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Leveraging World Bank Engagements in Indonesia through Trust Funds. Leveraging World Bank Engagements in Indonesia through Trust Funds. Chris Hoban 22 February 2011 Knowledge Series – Emerging Indonesia Location. Outline. Trust Funds in Indonesia
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Leveraging World Bank Engagements in Indonesia through Trust Funds
Leveraging World Bank Engagements in Indonesia through Trust Funds Chris Hoban 22 February 2011 Knowledge Series – Emerging Indonesia Location
Outline • Trust Funds in Indonesia • Engagements in the Country Partnership Strategy • Trust Fund Management • Strengthening Indonesian Institutions
Trust Funds support almost 60% of 315 full-time staff in Indonesia
Alignment of Trust Funds & Country Strategy Country Partnership Strategy • National Institutions • Sub-national • Finance & Private Sector • Infrastructure • Education • Community & Social • Environment & disasters Major Trust Funds • Public Financial Management • Decentralization Support Facility • Trade & Investment Climate • (coordination w AusAID) • Education • PNPM Support Facility, Poverty • Aceh MDF, Java Reconstruction
Outline • Trust Funds in Indonesia • Engagements in the Country Partnership Strategy • Trust Fund Management • Strengthening Indonesian Institutions
2. Trust Funds in the Country Strategy • Country Partnership Strategy recognizes an integral role of trust funds in delivering key CPS outcomes • Portfolio Review combines ratings of loans and trust funds in each sector • Key review point is the Engagement Strategy Note, discussed jointly with Country & Sector Director
Events in 2004-2005 requiring fast response December 2004 tsunami March & September 2005: large fuel price increases \ - mitigated by targeted poverty programs 2005 infrastructure summit: needed economic analysis Bank’s responsiveness & quality advice strengthened its appeal as a dependable partner Flexible DFID trust fund helped Generated interest in further advice on better ways to spend funds & increase growth While key partners moving to more senior roles Changing Bank Engagement in Indonesia
Shift from traditional ESW to rapid response notes & continuous advice that are timely, relevant & requested. Work with reform champions to identify areas of need matched with available Bank skills Flexibility critical to utilize reform opportunities Let government own the reforms & pace of reform Use DPLs to overcome gridlock & bottlenecks Key Changes in Approach
Outline • Trust Funds in Indonesia • Engagements in the Country Partnership Strategy • Trust Fund Management • Strengthening Indonesian Institutions
3. Trust Fund Management • All large trust funds are well aligned with country strategy & government priorities • and almost all strongly led by government • Integration of trust funds in portfolio review – requires rating of objectives & implementation • Engagement Strategy Reviews for good oversight • led by Country & Sector Directors • Trust fund management data challenges • Staffing issues
Alignment of Trust Funds & Country Strategy Country Partnership Strategy • National Institutions • Sub-national • Finance & Private Sector • Infrastructure • Education • Community & Social • Environment & disasters Major Trust Funds • Public Financial Management • Decentralization Support Facility • Trade & Investment Climate • (coordination w AusAID) • Education • PNPM Support Facility, Poverty • Aceh MDF, Java Reconstruction
Portfolio Review sample - Education L=loan, G=grant, Gi= grant with ISR
Trust Fund Management Issues • Manage budgets, property, staff exposure, deliverables, risks & client relationships across two "lines of business" • Overall comfort with these, but • Hard to report to management • Some innovative procedures, e.g. • Country team screening for ensuring strategy alignment • Selection process for grant recipients • One Stop Reviews reduce delays in trust fund approvals
Trust Fund Management Issues 2 • Review processes “as for loans”, but • Loans: ‘funds in’ once or twice (additional finance); ‘funds out’ through components • Trust Funds: ‘funds in’ many times;‘funds out’ - each child TF requires new review • Fee approval by too many departments • Two approaches for overheads (indirects) not easy to combine & track
Trust Fund Management Issues 3 • Difficult to track staff costs and exposure risk • Count staff by term or coterm, but not time charged to TFs • Strong need for consultants (ETC & STC) for speed & flexibility • Bank hiring far too slow • Two-year ETC limit is very constraining • Big gap in field benefits between term & ETC
Leveraging Bank Budget with Trust Funds Each dollar of BB spent on staff cost, supports over $2 in TF staff cost. In PREM, this has risen to $4.50
Utilization of staff between Bank Budget & Trust Funds 1. Bank staff time charged to TF – hard to monitor 2. Can’t charge TF staff to BB tasks
Outline • Trust Funds in Indonesia • Engagements in the Country Partnership Strategy • Trust Fund Management • Strengthening Indonesian Institutions
4. Strengthening Indonesian Institutions • Challenges of slow reform of key government agencies • Rigid bureaucracy doesn’t promote innovation of utilize skills • Weak coordination across ministries • Severe audit discourages action • Major problems with procurement of consultants • Very long time to procure – often 2 years • Many good firms do not participate • No procurement oversight institutions (now rebuilding) • Procurement committees unqualified & not accountable • Poor contract management does not deliver quality
4. Strengthening Indonesian Institutions Success Stories • Stronger Institutions • Fiscal Policy Office, Ministry of Finance • Spinoffs • Social Policy & Economic Research Unit SMERU • Knowledge Forum for Eastern Indonesia BAKTI Work in Progress • Key ministries, Universities, NGOs, • Oversight agencies, procurement systems • Continue to spin off where this makes sense
Strengthening Indonesian Institutions What’s next? • Continue timely response to key government policy analysis needs • Utilize Bank capabilities • Strong government ownership • Donor partnerships around government priorities • Help government to lead trust funds itself • Continue to work on country institutions • Civil service reform, procurement reform, key units • Analysis to support good policy decision-making • Spin off where possible • Stronger partnerships with universities, NGOs, think tanks
PREM Staffing Changes 1997 - 2010 1997 2010 62 full time 119 in SAP Many STCs
2010 PREM Work Program Evolution 2004 • Macro (Monitoring) • Poverty (ESW) • Decentralization (ESW) • PFM (Loan preparation) • Macro • Poverty • Public Financial Management • Trade • Investment Climate • Finance • Regional Development • Decentralization Support Facility