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Slide 1 Strengthening World Bank Group Engagement on Governance & Anticorruption Sanjay Pradhan Director, Public Sector Governance The World Bank October.

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Presentation on theme: "Slide 1 Strengthening World Bank Group Engagement on Governance & Anticorruption Sanjay Pradhan Director, Public Sector Governance The World Bank October."— Presentation transcript:

1 Slide 1 Strengthening World Bank Group Engagement on Governance & Anticorruption Sanjay Pradhan Director, Public Sector Governance The World Bank October 18, 2007

2 Slide 2 The World Bank Context Central to development effectiveness Global consensus around new GAC strategy – consultations held in 35 developing countries, 12 donor countries and four global events, reaching more than 3,200 people Governance and Anticorruption (GAC) Strategy was unanimously approved by the Board in March 2007 GAC Implementation Plan: Discussed at the Board October 11 – stage set for implementation of concrete actions

3 Slide 3 The World Bank The Seven Principles Guiding GAC Implementation 1.Focus on GAC is based on the Bank’s Mandate to reduce poverty—a capable and accountable state creates opportunities for the poor 2.The Bank’s GAC work must be country driven 3.There is no “one size fits all” – implementation is adapted to individual country circumstances 4.The GAC strategy requires the Bank to remain engaged so that “the poor do not pay twice” 5.The Bank aims to engage in its GAC work with a broad array of stakeholders 6.Work to strengthen, not by-pass, country systems through stronger institutions 7.The Bank will work with governments, donors, and other actors at the country and global levels to ensure a harmonized and coordinated approach

4 Slide 4 The World Bank Project Level Combating corruption in WBG operations Country Level Increased support to countries to strengthen ‘core’ and sectoral governance Global Level Collaborating with development partners, and addressing transnational issues Key Elements of World Bank Strategy Governance & Anticorruption

5 Slide 5 The World Bank GAC Strategy Implementation: Country Level A country-level governance and anticorruption “CGAC” process that assesses GAC impediments to country development goals –A process whereby country teams engage with government and stakeholders and identify “entry points” for Bank support for governance and anticorruption reforms – not a new World Bank report or TA –A country-tailored approach, not a mandatory format –A ‘systematic and disciplined stock-taking of the GAC environment and its impact on country poverty reduction goals and the Bank’s projects –Informs the CAS, and yields a clear “business plan” for how the country program/CAS will address governance and corruption barriers to country development goals

6 Slide 6 The World Bank Helping countries improve governance 1.Strengthen cross-cutting public management systems (e.g., financial and budget management, procurement, public administration), and independent oversight intuitions (e.g., SAI, PAC, judiciary) 2.Mainstream governance reform in sectors by systematically addressing sector-specific GAC impediments to delivering outcomes, and by enhancing sector-level transparency, participation, accountability 3.Strengthen “demand-side” enabling frameworks and capacity by enhancing transparency/information disclosure (RTI), CSO capacity, use of social audit/accountability tools 4.Work collaboratively with the private sector and civil society in reform processes (business assoc, chambers, CSOs, media) 5.Monitor progress via results and governance indicators (including new generation of indicators under development)

7 Slide 7 The World Bank Mapping Health Sector Vulnerabilities Addressing Corruption in the Delivery of Essential Drugs Manufacturing Registration Selection Procurement Distribution Prescription & Disbursement Production of sub- standard drugs Lengthy procedures with weak legal framework Warehouse theft Biased prescriptions (info asymmetry between doctor/ pharmacist & patient) Under-inclusion or over-inclusion “Tailor fit” drug specifications Vulnerabilities in … … some ways to combat these vulnerable points … Random inspections Monitoring based on transparent & uniform standards (WHO prequal list) Media coverage of drug selection committee meetings Competition & Transparency Tracking systems/third party monitoring User surveys Source: J. Edgardo Campos and Sanjay Pradhan, The Many Faces of Corruption: Tracking Vulnerabilities at the Sector Level, The World Bank, 2007

8 Slide 8 The World Bank Strengthening the Demand for Good Governance Enabling environment for Social Accountability Right to information legislation and practice (Orissa implementation of India-wide RTI legislation, Philippines public disclosure of senior officials’ private assets) Independent, competitively owned media (Kenya, Eastern Europe) Independent, executive branch oversight (Supreme audit institutions, Parliamentary accounts committees) Opportunities for citizen and civil society input into development planning, implementation and monitoring (Uganda, PRSCs) Enhancing Demand-side Approaches in Bank Operations Public disclosure of project-level contracting (Bangladesh E-procurement) Participatory budgeting (Brazil) Citizen and community oversight of investment operations (India DPIPs) Community empowerment for improved local governance (Indonesia KDP) Direct Support for Civil Society Capacity Building local civil society capacity for oversight and participation (service delivery score cards, capacity of user groups, parental participation in schools, water users associations, community conservation groups)

