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World Development Report 2004 Making Services Work for Poor People Qualidade do Gasto Publico no Brasil June 26-27, 2003 Ritva Reinikka Development Research Group, The World Bank Messages Services are failing poor people. But they can work. How? By empowering poor people to
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World Development Report 2004Making Services Work for Poor People Qualidade do Gasto Publico no Brasil June 26-27, 2003 Ritva Reinikka Development Research Group, The World Bank
Messages • Services are failing poor people. • But they can work. How? • By empowering poor people to • Monitor and discipline service providers • Raise their voice in policymaking • By strengthening incentives for service providers to serve the poor
Universal Primary Education MDGs—Global Aggregates Eradicate Poverty & Hunger
MDGs—Global Aggregates Promote Gender Equality Reduce Child Mortality Ratio of girls to boys in primary and secondary school (%)
Poorest quintile Richest quintile Outcomes are worse for poor peopleCumulative deaths per 1000 births Source: Analysis of Demographic and Health Survey data
Richest quintile Poorest quintile Outcomes are worse for poor peoplePercent aged 15 to 19 completing each grade or higher Source: Analysis of Demographic and Health Survey data
Similar changes in public spending can be associated with vastly different changes in outcomes
and vastly different changes in spending can be associated with similar changes in outcomes.
How are services failing poor people? • Public spending usually benefits the rich, not the poor
Percent to richest quintile Percent to poorest quintile Expenditure incidence Health Education Source: Compiled from various sources
How are services failing poor people? • Public spending usually benefits the rich, not the poor • Money fails to reach frontline service providers • In Uganda, only 13% of non-wage recurrent spending on primary education reached primary schools
How are services failing poor people? • Public spending benefits the rich more than the poor • Money fails to reach frontline service providers • Service quality is low for poor people
Examples of low service quality • Bangladesh: Absenteeism rates for doctors in primary health care centers: 74%. • Indonesia: Absenteeism in primary schools: 18%; in primary health clinics: 42%. • Zimbabwe: 13% of respondents gave as a reason for not delivering babies in public facilities that “nurses hit mothers during delivery”. • Guinea: 70% of government drugs disappeared.
But services can work • Infant mortality and malnutrition reduced in Ceará, Brazil • Citywide services in Johannesburg, South Africa reformed • Cash transfers to households in Mexico increased enrollment, lowered illness cases • Citizen report cards in Bangalore, India • More money reached primary schools in Uganda
Mexico’s PRONASOL, 1989-94 • Large social assistance program (1.2% of GDP) • Water, sanitation, electricity and education construction to poor communities • Limited poverty impact • Reduced poverty by 3% • If better targeted, could have reduced it by 64%
Policymaker-Provider:Contracting NGOs in Cambodia • Contracting out (CO): NGO can hire and fire, transfer staff, set wages, procure drugs, etc. • Contracting in (CI): NGO manages district, cannot hire and fire (but can transfer staff), $0.25 per capita budget supplement • Control/Comparison (CC): Services run by government 12 districts randomly assigned to CC, CI or CO
Utilization of Facilities by Poor People Sick in last month, %
FSSAP Bangladesh • Criteria: • Attendance in school • Passing grade • Unmarried • Girls to receive scholarship deposited to account set up in her name • School to receive support based on # of girls
Client-Provider:EDUCO Program in El Salvador • Parents’ associations (ACEs) • Hire and fire teachers • Visit schools on regular basis • Contract with Ministry of Education to deliver primary education
EDUCO promoted parental involvement… …which boosted student performance (% increase in test scores per visit)
EDUCO Effect: School days missed due to teacher absence Avg # of days missed: 1.34
What not to do • Leave it to the private sector • Simply increase public spending • Apply technocratic solutions
What is to be done? • Expand information • Tailor service delivery arrangements to service characteristics and country circumstances