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THE CHALLENGE OF CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT: WORKING TOWARDS GOOD PRACTICE. Based on DAC Network on Governance: DCD/DAC/GOVNET(2005)5/REV1, Feb.1, 2006. CONTENTS. Why focus on capacity? What has been learned? From emerging consensus to better practice on the ground
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THE CHALLENGE OF CAPACITY DEVELOPMENT: WORKING TOWARDS GOOD PRACTICE Based on DAC Network on Governance: DCD/DAC/GOVNET(2005)5/REV1, Feb.1, 2006
CONTENTS • Why focus on capacity? • What has been learned? • From emerging consensus to better practice on the ground • Capacity development in fragile states • Moving Forward: Unfinished business Annex 1: Vicious and virtuous cycle of empowerment Annex 2: UNDP’s default principles for capacity development
Growing consensus on aid effectiveness and capacity The 2005 Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness Calls for capacity development to be an explicit objective of national development & poverty reduction strategies The UN Millennium Project and the Commission for Africa Challenges the world to treat capacity development with greater urgency The New Partnership for Africa’s Development (NEPAD) Identified capacity constraints as a major obstacle to sustainable development Capacity Development: One of the most important elements of aid effectiveness Without sufficient capacity, development efforts will not succeed
Challenge • In recent years more than US$15 billion (1/4th of donor aid) went to “Technical Cooperation”, most of which dealt with capacity development • Despite these investments, development of sustainable capacity development remains one of the most difficult areas of international development practice • Capacity Development one of the least responsive targets of donor assistance • 2004 Global Monitoring Report for MDGs reveals that public sector capacity lagged behind all other MDG benchmarks
contrast between The Aim of the Paper Difficulty of achieving Capacity Development Increasingly recognized importance of Capacity Development
Intended audiences – broad range of development practitioners Draws on evaluations & analysis A framework to guide & stimulate on-going discussions A framework for thinking about capacity development Concerns with capacity issues in the public sector A basis for dialogue between donors & partner countries Aims of the Paper
Lesson Learned • No quick fixes or easy formulas that work well in all circumstances • There is a set of core issues which improve the results achieved in many particular settings
Basic Understandings • Capacity – the ability of people, organizations and society as a whole to manage their affairs successfully • Generic capacities – the ability to plan & manage organizational changes & service improvements • Specific capacities – for e.g., public financial management or trade negotiations
Relationship between capacity & performance • Analogous to a motor car • We maintain the car’s engine, chassis, brakes, tires, etc – its capacity – because we value safe & reliable transportation – the performance – it provides • In development, we are interested in factors that make possible strong performance in relation to development goals & MDGs, which requires a clear understanding of the determinants
Capacity Development • The process whereby people, organizations & society as a whole unleash, strengthens, creates, adapts & maintain capacity over time • Not the same as capacity “building” which suggests a process starting with a plain surface and involving the step-by-step erection of a new structure, based on preconceived designed
Promotion of Capacity Development • What outside partners – domestic or foreign – can do to support, facilitate or catalyze capacity development & change processes • Not equivalent to Technical Assistance or Technical Cooperation
Relationship between Technical Assistance & Capacity Development Facilitating access to knowledge Brokering multi-stake-holder agreements Capacity Development Technical Assistance Participating in policy dialogue & advocacy Providing incremental resources Creating space for learning by doing
Importance of Capacity Development Two connected observations Country Ownership is the cornerstone of aid & development effectiveness Country capacity is the key to Development Performance
Capacity challenge is a Governance challenge Level of Analysis Individual level (experience, knowledge & technical skills) Organizational level (systems, procedures & rules) Systemic factors, i.e., relationships between the enabling environment, organizations and individuals Influences by means of incentives it creates Enabling environment (institutional framework, power structure & influence) Successful capacity development requires not only skills & organizational procedures, but also incentives & good governance
Scope & limits of Capacity Development Building an effective state Promotion of good governance Institutional Development Capacity Development
