Concept Note IEG Learning Product on Maximizing Development Impact in IDA May 27, 2015 Background and Context 1. The International Development Association (IDA) is the World Bank Group’s (WBG) fund for the poorest countries. It is replenished every three years by contributions from the governments of the richer member countries, repayments of IDA credits, and contributions from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and the International Finance Corporation (IFC). 2. The sixteenth IDA replenishment (IDA16) covered the FY12-14 period. The discussions for the seventeenth replenishment (IDA17) covering FY15-17 were completed in December 2013 and the final report (the IDA17 Replenishment Report)1 was approved by the Executive Directors of IDA on March 25, 2014. Early in this period Bank management will deliver its IDA16 Retrospective (expected to be completed in June 2015), with a subsequent IDA17 midterm review half-way through the implementation period. A meeting of the IDA Deputies that is now planned for March 2016 will review the progress in IDA 17 implementation and also be the first replenishment meeting for IDA18. As set out in the IEG FY15-17 work program and budget document2 IEG will also make available, for this meeting, a synthesis (“the Product”) which brings together findings from recent IEG evaluations pertinent to the core themes of IDA 17. Product Concept and Purpose 3. Numerous IEG evaluations address issues that are relevant to IDA’s development impact. With the aim of helping to inform the discussions for the IDA18 replenishment, the planned report will use a desk exercise to bring such issues together by compiling and synthesizing relevant evaluation evidence from recently completed IEG evaluations and those expected to be completed in FY15 and early FY16. This synthesis report will, in this manner, compile and present such IEG evaluation findings that are relevant for IDA or IDA countries, with particular attention to the special themes under IDA16 and 17 (para 6 below). It will not be an evaluation of IDA performance, it will not report on IDA progress or on replenishment commitments, and will not make recommendations on IDA policy issues (such as graduation criteria as one example). The preparation of the product will be based on desk work without new field work or new analyses, except for an updated portfolio analysis. Report from the Executive Directors of the International Development Association to the Board of Governors. Additions to IDA Resources: Seventeenth Replenishment. IDA17: Maximizing Development Impact. Approved by the IDA Executive Directors on March 25, 2014. 2 Independent Evaluation Group, Work Program and Budget (FY15) and Indicative Plan (FY16-17), June 2, 2014. 1 1 Rationale and Objective 4. IEG’s independent evaluations focus primarily on specific issues of development effectiveness and provide insight into what works and on strengths and weaknesses of current approaches. Each individual evaluation addresses specific sets of topics across types of clients and country circumstances, often covering IDA countries as part of a wider spectrum of Bank country partners. In contrast, the IEG learning products synthesize and disseminate IEG evaluation work. The planned synthesis product will in this vein consider the various available evaluation findings through the IDA lens by drawing from the available individual evaluations such specific findings, lessons and conclusions on development effectiveness that are directly applicable for current IDA clients and in particular for the key topics of IDA16 and 17. These findings will be identified and set in context with attention to connectivities in a concise, readerfriendly format, with special attention to forward-looking aspects. The synthesis product will be of direct relevance for the preparations and discussions regarding the forthcoming IDA18 replenishment discussions. Scope and Key Questions 5. As part of the analysis of issues concerning IDA’s development impact, the synthesis will address the special themes for the most recent IDA replenishments (IDA 16 and 17), look at relevant measurements for recent country level performance, and identify drivers of IDA results. It will to this