Document of r R1E U>r I U The World Bank REPORTS - PILE COp yOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Report No. P-2 122-CO REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION OF THE PRESIDENT OF THE INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT TO THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS ON A PROPOSED LOAN TO THE REPUBLIC OF COLOMBIA FOR AN INTEGRATED NUTRITION IMPROVEMENT PROJECT August 30. 1977 This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by recipients only in the performance of their official duties. Its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank authorization. CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS P4- (As of February 1977, and used in this report) En UQCurrency Unit - Colombian Peso (Col$) E-' \Col$1 - US$0.0277 Col$1,000 - US$27.77 0) ... Col$1,000,000 - US$27,770 { 4.mp . US$1 - Col$36.01 WEIGHTS AND MEASURES Metric System P: I P: LJGLOSSARY OF ABBREVIATIONS AID - Agency for International Development CARE - Cooperative American Relief for Everywhere CARITAS - Charity (an organization of Catholic charities) CNAN - Consejo Nacional de Alimentacion y Nutricion (National Food and Nutrition Council) CONPES - Consejo Nacional de Politica Economica y Social (National Council for Economic and Social Policy) CRS - Catholic Relief Services DNP - Departamento Nacional de Planeacion (National Planning Department) DRC - Development Research Center FAO - Food and Agriculture Organization (United Nations) FONADE - Fondo Nacional de Desarrollo Economico (National Fund for Economic Development) GDP - Gross Domestic Product IBRD - International Bank for Reconstruction and'Development ICA - Instituto Colombiano Agropecuario (Colombian Agricultural Institute) ICBF - Instituto Colombiano para el Bienestar Familiar (Colombian Institute for Family Welfare) IDA - International Development Association IDB - Inter-American Development Bank IIT - Instituto de Investigacion Tecnol6gica (Institute for Technological Research) INAS - Instituto Nacional de Salud (National Institute of Health) IRDP - Integrated Rural Development Program MOH - Ministry of Health PAHO - Pan-American Health Organization PAN - Plan Nacional de Alimentacion y Nutricion (National Food and Nutrition Plan) PCM - Protein-calorie-malnutrition UNICEF - United Nations Children's Fund UNDP - United Nations Development Programme UJSAID - United States Agency for International Development WFP - World Food Program WHO - World Health Organization (United Nations) GOVERNMENT OF COLOMBIA FISCAL YEAR January i to December 31 FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Page 1 of 2 COLOMBIA NUTRITION IMPROVEMENT PROJECT LOAN AND PROJECT SUMMARY Borrower: The Republic of Colombia. Amount: US$25 million equivalent. Terms: Repayment in 17 years including 4 years of grace and interest of 8% per annum. Project Description: The project seeks to improve nutritional levels of the poorest parts of the populations in seven departments and Bogota and to strengthen the Government's nutrition program. Within project areas, a community based health service system would be established and nutrition education would be pro- vided for 1.8 million people mostly among the poorest 30% of the population. Potable water supply systems and latrines would be installed for a portion of beneficiaries, while 20,000 families would receive technical and material assis- tance for home garden production of nutritious foods. At the national level, the project would develop new food technology, improve quality control of processed foods, strengthen project management and monitor and evaluate the overall program. The project would result in increased work and schooling efficiency, reduced infant mortality, increased vegetable production and improved efficiency in the processing and preservation of food. Achievement of the project's benefits would be dependent upon effective coordination of the activities of the various agencies charged with carrying out the project. The Government's strong commitment to the nutrition program and the monitoring and evaluation systems being proposed in the project should help ensure that coordination will indeed be effective. This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by rocipients only in the performance of their official duties. Its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank authorization. Page 2 of 2 Estimated Cost: Local Foreign Total ---------(US$ Million)--------- Health Services 13.0 2.1 15.1 Water Supply and Sanitation 14.7 3.7 18.4 Nutrition Education 5.4 .7 6.1 Family Gardens 1.4 - 1.4 Applied Food Technology and Quality Control 3.0 .8 3.8 Monitoring and Evaluation 2.9 .1 3.0 Test of Nutrition System 2.1 1.3 3.4 Program Coordination 3.0 .9 3.9 Base Costs 45.5 9.6 55.1 Physical Contingencies 4.5 1.0 5.5 Price Contingencies 6.0 2.3 8.3 Total Project Costs 56.0 12.9 68.9 Financing Local Foreign Total Plan: ---- US$ Million ---------- Bank 12.1 12.9 25.0 Government 39.1 - 39.1 Beneficiaries 4.8 - 4.8 Total Project Cost 56.0 12.9 68.9 Estimated Disbursements: Bank FY 1978 1979 1980 1981 1982 -------------(US$ Million)-------------- Annual .5 3.8 6.0 7.8 6.9 Cumulative .5 4.3 10.3 18.1 25.0 Appraisal Report: Report No. 1583a-CO, dated August 26, 1977. INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT REPORT AND RECOMMENDATION OF THE PRESIDENT TO THE EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS ON A PROPOSED LOAN TO THE REPUBLIC OF COLOMBIA FOR AN INTEGRATED NUTRITION IMPROVEMENT PROJECT 1. I submit the following report and recommendation on a proposed loan to the Republic of Colombia for the equivalent of US$25 million to help finance a nutrition improvement project. The loan would have a term of 17 years, including 4 years of grace with interest at 8% per annum. PART I: THE ECONOMY 2. The latest economic report on Colombia (1548-CO) was distributed to the Executive Directors in May 1977. It assesses current developments and provides a medium-term perspective of the Colombian economy. Country data sheets are provided in Annex 1. Background 3. During the past two decades substantial structural transformation has taken place in the Colombian economy. The country has made impressive progress in the transition from a predominantly rural and agricultural economy made up of largely self-contained regions to an urban industrial economy, more oriented toward international trade. Broadening of the country's productive base has been accompanied by rapid growth of nontraditional exports (those other than coffee) and development of a modern sector which relies to a considerable extent on imported inputs. From 1967 to 1975 GDP rose by an average 6.4% per annum in real terms, well above the historical average of less than 5% (1950-67). The accelerated economic growth coupled with a decline in population growth (2.7% in recent years compared with 3.2% during the 1951-64 period) brought about a rapid increase in per capita incomes. Two mutually dependent phenomena, increased investment and relaxation of the foreign exchange constraint, have been the major factors in bringing about this acceleration. Merchandise exports have expanded more than three-fold since 1967 and, most significantly, nontraditional exports have become an increasingly important source of foreign exchange earnings, growing from 27% of merchandise exports to about 50% at present. Much of this increase was the result of both product and market diversification but also of the Government's implementation of a comprehensive set of programs designed to increase and diversify exports. Despite the substantial progress, Colombia still remains essentially an underdeveloped country with a limited modern sector superimposed on a large, traditional, and-poor base. - 2 - 4. When the present Government took off,ice in August 1974, the country was faced with several adverse developments -- weakening balance of payments situation, impending loss of self-sufficiency in petroleum production, infla- tion, deterioration of public finances, and reduction in public investment -- which threatened to interrupt the high growth rate achieved by Colombia in recent years. The new administration embarked upon an economic stabilization program with the aim of restoring the basis for sustained economic growth. In line with this, it implemented basic reforms of the fiscal, monetary and price systems. 5. To help strengthen public finances, the new Government undertook a tax reform which covered almost every important component of the tax system and represented a significant improvement in terms of progressivity and elas- ticity. The Government also made certain changes in the financial system with the purpose of stimulating private savings and improving the system's alloca- tional efficiency. The action included a restructuring of interest rates, simplification of the complex reserve system, and elimination of many of the more rigid and cumbersome controls. 6. The Government also took steps to correct major distortions which existed in the price system. Price controls on a number of important agri- cultural products were removed. In May 1976, the Government introduced far-reaching modifications in its petroleum pricing policy which aim at regaining self-sufficiency in production of crude petroleum by improving incentives for exploration and exploitation. Under the new policy, foreign oil companies are now paid the international price of crude CIF Cartagena for new petroleum produced in association with the government petroleum cor- poration. (Previously the foreign oil companies received less than US$7 per barrel for new crude.) The Government is also encouraging incremental produc- tion from existing fields and, in this connection, eliminated the special petroleum exchange rate, effectively increasing the price of crude oil by about 20%. Furthermore, retail prices of gasoline have been raised in successive steps from US$0.11/gallon in August 1975 to US$0.27/gallon in January 1977, or by almost 150%. The Government proposes to continue this policy until the prices of gasoline and other petroleum derivatives approach international levels. 