Wednesday, July 01, 2009
ISLAMABAD: The World Bank has delayed approval of a $200 million loan for the Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) by linking it with a satisfactory outcome of upcoming review talks between Pakistan and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), official sources confirmed to The News.
The deliberations will be held from July 3 to 10 at Istanbul, the sources said here on Tuesday. The WBs executive board was scheduled to approve $200 million for the BISP in its meeting held on June 18 in Washington, but did not do so. Later, the amount was linked to the review talks between the IMF and Pakistani side, the officials added.
When a high-level official in the Economic Affairs Division (EAD) was contacted on Tuesday, he confirmed that the approval of $200 million for the BISP and $100 million for the Higher Education Commission (HEC) as well as technical assistance for Thar Coal was delayed and linked to the review talks with the IMF.
The sources quoted WB officials based in Islamabad as saying that there was internal arrangement by the WB, otherwise there was no other problem linked to the much-trumpeted BISP.
However, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) had recently approved its lending facility for the BISP but the WB was showing reluctance to move ahead by approving IDA credit (soft loan) for the programme.
However, on the insistence of the WB, the government decided to conduct poverty scorecard survey of households in selected 16 districts of the country as a pilot project which would be completed by the end of July. This pilot project will be extended to other areas and completed by December.
After completing the poverty scorecard survey, the existing beneficiaries list, recommended by parliamentarians, would be replaced with the selected persons found through the survey.
The need for effective monitoring arises because the Planning Commissions monitoring wing is not authorised to assess the performance of BISP under which Rs70 billion would be distributed among seven million beneficiaries because the PC cannot monitor funds allocated under the head of current expenditures. The PC is only authorised to monitor development projects.
According to the WBs Programme Information Document (PID) which is at appraisal stage, total financing of $625 million is required for establishing safety nets, out of which the International Development Assistance (IDA) would be around $200 million while Pakistan would allocate $425 million from its own budgetary resources.
The development of effective institutions and strong monitoring and evaluation systems that can provide information on programme performance and gain the confidence of the public could mitigate this risk, the report states and added that the consensus across the political spectrum on the need for a safety net programme would also ensure continuity of the programme (though the name or institutional home may change). The WB estimates show that the BISP is expected to reduce poverty headcount rate by 6.4 percentage points. In addition, the basic income support to the poor is also expected to have a positive impact on human development outcomes and promote gender equity since the cash transfers supported by this operation are provided to the female head of the eligible families.
ISLAMABAD: The World Bank has delayed approval of a $200 million loan for the Benazir Income Support Programme (BISP) by linking it with a satisfactory outcome of upcoming review talks between Pakistan and the International Monetary Fund (IMF), official sources confirmed to The News.
The deliberations will be held from July 3 to 10 at Istanbul, the sources said here on Tuesday. The WBs executive board was scheduled to approve $200 million for the BISP in its meeting held on June 18 in Washington, but did not do so. Later, the amount was linked to the review talks between the IMF and Pakistani side, the officials added.
When a high-level official in the Economic Affairs Division (EAD) was contacted on Tuesday, he confirmed that the approval of $200 million for the BISP and $100 million for the Higher Education Commission (HEC) as well as technical assistance for Thar Coal was delayed and linked to the review talks with the IMF.
The sources quoted WB officials based in Islamabad as saying that there was internal arrangement by the WB, otherwise there was no other problem linked to the much-trumpeted BISP.
However, the Asian Development Bank (ADB) had recently approved its lending facility for the BISP but the WB was showing reluctance to move ahead by approving IDA credit (soft loan) for the programme.
However, on the insistence of the WB, the government decided to conduct poverty scorecard survey of households in selected 16 districts of the country as a pilot project which would be completed by the end of July. This pilot project will be extended to other areas and completed by December.
After completing the poverty scorecard survey, the existing beneficiaries list, recommended by parliamentarians, would be replaced with the selected persons found through the survey.
The need for effective monitoring arises because the Planning Commissions monitoring wing is not authorised to assess the performance of BISP under which Rs70 billion would be distributed among seven million beneficiaries because the PC cannot monitor funds allocated under the head of current expenditures. The PC is only authorised to monitor development projects.
According to the WBs Programme Information Document (PID) which is at appraisal stage, total financing of $625 million is required for establishing safety nets, out of which the International Development Assistance (IDA) would be around $200 million while Pakistan would allocate $425 million from its own budgetary resources.
The development of effective institutions and strong monitoring and evaluation systems that can provide information on programme performance and gain the confidence of the public could mitigate this risk, the report states and added that the consensus across the political spectrum on the need for a safety net programme would also ensure continuity of the programme (though the name or institutional home may change). The WB estimates show that the BISP is expected to reduce poverty headcount rate by 6.4 percentage points. In addition, the basic income support to the poor is also expected to have a positive impact on human development outcomes and promote gender equity since the cash transfers supported by this operation are provided to the female head of the eligible families.