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Processes of reform_part1_b

Date post: 21-Nov-2014
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The changes needed to secure sustainable access to adequate services usually involve various processes of reform that must be carefully planned and implemented in collaboration with a diverse set of stakeholders. This 90 minute face-to-face module presents some of the key considerations and steps for successful reform using practical case studies from Uganda, South Africa and Russia. The intended format is a seminar which incorporates both a lecture and question and answer period.
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1 Processes of Reform Capacity Building Module
Transcript
  • 1. Processes of Reform Capacity Building Module
  • 2. Overview
    • Introduction
      • Key steps in reforms
      • Balancing progress in utility and environment
    • Video interviews with three speakers
      • Triggers and obstacles to reform
      • Key success factors in reform
      • Taking care of the poor in reforms
      • Role of central government in reforms
      • Leadership
  • 3. Planning reforms
    • Identify what the problems are
      • Inefficient planning and project implementation
      • Water availability, water quality, energy supply
      • Staff motivation, capacity, efficiency
      • Tariff level and structure
      • Corruption
      • Commercial operation
  • 4. Key steps for successful reforms
    • Planning the process of introducing reform
    • Involving stakeholders
    • Setting upstream policy
    • Setting service standards, tariffs, subsidies, and financial arrangement
    • Developing institutional model
      • Utility: public or PSP
      • Non-utility services: small scale providers
      • Environment: policy maker; asset holder; regulator
      • Legal instruments for the arrangement
  • 5. Involving stakeholders
    • Politicians: local and national levels
    • Management and staff of public utility
    • Consumer associations
    • NGO: national and intl (service to the poor, environment, governance)
    • Financiers: multi and bi-lateral
    • Alternative suppliers (tankers, drilling companies)
    • Media: national and intl
    • Private sector: local and intl
  • 6. Sustainable utility reform and reform of the environment have to go hand-in-hand Our goal utility poor good poor good Typical reform path environment Possible combinations environment status/utility provider status
  • 7. How Uganda combisequenced the reforms of NWSC, its national utility Utility reform Reform of the environment 70s political turmoil mid 80s new government end 80s & 90s Major rehab 95 new statute 97 new Board 98 new MD 98-00 service & revenue enhancement programs 00 ext & int performance contracts 02 automatic tariff indexation 03 staff performance contracts 97 corporate plan
  • 8. Overview
    • Introduction
      • Key steps in reforms
      • Balancing progress in utility and environment
    • Video interviews with three speakers
      • Triggers and obstacles to reform
      • Key success factors in reform
      • Taking care of the poor in reforms
      • Role of central government in reforms
      • Leadership
  • 9. South Africa Mike Muller Former Director General, South African Department of Water Affairs &Forestry
  • 10. South Africa
    • Total pop - 45.2 Million (2005)
    • Urban pop (% of total) 59%
    • Surface area - 1,221,037 sq miles
    • Life expectancy 45 years
    • GDP (US$ billions) 240.2
    • Access to water supply 88%
    • Access to sanitation 65%
    • Trigger: the end of apartheid
    • Vertical unbundling: bulk utilities and end providers
    • Most utilities are corporatized
    • Subisidies: Free basic water 25 l/p/d
    • Basic water supplies to nearly 15 million people in 10 years; Sanitation much slower
    • applying good old-fashioned public finance principles
    • Ongoing decentralization process after establishment of democratic municipalities in 2001
  • 11. Uganda Dr. William Muhairwe Managing Director, National Water and Sewerage Corporation, Uganda
  • 12. Uganda
    • Total pop - 28.8 Million (2005)
    • Urban pop (% of total) 13%
    • Surface area - 241,038 sq miles
    • Life expectancy 49 years
    • GDP (US$ billions) 8.7
    • Access to water 60%
    • Access to sanitation 43%
    Utility reform Reform of the environment
  • 13. Russia Alexander Bazhenov Vice-Chairman, Eurasian Water Partnership
  • 14. Russia
    • Total pop - 143.2 Million (2005)
    • Urban pop (% of total) 73%
    • Surface area - 17,075,200 sq miles
    • Life expectancy 65 years
    • GDP (US$ billions) 763.7
    • Access to water 97%
    • Access to sanitation 87%
    • Trigger: the end of communism
    • Subsidies: lgoti and maximum % expenditure
    • WSS part of broader Housing and Communal Services sector centralized billing and collection
    • Mostly municipal departments with little autonomy
    • History of focus on infra: low efficiency
    • Regulation is regional oblast responsibility
    • Boom & bust of PSP in 03/04; now 2 nd generation PSP
  • 15. Overview
    • Introduction
      • Key steps in reforms
      • Balancing progress in utility and environment
    • Video interviews with three speakers
      • Triggers and obstacles to reform
      • Key success factors in reform
      • Taking care of the poor in reforms
      • Role of central government in reforms
      • Leadership
  • 16. The first challenge: how to trigger reform Droughts, floods & epidemics Unacceptable levels of service Political shifts & pressures financial crises
  • 17. The constant challenge to maintain progress. time performance Pressure to improve Broad sector reform Utility reform 3 2 1 Maintain progress 4
  • 18. Triggers and Obstacles to Reform Click the button to play a 5 minute video clip. (Windows Media;9,421k)
  • 19. Maintaining progress: Balancing external accountabilities Owners Customers Regulators Policy makers Financiers The unserved?
