80 likes | 257 Views
Developing Country Progress and the Effectiveness of International Aid. Maarten Brouwer, Effectiveness and Quality Director Ministry of Foreign Affairs Netherlands. Introduction. Perspective of a donor person using development statistics Need to know progress made in partner countries
E N D
Developing Country Progress and the Effectiveness of International Aid Maarten Brouwer, Effectiveness and Quality Director Ministry of Foreign Affairs Netherlands
Introduction • Perspective of a donor person using development statistics • Need to know progress made in partner countries • Why is this still so difficult?
Netherlands experience with progress measurement in developing countries • Second biennial Results Report just published. • Purpose is to inform parliament and the Dutch public • Report revolved around country-level “result chains” • These show Dutch efforts are part of a set of country and donor inputs that lead to outputs, which lead to outcomes & impact • Report was well received • But doing the report was a challenge: weak monitoring and data systems, especially at the sector level
Towards a common results framework • PRSPs have good monitoring framework (although often not used for domestic accountability) • Sectoral plans continue to have weak result chains • Donor trend towards using country systems and more budget support. • This requires better performance assessment frameworks (PAFs) in partner countries. • But can we use country systems for PAFs?
Towards a common results framework (cont’d) • No • Monitoring data are weak and too little detail on policy measures • So donors develop their own PAFs for partner countries • This is undesirable: important to strengthen national PAFs for domestic accountability
Towards a common results framework (cont’d) • Weak progress in improving quality of country sector or thematic plans; • These plans do not have a clear result chain and a corresponding monitoring framework. • Why is this so? • Limited tradition and expertise within sector ministries to do outcome-focused planning • Donors are not helping enough with this either • Statistical data to measure monitoring indicators are lacking, and there is no harmonised donor approach to strengthen country statistical systems
What to do? • Donors are increasingly involved in strengthening national plans (2nd generation PRSPs) • Opportunity to help establish a country’s result chains and outcome-based monitoring frameworks; • National, sectoral and sub-national; and also for difficult cross-cutting areas such as governance and the environment • Donors need to put much more effort in strengthening a country’s national and sectoral statistics; and coordinate better among themselves.
Conclusions • Donors want to scale up their aid. • But need better country systems to monitor progress • Donors should therefore do three things: • Help countries build strengthen their sector and governance plans, make them outcome based and establish clear monitoring frameworks • scale up their aid to statistics at country level • Better coordinate their support to statistics