7. Economic growth slowed in 1975 (from 6% in 1974 to about 5%) and unemployment increased, reflecting both the impact of the stabilization measures adopted at the end of 1974 and the effects of the world recession. Towards the end of the year the economy began to recover, stimulated by increased exports, larger agricultural output and heightened industrial activity. The recovery continued in 1976 with real GDP growing by about 6%. During 1974-76 National Government savings increased substantially; due to the 1974 Tax Reform, tax revenues increased by over 40% a year while nominal GDP grew at an annual rate of about 30%. Private savings mobilized through the financial system also increased rapidly, growing by almost 50% a year during 1974-76. Moreover, the balance of payments turned favorable in 1975 as a result of the sharp increase in world coffee prices and expansion of - 3 - non-coffee agricultural exports. The improved balance of payments perfor- mance continued in 1976 with foreign exchange reserves reaching almost US$1,150 million, sufficient to cover over 5 months' imports. With increased export earnings, the public debt-service ratio declined from 17.0% in 1974 to about 11.A% in 1976. However, despite strengthening of the Government's monetary and fiscal policies (which had reduced inflation from 27% in 1974 to 18% in 1975), the rate of inflation increased to 26% in 1976. Colombia, through a combination of domestic policies and fortuitous external develop- ments, has come through the period of world recession and economic adjustment with a strong foreign exchange reserve position and a rapidly recovering domestic economy. Recent Economic Performance 8. The economic forces have continued to be favorable. Coffee prices are high and the balance of paymepnts remains strong; foreign exchange reserves stood at about US$1,700 million at the end of the first half of 1977, the highest level in Colombia's history. The increased demand generated by the higher incomes of the coffee producers has been a powerful stimulus to the economy. Real GDP growth in 1977 is projected at 7%. As a result, urban unemployment, down from about -13% in 1974 to about 9% by end-1976, is expected to decline further. - 9. The inflow of foreign exchange from coffee sales has, however, led to a resurgence of inflation and this has prompted the Government to continue to give priority to short-term management of demand. Several measures have been taken. Legal reserve requirements have been increased and limitations on private external borrowing have been established. Import duties have been drastically reduced to shift part of the inflationary pressures to the exter- nal sector. Fiscal management was quite restrictive in 1976; the Treasury accounts had a surplus, which was used for repayment of the Government's short-term domestic debt. Almost two-thirds of coffee earnings are being kept from increasing the monetary base by measures adopted recently. /1 The Government's liberalized import policy will (although with a lag) increase the supply of goods, thus dampening pressure on domestic prices. Nevertheless, inflationary pressures are likely to persist. Even after the sterilization measures taken, the record coffee export receipts will add to the monetary expansion. Furthermore, current price and cost trends as well as "corrective" adjustments in public-service prices make substantial deceleration of price /L The measures are: 15% of payments to coffee producers to be made in three-year compulsory savings certificates; an increase in the coffee retention tax from 23% to 46%, and investment of a substantial portion of this tax, including the four percentage points received by the Coffee Federation, in Government bonds. Also foreign exchange receipts from coffee exports are to be surrendered to the monetary authorities in exchange for 90 day foreign exchange certificates. The certificates are freely tradeable but carry a penalty charge of 15% if converted into pesos before the 90 days are up. - 4 - increases unlikely during 1977 (the Government is attempting to hold wage increases in the public sector to 18%, but private sector wages will probably increase substantially more). Nevertheless, the rate of inflation is expected to decline over the medium term as the Government remains strongly committed to reducing inflation and its monetary, fiscal and trade measures begin to take effect. Although the reserves being built up during the "coffee boom" strengthen Colombia's longer-term prospects, the rapid increases in liquidity add to the difficulties of short-term economic management and illustrate the special problems facing economies with a heavy reliance on a single export commodity. Although inflation needs to be brought under control, the economy seems now poised for a period of rapid growth. Development Strategy and Prospects 10. The Government's development strategy is embodied in the 1975-78 development plan. The plan aims at creating the conditions necessary for sub- stantially reducing unemployment through increased capital accumulation in the private sector, improvement in the efficiency of the price system in order to encourage more labor-intensive production techniques and expansion of public investment. The plan places increased emphasis on the strengthening of public sector institutions to help carry out effectively the economic develop- ment program. Public investment is to be concentrated on expanding and improving infrastructure to stimulate rapid growth and employment in industry and agriculture, as well as on socially oriented projects to help eradicate rural and urban poverty. Within infrastructure, special priority has been assigned to the development of domestic energy sources to help reduce the country's impending dependence on imported energy. Also, the Government continues to stress small farmer agriculture because it is in the rural areas where the greatest concentration of poverty exists and in agricultural activi- ties where increases in employment can be most quickly achieved. Commercial agriculture is to receive support due to its strong contribution to export as well as employment growth. A substantial portion of public expenditures have been reoriented toward nutrition and primary education programs which affect the poorest 50% of the population. The Government is also starting projects to help eradicate urban poverty, placing emphasis on integrated projects which are likely to contribute to increased productivity and employment. This effort is being complemented by policies and programs to encourage decentralization of industry away from the largest cities to accelerate integration of more backward areas into the modern sector of the economy. 11. Looking back over the last two years, it is clear that the Govern- ment's development activities have concentrated principally on increasing the access of the poorest 50% of the population to education, health and other public services. A direct reflection of this is the fact that in 1976 37% of total Central Government outlays went to support programs in education, health and water supply. Over the last fifteen months, the Government also started ambitious programs in nutrition, urban and rural development, which when fully implemented would benefit more than one-half of the country. While these activities proceed to an advanced stage of implementation, the Govern- ment now proposes to concentrate on the development of the country's energy resources (hydro-electricity, gas and coal) and on further expanding the productive sectors to provide for a higher level of income and employment. - 5 - 12. Colombia's strong balance-of-payments prospects for the immediate future should make it possible in 1977 for the country to resume the hiigh rate of growth of GDP (6-7%) achieved in the early 1970s. Export prospects for the next several years are excellent, as world coffee prices remain strong and economic growth is resuming in the industrialized countries. With the contin- uation of appropriate incentives, minor exports should grow very rapidly once again. Manufactured exports--textiles, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, mechanical and electrical equipment, and paper products--are over the long-term expected to lead this recuperation, along with non-coffee agricultural exports. Given the improved outlook for coffee, Colombia is likely to maintain a favorable trade balance throughout the late 1970s. Under these circumstances an annual growth rate of GDP of 7.4% during 1977-82 is feasible and would be accompanied by a 10% annual increase of import in real terms. In light of favorable external economic conditions and domestic policies the marginal savings rate over this period is projected to be about 30% and public sector savings are projected to be about 8% of GDP. However, to achieve both economic and social objectives, capital expenditures would need to be maintained at about 10% of GDP. Consequently, Colombia will continue to require substantial capital inflows to bridge the savings/ investment gap of the public sector. Further- more, since the projected foreign exchange requirements associated with the public investment program would be greater than the foreign exchange component of the "projectizable" portion of it, external lenders would need to provide some local currency financing in their loans. In view of Colombia's progressive development policies and domestic resource mobilization efforts, local-cost financing by external financing agencies is considered justified in those cases where such financing is required to give the agencies a meaningful role in high priority social projects. 13. Colombia is expected to require gross capital inflows of US$4.2 billion during the five-year period 1977-82, of which almost US$350 million will be disbursed from commitments made through the end of 1976. To attain this level, annual gross capital inflow will have to increase from US$421 million in 1976 to US$990 million in 1982. Direct foreign investment is expected to provide only a small part (8%) of the required capital inflow, with approximately 50% being provided by official multilateral and bilateral sources and the remainder by suppliers', financial and other credits from private sources. 14. Colombia's public externai aeDt repayable in foreign currency amounted to US$3.3 billion at the end of 1976, or about US$2.6 billion excluding undisbursed commitments. The Bank Group's share of this external debt (disbursed only) as of the end of 1976 was about 28% and is expected to decline to about 25% by 1982. Service on this debt was about 11.4% of exports of goods and non-factor services in 1976, and is projected to remain at that level, assuming recovery of minor exports and the favorable outlook for coffee over the next few years. Balance-of-payments prospects beyond 1980 will depend to a significant extent on the timely development of domestic energy sources and on progress made in implementation of several resource- based export projects currently under preparation. The Bank's share of public debt service in 1976 was about 26% and is expected to decline marginally to - 6 - 25% by 1982. With the maintenance of sound economic and financial policies, Colombia should have no difficulty securing or servicing the external capital it needs. PART II: BANK GROUP OPERATIONS IN COLOMBIA 15. The proposed loan, the 69th to be made to Colombia, would bring the total amount of Bank loans to Colombia to US$1,548.6 million (net of cancel- lations). Of this amount, US$1,022.7 million is now held by the Bank; IDA made one credit of US$19.5 million for highways in Colombia in 1961. Dis- bursements have been completed on 43 loans and the IDA credit. IFC has made effective investments and underwriting commitments of US$53.7 million in 24 enterprises and now holds US$28.1 million. Annex II contains a summary statement of Bank loans and the IDA credit as of June 30, 1977, and IFC investments as of July 31, 1977. The Annex also contains summaries on the execution of the 22 on-going projects. 16. Since FY68, Bank lending in Colombia has become more diversified and has been concentrated on production-oriented programs and activities which carried social as well as economic benefits. Eight of the eleven agricultural loans have been made since then, seven of the ten loans for industry, all three loans in the education sector and all six loans for water supply and sewerage. This compares with only seven loans since FY68 in the power and transport sectors. 17. Bank lending to Colombia in FY77 consisted of loans for rural development, agricultural credit, telecommunications, highways and small- scale industry, totalling US$281 million equivalent. In addition to the proposed nutrition improvement project, the FY78 program includes proposed loans for water supply and sewerage, power, and urban development. Work is also under way in development finance companies, slum improvement, transporta- tion, power, mining and small farm development for possible consideration by the Executive Directors during the next two years. 