end draw on findings from relevant recent and ongoing evaluations in IEG’s work program, for the latter to the extent that their results will in time become available, shared with the Bank Group Management and presented to CODE. To the extent that evaluative evidence allows, the synthesis product will cover World Bank Group activities in IDA countries, including cooperation between the three institutions of World Bank, IFC and MIGA. 6. The overarching theme for IDA17 is “Maximizing Development Impact” and for IDA16 the closely related “Delivering Development Results.” Within these overall headings there was high continuity of special themes between IDA16 and IDA17, which indicates that these areas also will be important for IDA going forward. Three of the four themes were unchanged (although with some differences in formulations): Gender Equality, Climate Change, and Fragile and Conflict-Affected States. In addition under IDA16 a special theme was Crisis Response, and under IDA17 Inclusive Growth. The product will seek to address all five of these special themes. 3 For crisis response this will be based on three already completed evaluations (two on response to the financial crisis and one on food crisis). 3 2 7. The IDA17 replenishment document also focused on leveraging private resources, leveraging public resources, leveraging knowledge, and IDA’s focus on results, efficiency, and effectiveness. Where relevant and possible, the product will also touch on some of these aspects. 8. The product will assemble evaluation findings from recently completed evaluations, relevant follow-up information from the Management Action Record and evaluations expected to be completed in FY15 and early FY16 relevant to the IDA special themes. Specifically, the synthesis will bring together findings from thematic, country program, and project performance evaluations to identify – as possible based on the available evaluative evidence – aspects that have worked well or not worked so well and why, interconnections between themes, instruments and approaches, and relations between Bank programs, country counterparts, and development partners. It will broadly seek to answer the following questions under each theme: How has IDA addressed these themes in IDA countries through its country programs and individual operations? What factors have affected IDA development results at country level in general and pertaining to inclusive growth, climate change, and gender equality in particular? How effectively has IDA followed up on its commitments to strengthen its engagement in fragile and conflict affected states? What cross-cutting lessons emerge from IEG evaluations to help IDA maximize development impact? 9. IDA Portfolio. IEG annually updates every year the aggregate numbers for the performance of the Bank’s portfolio of completed projects and country programs. There was a deterioration in the portfolio performance in IDA countries in FY11-13 compare to FY08-10. These findings regarding the performance of country programs and projects for IDA countries will be updated to the end of FY15, with selective analytical cuts to elaborate on some of the performance and portfolio trends. The team will also consider whether the available evaluative evidence would permit any discussion on regional IDA programs. On the assumptions that the IDA deputies will receive a comprehensive and detailed portfolio and performance analysis of IDA countries from IDA team in operations, IEG will not go into as much depth in this section. It will confine itself to an update on the aggregate numbers that IEG normally reports in the RAP, using IEG validated data with some selected regional or sectoral disaggregation where appropriate and useful). 