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Community Development Sixty Years of Global Experience

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Community Development Sixty Years of Global Experience Portfolio Committee on Provincial and Local Government 19 September 2006 Hans P. Binswanger – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Community Development Sixty Years of Global Experience


1
Community Development Sixty Years of Global
Experience
  • Portfolio Committee on Provincial and Local
    Government
  • 19 September 2006
  • Hans P. Binswanger
  • Institute for Research on Economic Innovation
  • Tshwane University of Technology

2
The major intellectual and political battles over
the last 60 years
  • How to help and/or empower poor communities and
    people
  • Who is in charge of planning and execution
  • Who controls the money
  • Productive projects Via cooperatives,
    communities, or individual projects?

3
Three different approaches to communities
  • Service Delivery Approach Government or other
    service providers consult communities and
    beneficiaries, adapt their services and deliver
    them through their own staffs
  • Intermediary model Government or other
    facilitators work with communities, but take a
    strong management approach, including selection
    of projects, technology, construction, and
    financial management. Communities co-finance
    projects and run and maintain them
  • Empowerment model Outside facilitators help
    communities in diagnosis, design, and execution.
    Communities manage funds, contracts and
    implementation

4
Three different approaches to local development
5
Local and Community-driven development
  • The emerging consensus
  • Integrated local development is a co-production
    of communities, local governments, government
    sectors, and private organizations
  • Roles need to be properly defined, and actors
    need to be fully empowered to execute their
    roles, in particular with finances

6
Where did this consensus come from?
  • Mahatma Gandhi as an advocate
  • He would have said that he believes in holistic
    development, not just income
  • Sector-specific approaches
  • Community Development in India
  • The Comilla Model
  • Area Development programs 1970-1990
  • Community-driven development, Social Funds, Local
    government approaches

7
Sector-specific programs are the oldest approaches
  • Irrigation, health and education bureaucracies
  • Agricultural research, extension services,
    forestry departments
  • Agricultural credit institutions, often replaced
    by micro-finance institutions
  • Rural engineering departments, housing
    departments, water supply

8
Do sector-specific programs serve the poor?
  • The global record of sector-specific programs to
    serve the poor, vulnerable and marginalized is
    miserable
  • They rarely reach into deep rural space or
    informal settlements
  • They tend to service the better off members of
    the community
  • They are rarely accountable to the users
  • They are often corrupt

9
Community Development in India
  • 1948 pilots of S. K. Dev, advocating a holistic
    and integrated approach
  • Key elements Diagnosis, planning, empowerment,
    community development workers in each village,
    coordination at the block level (like rural
    municipality)
  • Mobilization of the communities and poor peoples
    own resources

10
Scaled up nationally in less than ten years
  • Managed by a special ministry of community
    development
  • But reality departed from the ideals
  • Block development plans developed by technicians
  • Program transformation to a service delivery
    approach by central agencies
  • Little community empowerment, NPO and local
    government involvement

11
More on India
  • Community development program achieved little
    until 1970, at which time the program and the
    ministry was disbanded
  • It was to be replaced by
  • Technology-driven approaches
  • Sectordriven service delivery, and intermediary
    approaches
  • A plethora of programs for special target groups

12
Elected local governments created in the late
1950s
  • But not empowered with fiscal resources,
    therefore achieved little
  • New thrust towards decentralization came back
    only in the 1990s
  • Now India is moving towards the co-production
    model, but lagging behind in the empowerment of
    communities and local governments financially

13
The Comilla Model in Bangladesh
  • Akhter Hameed Khan, and the Bangladesh Academy
    for Rural Development, starting in 1960
  • Same elements as CD in India, emphasizing a
    holistic development, mobilizing the strengths
    and resources of the poor
  • Plus a lot of emphasis on institutional basis for
    local development, technology, irrigation, and
    cooperatives, more elaborate coordination
    mechanisms at local level

14
Scaled up nationally (from 1970)
  • via the Integrated Rural Development Programme
    (IRDP),
  • eventually replaced by Bangladesh Rural
    Development Board (BRDB)
  • that became a large centralized bureaucracy,
    using the service delivery model
  • Absence of local government involvement, little
    community empowerment

15
More on Bangladesh
  • As a result of dissatisfaction with the central
    state-driven programs, NPOs developed, including
    the famous Grameen Bank
  • Some of these have achieved national coverage,
    usually with government funding
  • They are focused on specific sectors and rarely
    use an empowerment model to support communities
  • Local government has never been fully empowered

16
More on Bangladesh and India
  • Despite shortcomings, these countries have
    achieved significant development of
    infrastructure, food self sufficiency, rapid
    economic growth
  • But they are still lagging badly in poverty
    reduction, human capabilities, and social
    development

17
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18
Productive projects have always been a problem
  • Less successful, less sustainable than
    infrastructure projects
  • Often supply-driven, fail because of lack of
    markets
  • Cooperative and/or community enterprises have an
    enormous record of failure, all around the world
  • The reasons are largely conflicts over incentives
    to work, consume and share profits
  • The variant of labor-managed have also done
    poorly
  • Some cooperatives do well in provision of inputs,
    marketing, finance, and other facilitating role
  • Individual enterprises do best

19
The (Integrated) Area Development Approach 1969
to 1995
  • Inspired by Comilla model
  • Emphasizing holistic area development, community
    autonomy, role of local government, NPOs and
    sector specialists to achieve programs designed
    locally/communities

