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The Role of the World Bank

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Sudan: Darfur ... six sector teams on the issues facing reconstruction and development in Darfur. ... technical assistance for the Darfur peace negotiations. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Role of the World Bank


1
  • The Role of the World Bank
  • in
  • Fragile and Conflict-Affected States
  • Alastair McKechnie
  • Director
  • Fragile and Conflict-affected States Group
  • http//www.worldbank.org/fragilityandconflict

2
One of the Strategic Themes
  • We need to address the special problems of
    states coming out of conflict or seeking to avoid
    the breakdown of the state.
  • When the visionaries at Bretton Woods conceived
    of the IBRD over 60 years ago, the R stood for
    the reconstruction of Europe and Japan. Today,
    the R points us toward the challenge of
    reconstruction in states harmed by modern
    conflicts.
  • Robert Zoellick
  • October, 2007

3
Conflict Development Dimension
  • Paul Colliers research on the economics of civil
    war
  • 73 of people in the bottom billion have recently
    been through a civil war or are still in one
  • A typical low-income country face a risk of civil
    war of about 14 in any five-year period . Each
    percentage point added to the growth rate knocks
    off a percentage point from this risk
  • Risk of renewed conflict in post conflict
    countries is high50 of post-conflict countries
    relapse into conflict within 10 years.
  • High rate of unemployed youth has a significant
    correlation with conflict onset
  • Feasible actions could be taken to substantially
    reduce the global incidence of civil conflicts.
  • The direct cost of a conflict in a typical
    developing country is about 60billion
  • More than four-fifths of fragile IDA countries
    are or have been subject to conflict.
  • For stronger performers, sharing a border with a
    fragile state is estimated to cause a loss of
    approximately 1.6 of GDP per annum.

4
The World Banks role
  • The World Bank was established with a specific
    mandate for post-conflict reconstruction the
    R in IBRD, the International Bank for
    Reconstruction and Development
  • Concessional financing and grant window channels
    resources to poorest countries International
    Development Association, IDA
  • Wide range of countries around the world, facing
    different challenges of fragility and conflict
  • Activities financed have included
  • economic governance and public finance systems
  • civil service reform and capacity-building
  • infrastructure rehabilitation private sector
    recovery
  • service delivery
  • DDR and safety nets for vulnerable groups
  • Joint coordination of post-conflict recovery
    planning with the UN and key bilaterals

5
Understanding fragile states?
  • Historically, the Banks post-conflict unit
    provided a semi-annual monitoring report on
    conflict-affected situations to the Board of
    Executive Directors, using information reported
    by the country teams.
  • Based on the 2002 Task Force on Low Income
    Countries under Stress, the Bank began to focus
    analytical and operational attention on fragile
    states, the low-income countries with the
    weakest policies and institutions.
  • We use the same multi-variable index, the Country
    Policy and Institutional Assessment (CPIA), that
    we use to monitor all low-income countries.
  • The CPIA rankings are published each year, and
    are the backbone of the IDA performance-based
    allocation system, or PBA

6
A more refined understanding . . .
  • Bank monitoring has always noted that there are
    middle-income countries with weak or no CPIA
    ratings, where aspects of fragility and conflict
    were clearly in evidence
  • 2007 Working Group of Multilateral Development
    Banks anchored a consensus on broader definition
    that takes due account of the range of
    conflict-affected situations
  • Thus, the Banks monitoring of fragile and
    conflict-affected states and situations includes
    countries with international peacekeeping or
    peace mediation missions
  • We also support country teams in monitoring and
    responding to development challenges poised by
    sub-national conflicts or crises

7
The Challenge and the Response
  • challenge fragile states are significantly more
    prone to large-scale violence and civil conflict
    than other low income countries middle-income
    countries plagued by conflict are not able to
    reap the benefits of growth and development
    manifest in their more stable neighbors
  • response need for range of institutional changes
    on country strategies, partnerships, human
    resources, and operational policies and
    procedures
  • definition low country performance and
    institutional assessment (CPIA) rating (threshold
    is a CPIA of 3.2), and/or the presence of an
    international peacekeeping or peace mediation
    mission

8
Key themes in global thinking
  • OECD-DAC Principles of Good International
    Engagement in Fragile States and Guidelines to
    Preventing Violent Conflict
  • Recognition of key linkages between development,
    peace and security hence, of peace-building and
    state-building
  • Recognition of the need for strengthening the
    speed of aid response and field presence