10. Previous IEG Evaluations of IDA. IEG has previously undertaken two major evaluations that were requested from the IDA Deputies: Evaluation of IDA10, 11 and 12 (completed around 2002), and the evaluation of IDA’s internal controls (completed around 2009, with a subsequent evaluation around 2010 of management’s remediation program), both of which were funded through special additional, non-fungible budget allocations. The synthesis product will remind readers of these 3 two exercises and their major findings, also to provide some “historical” perspective to IEG’s engagement with IDA issues. Evaluative Sources4 11. Country Programs: IDA programs are implemented using a country-based development model, and the synthesis product will review the performance and draw lessons from evaluations and validations of country programs in IDA countries. Also, IDA17 documents expected that in designing Country Partnership Frameworks for IDA countries, attention would be given to the overarching and special themes. For that reason, the product will address the evolving country partnership frameworks and in particular their inclusion of the special themes, and will draw lessons from IEG’s country program evaluations relevant to IDA agenda. 12. IEG has produced eight country program evaluations for IDA countries since FY08, and another three have been completed as part of clustered evaluations. The FY15 Clustered Country Program Evaluation on Resource-Rich Countries (11) is assessing WBG support for helping countries manage the fiscal challenges of natural resource rents while ensuring broad-based sharing of benefits. The product will review these country program evaluations as well as the IEG validations of country strategies through FY15 and early FY16 with a view to identify supplementary findings and trends. The focus of this discussion is likely to be more on what works and why, and less on numerical portfolio trends. 13. Inclusive Growth. Several recently completed and ongoing FY15 evaluations focus on certain aspects of inclusive growth and will be analyzed to see how poverty focused IDA country programs have been, how specifically how specifically IDA country programs aimed to reach the poor and how effectively they have done so, including what role Bank interventions to enhance access to finance and youth employment have been and what factors explain success and failures. Specifically the product will draw on the following thematic evaluations FY13 Youth Employment took stock of international experience and evaluated the relevance and effectiveness of WBG support for youth employment, including in IDA countries. Attachment 2 lists the available and planned evaluative sources for this product. They cover a wide range of topics, but some unevenness of treatment may inevitably occur depending on the amount of relevant material that will be available for different topics and themes. The IEG sources will provide the bulk of the material for the product, but some other materials, such as management learning reviews, may be also consulted selectively. The numbers shown for convenience in parentheses above for each evaluation refer to the numbered evaluations in Attachment 2. Attachment 3 shows available country program evaluations (CPEs) and Attachment 4a completed and planned project performance assessment reports (PPARs) – these are summarized in Attachment 4b. This is a synthesis of evaluation findings regarding issues and development effectiveness (pertaining to IDA’s issues of focus), which normally do not change quickly over time, and not an evaluation of IDA results over any specific period. For that reason the synthesis will be somewhat flexible how far back it finds it appropriate to go, based on the likely continued relevance going forward of the evaluation findings. 4 4 FY14 Targeted Support for Small and Medium Enterprises (2) looked at how effectively WBG support to SMEs has been integrated into the larger thinking on inclusive growth and job creation. FY15 Getting to Poverty (10) aims to understand how the Bank designs and implements country programs to contribute to poverty reduction, with a focus on the adequacy of data and diagnostics, integration of analytical work into country strategies and selection of interventions, and effectiveness of feedback loops. FY15 Inclusive Finance (7) assesses the effectiveness of WBG support to promote financial inclusion, which is a critical pillar of the inclusive growth theme in IDA17. 