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  • Slide 1
  • ANDS, Infrastructure Development & Corruption in Afghanistan Hamdard Hamdullah (MEP13211) Infrastructure Development Advisor, Ministry of Finance, The Islamic Republic of Afghanistan Date: 18 July 2014
  • Slide 2
  • Afghanistan Development Framework Socio-Economic Development in the Short, Medium and Long term Millennium Development Goals 2005-2020 15 Years National Development Strategy 2008-2013 5 Years Medium Term Fiscal Framework 2006-2010 3 Years 1387 Budget Annual 1 Year Afghanistan Compact 2006-2010 5 Years 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP132112
  • Slide 3
  • Importance of the ANDS Donors will not channel their funds through the Governments core budget if there is no prioritized strategic plan or implementation arrangement. This means that the Government doesnt have access to donor funded programs/projects and has no control over them. Importantly, the bilateral implementation of projects without consultation or approval from Government ministries/agencies has meant that a number of the programs/projects have been conducted repeatedly and inefficiently in different parts of the country which is a waste of time and resources. Many development priorities have to date been defined by donors and not by the Government of Afghanistan. 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP132113
  • Slide 4
  • Importance of the ANDS In the absence of sectorial strategies, national programs and implementation arrangements, the Government has not been able to ensure that donor countries align their funding with the Governments plans to increase effectiveness and efficiency. The Government has been continually criticized by the international and donor community of corruption, low capacity and not having a National Strategy in which priorities are identified, programs/projects defined, implementing agencies introduced and sources for implementation identified. This absence of a clear policy, vision and plan has created problems for the three branches of the Government; the judicial, constitutional and executive branches. Balance and coordination among the three branches depends on a national plan to provide specific guidance for all branches. 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP132114
  • Slide 5
  • Our Vision for Afghanistans Future By the solar year 1400 (2020), Afghanistan will be: A stable Islamic constitutional democracy at peace with itself and its neighbors, standing with full dignity in the international family. A tolerant, united, and pluralist nation that honors its Islamic heritage and deep aspirations toward participation, justice, and equal rights for all. A society of hope and prosperity based on a strong, private sector- led market economy, social equity, and environmental sustainability. 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP132115
  • Slide 6
  • Afghanistan National Development Strategy The ANDS is a Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)- based plan that serves as Afghanistans Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PRSP). It is underpinned by the principles, pillars and benchmarks of the Afghanistan Compact. ANDS 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP132116
  • Slide 7
  • ANDS Institutional Structure 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP13211
  • Slide 8
  • Who were involved in the development process of the ANDS? The Government of Afghanistan: The president, cabinet, ministries, independent departments and commissions, municipalities, governors, provincial development committees, provincial departments of line ministries, district councils, embassies of Afghanistan in the other countries. The Government of Afghanistan: National Assembly (Upper and Lower Houses), provincial councils, elected councils at the district and village level. Civil society: local development councils, unions, organizations, political parties, NGOs, associations and private sector. Academics: universities, scientific and professional organizations and councils, science academy The International Community: United Nations, Embassies, Donors, NGOs, international private sectors, PRTs And also: minorities, Kuchis (nomads), disabled and war victims, Afghan residents and refugees outside of the country, national and international media 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP132118
  • Slide 9
  • ANDS Participatory Process 17500 Community Development Plans (CDPs) 345 District Development Plans (DDPs) 17 Sector Strategie s 34 Provincial Development Plans (PDPs) 39 Ministry/Agency Strategies 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP132119
  • Slide 10