History • Capacity and capacity development issues on the development agenda for ages, starting in the early 1950s • Seen primarily as a technical process, involving transfer of knowledge from the North to the South • Overestimated the ability of development cooperation to build capacity in the absence of national commitment • LESSON LEARNED:To be effective capacity development must be part of an endogenous process of change, with national ownership and leadership as the critical factors
Agreement on DAC Principles for Effective Aid (1992) “Shaping the 21st Century” OECD DAC paper outlining a new paradigm (1996) Paris Declaration (2005) The New Consensus Capacity development is the prime responsibility of partner countries, with donors playing a supporting role Rome Declaration (2003) Comprehensive Development Framework (CDF) (1998) Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP) Initiative (1998)
One of the most important element of the new consensus • Capacity Development is primarily the responsibility of partner countries with donors playing a supportive role
The role of partner countries and donors in capacity development • Partner Countries • Lead the process • Set specific • objectives in • national • development • plans • Implementation • through country-led • strategies • Donor Countries • Mobilize financial & • analytical support around • partner country’s objectives, • plans & strategies • Make full use of • existing capacities • Harmonize support • for capacity development
New emphasis on local ownership • Recognition of the importance of political leadership and the governance system to create an enabling environment • Ownership is processes & trends not the presence or absence of a particular quality • Ownership is not monolithic
Forces influencing capacity development BLOCKING FACTORS - NEGATIVE FORCES Systemic factors, i.e., relationships between the enabling environment, organizations and individuals Capacity Development FACTORS FAVOURING - POSITIVE FORCES
Conditions that make public sector capacity difficult to develop Lack of a broadly enabling environment • Lack of human security & presence of armed conflict • Poor economic policies discouraging pro-poor growth • Weak scrutiny of the legislative branch on the executive branch • Lack of effective voice of the intended beneficiaries • Entrenched corruption • Entrenched & widespread clientelism or partimonialism
Conditions that make public sector capacity difficult to develop Aspects of government ineffectiveness environment • Fragmented government with poor overall capacity • Absent, non-credible and/or rapidly changing policies • Unpredictable, unbalanced or inflexible funding & staffing • Poor public service conditions • Segmented & compartmentalized organizations • Only a formal commitment to performance-oriented culture
Conditions favouring capacity development in organizations • Strong pressures from outside • Top management provides visible leadership for change, promotes a clear sense of mission, encourages participation, established explicit expectations about performance & rewards • Change management is approached in an integrated manner • A critical mass of staff is involved • Organizational innovations are tried, tested & adapted • Quick wins are celebrated • Change process is strategically & proactively managed
Summary of lessons learned • Capacity development involves three levels - individuals, organizational and enabling environment – which are interdependent • Capacity development goes well beyond Technical Cooperation and training approaches • Incentives generated by organizations & the overall environment is critical for using skilled personnel • Capacity development is necessarily an endogenous process of change • Focusing on capacity building of organizations make success more likely
III. FROM EMERGING CONSENSUS TO BETTER PRACTICE ON THE GROUND
A framework for capacity development Not a single, once-only sequence A flexible, “best fit” search for supporting capacity development
Understanding the international & country contexts • A good understanding of context is fundamental • Country political economy studies provide a valuable first step • Important to get beneath the surface of the organization, looking for both formal & informal, hidden aspects • Identify the relevant stakeholders • Donors should consider whether their own government’s policies are part o the problem • Consider the role of the diasporas
Identifying & supporting sources of country-owned change • Country ownership needs to be treated as a process • The interaction between donors & domestic actors can generate either vicious or virtuous circles of change • Donors should encourage the “effective demand” for public sector capacity • Modalities of donor support should encourage and strengthen initiatives benefiting from country commitment • Capacity needs assessment a useful entry point • Choosing the right organizational cope is as important as selecting the right organization • Some organizations are more crucial than others
Delivering support • The enabling environment is still relevant when specific design issues are considered • Technical cooperation is effective when pooled and coordinated • Donor-instigated Project Implementation Units (PIUs) should be avoided whenever possible • Agreeing the desired outcomes of capacity development is crucial • South-South learning should be encouraged • Large new investments in training capacity may be justified
