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National Poverty Reduction Strategies (PRSs) in
South Eastern Europe
SEE Team PRS Learning Event 21 March 2003
PRSP Monitoring and Synthesis Project
2
Origins of the PRSP Idea
Mixed record on poverty reduction in 1990s (Africa, Transition economies, post-1997 Asia)
Findings on aid effectiveness – off-budget projects, ex ante conditionality, parallel donor processes
International Development Targets/MDGs
Multilateral funding for debt relief (HIPC II)
3
What’s new?
‘Costed’ poverty reduction strategy linked to macro & fiscal framework
Outcome focused; making the links between policy & results
Opening-up the policy process to new forms of participation
New incentives for monitoring & evaluation
New partnership possibilities & new forms of aid delivery
4
Assumptions behind PRS initiative? Conflict study - no explicit ‘preconditions’ for
embarking on a PRS but there are implicit expectations about:
Credible political authority with control over people & territory
Commitment to peace & poverty reduction
Functioning government (that follows certain basic good governance and economic policies)
Some space for public participation
As in Africa, a PRS may be embarked on without these being met, but constrains chances for ‘success’
Politics study - implicit empowerment model in PRS approach and assumption that it will support political devt.
5
Is PRS approach appropriate to transition countries?
Principles are appropriate & poverty levels are very high - but specific context of transition countries means it will play out differently than elsewhere
No HIPC incentive – but concessional lending
EU accession agenda
Thus donor profile is different than elsewhere (EU-IFI relations)
Complex conflicts
New states in most cases
Extremely fragile civil society
6
Participation
Context for participation History of conflict Extreme distrust between govt and NGO/CSO in many cases Fragile civil society, sometimes aid dependent, very low capacity Low capacity within government for carrying out PPA
Globally, there has been some opening of policy debate to broader participation by domestic constituencies - extent of gains dependent on starting point
Broadly true in transition countries…
7
Participation
Much information provision - drafts disseminated in relevant languages (Macedonia) and discussed in workshops nationally, regionally and sectorally Albania – promoted a national debate on poverty, talk shows, radio programs, newspaper coverage Who is involved? Many groups nominally engaged, but depth hard to judge and not necessarily respresentative Parliamentary involvement usually weak No PPAs and little community level consultation Not clear that participation is institutionalised (e.g. in monitoring plans or national fora for continued dialogue)
8
Governmental ownership
Context for ownership of PRS in SEE Recent states carrying out new functions Complex political institutional environment in many cases Budget systems weak Relationships with donors – incentives for owning PRS? Welfarist understanding of poverty
Globally, there are challenges with ‘mainstreaming’ the PRS – especially building political engagement & improving links with other planning and reform processes.
9
Governmental ownership
Note ownership may look different at different stages - only Albania has full PRS Understanding of PRS principles may be weak even in key counterparts PRS sometimes in context of national development strategy Links between centre/PRS unit and sectoral ministries and regional bodies often extremely weak – PRS process exposes this weakness…and strengthens? Considerable use of consultants in formulating PRSs – sustainability questionable Donor behaviour also affects possibilities for ownership – more later, but governments somewhat fatigued.
10
Links with budget reform
PRS units established in MoF in some cases, and in Social/Welfare departments in other cases – prospects for links with resource allocation?
Acceptance among governments that MTEFs are a positive tool.
But no MTEF process in most SEE countries – though Albania MTEF formulation very closely linked with PRS formulation (and implementation prospects hopeful).
Globally, prioritisation and costing have proved difficult (but worthwhile) exercises for most governments – SEE no exception
11
Results orientation
Context for results-orientation Some experience of data collection and monitoring but incentives under Soviet system led to distortions Very weak data and work on poverty assessments in early stages Little room for CSO monitoring Will require a considerable shift in culture – not yet evident given PRSs not complete Albania PSIA pilot
Globally, operational M&E plans are often developed after first PRS is complete – considerable time needed to get buy-in from a range of stakeholders. Tendency towards somewhat top-heavy, outcome-oriented, cumbersome systems.
12
Part II – Donor behaviour
Donor profile in SEE is exceptional
EU accession most prominent agenda
IFIs present but not main actors
Bilateral community in early stages of coordination
Donors making transition out of relief/reconstruction to development
PRS is an opportunity to bring about greater harmonisation and alignment amongst donors – globally, it is providing considerable impetus to in some countries
Not clear that this is the case in SEE?
13
World Bank and IMF
Experience of DFID engagement with IFIs is variable
Sometimes good relations, open lines of communication (esp with WB)
In other cases, mixed messages on key issues, less open relations with other donors generally, sudden decisions
Timetables for PRS preparation are often driven by IFIs and prescriptive on content
JSA process likely to be a key area for engagement as PRSs are finished – experience elsewhere suggests that this is not necessarily straightforward or open for comments
Links between CAS and PRS - again, not automatic links
14
The EU
EU accession is driving force for reform in all SEE countries
There are high-level commitments from both Bank and EU to work more closely on PRS and SAA
On the ground, this is not generally translated into practice
Indications that the EU tends to see SAA as a political process as distinct from the PRS developmental process
WB/IMF do not always acknowledge the prominence of the SAA agenda for these countries
15
UNDP
UNDP is most closely associated with PRS agenda globally – but also with MDG agenda
In practice not a great deal of harmony between these processes at present (in SEE and globally)
In theory governments can monitor progress towards MDGs by monitoring PRS implementation outcomes, but at present parallel processes
16
Aid instruments
There are problems with transactions costs of aid and off-budget aid (CIS countries and maybe SEE?)
Little evidence of move towards programmatic finance – PRS not affecting reasons for this (no PRGF, corruption)
PRSC – not clear that Bank is doing business differently
Performance assessment requirements of different agencies taxing – PRS, SAA, Stability Pact, MDGs, projects
Some countries will graduate to IBRD status – no formal requirement for a PRS