I've attached a series of documents and links related to Results Based Disbursements - aka Cash On Delivery, P4R, Payments For Progress; which will have increasingly important implications for the way donor deliver aid in years to come. The goals of these schemes are laudible - greater country ownership and the promotion of results based programs thereby giving recipients full responsibility and authority over resources paid. A Results Based Aid program can be designed to attain any goals for which measureable progress can be defined e.g. expanding secondary education, increasing immunization programs, expanding access to running water or slowing deforestation.
Government and donor agencies have shown a strong interest in developing these programs. From an PFM perspective there are a number of interesting challenges:
1. Defining the program and underlying expenditure framework - requires a COA which has sufficient detail to report on the underlying program to be financed.
2. Assessment and capacity building work - PFM systems will often be weak and capacity will be low. According to the principles of disbursement based on results measures of progress in developing systems will be important and, on occasions may be linked to disbursements. Benchmarking and measuring progress using PEFA like performance measures are important but challenging in a sector/program context.
3. Accountability and independent verification - an important element of these programs is to identify appropriate measures of performance and establish a way of reporting and verifying progress. Independent verification of results is critical to the credibiity of the agreement between the recipient and provider. Finding cost effective credible institutions to conduct this audit and verification work may prove challenging where local agencies (e.g. SAIs, internal audit) lack the skills and capacity.
4. Fiduciary concerns - there are bound to be question marks over the less stingent safeguards which are likely to be applied under these modalities. This, in part is why the traditional investment project is likely to continue as an option for IFIs for the foreseeable future.
Attached Link to World Bank P4R background and consultative papers.
http://web.worldbank.org/WBSITE/EXTERNAL/PROJECTS/EXTRESLENDING/0,,contentMDK:22748955~pagePK:7321740~piPK:7514729~theSitePK:7514726,00.html Attachments