9
Situations of Fragility and Conflict Towards a
Differentiated Approach
10
Post-conflict financing
  • Low-income countries emerging from conflict, or
    re-engaging with the international community, are
    eligible for exceptional IDA allocations,
    providing resources in addition to their normal
    performance-based allocation
  • Special grants from IBRD surplus have been
    provided to West Bank and Gaza, Kosovo, Liberia,
    and Timor-Leste, which were either non-member
    territories or in arrears to the Bank
  • Grants from surplus have also allowed the Bank to
    contribute to multi-donor trust funds, as in
    Sudan
  • Debt-distressed countries now receive 100 grants
  • The LICUS Trust Fund and Post Conflict Fund
    provide limited bridging finance until IDA or
    surplus funds can be engaged
  • Pre-arrears-clearance grants from a countrys IDA
    allocation are also available in specific
    exceptional circumstances

11
Recent Bank reforms
  • New Policy Framework
  • Accelerated and Streamlined Procedures
  • Strengthened Organizational and Institutional
    Support for country teams

12
Emerging Issues
  • Fragility amongst middle/high income countries
    (Iraq, Lebanon)
  • Sub-national fragile situations (Aceh, Mindanao,
    Jharkhand)
  • Need for improved harmonization and coordination
    between national and international actors all
    along the spectrum of fragility and conflict
  • Coordination is especially challenging in
    situations of deteriorating governance, where no
    one is sure they have the answer

13
Peace-building, partnerships and the Banks role
  • Peacebuilding goals involve a different range of
    international actors, but political-security-devel
    opment areas have historically been managed in
    stovepipes (nationally and internationally).
  • Work is ongoing to improve coherence through
    closer collaboration between diplomatic, security
    and development actors (IFIs, bilaterals,
    OECD-DAC, Peacebuilding Commission, regional
    organizations)
  • Country examples of partnerships to address
    peace-building linkages include
  • Support to recovery and development planning
    which covers political governance and security
    sectors (Timor, Afghanistan, Liberia, Sudan,
    Haiti)
  • Ground-breaking collaboration on Common
    Assistance Framework in DRC
  • Public finance capacity-building across
    government, including security and political
    governance institutions (Afghanistan, Haiti,
    possibly DRC, Burundi)
  • Joint approaches on economic governance and
    critical infrastructure with PKOs (Liberia, Haiti)

14
Multilateral Efforts to Improve Coherence the
Post Conflict Needs Assessment (PCNA) and
Transitional Results Framework (TRF)
  • Goal identify, prioritize and finance recovery/
    reconstruction needs by defining a joint plan
    that national and international actors can align
    around
  • Historically focused on mobilizing resources to
    transition from relief to reconstruction (and
    towards development)
  • Emerging focus is on
  • Supporting the fragile peace through selective
    near-term actions basing recovery plan on strong
    conflict analysis
  • Building capacity in communities and institutions
  • Supporting economic stabilization and recovery
  • Joint national-international exercise
  • PCNA-TRF process involves national authorities,
    UN, WB, bilateral and multilateral donors,
    regional institutions and civil society
    organizations

15
Democratic Republic of Congo
  • Bank provides support through trust funds and
    investment operations there are currently no
    budget support operations. Funds currently made
    available on 100 grant basis in view of
    countrys debt burden, terms will be reviewed
    when country reaches HIPC completion point
    (expected as early as end-2008).
  • Total IDA commitments amount to about US 1.9
    billion, and support dialogue with the
    authorities in the areas of social sector
    reforms, governance, decentralization,
    demobilization and disarmament, infrastructure
    rehabilitation, natural resource management, and
    private sector development.
  • Current projects include infrastructure
    rehabilitation, including power and roads
    demobilization and reintegration emergency
    support to living conditions and urban, economic
    and social reunification, private sector
    development and social development, including
    multi-sectoral HIV/AIDS program and a recently
    approved education project.
  • DRCs Country Assistance Framework (CAF) brought
    together 17 international partners, including
    Bank, United Nations, and key bilaterals
    including USAID, in a common strategic approach
    for economic assistance in the post-elections
    period. The CAF is expected to be the framework
    for over 95 of ODA to DRC over the next three
    years, and is viewed as a ground-breaking step in
    donor harmonization and coordination.

16
Afghanistan
  • As of January 9, 2008 the World Bank had
    committed US1.6 billion in IDA assistance to
    Afghanistan, financing 30 projects in public
    administration, infrastructure, education,
    health, customs, transport, and rural
    development.
  • Rural and transport sectors are two largest
    shares largely due to the successful
    implementation of the two nation-wide programs
  • National Solidarity Program (NSP) supports
    development of community demand-driven rural
    infrastructure and community level governance,
  • National Emergency Employment Program (NEEP)
    provides short-term employment opportunities to
    the vulnerable segments of rural population
    through rural roads rehabilitation and
    reconstruction.
  • Bank also administers Afghanistan Reconstruction
    Trust Fund (ARTF), on behalf of 27 donors
    (including USA), effective May 2002. ARTF
    provides coordinated funding support to
    Afghanistans recurrent budget, as well as
    investments in line with agreed budget
    priorities. The National Solidarity Program II
    and the Microfinance Project are the two
    fast-disbursing programs in the ARTF.
  • Bank also actively engaged in analytical and
    advisory services Gender Assessment released
    January 2006 analytical work on Fighting
    Corruption is underway