20
Hundreds of such programs were designed
  • Funded by World Bank, AFDB, DBSA, IFAD, bilateral
    donors
  • Most of them, reverted to planning by
    technocrats, used the service delivery or
    intermediary models, ignored any local government
    which might have helped, and suffered enormous
    coordination problems
  • They did best on delivery of infrastructure, but
    failed on most other objectives
  • Income growth often not achieved because of lack
    of technology
  • Few viable institutions left behind
  • The approach was abandoned around 1990

21
The Coordination Problem
  1. There is a huge diversity among poor areas, poor
    communities and poor people
  2. No central agency can even keep track of this
    heterogeneity or design and implement development
    programs
  3. Even when plans are developed locally or by
    communities, central agencies rarely can deliver
    on them individually in a service delivery mode,
    much less so in a holistic integrated approach
  4. The tree major approaches we discussed all
    developed the so called stove pipe model to
    delivery of programs, and then attempted to
    coordinate the stovepipes locally, such as your
    development nodes
  5. All attempts at such coordination failed

22
Components and costs of a typical land reform
project
23
But government programs are fragmented into stove
pipes(LRAD, CASP, RDP housing, MAFISA, Land
Bank, Khula, AgriBEE, LandCare, AgriSETA, etc.)
24
One Stop AgriBEE Shop
AgriBEE Municipal Council Coordinates, appraises
and recommends projects
Orientation and training of beneficiaries
If you want to acquire a farm and develop it
(LRAD)
If you want to set up an agri-business
If you want to develop your farm in the communal
areas
25
Lessons from this review
  • Strong ideals and strategies of holistic and
    integrated development degenerated upon scaling
    up
  • Centralization, disempowerment, inability to
    coordinate and integrate
  • The programs did not strengthen the institutional
    framework for local and community-development
  • They did not devolve functions and development
    resources to communities and local governments
  • They lost their social objectives, and instead
    were often captured by elites
  • NGOs have rarely graduated beyond the service
    delivery and intermediary model

26
Overcoming the legacy of failure
27
Local (Government) Development Funds
  • Pioneer United Nations Capital Fund, now being
    generalized
  • Bottom up planning starting at communities, each
    of which lists its priorities, complemented by
    priorities at local level
  • Selection of projects in open district
    development committees in the presence of
    community representatives
  • Financed out of a fungible fund held and managed
    at local level
  • South Africa has implemented this model in the
    local development grant
  • But it is requiring much too complex panning,
    usually done by consultants rather than the
    communities and local development committee

28
Community-driven development (CDD) (over a
hundred programs around the world)
  • Communities are in charge of the choice of
    project and its design, choice of technology, the
    money to execute the project, their contributions
    to the project, the contracting and financial
    management
  • Communities are coordinated at local government
    level, have access to professional facilitators,
    and the technical resources of the sector
    agencies. They may use their money to buy
    additional technical services
  • In the best programs communities get a budget
    based on per capita and other norms, and allocate
    it to their projects in their development plan

29
How is CDD done?
  • Diagnosis, planning, integration, and monitoring
    usually done via PRA techniques
  • They get training in financial management and
    planning
  • They learn mostly by doing
  • The communities have to co-finance the projects
    in cash, labor, or local materials

30
Recent impact evaluation of Brazil CDD program
  • Over 250000 communities reached, over 300000
    community projects, at a total cost of about 10
    billion rand
  • Mostly focused on essential priorities such as
    electrification and drinking water, but also
    productive and social projects
  • Communities achieve projects faster, cheaper, at
    the same or better quality as intermediary or
    service delivery approaches, sustainabilility of
    projects is fairly good

31
Impacts in Brazil
  • Access to infrastructure and quality of housing
    has increased
  • Child mortality and incidence of several
    communicable diseases have declined
  • All household assets have increased, but increase
    is not statistically significant
  • Productive projects do less well than
    infrastructure projects
  • There has been a very quick and large increase in
    social capital at community and local levels, and
    that capital does not depreciate

32
Social Funds
  • Started by using the intermediary model
  • Communities and projects identified in
    consultation by central staff of SF
  • Moneys not in the hands of communities, but
    intermediaries and facilitators, including NPOs
  • Execution largely managed by the intermediaries
  • Communities expected to contribute, and to manage
    the projects once completed
  • Social Funds are not an integrated approach,
    rarely builds institutions, does little for
    empowerment
  • It has not been scalable to more than 500 to 1000
    projects per year per country
  • The social funds are evolving towards CDD
    programs

33
The recent synthesis Local and community-driven
development (LCDD)
  • It is a co-production of communities, local
    governments, sector agencies, the private sector
    and NGOs
  • Coordination at local level
  • The money and authority does not flow in
    stovepipes They are devolved to local
    governments and communities
  • Local governments and communities are held
    accountable for use of funds and for achieving
    their own and mandated development objectives

34
Implementation of the synthesis is a huge
challenge
  • Lack of trust in communities and local
    governments
  • Exaggerated planning expectations
  • Many political battles about control over money
    and other resources

35
Weaknesses and future challenges for LCDD
  • Communities, local governments prioritize
    infrastructure first, followed by productive
    projects, rarely social projects
  • But they are not that good at productive projects
    because they find it hard to link to broader
    markets and input supply systems
  • A CDD approach to delivery of welfare services
    and social safety nets does not yet exist
  • only fragments of responsibility are devolved,
    such as selection of beneficiaries, and
    requirements to contribute labor and food
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