14. Gender Equality. Several recent, ongoing and forthcoming IEG evaluations focus inter alia on gender equality and will be drawn on to assess how effectively IDA has addressed gender equality in its programs and operations and what lessons emerge to ensure IDA can effectively support gender equality going forward. Specifically, the product will draw on the following evaluations: FY14 Gender in Sectors: Social Safety Nets and Gender Equality (6); WBG Support to FCS Evaluation (1); Investment Climate Reform (5); FY15 Electricity Access (16); Inclusive Finance (7); and Early Childhood Development (12). The team will explore to what extent early findings from the gender equality chapter of the Results and Performance (RAP) 2015 can be integrated (the one-stop review of the report is scheduled for October 2015). 15. Climate change. IEG has completed three major evaluations over the past five years on climate change5 which the IDA synthesis will draw on to the extent that findings remain relevant. Many of the major sectoral and country evaluations in the IEG program have strong coverage of climate change-related issues. For example, Electricity Access (16) has looked at the uptake of renewable energy in rural (off-grid) areas. IEG also chaired recently an Evaluation Oversight Committee for a special evaluation of the Climate Investment Funds (CIF) for the CIF governing bodies, Independent Evaluation of the Climate Investment Funds, June 2014. Findings from these evaluations will be combined with a review of relevant PPARs (Project Performance Assessment Reports) and Country Program Evaluations to see how effectively IDA helps its client countries prepare for, and tackle climate change risks, and what lessons emerge to help IDA assist the poorest and most vulnerable countries with climate change adaptation and mitigation going forward. 16. Fragile and Conflict-Affected States (FCSs). IEG shared the early findings from its FY14 WBG Support to FCS Evaluation (1) with the IDA Deputies during the IDA17 replenishment process. The implementation of WBG management’s response to the FY13 Adapting to Climate Change: Assessing World Bank Experience; FY10 The Challenge of Low-Carbon Development: Climate Change and the World Bank Group; and FY09 Climate Change and World Bank Group: Win-Win Energy Policy Reforms. 5 5 recommendations of the IEG evaluation is one of the IDA17 policy commitments. The synthesis products will summarize the key findings of FCS evaluation and will follow up the implementation progress of its recommendations, drawing on MAR reports. 17. Project Level Evaluations. The Product will update from RAP2013 and RAP2014 (8) summarized findings from project level evaluations for IDA countries, most importantly levels and trends for project ratings, and also including applicable lessons from relevant Project Performance Assessment Reports (PPARs), as well as the findings of FY14-15 Learning and Results in WBG Operations (13). This will provide an overview of what has worked and what has not worked and why. Attachment 4(a) lists relevant recent and ongoing/planned PPARs. Audience 18. The main audience for this synthesis product will be World Bank Board members (and specifically CODE) and IDA Deputies. Bank senior management, which is implementing the IDA program, and client country stakeholders, who would stand to benefit from the appropriate implementation of the limited IDA resources. Generally, the synthesis should also be useful for individual program task teams and task team leaders engaged in the identification, preparation, or supervision of IDA operations. Quality Assurance and Team 19. The evaluation will be overseen by Nick York, Director, IEGCC and Geeta Batra, Manager, IEGCC. Peer reviewers are Johannes Linn (former Vice President for ECA Region) and Henock Kifle (former Chief Economist for African Development Bank and Permanent Secretary of the Ministry of Agriculture in Ethiopia). The synthesis product will be written by a small team led by Ismail Arslan, including Monika Huppi, Nils Fostvedt , Xue Li and Kendra Diane White (focus on economic and portfolio analysis). The team would be supplemented by additional IEG staff and consultants as needed. Timeline 20. This product is expected to be produced based on existing evaluative evidence and other relevant material available, with no mission travel. The synthesis report had originally been timed for delivery in FY17, but has been brought forward to FY16 to ensure