18. The proposed Bank lending conforms closely with the Government's revised development strategy. To help Colombia develop domestic sources of energy, a substantial part of the proposed lending would be for hydro-power. The Bank would also assist the development of small coal mines, which hold potential in helping Colombia meet part of its energy requirements. Bank involvement in the energy sector would help mobilize additional external financing as some of the projects would require co-financing. Other future loans would finance agriculture and industry to assist the Government in its efforts to raise overall productivity, income and employment and to strengthen and diversify exports. Closely related to these objectives would be the proposed Bank lending for transport infrastructure in more backward areas of the country to integrate them into the modern economy. In this context, we are proceeding with a project to improve domestic airports. Finally, we are preparing a relatively large number of loans in support of the Government's - 7 - efforts to help the lowest 50% of the Colombian population. The proposed integrated nutrition project, and urban development, slum improvement and water supply and sewerage projects are to improve the poor's standard of living, while providing some additional employment and raising labor produc- tivity. 19. The operations of external lenders in Colombia are shown in Annex I. While IBRD, IDB, and AID provided about 75% of total external financing to Colombia in the 1961-72 period, their share has decreased since then to approximately 40%. Like the Bank, IDB and AID have given increased emphasis to social projects. For instance, the IDB has assisted projects in low cost housing, rural development, agrarian reform, university education, water supply, and land erosion; in the future IDB proposes to assist Colombia in its plans to develop sources of domestic energy and to expand the activity of the productive sectors to help generate increased employment. AID has supported programs in education, urban development and small farm development. More recently, it has moved to small project loans aimed chiefly at improving the distribution of income. It is expected to phase out its aid program in Colombia in 1979 with the commitment of a US$6 million nutrition loan. PART III - NUTRITION CONDITIONS AND PROGRAMS Background 20. Over the last two decades, Government strategy and policies have focused on diversifying and expanding exports while increasing employment, and simultaneously on improving living standards and opportunities for the popula- tion as a whole. Between 1960 and 1976 GNP per capita in current dollars rose from US$210 to US$640, while employment increased by nearly one-half in that period. Significant progress was also made in a variety of social service areas including the expansion and consolidation of the education sector and the spread of potable water supply and health services. Primary school enrollment of 4 million in 1975 was double that of 1963 while the 1.3 million enrollment at the secondary level in 1975 was nearly four times that of 1963. Potable water supply services were spread such that they reached over 70% of the households in medium and large urban areas and to almost 15% (from vir- tually no facilities in the 1950s) in rural areas in 1974. The spread of health services and water supply and sewerage was one of the factors behind the fall in infant mortality from 88 per 1,000 live births in 1963 to about 70 in 1970. Improvement in the standard of living of a large number of Colombians is also evidenced by reduced population growth rates (see paragraph 3 above). 21. As part of the development strategy, the Government has implemented programs and policies directed at the poor and at improving their employment possibilities. In the rural areas, for example, land reform efforts begun in 1961 have thus far benefitted nearly 200,000 families. Additionally, the principal source of agriculture credit, Caja Agraria, has lent a signifi- cant share of its portfolio (in 1975 about 50%) to hundreds of thousands - 8 - of small farmers. In the urban areas the Government has encouraged the expansion of small-scale labor-intensive manufacturing and industry through increased credit and technical assistance. In order to increase employment and opportunities where most of the poverty exists, the Government has more recently been expanding infrastructure and productive investments in regions outside the major metropolitan centers. 22. Though these efforts have benefitted and are continuing to benefit a large number of the poor, they cannot in the short run eradicate the signifi- cant levels of poverty which persist. According to a recent study, /1 per capita incomes in rural areas in 1974 averaged US$173 per annum, with 60% of the rural population living below the poverty level which is estimated to be an annual US$150 per capita. Approximately two-thirds of the 900,000 rural families below the poverty level are either landless or own less than 1 hectare of land. The poorest quarter of the population as a whole and 37% of the rural population had per capita incomes of below US$100 per annum. Towns with populations below 30,000 have income distribution patterns similar to those in rural areas. Unemployment remains high especially in provincial areas where it was estimated at about 15% in 1973. 23. The persistence of poverty in the face of rapid economic development is in large part due to the inability of large numbers of the poor to avail themselves of the new opportunities created. The poorest are at times too malnourished and sick to be fully employed and productive, while malnourish- ment amongst children in poor families affects their ability to learn effec- tively and to better their lots as adults. So the recurrent cycle of low productivity, poverty, malnutrition, low productivity continues regardless of the increased opportunities available. Nature and Extent of Malnutrition 24. Major malnutrition problems fall into three classes: (a) protein- calorie malnutrition (PCM), (b) iron-deficiency anemia, and (c) other vitamin and mineral deficiencies, particularly vitamin A and calcium. An estimated 4 million, or about two-thirds of the population under five years of age, and about 1.5 million women of child-bearing age suffer from PCM. About 880,000 or 22% of these children suffer from serious malnutrition. A recent study showed that 86% of the children surveyed in low-income areas of Bogota suffered from PCM. For the population of Colombia as a whole, it is estimated that deficiencies of greater than 40% of minimum recommended amounts of calories and proteins occur in one-fifth and one-fourth of the population, respectively. For calcium, vitamin A and some other minerals and vitamins, particularly those whose primary sources are vegetables, the deficits are even greater. Intakes of calcium and vitamin A average in rural areas 40% and 50%, respec- tively, of minimum recommended levels. The incidence and degree of mal- nutrition are even more striking than suggested above, if considerations of nutritional loss due to disease and to wastage in food preparation and storage are taken into account. /1 The Distribution of Public Services by Income Groups: A Case Study of Colombia (RPO-296) by Marcelo Selowsky, DRC, World Bank. Data given use 1974 official exchange rates. -9- Causes of Malnutrition 25. Malnutrition in Colombia as in other developing countries is caused by a combination of factors. Despite increases over time, low incomes conti- nue to limit effective food demand among the poorest. Additionally, insuffi- cient education on nutritional needs and sound feeding practices severely limit a poor family's opportunities to improve its nutritional status within existing income constraints. Lack of safe water supplies and poor sanitation facilities often result in diseases which go uncured because of inadequate health facilities preventing individuals from deriving maximum nutrition from their diets. Insufficient facilities for safe and hygienic storage of food crops, poor roads, and a domestic food distribution system which tends to favor urban consumers exacerbate the problem in rural areas. Effects of Malnutrition 26. Research in Colombia and other parts of the world has demonstrated the relationship between malnutrition and, inter-alia, infant mortality, the physical and mental development of children and the productive capacity of adults. Studies have concluded that infant birth weight and health are directly related to the nutritional intake of the mother. About one-third of the yearly 80,000 deaths of children under five in Colombia are attributed directly or indirectly to PCM. Malnutrition is also considered an important concomitant cause in almost 80% of the childhood deaths in Colombia due to communicable diseases. Furthermore, malnutrition-is an important contributor to illness which results in the loss to individual workers of an estimated 96 million work days each year in Colombia. Malnutrition also results in low labor productivity. The preliminary conclusion of a Bank financed study in Kenya is that undernourished road construction workers were 15% less productive than those well nourished. Similar studies carried out with sugarcane cutters in Colombia point to a possibly even greater difference in productivity between undernourished and well nourished workers. Though not specifically documented in Colombia, children's learning capacity is hampered by impaired brain development, fatigue, and apathy which result from malnutri- tion. The net impact of malnutrition on the economy in terms of the quality of the labor force, the agricultural products not harvested in time because of illness and lack of energy, the high medical costs, the resources spent on children who never become fully productive, and the educational inefficiency, though unmeasured, are clearly large. The resulting human suffering and misery are enormous and need no elaboration. Previous Actions to Reduce Malnutrition 27. Recognizing that direct action to reduce malnutrition was essential if the poor were to make better use of economic opportunities and contribute to the country's economic development, the Government introduced various programs to increase nutrient intake and improve consumption habits. The major programs have focused on food distribution, the development of enriched processed foods and processing facilities and the education of the population as a whole regarding better eating habits. An early nutrition program, - 10 - fortifying salt with iodine, was responsible for eradicating goiter in Colombia. Another successful effort was the development of a vegetable protein mixture for children and the construction of a processing plant to supply a portion of an infant and school feeding program. The rapid spread of water supply and sewerage facilities as well as costly curative health faci- lities, principally in urban areas, has also had an impact on nutritional status. The spread of such services to rural areas where a large portion of the malnourished live, however, has not been as notable. The Government has also attempted, although with less success, a program combining education of families in schools and clinics regarding nutrition with health services, training and minor agricultural and home gardens assistance. The program was hampered by insufficient cooperation from agencies whose assistance was essential, but who were not responsible for the program, and by inadequate budgetary and manpower support for the program. 