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Title: Piloting Innovations


1
Piloting Innovations for Decentralization
Reforms Local Governments in Local
Development and Poverty Reduction New
York, 21 June 2004
2

Presentation
  • UNCDF
  • UNCDFs pilot approach to local development
  • Major areas of innovation
  • Policy impact
  • Case studies
  • UNCDF project in BANGLADESH
  • UNCDF project in MALAWI
  • UNCDF projects in MALI

3
Presentation prepared by
  • Angelo BONFIGLIOLI, Sr. technical adviser
    UNCDF,New York
  • Azizur Rahman SIDDIQUE, Local Governance
    Development Fund Project, Sirajganj, Bangladesh
  • Willie SAMUTE, Principal Secretary, Ministry of
    Local Government Rural Development, Malawi
  • Mohamed AG ERLAF, Director, National Authority
    for Local Government Investment

4

II. UNCDF
5
UNCDF
  • The United Nations Capital Fund, created in 1966
    by the General Assembly of the UN, is a
    multi-lateral organization.
  • It has its own legal status and funds (from a
    group of donors), within the UNDP group.
  • UNCDF funds and implements small-scale
    investments (in the forms of grants) in LDCs in
    local development and micro-finance.

6

II. UNCDFs pilot approach to local development

7

An innovative model
  • UNCDF has developed an innovative strategic tool,
    the Local development Programme (LDP), designed
    to support local development, within the context
    of poverty reduction. LDPs stress
  • the role of democratic governance in
    poverty-reduction (i.e., the establishment of
    horizontal networks involving local
    governments, community organizations, the civil
    society and the private sector),
  • the role of democratically elected local
    authorities in local development

8

Specific challenges faced by LDPs
a) Developing local institutions
b) Building local capacities
c) Fostering pro-poor delivery of
infrastructure and services
d) Financing local development
9

Major risks faced by LDPs
Lower quality of public services
Inequity growing regional disparities
Capture of benefits by local elite
Still mixed and incomplete empirical evidence of
the comparative advantage of decentralized
governance in poverty reduction
10

Existing LDP portfolio
  • Since 1998, UNCDF has initiated projects
    supporting local governments in more than 20
    countries (mainly in Africa and Asia)
  • These projects involve a total cost of about 160
    million, of which 96 million from UNCDFcore
    funds and 64 million from contributions and/or
    trust funds from UNDP and other donors The
    Netherlands, Norway, DFID/UK, BSF/Belgium,
    Danida/Danemark, and Luxembourg
  • About 64 million constitute a general fund to
    support LGs investments (poverty reduction,
    infrastructure, service delivery, etc.), through
    different configurations (block grants, earmarked
    funds, green windows, etc.)

11

III. Major areas of
LDPSs innovation
12
Major innovations
Financing
Planning Budgeting
Capacity building
LDP
Accountab. transparency
Implement. production
13
Planning budgeting
  • Inclusive and cost effective planning
    partici-pation of all local stakeholders
  • Technical support innovative ways of providing
    LGs with technical skills for participatory
    planning
  • Linking planning budgeting planning as a more
    meaningful process with tangible results

14
Financing
  • Fund allocation use of pre-determined,
    formula-based allocations to LGs, for capital
    expenditure
  • Block grants hard budget ceilings, in order to
    undertake meaningful investment planning
  • Support to local budget on the basis of
    comprehensive LDP, away from a project-by-project
    modality, with predictable annual allocations
  • Performance-based funding ex-post controls (in
    the light of essential parameters)
  • Matching contributions in kind and nature,
    according to differential approach
  • Local resources support for improving local
    revenue collection

15
Capacity building
  • Training for a number of different stakeholders
    (use of planning tools, procedures. Mentoring of
    lower levels of LGs by higher levels)
  • Learning by doing fostering capacity-building
    by on-the-job familiarization ( the crucial
    innovation)

16
Implementation / production
  • Procurement /production procedures and modalities
    suitable flexible arrangements managed by LGs
    (private sector bidding, force account, community
    implementation, etc.)
  • Oversight supervision monitoring (with
    support to project management committees or task
    forces under the supervision of LGs)
  • Private sector upgrading contractors, training
    contractors in contract management for bidding
    for tenders, unleashing entrepreneurship
  • Operation maintenance arrangements included in
    the planning

17
Accountability and transparency
  • Communication a strategy for downward
    accountability
  • Monitoring and evaluation through a number of
    self-assessments and auto-evaluations
  • Participation participatory planning and
    accountability

18

IV. Impact on policies
19

Policy impact
Broad policy directions local governance for
poverty reduction
Legislation statutory framework
LDP
Regulatory framework norms, procedures,
practices
Institutional architecture
20

V. First case study UNCDF Project in Bangladesh
21
Sirajganj Local Governance Development Fund
Project
Duration 5 Years
Started in July 2000
Coverage
Implementing Agency Local Government
Division Ministry of LGRD Cooperatives
Funded by UNCDF UNDP
22
BANGLADESH Country Profile
  • Population 130 million (75 rural)
  • Density 876/sq km
  • Poverty 58 poor people live in rural areas 40
    rural pop. are poor (against 14 urban pop.)

