Post on 14-Jan-2016
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Sierra Leone Institutional Reform and Capacity
Building Project
Yongmei ZhouAFTPR
Objective of presentation
Share with participants the experience of the design phase of a decentralization and local government support operation
Identification: which reform to support?
Original coverage of IRCBP envisaged in TSS 2002-4: PFM, Decentralization and Local Gov Capacity Building, HRM, Legal & Judicial Reform, Agricultural Sector Capacity Building.
Too ambitious: stretching implementation capacity of GoSL and Bank team
Key objectives of governance reform in post-conflict Sierra Leone Restore core functions of government for effective
economic and fiscal management Restore trust in government Rebuild social capital in communities Address issue of social exclusion Address urgent needs for recovery and
reconstruction
Why support decentralization?
“Hot button” issue– Popular support for devolving power– Reestablishing local councils is incumbent SLPP
government’s top agenda Potential benefits
– Reducing conflict by opening up space for political participation and improving democratic accountability of the state to citizenry
– Long term effect on democratization: LCs as training ground for political leaders
– Potential for improving service delivery
Decentralization drives broader PSR reforms Instill a new culture of transparency and
accountability at the local level: will translate into same expectation of the center
Decentralize FM and HRM to local councils: will later trigger changes at the central government level
Fiscal decentralization: shift resources to LGs and force restructuring of central ministries and agencies
Local Government Act 2004: key features Election of local councils 20% of Paramount Chiefs in each locality will be un-
elected councilors Ambitious plan for devolution of functions, expenditures,
revenue authorities to local councils (Schedule III of LG Act)
Local councils have autonomy in HRM and FM under guidelines
Require transparency in council operation Transition arrangements
Current local administration: employment agencies rather than service providers
Local councils were abolished in 1972. Since then Management Committees have been appointed by President
Few service delivery responsibilities Very poor performance in service delivery
– Revenue collected cannot sustain service delivery: 80% revenue paying salary of staff and allowances of management committee members
– Staff largely unskilled: 80% are casual workers; little, if any, training to upgrade skills.
Decentralization does not automatically improve services or accountability Local councils may remain employment agencies,
if current unskilled and surplus staff are inherited, or if councils do not practice restraint in hiring
Local councils may have inadequate revenue capacity and expenditure management capacity to discharge new responsibilities
Local councils may be captured by local elites and fail to address needs of marginalized groups
Local councils may engage in corrupt practices
Key challenges
Design and implement a sustainable decentralization strategy, where phased functional devolution is supported by fiscal and administrative decentralization strategies as well as capacity building support.
Address the issue of social justice and inclusion and establish a new culture in local governments
GoSL Decentralization Program: Sequencing Jun-Dec04: grace period for implementing functional devolution
– Build basic LG capacity to make collective decisions and utilize resources
– Announce phases of functional devolution– Design fiscal decentralization strategy and sectoral devolution
plans Jan05-May08: transition period for implementing functional
devolution– Gradual transfer of service delivery responsibilities– Building LG capacity– Intensive M&E to identify improvement in policy and
implementation Jun08 & beyond: sustainability phase
World Bank support to decentralization
Pre-2004: Social Fund, Education, Health projects – Empower communities and local service providers to
contribute towards the repatriation, resettlement, reintegration, recovery process
2004-8: IRCBP (supporting GoSL Decentralization Program Phases 1 & 2)– Help design a sustainable fiscal decentralization strategy to
ensure adequate resource transfers to LGs and sustainable development of local revenue capacity
– Help build sustainable local government institutions to deliver services to communities
– Support the establishment of a reform platform for other donors to chip in
Decentralization Component of IRCBP: Objective Help GoSL establish a functioning local
government system– LCs institutionalize participatory planning– LCs have basic FM capacity– LCs establish local revenue mobilization
capacity– Service delivery at local level maintain at
current level and later expand and improve Outcome and output indicators in Annex 3
of PAD
Decentralization Component of IRCBP: strategic choices Invest in implementation capacity and
embed it in government structure Learning by doing approach of capacity
building: offer LG with discretionary resources so they can practice planning, budgeting, spending, accounting, monitoring, reporting skills.
Consciously create demand for performance Tap multiple sources of training providers
Decentralization Component of IRCBP: operational subcomponents
1. Strengthen policy and implementation capacity: DS, LGFD
2. Finance start-up administrative infrastructure of new LGs
3. Capacity building: for LGs and other stakeholders
4. Local Government Development Grant
5. Monitoring and evaluation
Strengthen policy and implementation capacity of decentralization program1. Decentralization Secretariat of MLGCD (serving
Inter-ministerial Committee on Decentralization and Local Government) and Local Government Finance Department of MoF (serving LG Finance Committee)
2. Legislative/regulatory changes
3. Fiscal decentralization strategy
4. Project planning/implementation/M&E
Capacity building for LGs: demand side
Demand v.s. need How to increase demand for performance?
– Electoral demand– Competitive pressure among LGs – Enforce LG Act and minimum conditions for
accessing LGDG Types of support
– Orientation training– Skills training and hands-on mentoring
Capacity building for LGs: supply side
Training providers: using existing institutions or encourage creation of training market? – IPAM
• Pro: existing infrastructure• Con: lukewarm response from leadership; weak training capacity,
curriculum
– Private providers• Pro: motivated, as reward based on performance• Con: limited # of local trainers; no guarantee for sustainable
capacity
Training of Trainers: identify entrepreneurial individuals, open to IPAM staff
Mentoring by practitioners
Local Government Development Grant
Objectives:– Offer resources to LGs so they can practice
basic resource management skills (planning, budgeting, contract management, accounting, monitoring, reporting)
– Use LGDG as a carrot to induce desirable behavior of LGs: focus first on governance culture, then skills
– Establish a credible transfer system for other financiers to use in future
Local Government Development Grant
Provide block grant to LGs for financing development projects, as part of IGT
Access rules focus on transparency and accountability requirements of LG Act 2004– Encourage transparent and accountable governance
culture from the very start!– Address fiduciary concerns of IDA– Give incentive to develop management skills
Allocation of LGDG among LGs based on equity criteria, infrastructure needs, other financing available
Eight Steps of Successful Change*
Increase urgency Build the guiding team Get the vision right Communicate for buy-in Empower action Create short-term wins Don’t let up Make change stick
* John P. Kotter and Dan S. Cohen, the Heart of Change
Donor coordination
Government coordinate donors: political oversight by IMC, technical implementation led by Decentralization Secretariat, MLGCD
Donor harmonization to reduce transaction costs for gov– Shared/joint consultation with stakeholders, diagnosis
& analytical work
– Common implementation arrangements
– Joint M&E
– Shared capacity building framework
Working with the Country Team
Sector programs– Adjustment of existing projects: social funds– Design of new projects– Implementation arrangement needs to adjust to
new functional assignment
New CAS
Other tricks for task managers
Get a PHRD grant for gov to finance preparatory activities
Get good consultants– Recently retired civil servants: practioners and
devoted– Practitioners from countries your client aspires
to Talk to the urban group Build quality assurance in the project
Challenges for Bank supervision Intensive supervision requires big budget and time
commitment Work closely with FM and Procurement staff Joint M&E with GoSL and other donors
– Collect baseline data before decentralization, if feasible– Design research framework and build data collection as
part of M&E Be ready for difficulties
– LGs not responsive to LGDG incentives– Political pressure for using LGs as employment agencies– Ministries resist changes