  • Public Awareness Campaign in 27 provinces during 2006 First Pilot Round of Sub National Consultations, March 2007 Second Round of Sub National Consultations, jun-Sep 2007 More than 17000 afghans (46% women) participated in the Sub National Consultation process Third Round of Sub National Consultations, Feb 2008 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321110
  • Slide 11
  • Role of the National Assembly in the Development Process of the ANDS Active participation of both male and female parliamentarians in the sub national consultation process of the ANDS Significant contribution in the consultative meetings on provincial development plans Significant involvement in the meetings on integrating the PDP priorities in the ministries strategies. Contribution and participation of NA members on the national budget 1387 which were based on the ANDS 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321111
  • Slide 12
  • Overview March: Clusters define goals, strategy and key interventions against the stated criteria: Ability to deliver jobs, directly and indirectly Nationwide coverage Builds on existing interventions Ability to attract more investment Planning Process for Kabul April: Analyze bankable programs to determine: Top up or scale-out of existing programs Re-design of programs to meet criteria Scale-down of poor performing or non- aligned programs Outline of new programs to fill gaps Clusters designed to enable strong leadership that facilitates ministries to deliver concrete results over the next 18-24 months Clusters prioritize ANDS around key criteria - jobs and service delivery -- through bankable programs Donors support government priorities at 80% of their budgets, improving coordination Ministerial Clusters will operate at strategic (decision making) level Cluster Working Level will include Deputy Ministers, Director Generals and STAs Cluster Secretariat will be staffed by MoF/ANDS Cluster Coordinating Committee will provide oversight and integration role Clusters for Achieving ANDS Results Structural Composition May: Integrate plans, receive Cabinet and JCMB endorsement and deliver at Kabul Conference
  • Slide 13
  • Cluster Planning Process FebruaryMarchAprilMay 1234123412341234 Cluster Secretariat Cluster Coordinators & Ministers Ministry Working Level Staff Prepare Ministry & Sector Analysis Prepare Materials Review Cluster Objectives & Goals Validate Cluster Objectives & Goals Validate Strategy & Interventions Prepare Bankable Program Analysis Bankable Program Decision Meetings Prepare Integrated Cluster Plan Review Cluster Plan Endorse Integrated Cluster Plan Send Plan to Cabinet for Endorsement Donor Meetings Explanation of Cluster process Present Cluster Vision, Strategy, Interventions Present Bankable Programs & Outline Cluster Plan JCMB Review & Endorse at Kabul Conference Prepare Strategy & Interventions docs Review of Bankable Program Analysis Review Strategy & Interventions
  • Slide 14
  • Meets Cluster Criteria YES NO PARTLY Considered Viable Program YES Can Scale Up in Volume YES Can Scale Out Regionally NO (or Not Needed) NO (or Not Needed) Continue Program Re-Design Program to Meet Criteria Re-Allocate Funds to Qualified Program Terminate Program Allocate More Resources YES NO Program can be re- designed YES NO YES Has currently committed funds NO YES Funds cans be re-committed or re-allocated NO YES 1 2 2 2 3 4 3 3 4 Bankable Program Decision Tree 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321114
  • Slide 15
  • Government of Afghanistan Structure for ANDS Clusters Coordination President & Cabinet Cluster Coordination Committee (CCC) (Chair Min. Zakhilwal) Cluster Coordinators Cluster Coordination Committee (CCC) (Chair Min. Zakhilwal) Cluster Coordinators Joint Coordination and Monitoring Board Joint Coordination and Monitoring Board CCC Secretariat (Director - DM Policy) CCC Secretariat (Director - DM Policy) Agriculture & Rural Development Cluster [ ] Agriculture & Rural Development Cluster [ ] Human Resource Development Cluster [ ] Human Resource Development Cluster [ ] Infrastructure and Economic Development Cluster [ ] Infrastructure and Economic Development Cluster [ ] Cluster Secretariat (2-4 ppl) Cluster Secretariat (2-4 ppl) Policy Directorate Strategic Implementation Directorate Strategic Implementation Directorate Civilian Technical Assistance Directorate Civilian Technical Assistance Directorate Cluster Ministers (plus 1 DM & 1 TA per ministry) Cluster Ministers (plus 1 DM & 1 TA per ministry) Cluster Secretariat (2-4 ppl) Cluster Secretariat (2-4 ppl) Cluster Ministers (plus 1 DM & 1 TA per ministry) Cluster Ministers (plus 1 DM & 1 TA per ministry) Cluster Secretariat (2-4 ppl) Cluster Secretariat (2-4 ppl) Cluster Ministers (plus 1 DM & 1 TA per ministry) Cluster Ministers (plus 1 DM & 1 TA per ministry) DM for Policy Office Support Operations Directorate 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321115
  • Slide 16