LOCAL GOVERNMENT ADMINISTRATION
Division (06)
District (Zila, 64) Average popul. 2 million
Deconcentrated level
Sub-District (Upazila, 469) Average popul.
255,000
Union (Union Parishad, 4488) Average popul.
30,000 9 wards(Gram Sarkar)
Elected authorities
23
Policy Constraints
  • LGs (established in 1870) still lack a coherent
    and stable policy
  • Limited authority of UP (strong central control)
  • Unclear womens representation
  • Weak tax revenue power
  • General mistrust, perceptions of low capacity,
    elite bias, corruption and lack of accountability
  • Some policy statements (eg PRSP), while pointing
    to potential role of LGs, still remain starved of
    resources and sidelined

24
Overview of major innovations
  • Participatory Decision Making Monitoring
  • Decentralized performance-based funding
  • Open Budget Sessions
  • Women Empowerment
  • Local Resources Mobilization
  • Participatory Performance Assessment of UPs
  • Transparency and accountability
  • Dissemination of lessons learned for policy
    change

25
Participatory Decision Making Monitoring
  • Participation of local community in Planning,
    Implementation, Monitoring, Maintenance
  • Community wards meeting before annual budget
    session (at UP level)
  • Men and women identify local problems and
    prioritize them for immediate solution
  • UP plan and budget incorporated in community plan
  • UP approved projects are implemented, monitored
    maintained by community committees

26
Decentralized performance-based fund
  • Annual Development Block Grant directly allocated
    to the UPs instead of sub-district
  • Use of formula-based predictable grant
  • Performance-based financing
  • Timely disbursements to the UPs
  • Fund owned by UPs
  • Dissemination of information to Communities
  • 30 of funds earmarked for women

27
Open Budget Session
  • UP Budget prepared through consultation with
    community opinion of local stakeholders on
    allocations to different activities
  • Budget meetings usually attended by 100-500
    persons
  • Communitys concerns are reflected in the budget
  • Community participation in local resource
    mobilization
  • Information on different sources of revenue and
    expenditures provided to communities

28
Women Empowerment
  • UP Women members are organized / trained through
    Women Development Forum at district Upazila
    level.
  • At least 30 of local committees are chaired by
    female members
  • 30 local development fund are earmarked for
    women
  • Women participation in decision making process
  • Advocacy information on women rights in the
    local governments process

29
Local Resource Mobilization
  • Enhancement of local revenue mobilization is one
    of the key criteria for accessibility to funds
  • Training/Counselling to UPs and Communities
  • Local resource mobilized for OM
  • Incentive for performing UPs (e.g. in revenue
    collection)
  • Community are informed about the use of revenue
    collected by UPs.
  • Contribute to the government effort to revise
    model tax schedule strategy

30
Participatory Performance Assessment
  • Assessment of the UP Activities by the community
  • The assessment done once a year in a particular
    day in presence of local people
  • The assessment facilitated by UP members or any
    persons from community and community
    representatives provided score
  • Participation of 100-300 persons (including
    20-30 women) in the assessment workshop
  • Use of public score card to assess the
    performance of Ups
  • Links between the results of the performance
    assessment and funding capacity building
    activities of UPs

31
Transparency Accountability
  • Organization of UDC, WDC, SSCs UFT in a
    transparent manner to ensure participation of
    community
  • Use of scheme information boards, UP notice
    boards for information dissemination
  • - Monitoring
    activities managed
  • by community
  • - Access of
    communities to UP
  • financial
    transactions
  • - Community
    gathering at the
  • start and
    handover of schemes.

32
Dissemination of lessons learned
  • Performance assessment score card (eventually
    introduced nationally by LG Ministry)
  • Incentive for the LGIs linked with Performance
    outcome
  • Organization of local and national workshops
  • Wide communication of results and findings of

    evaluation studies to constituencies and to
    policy makers

33
Major innovations of the SLGDFP
Appropriate financing procedures
Improved Planning Budgeting
Capacity building for all stakeholders
SLGDFP
Accountab. transparency with trust and
credibility
Efficient implement. production
34

V. 2nd Case study Local Governance and
Development Management Programme, MALAWI
35
MALAWI Country Profile
  • Population about 12 million
  • Poverty is widespread, deep and severe
  • 65 of population is poor 28 living in dire
    poverty
  • Life expectancy rate 39 years
  • Literacy rate 58 (female rate 44)
  • Up to 1994 30 years of autocratic rule,
    over-centralization and weak local Government
  • 1993 multi-party democracy
  • 1994 first multiparty democratic government and
    Government intension to decentralize