that it will be timely for the IDA18 discussions. To ensure that the report is useful to the Board, IDA Deputies, and World Bank Management, , it will be finalized by February 2016, in line with the timing of the planned first replenishment meeting for IDA18 in March 2016. The timing of this delivery is of essence and will be maintained even if some of the planned evaluation inputs (discussed earlier in this note) should be delayed. Even so, it is of vital importance for this tight deadline that the team for this report will have free and early access to the relevant evaluative material as this would become available, including drafts of background papers and country case study reports. 6 21. As a synthesis of other evaluative material it is expected that the product will provide findings and lessons but will not include recommendations. 22. The report will be finalized and shared with the Board through CODE in March 2016, in line with making the report available to IDA Deputies in time for their first replenishment meeting for IDA18 in March 2016. 7 Attachment 1: References IEG (Independent Evaluation Group). 2013. World Bank Group Assistance to Low-Income Fragile and Conflict-Affected States. Washington, DC: World Bank. ____. 2014. The Big Business of Small Enterprises: Evaluation of the World Bank Group Experience with Targeted Support to SMEs, 2006–12. Washington, DC: World Bank. ____. 2014. Learning and Results in World Bank Operations: How the Bank Learns. Evaluation 1. Washington, DC: World Bank. ____. 2014. World Bank Group Support to Health Financing. Washington, DC: World Bank. ____. 2014. Investment Climate Reforms. An Independent Evaluation of World Bank Group Support to Reforms of Business Regulations. Washington, DC: World Bank. ____. 2014. Social Safety Nets and Gender Learning From Impact Evaluations and World Bank Projects. Washington, DC: World Bank. ____. 2014. Results and Performance of the World Bank Group 2014. Achieving the MDGs. An Independent Evaluation. Washington, DC: World Bank. ____. 2014. Investments in Renewable Energy Generation. IEG Learning Product. Washington, DC: World Bank ____. 2015. Financial Inclusion – A Foothold on the Ladder Toward Prosperity? An IEG Evaluation of World Bank Group Support for Financial Inclusion for Low-Income Households and Microenterprises. Washington, DC: World Bank (forthcoming). ____. 2015. The Poverty Focus of Country Programs: Lessons from World Bank Experience. Washington, DC: World Bank (forthcoming). ____. 2015. World Bank Group Engagement in Resource- Rich Developing Countries: The Cases of Bolivia, Kazakhstan, Mongolia, and Zambia. Clustered Country Program Evaluation Synthesis Report. Washington, DC: World Bank (forthcoming). ____. 2015. World Bank Support to Early Childhood Development. Washington, DC: World Bank (forthcoming). ____. 2015. Learning and Results in World Bank Operations: How the Bank Learns. Evaluation 2. Washington, DC: World Bank (forthcoming). ____. 2015. Review of DPO Instruments. Washington, DC: World Bank (forthcoming). ____. 2015. WBG Transformational Engagements. Washington, DC: World Bank (forthcoming). ____. 2015. World Bank Group Support to Electricity Access FY2000-FY2014. Washington, DC: World Bank (forthcoming). 8 Attachment 2: Selected Delivered and Planned Evaluation Products, FY14-16 WBG Support to FCS Evaluation type Major Evaluations 15-Aug-13 Report Report Submission 27-Sep-13 2 Targeted Support for SMEs Major Evaluations 25-Sep-13 23-Dec-13 29-Jan-14 3 Support to Health Financing Major Evaluations 23-Jan-14 23-May-14 18-Jun-14 4 Learning and Results in World Bank Operations - Phase I Major Evaluations 18-Feb-14 31-Mar-14 12-May-14 5 Investment Climate Reform Major Evaluations 31-Mar-14 27-Jun-14 21-Jul-14 6 Gender in Sectors: Social Safety Nets and Gender Equality Other 8-May-14 30-Jun-14 7 Inclusive Finance Major Evaluations 26-Feb-14 5-Jun-15 8 RAP 2014: Achieving the MDGs Major Evaluations 3-Nov-14 4-Feb-15 9 Renewable Energy Other 17-Nov-14 30-Dec-14 10 Getting to Poverty Major Evaluations 18-Nov-14 5-Mar-15 FY15 Q3 or Q4 11 Clustered CPE on Resource-Rich Countries Major Evaluations 16-Dec-14 19-Mar-15 FY15 Q3 12 WBG Support to Early Childhood Development Major Evaluations 