Title: The Uganda PSIA Demonstration Exercise
1 The Uganda PSIA Demonstration Exercise
- Presentation to DFID PSIA Seminar Series, London
- 12 March 2003
- David Booth, Deborah Kasente, George Mavrotas,
Gloria Kempaka Mugambe and Abdu Muwonge
2PSIAWhat is it? Why now?
- Ex ante PSIA looking at the likely consequences
of a policy before implementing it - 1997-1999 self-criticism at IMF and World Bank
for not doing it much - 1999 PRSPs - general adoption of Ugandas PEAP
model poverty reduction efforts and analysis
need to be Government-led, consultative
3The process in Uganda
- MFPED agreement with DFID to sponsor a
demonstration exercise - Purpose to show it can be done, is helpful to
policy, and what the problems are likely to be - Approach Open-ended discussions between initial
research team and stakeholders (April 2002) - Topic selected and team finalised
4Deciding what to focus on
- Principles
- something topical and important
- something do-able, using mostly existing data
- try out a range of quantitative and qualitative
methods - dont try to be comprehensive add value to
existing debate - Decision
- look at neglected aspects of the Strategic
Exports Initiative (STRATEX) - focus on coffee and fish to keep it manageable
5Why strategic exports?
- A recent presidential initiative - partly arising
from concern about excessive dependence on donor
support - Controversial with donors - public-private split,
supply- versus demand-driven, etc. - Some analytical work done, but scope for new
knowledge to make a difference - Not widely debated - thus, an important challenge
for keeping the PEAP dialogue vigorous and
inclusive
6Which impact issues?/ What previous work?
Incentives
Distribution
World market prospects signalled?
Does production structure favour equitable
distribution of benefits?
Are there incentives to sustainable production?
Meso
Are redistributive mechanisms needed?
Are incentives reaching the farm gate?
Are marketing margins fair to producers?
Micro
Gender division of labour and supply response?
Will higher earnings improve nutrition, health
and education?
Sub-micro
7Which impact issues?/ What previous work?KEY
- Roman text main focus of debate until now
consultants reports suggesting world market
prospects poorly signalled method supply-driven
rather than facilitative - Italic text partially covered good work on
marketing chains especially - Bold text entirely absent
8What did we ask?
- What does the 1999/2000 survey say about
households in coffee and fishing? - What do local studies and interviews with experts
tell us about macro-micro-submicro links, for new
crops and export fishing? - What was in the initial PPA2 reports on fishing
communities? - On what topics could a quick study add value to
the policy debate?
9Key findings
- 1) Opportunities for poverty reduction through
coffee are by no means exhausted - 2) But STRATEX will work badly if it doesnt
confront 2 consequences of gender division of
income - male bias of household spending is likely to
prevent improvement in welfare of women and
children - especially dramatic in export-fishing - womens position on export crops also likely to
weaken supply response in coffee
10What is the policy issue?
- STRATEX needs to address micro-issues, if it is
to work - And it is running in parallel with GoUs own
instrument for micro-level facilitation of
commercialisiation - PMA - Some project experience shows facilitating
cooperative solutions to crop-choice and resource
utisation can work - PMA/NAADS demand-driven approach is suitable for
scaling-up these successes
11Recommendations
- Harmonise STRATEX and the PMA
- Adjust STRATEX methods in the light of existing
criticisms - But also
- deliberate targeting of women farmers by NAADS is
crucial - facilitation for cooperative gender solutions,
and womens de facto land access - stronger focus on adult literacy for women
- more resources for gender mainstreaming in all
sector-wide strategies
12What did we learn?1 about data
- The survey analysis was disappointing
- Poverty-measurement surveys area not ideal for
exploring income scenarios in detail - Tailor-made surveys needed?
- Relevant local case study evidence was abundant -
Uganda and international - Although well-known in research circles, not
taken into account by policy makers - So there can be value-added from just making
research-policy linkages
13What did we learn?2 about method
- Practical snags obstructed intellectual
integration and timely reporting - Go for a simpler organisational model?
- Report unwieldy for Ugandan policy purposes
- Be clearer about audience
- Include fewer of the frills required for
international public - Focus on gap-filling, value added and
experimentation doesnt persuade readers?
14Way forward in Uganda?
- Use the PEAP research programme to mainstream
PSIA - identify issues and commission PSIAs in good time
- Schedule next ones ahead of the 2003 PEAP
revision - Separate commissioning and research roles, and
keep the former close to policy