17
Liberia
  • World Banks program in Liberia supports
    Governments post-conflict transitional program
  • Economic Revitalization, including rebuilding
    basic public financial management and procurement
    systems and support for reform in the forestry
    sector
  • Governance and Rule of Law, including civil
    service and legal and judicial reform
  • Infrastructure and Basic Services, including
    emergency road rehabilitation urban works
    community development and emergency support to
    the health sector.
  • Since reengagement in 2004, Bank has made
    available more than US 140 million in grant
    funding both from trust funds and IDA grants.
  • IDA special post-conflict funding (both pre-and
    post-arrears clearance) is on 100 grant
    financing terms and annual commitment totals
    around 35 million.
  • Liberias first post-war Development Policy
    Operation approved Dec 2007, cleared the
    countrys arrears totaling 400 million.
  • High female illiteracy and low female enrolment
    in secondary education sizeable group of adult
    women and adolescent girls unprepared for social
    and economic opportunities
  • World Bank partnering with Nike Foundation on 3m
    project to provide adolescent girls and young
    women with skills training for wage employment
    and entrepreneurship.

18
Liberia (2)
  • Bank program in Liberia seen as good practice
    example of collaboration and coordination in four
    specific ways
  • post-conflict needs assessment and recovery
    planning in 2003 covered critical spectrum of
    economic, social, security, and political
    challenges with close involvement of bilaterals
    incl USA
  • aggressive response to deteriorating governance
    and corrupt public finance under transitional
    government before 2006 elections was a tight
    collaboration between USA, EC, Bank, Fund, with
    political cover from UN and ECOWAS
  • Bank country office in constant strategic and
    operational contact with USA (State, Treasury,
    USAID) other key bilaterals (EC)
  • pioneering collaboration between Bank, UN
    Department of Peacekeeping Operations, UNDP, and
    Government to undertake critical road repairs
    using assets from peacekeeping and development
    actors together

19
Kosovo
  • The Bank began operations soon after the conflict
    in 1999.
  • The Bank has provided IDA grants amounting to
    132 million under UNSC Resolution 1244 (1999),
    and IFC has invested 51 million in the private
    sector in a range of small and medium
    enterprises, among other sectors.
  • The Bank's current active portfolio of grants
    amount to 51 million and include projects in
    education, energy, environment, public
    expenditure management, and business and cadastre
    development.
  • The Bank strategy in Kosovo is implemented in
    partnership with a host of partners, including
    the EC, USAID, DFID, SIDA, the Dutch Office, etc,
    and with the Kosovo authorities (The Kosovo
    Government and UNMIK), to support programs
    primarily focused on strengthening the
    macroeconomic stability through sound fiscal
    policy and public finance management, and develop
    sources of economic growth in the short to medium
    terms.
  • The Banks current strategy focuses on the
    demonstration of gradual but steady improvements
    in the capacity of institutions, client ownership
    and effective donor partnerships.
  • The Bank, along with the European Commission
    (EC), is currently involved in the preparation of
    a Kosovo's Donors Conference slated for July 11,
    2008.

20
Sudan Darfur
  • In July 2006, the World Bank, African
    Development Bank and UN, with support from many
    donors, embarked on a Joint Assessment Mission (
    DJAM), which was suspended in September 2006
    because of the increased conflict and insecurity
    in Darfur
  • The Bank report on Dimensions of Challenge for
    Development Background Volume in June 2007,
    contains the diagnosis of the six sector teams on
    the issues facing reconstruction and development
    in Darfur.
  • The DJAM has been supported by a core
    coordinating group (CCG), including the
    Government of National Unity, the UN, the World
    Bank, AfDB, the African Union and selected
    donors, chaired by Netherlands.
  • A LICUS grant for the African Union supports the
    Darfur-Darfur Dialogue and Consultations, as well
    as other peace-building activities, and provides
    for possible technical assistance for the Darfur
    peace negotiations.
  • A Post-Conflict Fund (PCF) grant supports
    research and knowledge dissemination on
    institutions and key aspects of the socio-economy
    of Darfur.
  • The grant is also intended to build the capacity
    of local partners in Darfur, particularly NGOs
    and CBOs, to prepare development programs
  • Additional work to fill knowledge gaps is
    currently under way to enable operational
    readiness to quickly start reconstruction and
    development activity when peave and security are
    restored in Darfur.
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