7-Jan-15 30-Mar-15 FY15 Q4 13 Learning and Results in World Bank Operations - Phase II Major Evaluations 13-Jan-15 31-Mar-15 FY15 Q4 14 Review of Instruments: DPO (5 notes) Other 16-Mar-15 10-Apr-15 15 WBG Transformational Engagements Other 9-Apr-15 29-Jun-15 16 Electricity Access Other 25-Feb-15 8-Apr-15 17 WBG Support Fragile Situations in Non-FCS Countries One-Stop N. 1 Evaluation Major Evaluations 9 CODE SC Meeting 21-Oct-13 FY16 Q1 Attachment 3: Delivered and Planned Country Program Evaluations from IDA and Blend countries, FY09-16 Delivery FY 2008 Country Cambodia Region EAP Lending Category IDA 2009 Uganda AFR IDA 2009 Bangladesh SAR IDA 2009 Nepal SAR IDA 2010 Mozambique AFR IDA 2011 Timor-Leste EAP Blend 2012 Liberia AFR IDA 2012 Afghanistan SAR IDA 2015 Mongolia * ECA Blend 2015 Bolivia * LCR Blend 2015 Zambia * AFR IDA Notes: * Country/Regional Program Evaluation to be produced as part of the Resource-Rich Cluster Evaluation. 10 Attachment 4a: Projects from IDA and Blend countries reviewed by completed and planned PPARs, FY12-15 1 Evaluation FY 2012 Lending category IDA 2 2012 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 N. Region Country AFR Burundi - LCR Caribbean 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 2012 IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA Blend Blend LCR AFR AFR MNA EAP AFR AFR SAR SAR 12 2012 Blend AFR 13 2012 Blend AFR 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 2012 2012 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2013 2014 2014 Blend Blend IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA Blend IDA IDA Blend Blend IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA EAP EAP SAR SAR SAR SAR AFR AFR AFR SAR AFR AFR AFR SAR SAR ECA AFR AFR AFR AFR AFR AFR AFR AFR SAR SAR Caribbean Congo, DRC Congo, DRC Djibouti Mekong Mozambique Mozambique Pakistan Pakistan Republic of Congo Republic of Congo Vietnam Vietnam Afghanistan Afghanistan Afghanistan Afghanistan Gambia Ghana Malawi Nepal Nigeria Sierra Leone Sierra Leone Sri Lanka Sri Lanka Tajikistan Tanzania Tanzania Tanzania Tanzania Tanzania Tanzania Tanzania Tanzania Bangladesh Bangladesh Project Name BI - Food Crisis Response DP Grant - P113438 GEF 6R-CRB PLANNING FOR ADAPT CLIM CHANG P040739 GEF MACC 6R Mainstreaming Adapt to Clima - P073389 DRC Econ Recovery Credit SAL (FY02) - P057293 DRC - POST-REUNIFICATION - ERC - P082443 Djibouti - Food Crisis Response Dev. - P112017 4M-MEKONG WATER UTILIZ. - P045864 MZ-Roads & Bridges MMP (FY02) - P001785 MZ-Railway & Port Restr (FY00) - P042039 BSRPP - P055292 PK Banking Sector Dev. Policy Credit - P083079 Congo Rep -Post Conflict - Econ. Rehab - P073316 CG-Econ Recovery Credit ERL (FY05) - P083627 VN - MEKONG DELTA WATER - P004845 VN-3 CITIES SANITATION - P051553 AF - Programmatic Support for Inst. Bldg - P078618 AF Program. Support for Inst. Bldg II - P090829 Program. Support for Inst. Bldg III - P102709 Afg Strengthening Institutions DPG - P107921 GM-Gateway SIL (FY02) - P057394 GH Land Administration (FY04) - P071157 MW-Com Based Rural Land Dev (FY04) - P075247 NP: Avian Flu - P100342 Avian Influenza Emergency ERL (FY06) - P100122 SL-Natl Soc Action (FY03) - P079335 SL-DPL-FOOD CRISIS RESPONSE - P113219 Relevance and Quality of Undergrad. Educ - P050741 LK: Education Sector Development Project - P084580 AVIAN FLU - TJ - P100451 TZ-PRSC 1 (first) - P074072 TZ-PRSC2 (intermediate) - P074073 TZ-PRSC 3 (last) - P087256 TZ-PRSC 4 DPL (1st of 2nd series) - P095509 TZ-PRSC 5 (2nd of 2nd series) - P095657 TZ-PRSC 6 (3rd of 2nd series) - P101229 TZ-PRSC 7 (4th in 2nd series) - P101230 TZ-PRSC 8 (5th and last in 2nd series) - P116666 Primary Education Development Project II Health, Nutrition, and Population Sector Program 11 N. Evaluation FY Lending category Region Country 40 2014 IDA SAR Bangladesh 41 2014 IDA SAR Bangladesh 42 43 44 45 2014 2014 2014 2014 IDA IDA IDA IDA SAR AFR AFR AFR Bangladesh Ethiopia Ghana Ghana 46 2014 IDA AFR Ghana 47 2014 IDA AFR Ghana 48 2014 IDA AFR Ghana 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 78 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2014 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 IDA IDA IDA IDA Blend Blend Blend IDA IDA Blend Blend