28. Free food distribution to vulnerable groups in the population has been an important part of Government efforts to reduce malnutrition. The major program, begun in 1968, relies on food aid donated principally by foreign private and bilateral sources, and distributes foods along with nutrition education at schools and health clinics to children and pregnant/ nursing mothers. The program reached about one million beneficiaries nation- wide in 1976. However, many of the beneficiaries came from middle income groups and from the urban areas. The limitations and expensiveness of the program were fully recognized when the decision was made to phase out food aid by 1978. This decision also helped stimulate Government's formulation of a national strategy to reduce malnutrition. National Food and Nutrition Plan 29. By the early 1970's, a large body of opinion in Colombia perceived the importance of mobilizing adequate and coordinated resources to improve the nutritional status of the poorest half of the population. While permanent improvements in nutritional standards would result from increases in employment and income, it was recognized that the process would be slow and take some time before reaching the poor. At the same time, the malnourished were often prevented from taking advantage of the opportunities offered by the expanding economy. With these considerations in mind, in March 1975 the Government approved the National Food and Nutrition Plan (PAN). PAN was premised on the importance of complementing the Government's more general efforts to provide the economic and social base for development in communities of high poverty concentrations with a set of coordinated policies and programs to reduce malnutrition. Drawing on the experience of programs in agriculture and nutrition, PAN proposes measures to increase the supply, demand and utiliza- tion of nutrients, to phase out food aid by 1978 and to reduce future depen- dence on food imports. PAN also seeks to link efforts to increase food production with measures to ensure better nutrition utilization of existing foods as well as efficient distribution of foods to the malnourished. Programs for accomplishing the goals of PAN include the Integrated Rural Development Program (IRDP), the Nutrition Program and expanded credit facilities to the commercial agriculture sector, primarily for food crops. The latter aims to expand the supply of food nationally, while IRDP aims simultaneously to - 11 - increase food production and to raise the incomes and consequently nutritional levels of small and generally poor landholders. IRDP concentrates initially on regions with large numbers of small farmers, providing a spectrum of agri- cultural services, along with social service investments. Although IRDP would increase employment primarily for benefitting small farmers, the nutritional impact on the poorest 40% of the rural population, the landless and the virtually landless, is likely to be limited to the results of health and water supply investments. 30. While IRDP's nutritional impact is expected to be principally on the upper end of the poorest 50 percent of the population, the Nutrition Program seeks to improve nutritional status among the poorest 30% of the population. The nutrition program includes activities aimed at (a) reducing nutrient losses by reducing illness; (b) improving nutrient consumption patterns within existing income constraints; (c) providing for limited food production increases; and (d) increasing food consumption by improving purchas- ing power. The program, which is already under way with AID's support in three departments, involves a range of nutrition activities integrated at the department level. The program is to be expanded country-wide by 1985. 31. The nutrition program consists of the elements described in Part IV and a subsidized food distribution system, financed by the Colombian Govern- ment. Under the distribution system, families with children 3-24 months, malnourished children 2-4 years and/or pregnant and nursing mothers, who satisfy income criteria, receive coupons to be exchanged in the local market for a specific range of nutritious processed foods produced domestically, with the purchaser paying only about 40% of the normal price. The program marks a significant shift away from public sector free distribution to sub- sidized purchase in the market place in order to reduce wastage and encourage proper use. While as yet tested only on a limited scale, the coupon system has been developed and refined to the point where it is expected to be a relatively efficient system for achieving its goals. The private sector is the primary producer of nutritious processed foods and is expected to expand its output significantly as the nutrition program expands. Credit lines are already available for the purpose. A small amount of free distribution of nutritious food through primary schools and day care centers will be continued until the coupon system reaches full national coverage. By providing an increased and reliable market for domestically processed foods, the food distribution system also aims to provide a boost to the food processing industry and the agriculture sector. Bank and Other Donor's Role in Nutrition 32. Over the past two decades, various international and bilateral agencies /1 have assisted Colombia's nutrition improvement efforts. These efforts have provided Colombia with the foundation for its present national program. A number of agencies (UNICEF, UNDP, the Netherlands Government and USAID) are continuing to support this program and the Bank has coordinated its /1 UNICEF, UNDP, PAHO/WHO, FAO, USAID, CRS/CARITAS, WFP, CARE. Complete names are listed on the inside cover of the report. - 12 - efforts with theirs. At Government request, the Bank has played an active role, since the launching of PAN, in the refinement and development of the various PAli programs. Both IRDP and the proposed nutrition project provide mechanisms for bringing the poor closer to the economic development process, and complement ongoing programs financed by the Bank and other external lenders aimed at increasing productivity, employment and income of the poor in Colombia. Furthermore, the proposed nutrition project would help improve the poor's ability to contribute to and benefit from expanded output, while supporting the Government's other objectives of strengthening social sector management and eliminating the country's dependence on food aid. PART IV - THE PROJECT Background and Objectives 33. The proposed nutrition project aims to break the recurrent cycle of malnutrition, low productivity and poverty among the poorest 30% of the popula- tioii in seven departamentos and Bogota. By reducing malnutrition the project would thereby increase the ability of the poor to benefit from and contri- bute to economic development and growth. The proposed project would provide a bridge for the poorest and most severely malnourished until economic devel- opment reaches them while simultaneously developing the infrastructure to help ensure that increased incomes lead to permanent improvement in nutritional levels. 34. The proposed project is designed to improve the nutritional status of about 1.8 million primarily low-income people and improve and refine the national nutrition program. The first objective would be accomplished through a set of investments directed at the beneficiary population. Im- provement of the national program would be brought about through intensive monitoring and evaluation and through strengthening of its managerial base. 35. The project was conceived and prepared by the Government of Colombia. Mr. Gabriel Turbay Marulanda, Director General of Public Credit, led the Colombia delegation in negotiations which were held in Bogota in July, 1977. A project Appraisal Report entitled "Colombia: Appraisal of an Integrated llutrition Improvement Project" (Report No. 1583a-CO dated August 26, 1977) is being circulated separately to the Executive Directors. The main features of the loan and project are summarized in the Loan and Project Summary and in Annex III. Project Description 36. The project consists of an integrated set of action programs at the community level, pilot programs and research and development and activities to support the development and improvement of the national program. The action programs would utilize community health posts as the agent for the delivery of nutrition education, food coupons, improved environmental sani- tation as well as improved health services. The project consists of the following components: - 13 - Investments at the CoLmunity Level (i) Health Services - the construction of 56 and reconstruction of 225 health posts and the equipping and operation of those posts. (ii) Water Supply - The construction of potable water supply systems for about 372 rural communities. (iii) Sanitation - The installation of about 112,000 household latrines. (iv) Nutrition Education - The production and dissemination of nutrition messages through the mass media and through village level workers and the training of the village workers. Pilot Programs, Research and Development (v) Family Gardens - Provision of inputs and technical assistance for about 20,000 family gardens and 100 school demonstration gardens. (vi) Applied Food Technology - The support of 26 research, development and feasibility studies related to the manufacturing, processing, storage and marketing of nutritious foods. Program Development (vii) Monitoring and Evaluation - Support for regular monitoring of each component, and for evaluation of the nutritional impact and other important aspects of the program including an intensive evaluation of the program's effectiveness in one department. (viii) Quality Control - The equipping and operation of a food quality control laboratory. (ix) Program Coordination - Support for the operating unit which is responsible for coordinating and refining the project and the nutrition program. Project Area and Beneficiaries 37. The proposed project would be implemented in seven of Colombia's 22 departments and the Federal District of Bogota. Four departments form a contiguous block in the west-central region, and three form a similar block in the Northern Coastal region, thus representing the two major heavily populated regions of the country. The departments were selected to avoid overlap between IRDP and the Nutrition Program in their initial stages. The Govern- ment decided to implement the two programs independently at first in order to spread the benefits of the two programs to as many regions as possible and to avoid overburdening regional administrations by initiating two such complex programs simultaneously. - 14 - 38. Within departments where the Nutrition project would be executed areas were chosen on a relative standard of living basis. Communities were assigned a composite index based on levels of per-capita income and access to public services including education. Communities in the selected departments which were ranked in the bottom 30% of all communities in the nation were selected for nutrition project implementation. The procedure ensures that project communities would have high concentrations of Colombia's poorest. The study determined that in the departments selected project implementation would range from 25% of the rural communities in Valle to 60% in Bolivar. 39. Communities selected would automatically benefit from the health and nutrition education components of the project. Total beneficiaries of those components would be 1.8 million of which about 70% are in rural areas of the seven departments. Around 372 communities, or 231,000 people, would benefit from access to potable water, bringing the total population with access to potable water supplies to about 416,000 of the project areas' 1.25 million rural population. Latrines would be installed in about 112,000 homes or for roughly one-third of project beneficiaries. Communities with high incidence of intestinal diseases would have priority access. Twenty thousand rural families in communities selected for availability of support manpower and ecological diversity would benefit from the family gardens component. Beneficiaries of the food coupon system in Bolivar, estimated to average about 20,000 per year, would be limited to pregnant and nursing mothers and small children in families whose income per capita falls below US$6 per month. 