  • Core Cluster Participation Cluster 1 (Coordinator) Cluster 1 (Coordinator) Cluster 1 Secretariat (2-4 ppl) Cluster 1 Secretariat (2-4 ppl) Cluster 1 Ministers (plus 1 DM & 1 TA per ministry) Cluster 1 Ministers (plus 1 DM & 1 TA per ministry) Cluster Coordinator Minister 1 Minister 2 Minister 3 Minister 4 Ministerial participation Strategic guidance Oversight of process Endorsement of results Cluster Coordinator Minister 1 Minister 2 Minister 3 Minister 4 Ministerial participation Strategic guidance Oversight of process Endorsement of results Ministry Support Ministry 1 Deputy Minister Ministry 1 Senior Advisor Ministry 2 Deputy Minister Ministry 2 Senior Advisor Knowledge of Ministry Programs and projects Technical planning skills Reach-in to Ministry Preparation of Ministry plans within the Cluster Ministry Support Ministry 1 Deputy Minister Ministry 1 Senior Advisor Ministry 2 Deputy Minister Ministry 2 Senior Advisor Knowledge of Ministry Programs and projects Technical planning skills Reach-in to Ministry Preparation of Ministry plans within the Cluster Secretariat Cluster Manager Senior Technical Advisor Drafter / Organizer Facilitation of planning Background analysis Objective technical support Preparation of drafts Deconflict and synch plans with other Clusters Secretariat Cluster Manager Senior Technical Advisor Drafter / Organizer Facilitation of planning Background analysis Objective technical support Preparation of drafts Deconflict and synch plans with other Clusters 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321116
  • Slide 17
  • Infrastructure Development There are four National Priority Programs in Infrastructure Development Cluster NRRCP (Airports, Civil Aviation, Roads, Railway) NEIEP (Mining and Extractive Industries) NESP (HPPs, Renewable energy, Transmission Lines, Power generation and electricity import) UMSP (urban development projects, construction of towns, urban roads, and canalizations) 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321117
  • Slide 18
  • Classification of External Assistance by ANDS Sectors (2011) 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321118
  • Slide 19
  • Clusters Priorities & Objectives (Proposed) Goal Statement: The goal of the clusters is to increase collaboration between Ministries and to develop and implement a clear, prioritized agenda aimed at addressing the key development challenges of the sector. (London paper on Economic Development) Agriculture and Rural Development Cluster Objectives Human Resource Development Cluster Objectives Infrastructure and Economic Development Cluster Objectives The GoA will build prosperous rural communities through focus on: The GoA will prepare Afghans for the labour market through focus on: The GoA will develop a business climate that enables private investment through focus on: 1. Improving access to water and irrigation 1. Increasing the number and quality of University Graduates 1. Increasing access to energy 2. Improving access to rural credit 2. Bridging gap between graduation and recruitment 2. Creating a modern transportation backbone 3. Improving applied research and technology transfer services for farmers & kuchis 3. Increasing number and quality of vocational education 3. Facilitating growth of business and trade 4. Improving access to rural energy 4. Utilizing public private partnerships in the provision of training 4. Preparing Afghanistan for large-scale investment in the extractive industries
  • Slide 20
  • 1387 2008/09 US$m 1388 2009/10 US$m 1389 2010/11 US$m 1390 2011/12 US$m 1391 2012/13 US$m Total US$m Core + External Budget Funding Domestic Revenue8871,1041,3511,6111,9116,864 Total Assistance from Donors*6,5134,9604,8144,3983,90824,593 Total Funding*7,4006,0646,1656,0095,81931,457 Budgeted Core + External Expenditure Security 3219258526792790290614179 Infrastructure 1781309336814180445117185 Agriculture and Rural Development 8299219169099124486 Education and Culture 742893980107711814872 Good Governance and Rule of Law 3745586406857282985 Health & Nutrition 3254655305635952478 Economic Governance & PSD 2372152302442601186 Social Protection 1923593944214491815 Others (Sub Codes) 205198185170157915 Total Expenditure 7,903 9,286 10,23611,03811,637 50,100 * Based on discussions with donors and the 1386 (2007) financial review Overall Financing Envelope for the ANDS 1387-1391 (2008 2013) 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321120
  • Slide 21
  • Corruption & Infrastructure Factors facilitating corruption in infrastructure, by Level 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321121
  • Slide 22
  • 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321122
  • Slide 23
  • Corruption vulnerabilities project cycle 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321123
  • Slide 24
  • Vulnerabilities to Corruption in Afghanistans Road Construction Sector 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321124
  • Slide 25
  • 7/18/2014By Hamdard Hamdullah, MEP1321125