36
District focus for Development Concept
  • 1993 Government adopts the District Focus for
    Development Concept, whose elements are
  • Development planning and management procedures
    and institutional arrangements,
  • Decentralized Development Financing,
  • Capacity building for decentralized development
    management,
  • National Decentralization Policy formulation
  • The policy is implemented by the project in 6
    Local Impact Areas (Districts) 1993 1997
  • Rolled out to the rest of the country 29
    Districts in 1998 (UNCDF/UNDP) under the Local
    Governance and Development Management Programme
    (LGDMP)

37
Local Governance Development Management
Programme (LGDMP)
  • Objectives
  • Contribute towards the alleviation of poverty in
    Malawi by improving governance through improved
    broader citizen participation in decision making
    and enhanced performance of central and local
    government.
  • Develop sub national development planning system
  • Develop decentralised financing mechanism to meet
    the challenges of community development
  • Formulation of decentralization policy

38
Major innovations of the programme
39
Sub National Planning System
  • Giving to the District Development Committees
    responsibility for local development ( i.e final
    decision on district specific development through
    District Development Plans)
  • Strengthening development institutions (VDCs,
    ADCs, DDC)
  • Setting planning procedures at all levels (VAP,
    SEPS, DDPs)

40
Sub National Planning System ()
  • Capacity Building establishing procedures,
    institutions and capacities for communities
    participation in local development
  • Establishing coordination mechanism through the
    setting up of a District Development Office,
    District Executive and Area Executive committees
  • Establishing institutions for capacity building
    at district, area and village level.

41
The District Development Fund
  • A decentralised development financing mechanism
    established and managed at the district level
  • The DDF is designed to respond to issues and
    projects that are raised through the District
    Development Planning system
  • Allocation of funds based on a clear formula

42
Distribution formula
  • National Level
  • 5 of National Revenue Net statutory expenditure
  • 20 distributed equally to all district
  • 80 based on population, illiteracy rate, infant
    mortality rate and access to safe drinking water
  • District level
  • 70 of the funds are allocated to community based
    projects
  • 30 for projects initiated at district level

43
National Decentralisation Policy
  • 1996 Commissioning of comprehensive studies of
    Decentralization Policy
  • Institutional set-up for policy formulation
    (Cabinet Committee on Decentralization, Technical
    Committee and Decentralization Secretariat)
  • 1998 Decentralisation Policy approved Local
    Government Act passed based on the policy

44
Characteristics of the policy
  • Devolving political, administrative and
    development authority to the districts
  • Integrating governmental agencies at the district
    and local level into one local government
    administrative unit
  • Diverting the centre of implementation
    responsibilities
  • Promoting popular participation, in the
    governance and development management

45
Other achievements
  • Merger of local and district administration to
    form one local government secretariat
  • Local Government Elections
  • Establishment of key Local Government
    Institutions including the National Local
    Government Finance Committee
  • Approval by Parliament of intergovernmental
    fiscal transfer formula
  • Funding to District Assemblies based on approved
    formula including Social Funds
  • Integration of MASAF III into Decentralized
    Planning and Financing Mechanisms

46
Other achievements
  • Allocation of funds to assemblies using the
    formula
  • Establishment of key Local Governance
    Institutions including the National Local
    Government Finance Committee
  • Sustained central government grant transfers to
    all local authorities

47
Major innovations
Financing
Planning Budgeting
Capacity building
LGDMP
Accountab. transparency
Implement. production
48
Challenges (problems still to be solved)
  • Slow pace of devolution
  • Inadequate capacity at assembly level
  • Transferring less funds than indicated in the
    policy
  • Variation between local priorities and funding
    decisions
  • Multiplicity of participatory institutions at the
    community level

49

V. 3nd Case study Support to Local Government
Projects (in Mopti and Timbuktu) MALI
50
MALI
  UNCDF SUPPORTING LOCAL GOVERNMENTS (MOPTI
AND TIMBUKTU REGIONS)
51
MALI COUNTRY PROFILE
  • POPULATION 13 million
  • AREA 1.204.000 km2
  • LIFE EXPECTANCY 48 ans (men) 49 (women)
  • GDP 230 / capita
  • 1999 FIRST LOCAL ELECTIONS (participation rate
    22)
  • 2004 SECOND LOCAL ELECTIONS (participation
    rate 45)
  • MINISTERE DE LADMINISTRATION TERRITORIALE ET DES
    COLLECTIVITES LOCALES (Ministry of Territorial
    administration Local Governments)
  • Direction Nationale des Collectivités Locales
  • Agence Nationale dInvestissement des
    Collectivités Locales (9 élus locaux faisant
    partie dun Conseil dadministration de 12
    membres)
  • HAUT CONSEIL DES COLLECTIVITES TERRITORIALES

