World Bank Support to Household Survey Programs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 16
About This Presentation
Title:

World Bank Support to Household Survey Programs

Description:

World Bank Support to. Household Survey Programs. Misha Belkindas. 13 May 2004 ... The World Bank and Capacity Building in Household Surveys and Poverty Statistics ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:90
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 17
Provided by: intera2
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: World Bank Support to Household Survey Programs


1
World Bank Support to Household Survey Programs
  • Misha Belkindas
  • 13 May 2004
  • ________________________________________
  • Presented at Forum on African Statistical
    DEVelopment (FASDEV)
  • that took place 12-13 May 2004 in Addis Ababa,
    Ethiopia.

2
Three Dimensions of Poverty
depth of poverty
Geographical distribution
Changes over time
3
Tools for Poverty Monitoring
  • Measuring depth of poverty and determinants
  • Tools - A comprehensive household survey (there
    are various options Household Budget Survey,
    LSMS, Integrated Household Survey, etc.)
  • Participative and qualitative assessments
  • Monitoring Spatial/regional differences
  • Poverty maps
  • Tools - Population census Household survey
  • Monitoring Changes over time
  • Tools Administrative data/MIS
    Institution-based surveys household surveys
  • Monitoring leading indicators (Service Delivery)
  • Key requirements
  • Simple to execute
  • Rapid reporting
  • Disaggregatable to low levels
  • Core Welfare Indicators Questionnaire (CWIQ)

4
The World Bank and Capacity Building in Household
Surveys and Poverty Statistics
  • Statistical capacity building in household
    surveys and poverty statistics are an integral
    part of World Banks development assistance for
    institutional and knowledge development to
    underpin research and policy work
  • Living Standards Measurement Study (LSMS) surveys
    a multi-purpose household survey from
    1985-present
  • Social Dimensions of Adjustment (SDA)
    Integrated Household Survey (HIS) and Priority
    Surveys (PS) for African countries from late
    80s to mid-90s
  • Core Welfare Indicators Survey (CWIQ) An
    off-the-shelf survey package with core and
    optional questionnaire modules for service
    indicator
  • MECOVI Program as an coordinated approach to
    build regional and country capacity for household
    surveys of living conditions
  • _________________________________________________
    __
  • MECOVI is short for Programa para el
    Mejoramiento de las Encuestas y la Medición de
    Condiciones de Vida, the Spanish translation for
    the Program for Improvement of the Surveys of
    Living Conditions (ISLC).

5
A Brief History of the Living Standards
Measurement Study (LSMS) Surveys
Originally a research program to determine the
feasibility of
6
Evolution of the Living Standard Measurement Study
  • Originally a research program to determine
    feasibility, improve methodology and data
  • The emphasis was on research
  • Now, moved to a decentralized model
  • WB has no central mandate LSMS surveys are
    demand driven by countries
  • WBs Research Group provides technical /
    analytical support on LSMS activities to
    countries statistical offices
  • Funding Started with WB Research grants, now
    largely funded by WB loans, other country
    resources, donor grants, cooperative agreements

7
LSMS Surveys
LSMS Survey characteristics
LSMS Program goals
  • Multi-topic household survey to collect data on
    wide range of factors affecting household and
    individual welfare
  • Robust money-metric welfare measure
  • Emphasis on quality control and timeliness of data
  • Promoting linkages between users and producers
  • Promoting open data access
  • Capacity building for survey technique and policy
    analysis

8
LSMS/IS Surveys 1985-2005
  • Albania
  • Armenia
  • Azerbaijan
  • Bolivia
  • BiH
  • Brazil
  • Bulgaria
  • China (part)
  • Cote dIvoire
  • Ecuador
  • FRY Kosovo
  • Gambia
  • Ghana
  • Guatemala
  • Guinea
  • Panama
  • Papua New Guinea
  • Paraguay
  • Peru
  • Russia
  • South Africa
  • Tajikistan
  • Tanzania
  • Timor Leste
  • Tunisia
  • Turkmenistan
  • Uganda
  • Viet Nam
  • Guyana
  • Honduras
  • India (part)
  • Jamaica
  • Kazakhstan
  • Kenya
  • Kyrgyz Republic
  • Madagascar
  • Mauritania
  • Malawi
  • Morocco
  • Nepal
  • Nicaragua
  • Niger
  • Pakistan