40. The long run aim of the nutrition program is to spread potable water supply and latrine facilities as well as the home gardens programs to all project beneficiaries. The project expands access to such services to the extent that is organizationally and manageably feasible at the present time. Detailed Project Features Direct Nutrition Investments 41. The project would accelerate and strengthen the development of the community level health care portion of a recently introduced national health system. At the community level the new system emphasizes preventive rather than primary curative care nutrition education, family planning along with maternal and child health services and environmental sanitation. Community level health workers (promotoras) selected by the community maintain contact and provide education and basic nutrition, health and family planning services. Six promotoras, each serving 180 families, would be supervised by two auxiliary nurses who, along with a part-time doctor and part-time dentist, would staff a community health post in rural areas. Urban community health posts would have attached a half-time physician and half-time dentist. The health posts would be linked to regional and university hospitals which would handle serious medical cases. It is estimated, however, that about 85% of health problems would be handled at the local level. The project includes the construction of 56 and renovation of 225 health posts which would serve 1.8 million people. - 15 - It also provides equipment and medical supplies, staff training, along with the operation of the posts until project completion. 42. The health component of the proposed project is both novel and ambitious in scope. In order to ensure that the health post system functions as a community based system providing health and nutrition education and preventive care, all community level health workers would receive intensive training in community health, family services and nutrition. Assurances were obtained that revised curricula and programs, satisfactory to the Bank, would be prepared by January 1, 1978 (Section 3.07 of the draft Loan Agreement). Additionally, because the system is new and initially will increase workloads, health administrators at both the national and regional levels will require management and technical assistance to implement the program. Assurances were, therefore, obtained that the Government would fill local consultant positions in the regions by January 1, 1978 with persons whose qualifications and terms and conditions are acceptable to the Bank (Section 3.03 (b) of the draft Loan Agreement). 43. Potable water supply systems would be constructed to serve about 231,000 people in 372 rural communities covered by health posts. About 15% of the rural population in project areas currently have potable water supplies. By completion of the project, one-third, or over 400,000 rural project bene- ficiaries would be supplied with potable water supplies. The systems would serve an average of 100 households, each through individual house connections. Installation would be carried out by the National Institute of Health (INAS), a semiautonomous agency under the Ministry of Health, which has in the past worked efficiently and closely with local communities. 44. Under the sanitation component, about 112,000 household latrines would be installed, which would about double-the number of latrines in project areas. An MOH sanitary promoter attached to each health post would encourage families to install latrines and would coordinate their installation and mainte- nance. 45. The nutrition education component uses techniques of group discus- sions and mass media to guide families in better use of their incomes in food purchase and in more nutritional food preparation. Radio messages, short nutrition films and television programs would complement the efforts of health and community development workers, community leaders and shopkeepers in the project areas. The themes of the various forms of communication would include breast feeding, weaning, food supplementation during illness, food preparation and the use of food coupons. The project would provide training to the proj- ect area educators, would develop educational materials and mass media messages, and disseminate the messages. Five man-years of technical assistance would be provided for developing and improving production techniques of educational materials. The Colombian Institute of Family Welfare (ICBF), which has extensive experience with nutrition education, would coordinate this effort, while the National Planning Department (DNP) would execute mass media efforts. - 16 - Pilot Programs, Research and Development 46. The fLamly gardens component would be a pilot effort to increase home production and consumption of vegetables and legumes by 20,000 families. Existing gardens at 100 schools would serve as demonstration centers for the program. ICBF with the assistance of the Colombian Agricultural Institute (ICA) and other agriculture agencies would develop suitable technical and nutritional packages for small home plots. Inputs would be supplied during the first year, while farmers would gradually pay full costs by the fourth year. Preliminary estimates suggest that almost one-half the vegetable require- ments which a family of six requires for a balanced diet can be produced in most project areas from a 12 by 6 meter plot. ICBF in coordination with agriculture agencies and the schools would carry out the initial program and would expand the program to the entire project area in the next phase of the nutrition program. 47. The applied food technology component would support about 26 research and development subprojects on small-scale storage, preservation and process- ing of farm produce, on diversifying raw materials and processes for commer- cial food manufacture and on improving systems of quality control. The sub- projects would concentrate on technologies that can produce potentially large economic and individual savings. Included in the list of subprojects is the substitution of cotton seed waste for soy in processed foods and village level preparation of nutritious pre-cooked doughs and flours. The Institute of Technological Research (IIT), the principal implementing agency, has a history of success in developing food processing technology. Short-term international technical assistance estimated to average US$4,500 per month and fellowships would be provided in specialized areas, where local expertise does not currently exist. The National Fund for Economic Development (FONADE), an autonomous intermediary financed by the National Planning Department (DNP), would contract the studies with the implementing agencies after a DNP technical committee approved the technical proposal. 48. A small Project Management Fund would be established to carry out pilot programs, feasibility studies and other such activities that are unfore- seen now and presumed to result from studies and monitoring and evaluation. The list and scope of subprojects eligible for financing under the fund would be agreed upon by the Borrower and the Bank (Section 3.11 and Part G(b) of Schedule 2 of the draft Loan Agreement). Program Development 49. Monitoring and evaluation plays a key role in this project. The outcomes of this component would serve as a basis for further revision and refinement of the project and program. All aspects of the nutrition project and the national program would be monitored on a regular basis and would be reviewed quarterly at the policymaking level. In addition, changes in nutri- tional status would be regularly measured. Studies also would be undertaken on the economic effects of the nutrition project and on the effectiveness of the nutrition delivery system. A four-year intensive evaluation of the nutrition system, including food coupons, would be carried out in one depart- ment to test out variations in the system, to identify shortcomings and to - 17 - refine the system. A detailed evaluation of the community health system would take place to determine the pace of future health system improvements. Because of this study's importance for project implementation in the latter years, assurances were obtained that the evaluation of the community health system, under terms of reference satisfactory to the Bank, would be completed by September 30, 1978. The pace and scope of health post development would be revised on a basis acceptable to the Bank (Section 3.08 of the draft Loan Agreement). Local and foreign consultants would assist in the design, exe- cution and analysis of results of the monitoring and evaluation system. A monitoring and evaluation unit in DNP would implement this component. 50. A quality control laboratory would be constructed to ensure that processed foods meet prescribed standards established by the MOH. INAS would run the laboratory and perform the analyses, while the MOH's division of environmental sanitation would collect samples to be tested. 51. Program Coordination would be carried out by the PAN Group within DNP. The PAN Group also would be responsible for mass media and monitoring and evaluation. It plays a central role in the project as the agency respon- sible for coordinating, developing and refining the program. Assurances were obtained that key persons in the PAN Group would have adequate qualifications and job descriptions and that the PAN Group would be adequately staffed through 1985 (Section 3.10 of the draft Loan Agreement). Project Cost and Financing 52. The cost of the project is estimated at about US$68.9 million (Col$ 2,481 million). Foreign exchange expenditures are estimated at US$12.9 million, or 19% of the total project cost. Cost estimates are based on July 1977 prices. A 10% physical contingency was applied to all project costs. Price contingencies amount to 14% of base costs and physical contin- gencies and are based on estimates of yearly domestic and international price increases. 53. The proposed Bank loan of US$25 million equivalent or about 36% of total project costs would cover all foreign exchange costs and US$12.1 million of local costs. With the exception of US$4.8 million to be contributed by beneficiaries for the health, water supply and sanitation components (see paragraph 57 below), the remaining US$39.1 million (57%) would be financed by the Government. A breakdown of project costs by component is presented in the Project Summary. 54. On the basis of the justifications presented in paragraph 12, local cost financing is recommended in order to ensure that the Bank maintains a meaningful role in a project with low foreign exchange costs. Low foreign exchange costs are characteristic of social projects in Colombia, where equip- ment requirements are few and civil works are for small local structures which can be built most inexpensively at the local level with indigenous materials. In addition, the Bank share of 36% of project costs represents a much smaller share of the costs of the entire nutrition program, to which the Government has committed substantial resources over and above the project, including US$17 million for the food coupon system. - 18 - Procurement and Disbursement 55. International competitive bidding, in accordance with Bank guide- lines, would be required for the procurement of water pipes and pumps, esti- mated to total about US$1.7 million and for vehicles and other equipment, when orders are estimated to cost more than US$100,000. Domestic manufac- turers would receive a preferential margin in bid evaluation equal to the prevailing tariff, or 15% of the c.i.f. cost of imports, whichever is lower. Purchases of vehicles and equipment which cost less than US$100,000 and of latrine equipment and fixtures would be made in accordance with local competi- tive procedures which are acceptable to the Bank. Construction of health posts and potable water systems are small and widely disbursed geographically and, therefore, would be carried out by self-help and force account or local competitive procedures acceptable to the Bank. Service contracts for the production and dissemination of mass media messages would be procured through local shopping. 