52
FINANCIAL SUPPORT
TECHNICAL SUPPORT
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
DNCT Direction Nationale des Collectivités
Territoriales (Central Branch)
ANICT Agence Nationale dInvestissement des
Collectivités Territoriales (Status
Etablissement Public à caractère Administratif)
53
DNCT MISSION
  • DEFINE, CONTROL AND IMPLEMENT THE REGULATORY
    FRAMEWORK FOR LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
  • CARRY OUT BASIC STUDIES TO IMPROVE AND BUILD UP
    THE DECENTRALISATION PROCESS
  • MONITOR THE LEGAL CONTROL OF THE REPRESENTATIVES
    OF THE CENTRAL GOVERNEMENT ON SUB-NATIONAL
    GOVERNEMNTS
  • DEFINE THE TYPE OF SUPPORT NEED BY LOCAL
    GOVERNMENTS IN ORDER TO PLAY A CRUCIAL ROLE IN
    LOCAL DEVELOPMENT AND ADMINISTRATION
  • STRENGTHEN THE COOPERATION BETWEE LOCAL
    GOVERNEMENTS AS WELL AS THE PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN
    LOCAL GOVERNMENTS AND THEIR PARTNERS

54
ANICT THE MISSION
  • DISTRIBUTE GRANTS TO LOCAL GOVERNEMENTS IN
    ORDER TO FINANCE LOCAL DEVELOPMENT-RELATED
    INVESTMENT
  • FAVOR GRANT PEREQUATION MECHANISMS, WHICH TAKE
    INTO ACCOUNT THE DEGREES OF DEVELOPMENT OF LOCAL
    GOVERNEMENTS, ACCORDING TO WELL-DEFINED CRITERIA
  • ASSIST LOCAL GOVERNEMENTS TO DEVELOP BASIC
    PRO-POOR INFRASTRUCTURE AND SERVICES
  • ASSIST SUB-NATIONA GOVERNEMENTS TO MOBILIZE
    INTERNAL FINANCIAL RESOURCES
  • PROVIDE COLLATERAL FOR LOCAL GOVERNEMENTS
    LOANS AIMED AT FINANCING LOCAL DEVELOPMENT
    INITIATIVES

55
UNCDFS TECHNICAL SUPPORT TO LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
NATIONAL COORDINATING UNIT
DNCT
PACR-TImbuKtu PACR-Mopti
LOCAL GOVERNMENTS
56
UNCDFS FINANCIAL SUPPORT TO LOCAL GOVERNEMENTS
UNCDF
PUBLIC TREASURY
ANICT CENTRAL BANK ACCOUNTS
ANICTS ADMINISTR. COSTS 5
INVESTMENT 95
BLOCK GRANTS TO LOCAL GOV.
MATCHING GRANTS (FROM LOCAL GOVERNEMENTS)

LOCAL GOVERNMNTS
SERVICE PROVIDERS
57
CONTEXTUAL CONSTRAINTS
  • SLOW TRANSFER OF SECTORAL RESPONSIBILITIES TO LGs
  • LOW MOBILISATION OF LOCAL FINANCIAL RESOURCES
  • LOW IMPLEMENTATION RATE OF INCOME GENERATING
    INFRASTRUCTURE
  • WEAK CONTROL OF LOCAL MANAGEMENT PROCEDURES BY
    LOCAL STAKEHOLDERS
  • FREQUENT TURN-OUT OF STAFF AT LOCAL GOVERNMENT
    LEVEL
  • INSUFFICIENT DECONCENTRATION OF LINE DEPARTMENTS
  • LACK OF SYNERGIE BETWEEN COMMUNITY APPROACHES AND
    LOCAL GOVERNEMENT APPROACHES

58
PACR-T PACR-M LESSONS LEARNED
  • STRONG CENTRAL GOVERNEMENT INVOLVEMENT
  • STRONG PARTNERSHIP WITH OTHER DONORS SUPPORTING
    DECENTRALISATION AND EFFORTS TO HARMONIZE
    PROCEDURES
  • TECHNICAL AND FINANCIAL SUPPORT TO ABOUT 130
    LOCAL GOVERNEMENTS (OUT OF A TOTAL OF 761)
  • PARTICIPATORY PLANNING AND BUDGETING
  • USE OF NON-CONDITIONAL AND PREDICTABLE FUNDS
  • ADOPTION OF A GENERAL APPROACH SPECIFICALLY AIMED
    AT EMPOWERING LOCAL STAKEHOLDERS

59
Piloting Innovations for Decentralization
Reforms Local Governments in Local
Development and Poverty Reduction New
York, 21 June 2004
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