9 Slide 9 The World Bank Making the Private Sector an Advocate of Governance Reform The two faces of the private sector –Competitive, productivity-focused firms thrive on a level-playing field –Corrupt, rent-seeking firms thrive in the shadows How to support competitive, responsible private sector? –Create sound business environments, benchmarked internationally (Doing Business Indicators) –Showcase examples & evidence that ‘avoiding corruption is good for business’ (Celtel’s Mohammed Ibrahim) –Support initiatives to promote business ethics and voluntary codes of conduct (ICC Code of Conduct, TI’s Business Principles, WEF PACI, UN Global Compact) – and create external verification mechanisms –Build coalitions of businesses and other stakeholders for anticorruption (Indonesia Business Link, Makati Business Club, Global Integrity Alliance) –Enforce global/regional laws & regulations (OECD Convention, UNCAC)

10 Slide 10 The World Bank Monitoring for Results Use aggregate governance indicators to indicate extent & mix of governance problems Use actionable & outcome indicators to monitor progress in implementing priority GAC reforms A Typology of Governance Indicators Measuring Quality of Processes/Rules Measuring Outcomes Specific Measures  PEFA indicators*  CPIA sub-indicators*  Global Integrity Index (GII) sub-indicators*  Open Budget Index (OBI) sub-indicators*  OECD Procurement Index*  Doing Business  Investment Climate Assessments**  Business Environment & Enterprise Surveys (BEEPS)**  Worldwide Governance Indicators (WGI) - selected sub- indicators)*** Broad Measures  Overall CPIA*  Overall GII*  Overall OBI*  Overall DB Index*  Transparency International***  WGI***  Freedom House*  Polity IV (executive constraints)* Sources: *Expert assessments **Surveys ***Combination Frontier challenge: Improve menu of actionable & outcome indicators

11 Slide 11 The World Bank Donor coordination, including common response principles, especially where GAC pose serious obstacles to development, GAC Strategy Implementation: Global Level The Bank is committed to “not acting alone”. Five areas targeted for increased Bank involvement: Multi-stakeholder engagement and voluntary codes of conduct (e.g., Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative) Harmonize investigative practices with other MDBs Support global legal conventions (e.g., UN Convention Against Corruption, OECD Anti- Bribery Convention, Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative (Star)) Build global consensus on how GAC enhances development effectiveness – biannual conference and support for GAC related research

12 Slide 12 The World Bank One Key Priority: The Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) Initiative Ferdinand Marcos (President of the Philippines 1972-1986) $5-10 billion Sani Abacha (President of Nigeria 1993- 1998) $2-5 billion Mobuto Sese Seko (President of Zaire 1965-1997) $5 billion Mohamed Suharto (President of Indonesia 1967-1998) $14-35 billion *Source for estimates of former Presidents above: Transparency International Global Corruption Report 2004. All sums are estimates of alleged embezzlement in US dollars. Proposed activities include: Persuading all jurisdictions to ratify & implement the UNCAC Persuading all jurisdictions to ratify & implement the UNCAC Helping developing countries build capacity for requesting mutual legal assistance for asset recovery Helping developing countries build capacity for requesting mutual legal assistance for asset recovery Advocating with financial centers to lower barriers to recovery Advocating with financial centers to lower barriers to recovery Developing partnerships to share information & experience Developing partnerships to share information & experience On a voluntary basis, offering expertise to monitor the use of recovered assets for development (e.g., Nigeria) On a voluntary basis, offering expertise to monitor the use of recovered assets for development (e.g., Nigeria) Cross-border proceeds from criminal activity, corruption & tax evasion estimated to be $1- 1.6 trillion per year— half from developing & transition countries Cross-border proceeds from criminal activity, corruption & tax evasion estimated to be $1- 1.6 trillion per year— half from developing & transition countries Bribes received by public officials from developing & transition countries is estimated at $20-40 billion Bribes received by public officials from developing & transition countries is estimated at $20-40 billion TI’s estimates of stolen assets include: TI’s estimates of stolen assets include: The Problem StAR is a joint initiative with the Bank & UNODC. Partnerships are being developed with the OECD, Norad, IMF, other MDBs, the G8, & developing countries A Global Effort

13 Slide 13 The World Bank Suggestion Items for Discussion Advice and suggestions from GovNet members on how best to collaborate and strengthen GAC effectiveness on the groundAdvice and suggestions from GovNet members on how best to collaborate and strengthen GAC effectiveness on the ground Potential areas for collective action include:Potential areas for collective action include: –More harmonized assessments –Implementation of common response principles (pilots) –Implementation & monitoring of OECD and UN conventions –Partnership on StAR (raising $15 million in trust funds, to help countries recover stolen assets) Key priority: Multi-donor trust fund on demand for good governanceKey priority: Multi-donor trust fund on demand for good governance –To mainstream and scale up ‘demand-side’ work in World Bank operations –To fund civil society development on governance and anti- corruption Challenge: How to make it arms length of government approval?

14 Slide 14 The World Bank Thank you The World Bank 1818 H Street, NW Washington, D.C. 20433 USA “Working for a World Free of Poverty” For additional information, see: http://www.worldbank.org http://www.worldbank.org


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