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Governance Reform: Bridging Monitoring & Action Framework Patterns Reforms. April 28th.2011. The National Governance System Framework. Governance and corruption are not the same thing. Governance Trajectories. Some Governance Indicators.
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Governance Reform: Bridging Monitoring & Action Framework Patterns Reforms April 28th.2011
The National Governance System Framework Governance and corruption are not the same thing.
Two Approaches to Measuring Governance • Broad and Aggregated: Broad measures to measure governance at more aggregated levels. Help reveal systematic patterns – and basis for monitoring trends over time. • Specific and Disaggregated: Specific measures of quality of key governance subsystems, including using “actionable indicators” to benchmark and track reforms. • Way Forward: Match the governance indicator with the purpose of measurement and monitoring; intensified investment in specific indicators
REFORMS • Strengthening Bureaucratic Quality • Strengthening Checks and Balances • Initiating Reform from the Front-line
Strategy – Strengthening Governance Institutions I Five Common Themes 1. Understand the politics: why are a country’s governance strengths and weaknesses what they are? (Kenya vs Sierra Leone; Bangladesh) 2. Focus narrowly, embrace momentum 3. Many opportunities for improving transparency – be proactive everywhere 4. Monitor progress, using specific indicators 5. Initiate dialogue on path to long-run sustainability
PFM operations perform satisfactorily regardless of governance starting point,but ACSR operations are successful in stronger settings
Trends in PFM can be monitoredNet Change in HIPC Tracking Indicators, 2001-2004 8 7 7 6 6 6 5 4 3 2 2 1 1 0 Decline in Decline in No change Improvement Improvement categories categories in 1-2 in or more categories categories
Improving PFM – A Platform Approach Cambodia – Sequence of Platforms Platform 4 Integration of accountability and review processes for both finance and performance management Enables more accountability for performance management Enables focus on what is done with money Platform 3 Improved linkage of priorities and service targets to budget planning and implementation Broad Activities Enables a basis for accountability Platform 2 Improved internal control and public access to key fiscal information to hold managers accountable • Full design of FMIS • Develop IT • Management • Strategy • Initial design of asset register Platform 1 A credible budget delivering a reliable and predictable resource to budget managers Broad Activities • Re-design budget cycle (e.g. MTEF) • Pilot program based budgeting & budget analysis • Further fiscal • Decentralization Broad Activities • Re-design • Budgeting • Classification system • Initial design of FMIS for core business processes • Strengthen external audit and define internal audit function Broad Activities • Integration of budget (recurrent & capital budgets) • Strengthen macro and revenue • Forecasting • Streamline spending processes
Strengthening administrative capability Some initial lessons • Ambitious administrative reforms work only in those few countries with strong political commitment and coherence • Latvia: EU accession market competitive pay, meritocracy, comprehensive administrative restructuring • Tanzania: pay decompression; performance-based agency reforms • Even in these countries, implementation was difficult • In most countries, a more modest administrative reform agenda is more likely to get results: example of Albania • Pay reform and meritocracy targeted at top 1300 civil servants • Underpinned by independent appeals body • Beneficiaries successfully resisted political push-back
Building the Demand Side A constellation of checks and balances Broader International Community Civil Society Media Judiciary Legislature Subnational governments and autonomous oversight agencies Executive
Strengthening JusticeThree emerging lessons Incentives for effective judicial system: • Incentives of citizens and firms to use • Incentives of politicians to refrain from intervening • Incentives of judges to carry out their roles • Judicial reform requires enabling institutional environment • Reform needs to address political obstacles • Successful implementation remains elusive Independence without accountability results in poor performance • ECA: independent courts, w/o accountability, result: court corruption
Decentralization and Local Governance • Effective decentralization needs: • Clear allocation of responsibilities between central and local governments • Assignment of service provision responsibilities • Assignment of fiscal resources (including local tax base) • Central fiduciary and performance oversight over local • Capacity of local governments (and central counterparts • Downward accountability between local governments and citizens • => High risk of institutional limbo • 2. Community Local government • Opportunity for cumulative gains?
Strengthening checks & balances through transparency • Strengthening national-level transparency • Supply: Building statistical capacity - Marrakech action plan for statistics • Information availability: Freedom of Information Act; support for media • Participatory poverty reduction strategies (PRSPs) • Strengthening participation and transparency • Citizen Scorecards in Bangalore • Rajasthan India: leverage FOIA to compare official data with actual experiences of hospital patients and food rationing recipients • Philippines: citizen monitoring of textbook distribution • Tanzania: local community tracking of health and education spending • Transparency & competition in public procurement, e-procurement
Governance and Poverty Reduction: Orchestrated Imbalance A Governance Virtuous Spiral?
Governance from the Front-line I Getting the Priorities Right