56. The Bank would disburse at the rates of: (a) 100% for consultants, fellowships and training and the foreign costs of imported vehicles, water pipes, equipment and supplies; (b) 75% for locally manufactured water pipes and pumping equipment; (c) 55% for civil works, monitoring and evaluation, project management fund and mass media production and dissemination; and (d) 50% for vehicles and equipment assembled in Colombia, and vehicles, equipment, water pipes and pumps imported and procured locally. Retroactive financing not exceeding US$300,000 is proposed for expenditures incurred from February 1, 1977 for baseline surveys and for initial development and training costs of the nutrition education and family gardens components. Cost Recovery and Fiscal Feasibility 57. Beneficiary communities would provide US$4.8 million in project financing and US$2.7 in repayments for portions of investment and operating costs of the two largest components of the project, health and water supply, and a portion of the installation costs of latrines. In accordance with present Government policy, communities would contribute initially an average of at least 10% of health investment costs through labor, materials or cash. Additionally, community contributions would total an estimated 10-60% of total project investments in water supply, though the contributions of individual communities will vary according to an established formula deter- mining the community's capacity to pay. The balance of investment costs will be borne by the Central Government and/or other Government agencies. Communi- ties would also pay for all operating, maintenance and administration costs of their respective water supply systems. Total water charges currently average about US$1 per household per month which is considered reasonable in light of the low average incomes in the communities to be covered. Assurances were obtained that the Government will maintain the above arrangements for the recovery of costs for beneficiaries (Section 4.06(a) and (b) of the draft Loan Agreement). - 19 - 58. The Government has also agreed to add two additional cost recovery elements to the project. In order to reduce possible excessive use of medi- cines and simultaneously to reduce the Government's burden of recurrent ex- penditures on health, assurances were obtained that a system of charges of would be applied to obtain from beneficiaries at least the cost of medicines provided at the health posts (Section 4.06(d) of the draft Loan Agreement). Assurances were also obtained that families would contribute in materials or cash a percentage of not less than 50% of the costs of installing each latrine and shelter (Section 4.06(c) of the draft Loan Agreement). 59. Recurrent expenditures associated with the nutrition program are not expected to become a substantial burden on the Government budget. Total program costs including the food coupon system would rise from less than 1.4% of current expenditures to about 3.3% in 1985, when the program would reach complete national coverage. In absolute terms, the per capita cost of the nutrition program is estimated to be about US$2.25 in 1985 compared to a projected GDP per capita of about US$1,000. After 1985, as the percentage of poor falls and as the economy continues to grow substantially faster than the population, expenditures on the program are expected to fall as a percentage of current expenditures. Project Management and Execution 60. Nutrition policy is set by the National Council for Economic and Social Policy (CONPES), a cabinet level council chaired by the President. The chief of DNP chairs a subcommittee of CONPES, the National Food and Nutrition Council (CNAN) which oversees the development and execution of the Nutriiton program and reports to CONPES on its progress. The PAN Group, a division of DNP, is responsible for overall coordination, including budgeting, programming and evaluating the activities of the nutrition project and program and serves as secretariat to CNAN. At the regional level, project and program activities are coordinated by a regional PAN committee. The committee is chaired by the Governor of the region and consists of the regional directors of the ministries and agencies implementing the program together with representatives of regional agricultural institutions and the regional planning office. The regional PAN director, assigned by the PAN group of DNP, serves as executive secretary of the committee. The regional PAN committees coordinate and monitor regional activities of the various implementing agencies and arrange for prompt submission of yearly and quarterly work programs and investment budgets to the PAN Group. 61. Project execution of the various components would be the responsi- bility of the following institutions: - 20 - Responsible Agency Project Activity Ministry of Health (MOH) - Health services, latrines, food coupon distribution to benefi- ciaries. National Institute of Health (INAS) - Water supply, food quality control laboratory and studies. Colombian Institute of Family - Nutrition education, family Welfare (ICBF) gardens. Institute for Technological - Applied food technology. Investigation (IIT) and The National Fund for Economic Development (FONADE) National Planning Department (DNP) - Project coordination, monitor- ing and evaluation; mass media. Each of the institution's responsibilities under the project would be covered by an agreement, satisfactory to the Bank, with the Borrower. Because of the importance of the activities of DNP, IMOH, INAS and ICBF, signed subsi- diary agreements of INAS and ICBF with the Borrower and an agreement of DNP with the MOH would be made a condition of effectiveness (Section 6.01 of the draft Loan Agreement) while the remaining agreements would be conditions for disbursement of funds pertaining to each of their activities (Paragraph 4(b), Schedule 1 of the draft Loan Agreement). Benefits, Justification and Risks 62. The project is justified as an effective and relatively inexpen- sive method of improving the nutrition conditions, well-being and productive capacity of a large portion of the 1.8 million beneficiaries. By reducing the incidence of disease through investments in health, potable water supply and sanitation, and by providing nutrition education, the project would facilitate more efficient consumption of nutrients and thereby increase the potential of the beneficiaries to be more productive members of society. In addition, a portion of the beneficiaries would also benefit from increased production and consumption of home grown foods, while pregnant and nursing mothers and small children in one department would increase their nutritious food consumption. Without the project, a large percentage of the 1.8 million beneficiaries would remain limited in their ability to avail themselves of the long-run opportunities presented by overall economic development. The project would thereby provide a bridge for the malnourished to the employment oppor- tunities and increased production potential of the 1980s and 1990s. - 21 - 63. Increased nutrition and better health would result in increased immediate productive potential for adults and in future productive potential of children. Reduction of malnutrition and disease would result in better physical and mental growth and consequently in a better educated and more able and productive adult population. Apart from the eventual benefits resulting from reduced costs associated with producing educated and skilled manpower, immediate economic benefits would result during periods or in regions where labor shortages exist. In quantitative terms, it is estimated that the health and nutrition education components (the components that apply to all project beneficiaries) would reduce the number of sick days of the benefi- ciary population by 20% and the infant mortality rate by 25%. If only one- fourth of adult sick days saved by project beneficiaries are translated into employment, which does not substitute for the work of others, the increased income to the society would be US$2.4 million annually or about one-third the annual operating costs of the community health posts in project areas. Where beneficiaries receive access to water supply and/or sanitation, the reduction in sick-days is expected to be even greater and would result in further income and production increases. An additional US$0.5-1.0 million is expected to be saved as the new health system substitutes for present unnessary expenditures by beneficiaries for medical expenses. 64. Various smaller components are expected to yield additional economic benefits. The family gardens component is estimated to provide each family an annual net return of about US$20.50. Without including benefits that would accrue to families where the component is expanded beyond its pilot phase, this component would achieve an economic rate of return of 20%, even if only 16,000 families, rather than the projected 20,000 families participate. The potential economic returns of the food technology component are quite large. Present agricultural losses due to lack of storage and preservation techniques at the local level are estimated at US$20 million annually. Even if those losses were reduced by only a small percentage as a result of the outcomes of studies in this component, the component would pay for itself many times over. Given IIT's impressive past record, achievement of such returns are considered reasonable. 65. The overall nutrition program, of which this project forms a part, is expected to achieve additional benefits for the economy. By increasing the demand for domestically produced and processed foods, the program would estab- lish a firm market for investments in agriculture production. Likewise, the spurt in the food processing industry resulting from the increased demand, as well as improved technology, would provide the basis for increasing Colombia's comparative advantage in the sector and thus augmenting exports. The program itself contributes to the Government policy of phasing out food aid and reducing dependence on food imports.' 66. The project would also improve and refine the national nutrition program and increase the capacity of the various agencies to implement it on a national scale. The project would develop and execute training programs and prepare additional personnel needed for future program expansion. A tech- nical package for small house gardens would be developed and an implementation process refined after pilot testing of the package. Intensive monitoring - 22 - and evaluation would provide the basis for refining the program, stream- lining the implementation procedures, and increasing the cost-effectiveness of the package. The project would thus benefit future program beneficiaries and increase the efficiency and reduce the costs of future nutrition program interventions. 67. The proposed pr9ject has inherent risks in that it requires effective implementation on the part of a number of agencies and is a project wi'th few precedents. The Government, however, is deeply committed to the national nutrition program and has formulated and developed the project over the past two years. FurtharfErj, the Government recognizes the need to strengthen interagency coordination and has developed a management system for the project which is already in place, With a monitoring and evaluation system which allows for changes in program design as the project proceeds and with extensive Bank supervision, the risks would be minimized and are acceptable in view of the substanttal benefits expe,t1d of the project. FART V - LEGAL INSTRUMENTS AND AUTHORITY 68. The draft Logn Agreement between the Republic of Colombia and the Bank, the report of the Committee provided for in Article III, Section 4 (iii) of the Articles of Agreement, and the text of the draft resolution approving the proposed loan are being distributed to the Executive Directors separately. 