  • 20. Overview
    • Introduction
      • Key steps in reforms
      • Balancing progress in utility and environment
    • Video interviews with three speakers
      • Triggers and obstacles to reform
      • Key success factors in reform
      • Taking care of the poor in reforms
      • Role of central government in reforms
      • Leadership
  • 21. Key Success Factors in Reform Click the button to play a 5 minute video clip. (Windows Media; 9,208k)
  • 22. Overview
    • Introduction
      • Key steps in reforms
      • Balancing progress in utility and environment
    • Video interviews with three speakers
      • Triggers and obstacles to reform
      • Key success factors in reform
      • Taking care of the poor in reforms
      • Role of central government in reforms
      • Leadership
  • 23. Taking Care of the Poor in Reforms Click the button to play a 10 minute video clip. (Windows Media; 15,619k)
  • 24. Existing quantity-targeted subsidies are regressive Source: Water, Electricity, and the Poor: Who Benefits from Utility Subsidies? Komives et al.
  • 25. Who are the urban poor?
    • Typically use multiple sources and differentiate drinking from other uses - purchase small quantities if a free source is available:
    • May share a house or yard tap with multiple families design standards underestimate number of users
    • May purchase from a neighbor poor households are often heterogeneous; differentiate demand as slums may have mixed densities, income levels
    • May use a public standpipe/standpost/kiosk the level of consumption is constrained by distance traveled, time spent collecting water
    • May rely on small-scale private sector when services do not meet their needs choose to have water delivered to house rather than walking to and queuing at the standpipe
    BUT: poor households do pay for water often at higher rate (per cubic meter) than wealthy households
  • 26. How to improve services for the poor?
    • The long term utility solution: a private - house/yard -connection for all
    • Standpipes from free to paid service
    • Augmenting small-scale service providers
    • How to deal with self provisioning?
  • 27. Overview
    • Introduction
      • Key steps in reforms
      • Balancing progress in utility and environment
    • Video interviews with three speakers
      • Triggers and obstacles to reform
      • Key success factors in reform
      • Taking care of the poor in reforms
      • Role of central government in reforms
      • Leadership
  • 28. The Role of the Central Government Click the button to play a 4 minute video clip. (Windows Media; 7,526k)
  • 29. Overview
    • Introduction
      • Key steps in reforms
      • Balancing progress in utility and environment
    • Video interviews with three speakers
      • Triggers and obstacles to reform
      • Key success factors in reform
      • Taking care of the poor in reforms
      • Role of central government in reforms
      • Leadership
  • 30. The political economy of reform
    • Reforms must provide returns for the political decision makers who are willing to make the changes.
    • Initiate reform where there is a powerful need, and demonstrated demand, for change
    • Nothing succeeds like success
    • Best fit rather than best practice
      • Realistic goals and timeline
      • Develop a sequenced, prioritized list of reforms
      • Match available human, financial and knowledge resources
      • Take one step at a time, but lock in progress
  • 31. The Importance of Leadership Click the button to play a 3 minute video clip. (Windows Media; 3,477k)

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