IDA IDA Blend Blend Blend IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA IDA Blend Blend IDA IDA IDA EAP AFR AFR AFR AFR AFR AFR AFR AFR SAR LCR AFR AFR EAP EAP EAP SAR SAR SAR SAR SAR SAR EAP SAR LCR SAR SAR AFR AFR AFR Laos Mozambique Mozambique Mozambique Nigeria Nigeria Nigeria Senegal Senegal Sri Lanka St. Lucia Tanzania Uganda Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Afghanistan Afghanistan Afghanistan Afghanistan Afghanistan Afghanistan Laos Nepal Nicaragua Pakistan Pakistan Rwanda Senegal Senegal 79 2015 IDA AFR Senegal 80 81 2015 2015 IDA Blend AFR SAR Senegal Sri Lanka Project Name Rural Electricity and Renewable Energy Development Project (P071794) (RERED) Power Sector Development Technical Assistance Project (P78707 Power Sector Development Policy Loan (P107797) Ethiopia Protection of Basic Services Trade Gateway & Investment Project Rural Finance Services SIL First Natural Resource and Environmental Governance Projects (IDA-44260, IDA-46270, IDA-47460) Second Natural Resource and Environmental Governance Projects (IDA-44260, IDA-46270, IDA-47460) Third Natural Resource and Environmental Governance Projects (IDA-44260, IDA-46270, IDA-47460) Second Land Titling Project (P132897) Decentralization Planning & Fin SIL Enterprise Development Public Sector Reform Project Nigeria State Education Sector Project Nigeria Community Based Poverty Reduction Project Fadama II Energy Sector Recovery Development Policy Electricity Sector Efficiency - Phase 1 - Apl 1 Renewable Energy for Rural Economic Dev. Proj. (P077761) Economic and Social Development Loan Public Sector Reform Local Governance Development 2 Transmission, Dist., and Disaster Recon. Proj. (P045628) Systems Energy Equitization Rural Energy Proj. (P056452) AAA PAR on Public Expenditure and Fiduciary Aspects AAA PAR on Public Administration and Governance AAA PAR on Health AAA PAR on ICTs AAA PAR on Microfinance PAR on Business Development Poverty Reduction Fund (P077326) Nepal Education for All Education Project (P078990) Pakistan Sindh Educ. Sector Proj. (P107300) Punjab Education Sector Proj. (P102608) Decentralization & Community Development Senegal Long Term Water Sector Project P041528 Supporting Access To On-site Sanitation P102478 Integrated Marine and Coastal Res. Management project (P086480) Sustainable management of fish resources (P105881) Sri Lanka Cluster - Gemi Dirlya I (P074872) 12 82 83 Evaluation FY 2015 2015 Lending category Blend IDA 84 2015 85 N. Region Country SAR AFR Sri Lanka Tanzania IDA AFR Uganda 2015 IDA AFR Uganda 86 2015 Blend ECA Uzbekistan 87 88 89 90 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 99 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 2015 Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend Blend ECA EAP EAP EAP EAP EAP EAP EAP EAP EAP EAP EAP EAP Uzbekistan Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam Vietnam 100 2015 Blend EAP Vietnam Project Name Sri Lanka Cluster - North-East Irrigated Agric. (P058070) Tanzania Government Support Project (P070736) Uganda DPO - 2 PRSC series (PRSCs 5- 7 and 8 - 9) + 1 financial DPO (truncated series) Millennium Science Initiative Uzbekistan Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Project (P009121) Bukhara & Samarkand Water Supply Proj. (P049621) Second Rural Finance Project (P072601) Third Rural Finance Project (P100916) 2nd Higher Education Project Vietnam Poverty Reduction Support Credit 6 P101724 Vietnam Poverty Reduction Support Credit 7 P105287 Vietnam Poverty Reduction Support Credit 8 P111164 Vietnam Poverty Reduction Support Credit 9 P111182 Vietnam Poverty Reduction Support Credit 10 P111183 VN-Public Investment Reform 1 P117723 VN-Public Investment Reform 2 P120946 VN - Program 135 Phase 2 Support Credit P104097 Second Program 135 Phase 2 Support P107062 Third Program 135 Phase 2 Development Policy Support Operation P117610 13 Attachment 4b: Summary of Projects from IDA and Blend countries reviewed by completed and planned PPARS, FY12-15 Regions AFR EAP ECA LCR MNA SAR Total 2012 7 3 2 1 2 15 Evaluation Fiscal Year 2013 2014 14 16 4 1 1 7 22 * Planned deliveries 14 6 27 2015* 8 14 2 1 11 36 2012-2015 45 21 3 4 1 26 100
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