69. Special conditions of the loan are listed in Section III of Annex III. A special condition of effectiveness would be that subsidiary agreements have been entered into with the Government by ICBF and INAS and between DNP and the MOH (Section 6.01 of the draft Loan Agreement). In addition, a condi- tion of disbursement for activities carried out by IIT and FONADE would be that the relevant subsidiary agreement has been entered into between the Government and the implementing agency (Paragraph 4(b) of Schedule 1 of the draft Loan Agreement). 70. I am satisfied that the proposed loan would comply with the Articles of Agreement of the Bank. PART VI - RECOMM1ENDATIONS 71. I recommend that the Executive Directors approve the proposed loan. Robert S. McNamara President by I. P. M. Cargill Attachments August 30, 1977 ANNEXI Page 1 of 4 paiLes COLOMBIA - SOCIAL INDICATORS DATA SHEET LAND AREA ITHOU KMZI -- - -- - - -- - -- - - - …- - - -- - -- --------------- ~~~~~COLOMBIA REFERENCE COUNTRIES (1970) TOTAL 1138.9 MOST RECENT AGR IC. 227.8' 1960 1970 ESTIMATE TURKEY BRAZIL MEXICO ' GNP PER CAPITA IUSBI 210.0* 350.0* 640.0*/a 500. 0 550.0* 69.0.0' POPULATION AND VITAL SIATIS71CS POPULATION (MID-YR. MILLION) 15.4 20.6 24. 2 /a 35~6 9 2. 8 50.4 POPULATION DENSITY PER SQUARE KM. 14.0 18.0 21.0 /a 46.0 11.0 26.0 PER SO. KM. AGRICULTURAL LANO . 92.0 106.OLB 67.0 66.0 52.0 VITAL STATISTICS CRUDE BlIRTH RATE I/THOU. AV) 46.1~ 44,.3w 40.6~ 40.6 38.4 43.8 CRUDE OEATH RATE (/THOU.'AV) 14.7 11.0 6.8 14.4 9.9 10.2 INFANT MORTALITY RATE I/THOU) lOO.0/. 7O.0/a . 145.0 110.0 68.5 LIFE EXPECTANCY AT BIRTH (YRSI 54.7- 568. 5 60.9 54.4 59.7 61.0 GROSS REPRODIUCTION RATE 3.2 3.2 3.1 2.6 /a.b 2.6 3.1 POPULATION GROWTH RATE IS) TOTAL 3.2 2. 9 2.7 2.5 2.9 3.4 tJRBAN 6.0/b 5.5/b 4.9 4.9/c 5 .0 4.8 URBAN POPULATION It OF TOTAL) 53.0/C 60.0 63 .0 36.5 56.0 58.7 AGE STRUCTURE (PEPCENT) 0 TO 14 YEARS 46.6/a 46.6 44.1 41.6 42.0 46.2 15 TO 64 YEARS 50. 47w 5 0.4 5 2.17 53.9 5 5.0 50.1 65 YEARS AND) DYER 3.07 3 .0 3 .2 4. 3 3. 0 3.7 AGE DEPENDENCY RATIO 10a .0 0.9 0.9 0.8 1.0 ECONOMIC DEPENDENCY RATIO 1.6w .6 16 11I:1/6 1.5 2.0 FAMILY PLANNINIG ACCEPTORS (CUMULATIVE, THOU) 0.5 306.9 955.1 . 250.0 55.5 USERS cz OF MARR lEO WOMEN) ... 31.0 6.2 1.6 E MPLOYMFNT TOTAL LABOR FORCE (THOUSAND) 5100.0/c 6 2 0 0 . 6BCO.O 14500. 0/e 296 03.0 13000.0 LABOR FOCOE TN AGRICULTURE IS) 47.0/-c 39.0 . 67.0 44.0 40.0 UNEMPLOIYED IT9 OF LABOR FORCE) B . 0d_e 7.C 14.3 4.0/f INCOME DISTPTIJUTIDN 3 OF PRIVATE 1I'1CDME PEC*C eY- HIGHIEST ST OF HOUSEHCOLS 41 21c f 31 .9/d . 32.8 B 35. 0/a 3 7.68 HIGHEST 20% OF HOUJSEHOLDS 67.l/c. 60.1/ iTd 60.'6 62.0/a 63.2 LOWEST 20% OF HOUSEHOLDS 2.1/c 3. 5/d . 2. 9 3.o/a. 4. 2 LOWEST 403 OF HOUSEHOLDS 6.6/c.f I10.1/ ld 9.4j 10.o7/a 10.2 D I STR IBUT ION O F L AND OwNE RSHI P 3 OWNED BY TOP 103t OF OWNEPS .. 83).0 Ia 53.0 45.0 37.1 3 OWNEO By SMALLEST 103 OW1NERS .. . .2 LB0.9 1. 5 0.3 HEALTH AND NUTPITICN POPULATION PRE PHYSIC IAN 2400 2110.0 2100. 01 22 50.0 1910.0 .1480.0 POPULATION PEP NURSING PERSON 3520.0Th . 1450. 0?d 1770.o,4i 322 0. 0/b .1620.0 POPULAT I ON PER HOSPTITAL eED 580.0 430.0o 460.0/a 903. 0 260.U, 960.0 PER CAPITA SUPPLY OF - CALORIES; IT OF RFOQUIREMENTS) 94.0 97.0 95.0/e 1. 109.3 110.0 PROTEIN I(GRAMS PER DAY) 50.0 5 1. 0 51.0/ae BR. 6 4.0 65.0 -OF WHICH ANIMAL AND PULSE 28.0/h 29.0/e . 22.0/i 39.0 28.0/a DEATH RATE I/TH1OU1 AGES 1-4 16. 3 6. 4 15.0/b' . 9.6 BEDUC ATICON ADJUSTED ENROLLMENT RATIO PRIMARY SCHOOL 117.0 10 2.0 1 14.0Q/d 1 11. 0 617.0 106.0 SECONDARY SCHOOL 12 .0 /3 .0 28.o/d 26S.3 260.0 23.0 YEARS OP SCHOOLING PROVIDED (FIRST AND SECOND LPVFLI 15.0 11.0 11.0 11.3 13.0 12.0 VOCATIONAL EN4ROLLMENT 13 OF SECONDARY) 31.0/i 20.0/f 21. 0 Id f 14.30 1 7.0 24.0 ACULT LITERACY RATE 151 . 73.0 74.0 55.0 /j 66.0 76.0 HOUS INO PERSONS PER ROOM (URBAN) .. .. 1.9 1.0 2. 2 OCCIJPIED DWELLINGS WITHOUT PIPED WATER 11RI 59.OLW1 .. . 64. 0 13. 0/c 61. 0/b ACCESS TO ELECTRICITY I3 OF ALL DWELLINGS) 47.0 /C .. 41. 1 48. 0 59.0 RURAL DWELLINGS CONNECTED TO ELECTRICITY (11 6.0 /C .. 16.0 6.0 26 .0 CCNSUMPTI ON RADIO RECEIVERS (PER THOU POP) 139. 0 10 5.0 120. 0 89. 0 6J3.0 276.0 PASSENGER CARS (PER THOU POP) 7.0/e 11.0 14.0 4.0 25.0 24.0 ELECTRICITY IKWH/YR PER CAP) 2A4.0 4 14. 0 499.0 247.0 49 1.0 567.0 NEWSPRINT (KG/YR PER CAP) 2 .4 2 .6 1.68 0.17 2. 7 3.2 …-- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - SEE NOTES AND DEFINITIONS ONl PEVERSE NOTrES Page 2 Of 4 pages Unless otherwise noted, data for 1960 refer to sty year between 1959 and 1961, for 1970 be tween 1968 and 1970, sod for Mont Recen.t Estimate between 1973 and 1975. * GIP per oaplia are haae.d On the World Sank Atlaa methodology (1974-76). oxOfficial estimates based on registrations, show crude birch rtet for 1960 as 39, average crude birth rare for 1961-70 so 36 and for 1971-74 as 31. a-sMexico has been s.eleted as an objective contry becaus.e Colombia is nmg fn the stags Of ecnoic developmet that Memico was in ten years ago. Roth contries aim at a GOP growth rate Of about 7 percent and at a s.obtantial reduction of onemployment. COLOMBIA 1960 /a Registered only; /b 1951-64; /c 1964; /d Bogota only; /e 1963; /f Ermoolicaily active population; _& 1965; /h 1961-63; /i Total secondary includes teache_r training at the third level; /J, Water piped inside. 1970 /a Sass based on burial persita; /b 1964-70; /c Ratio Of population under 15 and 65 and over to total labor force; /d Econoically active population; /e 1964-66; 0f Total secondary includes teacher training at the third Iavel. MOST RECENT EST I24ATE: /a 1976; /b patio of population under 15 sod 65 and over to total labor force; /c 1971; /d 1972; /e 1969-71 average: /f Total secondary includes teacher training at the third l-eve.1 TUPRKEY 1970 / E isludes 17 Eastern provioces; /b 1965-67; /c 1965-70; /d Ratio of population under 15 and 65 sod over to labor force age 15 years and over; Le 15 years and over, excludes unemployed; /f Registerad only; Lg Diaposable Income; /h locluding ass istst nurses and midwives; /i 1964-66; /i Persons sin years old and over who tell the cenaus tabers that They coo read sod write.. BRAZIL 1970 / Econoniclly action population; /b Hospital personnel- /c Inside only. MEXICO 1970 0 1964-66; /b Inside only. R1lO. July 25, 1977 DEFINITIONSI OP SOCIAL IoiICATORS Land Arsa (thou be2) PopuIati- per saraing pnrsun - Population divided by sober Ofpatcn Total T-Ttal surface area c-priuieg land area and inlan.d watara. male and female gradus te are,"troi-ed Or 'certified' --an, and SSAgrit - Moat recet estimate Of agrioulcorsI area asd temporarily Or Porno- aaMilar personnel with training Or nep-rience. -etly for crops, posturs, -akor 4 kitchen gardena or to lie fallow. fpoclation por hossital hod - Ppopulaion divdod by number Of hospital beds available is p,blic -sd prioste geosral and specialised hospital and IMP .r canita 115$) - IMP per capita saia t or crcnntma.rk prices, rehabilltarfon centers; exclu.de a sra ing bones and estobllnhaests for ca.lculted by soone c--oalo, - thod as World Bank Atlas (1977-75 basis); oustodia1 sod pr-evetive care. 1960; i970 aed 1975 data. Per .aPita aupeiy Of calories (7 of rssoir-mets) - Computed Iron snergy eqioerOf net food supplie -s vilable in country per oapita per day; rupslatiun and via-ttsi vilable suPplies -aPrise d-entic prod-tio. imPorts less -op-rt ..ad Fpoolatfon (mid-yer nl1lio_) A isOf July ficut: if not avilable, averge changes in stck; net supplie.s-enlude anmlfeed, seeds, quantitIes used Of two end-poo esimts; 60, 1970 and 1973 data, in food proceouiog and lassin distribution; requiremets were eti-at.d by PAl based sOn physiological needs for norma ac.tivity and health conid- .peclation density p-r squar I.. - Mid-year population per qoare kilometer sting enviromoeto1 temperature, body weights, age and sex distribstions Of (...ind.i,pr p .' I.I1 r1110 hctares) uf tal rs.populattion,and allown 1 frwar at household level. ponolriondensty -nor nunr in f sonic, land - Computed as above for Peroissol fooei sasprdy rtencneto e opt agiutr l.lad Only. net supply Of food pot day; net sapply Of food is defiind an above; require- ments far all cmoutries establiahed by EISDA Econoic Research Services Vital statistics provide for a miimm llwac of 60 grams Of total protein per day, and Crudo birth ros e thousand,.,eroon - A-s..a lion births per thousand Of 20 gras Of utimal and pulse protein, of which SI gram shosid be anWIma old-po pplain tnyeraithmetic susrage ending in 1960 sad 1970, protein; these standards are lowr than those Of 75 grone Of total proesin ad five-year averog ndin a 1975 formo eet estimate, and 27 grass Of animal protain asa verage fur the wold, proposed by FAO Cruds death rate pnr thous.and, average - Annual deaths per thousand Of mid-year in the Third World rood ISr-y. population ; ten-year arithOe tic averagos ending in 1960 asd 1970 and fiv- Per capita protein sapoly from animal sad ps1se - Protein sopply Of food pear averge ending in 1975 for sont r.eet sa tiaste. derived from -oima1a and pulses in gramn per day. Infant aorraliry rate 1/thos) - Annual deaths of infa.st snder one year of age Death rate f/thou) ages 1-4 - be-oa deaths per thousand is age grasp 1-4 per thousand live bitiha. ysre, to ohildren in this age greop; suggested so on indicator Of Life ..,ecta.c at birth (y-i) - Average somber Of years Of life ~ rmining at us1-trliti. birth; asually five-year -averges ending in 1960, 1970 and 1975 for develop- ing conre.Education Grous -eord-ctian rate- Averag nuber of lion doghters a uonan will hear Adjunted.enrollment rato- orinay school - Enrollment Of all age a a per- in her nomlrprodocIve perIod ioh 5 npriesespreset age-specific onstage Of primary school-age population; includes children aged 6-li years fer tility rat'ea; asoolly fie-peraergsenigi 1960, 1970 and 1975 but adjunted for different lengths Of primary education; for -ntries with for developin -owtries u-iv-r-al edc-i-, enoletmy exceed 1007 since som puplIs ore hbow Fopul.tion growth'ratn (2) - teto1 - Compound snaIgrowth rates Of old-yearor above_the ofiilsho ge population for 195f-60 16-70 and 1970-75. adjusted enrllen ratIoc-secondary school - tumputed as shov; secondary lpoolation growth rate (7.) - urban - Compted lube growth rate Of total edu-tion require at least four years Of approved primary ius t-ution; POPu lation; different defimitiosa of orb snare asmy affect comparability Of pravidna geasral, voctional Or teacher training i-truotiona for pupils data amog outries, of12to 17 ye.ar o f age;.crreaponden...e course are_generally secluded. Urhan posltio C7. Of ctota) - istlo Of urban to total population ; different Years Of schooltmg provided (firs an -sod levels) Total years Of definitions Of urban areas nay affect -oporsbility, of data among sete.schooling; at .e.omdary level, vocational. isatrutin nay be partially Or Age u~trucre oecnt Children (0-14 year), working-age (15-hi year), locaiona enrollmet (7. Of secodary) - Vocational iselist.ion. include sod rtired (45pers-od over) an po-rcetgee of mid-year population. teohoical, iedustrfsl or Other profraa which operte independently ora Age deocod-nr ratio - Ratio of popolotias under 15 snd 65 and Over to those deparuaets of secodary i-tsituti-s. oaps II through 64 Adult literac rate (P.) - Literate adc1ts (able to red and wirit) 55 per- tcEonic donende..cy rati J, Patio Of pepclotiou s-der 15 sod 