9
Social Dimensions of Adjustment (SDA)
  • World Banks response to international demands
    for knowledge on the human costs of a decade-long
    process of adjustments in 1980s
  • Generous donor support to fund the work program
    for the Sub-Saharan Africa from late 80s to
    mid-90s
  • Innovative approaches with Integrated Household
    Survey every 4-5 years, and Priority Survey in
    intervening years falling short at the
    execution stage
  • Lessons learned
  • Distance between planning and implementation
  • Supply-driven process with little country input
  • Limited absorptive capacity
  • Scale up problem gt magnitude of the project
    should have required closer coordination and more
    technical support to surmount low country
    capacity
  • Resources spread too thin across many projects in
    many countries gt too much money to chase too
    many talents with problematic quality control
  • Narrow objectives of filling data gaps than
    building lasting country capacity gt
    sustainability was not achieved
  • Some capacity built and some data gaps filled gt
    laid a foundation for World Banks current
    technical assistance program for the Africa region

10
The CWIQ is a household survey
  • It is used to monitor outcomes of development
    actions, (such as HIPC/PRSPs) .
  • ..through the use of leading indicators, such
    as access, use and satisfaction

11
How does the CWIQ work?
12
MECOVI Program in Latin America
  • A Coordinated Approach A Regional Program of
    Technical Assistance for Capacity Building to
    Improve Household Surveys to Measure Living
    Conditions and Poverty in Latin America and the
    Caribbean
  • Launched in 1996 jointly by IDB, World Bank and
    UN-ECLAC
  • Subsequently supported by other donors UNDP,
    Canada, Germany, Sweden, Norway, Denmark, US,
    Japan, Soros Foundation, etc.
  • With a Shared Vision for Change in Doing Business
    in Household Surveys
  • A multi-year program instead of a one-shot
    project with a view to building sustainable
    capacity
  • Breaking the vicious circle with intervention at
    various entry points
  • Program design built on the profile of existing
    country capacity and statistical system
  • Program sponsors offer resources according to
    respective strengths and comparative advantages
  • Allocation of generous amount of resources for
    coordination and supervision of program
    activities
  • All to ensure significant improvement of
    statistical capacity for producing and analyzing
    household survey and poverty data

13
MECOVI Program Objectives and Organization
  • Program Objectives
  • Improve quality, relevance and timeliness of
    household survey and poverty data
  • Promote wide use of the improved data for
    research and policy analysis
  • Promote open accessibility to the household
    survey and poverty data
  • Improve survey methodologies and poverty analysis
  • Organization a clear mechanism for governance,
    counsel, and inter-institutional coordination
  • Steering Committee (made up of IDB VP, World Bank
    LAC VP, UN-ECLAC Executive Secretary) decides and
    guides on key matters of policy, planning and
    resource mobilization.
  • Advisory Board provides input to technical issues
  • Program Coordinators handle day-to-day
    operational matters, including program
    coordination, project development, preparation
    and implementation, and fielding joint missions
    to supervise on-going operations

14
MECOVI Program Results by Component
  • As of May 2004, a national MECOVI program of
    technical assistance operation were rolled out in
    10 countries
  • 12 regional seminars/workshops on survey
    methodologies poverty measurement ?Promotion of
    good practices in definitions, measurement, data
    collection and analysis
  • 11 regional training courses ? 270 participants
    from 20 countries
  • Data Dissemination LAC regional data bank made
    up of micro-data sets from 300 household surveys
    ? key input to country and regional reports

15
MECOVI Program Some Success Factors
  • Relatively favorable environments to develop a
    joint regional initiative ? common language and
    some existing infrastructure
  • Extensive consultation helps create country
    stakeholder buy-in and country ownership ? NSOs
    in the driver seats
  • Institutional commitment of the NSOs creates a
    virtuous circle of
  • Better data ? Better publicity ? Increased demand
    ? Increased allocation of resources ?Better data
  • Fundamental changes in the concept of key
    deliverables
  • Relevant and high-quality data timely available
    to a wide group of users
  • Emphasis on building capacity than just
    perfecting survey instruments alone
  • Producer-user interaction increases long-term
    viability of the program gt via constitution of
    an inter-institutional committee
  • Promote Culture of Statistics and
    democratization of statistical information gt
    open data access policy as pre-conditions for
    participation in MECOVI program

16
Lessons of MECOVI Program for International
Cooperation on Statistical Capacity Building
  • Success of MECOVI exposed weaknesses of other
    statistical activities ? an island of efficiency
    in a sea of inefficiency
  • MECOVI-like framework to serve as a platform of
    international technical cooperation to mobilize
    resources to scale up joint operation to build
    statistical capacity ? substantial up-front
    investment needed to set up the structure
  • A call for scaling up MECOVI mandates to
  • Replicate in other regions (SPARC, PADI, etc.)
  • Formulate and implement a comprehensive strategy
    to develop statistical capacity (a la Marrakech
    Plan)
  • Increase coordination and information sharing
    with setting up of International Household Network
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com