Joining-up macro, structural social policy a
  • challenge everywhere (CDF)
  • Broad societal support for policy change
  • often critical to effectiveness

6
Relevance cont.
  • Results-orientation widely applicable
  • Donor role secondary to domestic constituencies
  • /electorates
  • BUT poverty, political economy, capacity
  • weaknesses and the leverage of external
  • partners are all different from LICs.
  • Wholesale application of PRS principles probably
  • not appropriate but variations on a theme.

7
Ownership
  • What does ownership entail?
  • - locus of idea resides domestically
  • - technocratic conviction political support
  • - broad societal support
  • - institutionalistion embedded in new
    inst.arrgs
  • How is the PRS doing?
  • - PRS principles gradually being internalised
  • (as part of the political project
    popularisation
  • as framework for budget guidelines)
  • - Upgrading of poverty policy with involvement of
  • MoF technocrats given higher profile

8
Ownership cont.
- Some new institutional arrangements (cross-
sectoral technical committees, PRS working
groups) - Domestic constituencies are more
engaged in policy debate (national dialogues,
policy fora)
  • Challenges
  • - deepening understanding through info compaigns
  • - engaging political constituencies more directly
    -
  • Parliaments, political parties, TUs (again
    media)
  • - locking-in commitment to principles through
  • complementary reforms (CSR/pay reform)
  • changes in the aid relationship

9
Participation
  • Experience shows
  • - Opportunity has been created for more
    strategic engagement (NGOs engaging with policy
    questions)
  • - New spaces for domestic policy dialogue are
    emerging (joint policy fora, participatory PER
    processes)
  • - New coalitions also emerging CSOs, INGOs and
  • local NGOs, academic institutions
  • - Participation often limited to consultation,
    sometimes in conflict with formal political
    institutions

10
Participation cont.
  • Significant challenges remain
  • - There are costs risks to participation how
    to avoid
  • loss of trust is a key issue
  • - Consistent, long term support to participatory
    policy processes is necessary to yield desired
    results
  • - Over-privileging of NGOs can be at the cost of
    local political institutions, membership
    organisations etc.
  • - Not just dialogue but also collective analysis,
    a link to action monitoring for feedback
    results

11
Partnership
  • Experience so far
  • Recognition that a broader policy dialogue is
    needed
  • beyond projects
  • - Acknowledgement of Govt. leadership in mgmt of
    aid
  • New aid modalities
  • Donor moves towards harmonisation results
    focus
  • But the potential is also there to
  • Further streamline donor processes benchmarking
    of
  • donor performance establish common mechanisms
  • Move towards longer term commitments based on
  • mutual accountabilities

12
Partnership
  • Possible approaches include
  • - Extend national partnership agreements to
    include
  • sub-national local authority (even
    community)
  • - Linking institutions with experience with
    participatory
  • methods/social assessment/monitoring
  • - Extending partnership by linking to private
    sector/
  • chambers of commerce, corporate social
  • responsibility issues

13
Results Oriented
  • Assessing progress key to public credibility of
  • poverty policy
  • Feasibility and evaluability of policy
    priorities
  • targets are in turn key to monitoring progress
  • PRS monitoring requires (at a minimum)
  • - clear articulation of intermediate output,
    outcome
  • final outcome indicators
  • - national, local and household level poverty
    data
  • - administrative/facility level data
  • - qualitative policy analysis/quick
    monitoring tools
  • (citizen report cards consumer surveys)

14
Results Oriented
  • But monitoring is not just about data crucial
    are
  • the systems that feed evidence back into
    policy.
  • Institutional arrangements must enable
  • domestic policy dialogue around poverty to
  • continue and deepen (link data, analysis
  • dissemination)
  • Build demand through budget/PER reform
  • processes, links with research advocacy
  • community, (town-hall meetings
  • e-govt.)

15
Results Oriented
  • Participatory tools can increase access to info
  • increase trust, particularly in excluded
  • communities
  • Supporting capacity for poverty social impact
  • analysis (research community, TUs etc)
  • can help to inform the domestic debate
  • about policy change contribute to better
  • evidence-based policy making.

16
What does this mean for you?
How do these lessons challenges fit with your
current experience of working in Russia/ Ukraine?
Whats different what are some of possibilities
for working more directly with PRS principles?
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