Lessons learned about capacity development through long-term training • Better to aim at institutional changes in key organizations than focus on improving the capacity of individuals • The gains in long-term training includes work attitudes, critical thinking, self-confidence, etc. • Having a critical mass of staff in the same organization trained abroad in the same country make changes more possible • Costs and benefits of different training options must be determined • Follow up support in organizations essential • Long-term commitment by donors is critical Source: USAID’s African Graduate Fellowship (AFGRAD) and African Training for Leadership and Advanced Skills (ATLAS) Programme
Learning from experience and sharing lessons • Capacity development initiatives should maximize learning • Further lessons must be extracted about what works and what does not in terms of changing the enabling environment • Monitoring should also look into whether donor support is delivered in a way that assist country ownership • An independent form of monitoring, capable of generating objective judgments is required • Select and apply measures of achievement • Collect the views of intended clients or end-users • Individual assessment is not just about skill enhancement
Summing up on operationalising the new consensus • General formulas models do not produce sustainable benefits • Approaches that achieve a best fit with the particular circumstances of the country, sector or organization is needed
Fragile States • Most difficult aid environments that are being neglected by the international community • Countries recovering from conflict • Regimes that are chronically weak or in decline • Capacity development must prioritize on reducing fragility
General principles for working in fragile development environments • Development partners need to be highly selective in the instruments they use for capacity development • Must understand the country context and focus on an approach suitable in the specific circumstances • Must be realistic about their expectations • Donors need to identify likely partners and work with them consistently over the short, medium and longer terms
Lessons learned from working on capacity development in fragile states • Capacity development efforts must selectively focus on core state functions, so that they can effectively provide for their people • Planning tools developed for post-conflict environments may be useful • Respect the principle of endogenous change and foster country leadership • New capacity development initiatives must not erode or duplicate existing capacities in individual, organizational or enabling environment terms • Sectoral selectivity or “partial alignment” can deliver strategic pay-offs • Modest capacity development can be achieved even in states with acute governance challenges
Experiences of the past 5 decades • Donors must align with and support country-driven approaches and systems for capacity development • Significant efforts are required • More creative thinking is needed • Moving from “right answers” to a “best fit” implies a better understanding of country contexts, identifying sources of country-owned change, designing appropriate forms of support and sharing lessons learned
Unfinished Business of Capacity Development • Consolidating consensus on capacity development as an endogenous process of unleashing, strengthening, creating and maintaining capacity over time • Identifying & addressing the systemic factors that discourage country-owned efforts • Donors provide support which encourages, strengthens and do not replace initiatives by leaders and managers in partner countries • Integrating human capital formation and Technical Cooperation with institutional changes and organizational reforms • Developing policy-relevant disaggregated Technical Cooperation statistics
Vicious Cycle of Empowerment … see bad results as confirming weak capacity and commitment DONORS … … fail to claim ownership; refuse responsibility; entitlement attitude … perceive standards as unrealistic, irrelevant … fill leadership gap, set boundaries and logic … suspicious; establish evaluation standards, emphasize quantity RECIPIENTS … … the get-most-out-of-the-system attitude … lack of control; perceive inequities, friction & mistrust … advocate and set priorities … control implementation, staff & procurement … perceives disconnect with needs and preferences … inability to question or refuse logic … conceive, write and present plan Source: UNDP, “Ownership, Leadership and Transformation”, New York (2003), p.42/43
Virtuous Cycle of Empowerment … perceive growing assertiveness & capacity development DONORS … … claim ownership; assume responsibility … perceive agreed standards as relevant & draw lessons … exercise respect, restraint & listen … help improve evaluation standards RECIPIENTS … … develop evaluation standards; growing partnership & trust … Reform system that works for development … support national efforts, priorities, systems & processes … take some risk & provide support on demand … control implementation, staff & procurement … conceive, write & present plan … constructive critique and long-term commitment based on agreed conditions Source: UNDP, “Ownership, Leadership and Transformation”, New York (2003), p.42/43