65 -ed ovr to cetage of total adult population aged 15 years and over the labor forc inaegop of 15-64 yearn Funily ooig- _auceecora (cumulative, thou) - Cumulative.. nuber Of as..eprors Housing of birth-control device acder auspices Of national family plansiog program Person pr room (urban) - Average -unhr Of peron per roo in occupied sinceinception,Z conenionalI dwell ings in srbao areas ; dwellings ecrlude non-peemnna-t family placaini- sers (7 Of usred woen) -hPercentages Of macnod cone of structures sod unccpied parts. child-bearing age (15-44 years) wh s ir th-control devices to all maried Icc...opid dwellnu ithout pined water (7) - Occupied covninldwellings womn 1 sne age group. in rba and -rura area without inside Or outside piped water facilities aspercentage ofalocpe dwellings. Epeloy,set rAcs toecItrity (71f l doellinus) - Conv-ntial..I dwellings with Total labor foroe (thousand) - Ef-onomicly acti-e person, iaclding armed electricity in living quarters as percent Of total dunllogs in urban esd forces so s-eplopd hut eacluding bs.newives, students, etc.; defiiti-n -rwr 1 es in varou _cunries are st comparable.Sra dwlig tonnected to e1ltcirioty (7.) -coputed as above for -rura Labor force in orisultors1.) - Agricultura labor force (in farming, forestry, dwellings only. bunting and fishin)specnisage Of total labor force. Imemploynd (7oflabor (sne - U-omplyd are us aly defined as p-ro-s who ConaunPrio are able and willing to tale a Job,-at Of ajab On a given day, ro.naind oat Radio receivers fontr thou aPO) - All types Of receivers for radio broadcasts of ajb, nd seebtoig w-k for a specifid minimum period not enoending one to generlpbi e huade ouain nldsalrne eevr week; ma .st he comparale between -oatries dse to different definitions incutriesad is yern when registration Of radio seta was Is effect; of u-oplaped and aasrce Of data, e.g. , omploym t ffre statistins, sample data fore recent years may not he soporoble sioo mast ....rries abolished ..r_.Y. copulsory uaomploptset inourn-e licasa cnn Passenger cars (per thatap Pass. eager cars comprise motor oars seating ln- discribotion - Percentage of private incom (both in cash sad bind) less than eight pe rsons; ealudes ambulances, hearses and military received by richest 5%, richest 207., pooret 207., and poorer ,40/. of honse- vehicles. holds. Electricity fbkh/yr ner cap) - Annual cosuption Of industrial. -om -rial public and private electricity in kilowatt hosrn per capita, g-meroIly Di'listri-ao Of land _wnrshi~- Peroe . age t8 Of land owned by wealthiest 10% based'on production da ta, wirhoat allowace far losses in grids but allo-- and poorest 10% of land owers. ing for imports and saports Of electricity. Newprint (kg/yt per cap) -Per capita s...a. consumption in bilagran geal1th and Natrition estimated from domestic produ-ti- Plus net imparts Of aewsprint. Popula:tion per pshysician - opltion divided by s,obse Of practicing physician qualiied from d medca school at_on-vrsIty level. ~~..ac 1~~~~YE.0WDJT~~~ ~ roo ~3 f 4 gG (t. Millian. of US DDIr-) A,.taaL ti"td "Jt A-g. n ~ .~ A -1 V.-th4,Rti A. Pet-t of GDP 1967-69 AvOrapo 1974 1975 1976 1977 1982 (1967-695-74 1974-76 1976-82 1974 1976 1982 1976 Nlit.. .od Rach.nx. gt.. KatLIol Accou..t. Geon OneT1it Product. 9,785 14,405 15,061 15.900 17,063 24.459 6.7 5.2 7.4 100.0 100.0 100.0 Gan ri. T_e, fTrde + -751 -9 -48715 -141 - - - 2.7 -0.6 Co.D-metic T Tno.90-34 14.015 14,603 15.900 17,778 24. 3-18 7.6 6.7 7.3 97.3 100.0 99. lefrt loo. gpO) 1,491 2.323 2,229 2,436 2,806 4.325 7.7 12.5 10.0 16.1 15.3 17.7 =ortt. " (boont Capacity) 1.1 ,1 2.249 271 3,665 4.360 6.9 14.7 7.8 14.7 17.5 17.8 Re.ooroe Gop ~~~ ~~~~ ~~72 209 -20 .9 -3 194 -- 1.5 2.2 0.1 Connupti.. Eoponditor.. 7 ,44) 11,429 12.389 12,513 13,451 18.012 7.4 4.6 6.3 79.3 78.7 73.6 In_ontoont . (to-l. Stock.) 2.101 3,268 2,326 3,145 3,383 6.291 7.6 -3.3 12.3 22.7 19.8 25.7 Il-otic SavIgs ,5689 2,566 2,214 3,4.41 4,327 6,306 85 15.4 106 20.0 211.6 25.8 NotIonal SavIn.9 1865 2.8853 2.353 3.37 3.986 6.187 7. 6.1 10.6 1. 21.3 25.3 Merchandine Trade Annual Dota t Coroal Nrit.. A. Portet of Tot.l loportt C-pi tol Goodn 290 525 540 655 834 1.753 10.4 11.7 17.8 34.8 36.1 32.3 So.,,o-di.to Good. (Rot1. FonIn) 254 811 758 872 1.087 2.437 21.4 3.7 18.7 53.7 48.1 45.0 Fool, nod ,R.latod Mat.rilal 3 6 14 73 153 716 12.3 500.0 46.3 0.4 4.0 13.2 of WIch: Forolon() (- (14) (73) (133) (716) - - (46.3) (-2 (4.0) (13.2) Cononptilon Good. 61 167 "48 214 267 515 18.3 13.2 15.8 11.1 11.8 9.5 Too Int . pere (FOSS 608 1.509 1.480 1.814 2,341 5,421 16.4 96 2. 0. 0. 0. Pr00ry Prod-tcn (tool. Foni.) 418 1,001 1,179 1.683 2.716 4,137 15.7 29.7 16.2 67.0 74.6 72.8 Fool .1 no Re.1od Mtberi.ln 71 95 67 87 102 214 5.0 -. 7 16.2 6.4 3.8 3.8 of Which: Pottroloc (56) (4) (5 -) - -1 (-35.5) - - (0.3) (-(- Monofa-t-rd Good, 117 398 428 488 569 1.333 22.5 10.7 16.2 26.6 21.6 23.4 Totol,Mooch. KEporton (FOB) 606 1,494 1,694 2.258 3,387 5,684 16.2 23.0 16.6 100.0 100.0 100.0 To-in nod Bord- Trnde - - - - - - - --- Merchondino Trade tedi-e Enport Price ttd.. 21.2 72.4 74.5 100.0 141.5 1)1.1 Soport Price 1ode- 34.0 90.0 93.0 100.0 108.9 157.4 T0.-0 of T'ade l,d:n 62.3 80.4 80.1 100.0 129.9 96.0 ap-rto Volonelde 126.6 92.2 100.7 100.0 106.0 166.6 Vo1oc Added by S-ctr Anno..l Oat. t 1976 - Price. and Ech-ooe Rote, A-erge Ann...l Growth Rate. A. Per-ec of Totl1 Ag,lcolior n 2.951 3.828 4,8 4.239 .4,451 5:,745 4.4 5.2 5.2 28.6 26.5 23.3 Sodontry and Miniog 2,:444 3,811 3,:8717 4.518 4,925 7759 7.7 8.9 9.4 28.5 28.3 31.5 Serice 4.3 5.746 TM05 7.228 7.734 11.112 44 12.2 7.4 42.9 45.2 45.2 Total 9,834 13,38)5 4,1 15.985 17,110 24.616 1.3 9T. 3 73 -0 100.0 100.0 P.blic Financee (Cztr:,1tG-r-.nt) ~ ~~Annoa Onto at C--net Pri... A. Peroeor of GDP GretRecipt, 413 1,194 1,402 1.551 1.924 2,944 19.4 13.9 11.3 9.5 9.9 9.6 Corroot opooditore- 262 640 702 734 933 1.428 16.0 7.1 11.7 5.1 4.7 4.6 ludgetnoy Saving- 1)5 554 700 817 991 1,'514, 24.2 21.) 10.9 4.4 5. 2 5.0 Other Public SectorSaving, 434 150 394 334 390 810 .16.2 49.0 15.9 1.2 2.1 2.6 Poblic Sector Inv-t-t 612 1,189 1,382 1,496 1.5 2,9 11.7 12.2 12.3 9.4 9.5 9.7 5electd lodicators 1945-70 1970-73 1973-76 1976-82 DetaI1 .n Public S ctor S.toe ...et frocrnn and Finaning A. II of Total (C.1colat.d from 3-year -t.rg.d data) 1975-76 1977-82 A-enge lCOR 3.17 3.02 3.22 2.93 Social Secto- 33.5 38 2 Ioport Elneticity 1.16 0.28 0.32 1.42 Ageiclt,r, 10.2 12.0 Mar'gina I ooontIc Saig oe0.20 0.12 0.23 0.33 Sdot5adHen . . Marginal Sationnl Savinge Rote ~0.14 0.17 0.24 0.33 Po-r 4.5 95 ____________________________________________________________________________________TTononport nnd Coo iniottio.o220.2 114. L.b.r F.- ..d Ot~~~t P- W.tk., Ttal Lb- F.r.e ~~~other 20.1 15.8 Labor Forte and Output per Worker Total lAhor FoOte ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Toto1 E.pendtt.re, 100.0 100.0 Sn Millio.. % of Total Growth Rat. 1964 1973 1964 1973 1964-73 Agriculture 2.427 2.057 47.3 30.2 -1.9 tod,otry 0.9)8 1.212 18.7 17.8 2.7 Public Snotor Savibg. 42.7 68.5 Servic 1.749 3.542 34.0 52.0 8.2 Poreigo Prt.ect Aid 13.4 24.6 Total 5.134 6.812 100.0 100.0 -3.2 Other 23.9 6.9 V,1oe AddedJ per Wrker (1976 Prices and E..cha:nge Rat,) T___________T__-___g_____ o__________ 0____0 to 01 1olar . ef Averag. Gr,th Rto Agriculture 903 1,017 66.4 88.4 5.9 tndu.try 1,837 2.552 135.2 148.6 3.7 Servic 1.730 1.4 127.3 90.0 -1.2 Total 1,319 1,717 100.8 100.0 2.6 BIIASI OF PAIICI9. RZTESAI. ASSISTAN! AND DEBT Ltei Millen. of US Dollar, at 0Out rati rig) Actua Eatianted ret 191 1972 1973 1974 1975 Jr 17 1978 97 1960 1981 1942 feporto (mcI. tiP) 974 1,207 1,548 1,958 2.100 2. 781 3.988 4. 547 4 649 5SOS7 5,863 6.828 J520-±L1-1A~. Lil28 1.236 1.424 2_072 2.882 2.436 3. 053 3_I 611 .27 5.0401 5 932 677 -311 -29 124 isl 1 345 935 ~ ~ I s Ii 7 Z ector Service, -178) -187) -215) -192 -241 -238 -275 -292 -327 -371 -389 -430 Profit. (-70) (-73) (-74) (-60) (-66) (-82) IloO I0) (-1175 (-137) (-1645 (.172) (-1I80) Other, (-106) (-124) (-1415 (-532) (-175) (-174) (-175) (-175) (-190) (-207) (-227) (-250) Current Tcaot.r. (fet)4 35 33 351 4 7 10 12 123 138 1 52 147 184 Balance on CurrentAcon -455 -191 -16 -351 -176 187 773 767 223 -202 -272 -191 Prite- DIrec Itn-tune 40 17 23 36 43 45 32 39 57 65 74 72 Diebroct 22 2 3)1 417 364 383 376 412 518 583 435 799 91 7 -gRanoeno -92 -96 -132 _..11 -13 -,jl z173 -215 -250 -298 -386 -471 Nrc Dtebore-ete130 255 285 153 249 195 239 10 333 337~ 413 "OT Och-r MALT Lon ilnorere.145 139 60 so 76 - - - - --- -oopuyoeot -79 -04 -58 -so -87 ------- ttDiobure6nc6 55 2 -8 !-. I Capitl1 Trune-loo no....d. 135 28 -41 -2)9 13 157 -- - - - - Chang i.N: Met e.erve.. 82 .164 -213 389 -118 -584 -1,043 -1.109 -412 -200 -215 -321 Oc-ot cod Loan Coatt--t crent- libe - - - - - - ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~Debt ond Debt Act-a E.cinacd SerIce 1971 1972 1973 1974 195 97 Public L 94 ...un Public Babc Icon 153 74 142 8 08 80 Oncetendln8 und IDA- - - Di Ot.bored 1,38.4. 5,630.0 1,934.0 2,117.4 2,340.8 2,542.0 Incur..ti Pub. Othe t9ttiletnr-I 42 41 29 644 24 Debt 49.2 579Y 78.5 103.7 112.3 134.9 CorrnoceI10 114 67 55 65 131 iaPuynec on Oupplier- 35 37 31 45 7) 32 Public Debt 92.0 95 9 151.9 211.4 134.4 180.9 Prmntt cock, 38 04 190 58 162 142 Total Public conde . 45 - - - Debt S.teel 141.2 153.8 2)0.4 315.1 246.7 317.8 P.bico2L- -,,ni& - 0 0 4 1 - Other Debt Tote Public MALT Leant 378 358 52) 234 391 431 Sernlce (Nac) 133.1 1)5.1 126.4 118.4 108.0 160.0 Tota Debt te.nt.e (Bec) 274.3 308.9 337.0 453.7 354.7 477.8 1oe0do2.(L23176. Burden .c lEpr Otabut'icA Earn~~~~~~Uing. (i)l E Irto P,,blic Debt Bait Percent PublicDebt -Seric- 14.5 12.7 13.4 14.9 11.7 11.4 (Rcubl. nPrltCr. Total 1 Dbtl ternice 28.2 25.4 21.8 23,3 54.0 17.2 W-rld Buob 70b.B 27.6 Tote IDebt Seic IDA ~~~~~ ~~~~~ ~~23 .3 0.8 Plot Forign Inc OLhor tMliara 60.3 '6.4I6o 35.3 31.4 26.5 24.6 20.0 20.1 Goctrtecce ~~~~~~977.3 30.2 Supplicr. 169 .4 4.4 AneueTr-o Pr iat BanUk. 435.7 17.0 Publi Debt f ooodn ~~~~~ ~~~~~~~48.4 1.9 IntreteD 1 Pio Public Debt.n.. 31.4 0.2 Yea D040 3.9 4.2 4.8 5.3 5. 3 3.9 Tota Public M9bLT Lo.n. 2,4.Y000Ta 5)4D 7.4 6.9 8.0 00.9 6 3 7 .7 e5nd uure 5908 453.4 504.5 561.7 43. 70 18. a -.Public Deb 041 28.2 2 7 .5 24.1 24.5 24. 27.1 lBogD co7.Pblfc Debt Snreic 29.4 30.9 28.9 23.4 32. 3 2)5 8 end Iliboe 19.4 20.5 23 0 22.8 22.5 22.3 IDA a 7. Pubdlic Debt 0411 1.4 1.3 1.2 1.1 1.0 0.9 104De 7. Public Debt Scenic 0.2 0.3 0.2 - 0.2 0.1 ANNEX II Page 1 of 7 THE STATUS OF BANK GROUP OPERATIONS IN COLOMBIA A. STATEIENT OF BANK LOANS AND IDA CREDITS (As of June 30, 1977) (US$ million) Loan Amount (less Cancellation) Number Year Borrower Purpose Bank IDA Undisbursed Fully disbursed loans and credits 667.3 23.5 /1 -- 575 1968 Interconexion Electrica, S.A. Power 18.0 .2 680 1970 Colombia Roads 32.0 3.9 681 1970 Interconexion Electrica, S.A. Power 52.3 .3 682 1970 Empresas Municipales de Cali Water Supply 18.5 .1 738 1971 Empresas Municipales de Palmira Water Supply 2.0 .3 740 1971 Empresa Nacional de Telecomunicaciones Communications 15.0 .1 741 1971 Empresa de Acueducto y Alcantarillado de Bogota Water Supply 88.0 28.9 849 1972 Instituto Colombiano de la Reforma Agraria Irrigation 2.2 1.6 860 1972 Instituto de Fomento Municipal Water Supply 9.1 4.2 874 1973 Empresas Publicas de Medellin Power 56.0 21.5 903 1973 Banco de la Republica Industry 60.0 7.8 920 1973 Colombia Education 21.2 13.2 926 1973 Ferrocarriles Nacionales Railways 25.0 1.8 971 1974 Colombia Pre-Investment Studies 8.0 6.6 1071 1975 Banco de la Republica Industry 5.5 1.1 1072 1975 Instituto Nacional de Fomento Municipal Water Supply 27.0 23.2 1073 1975 Empresa Nacional de Telecomunicaciones Communications 15.0 6.1 1118 1975 Colombia Rural Settlement 19.5 16.4 1163 1975 Colombia Agriculture 21.0 20.7 1223 1976 Banco de la Republica DFC 80.0 69.7 1352 1977 Colombia Rural Development 52.0 52.0 /2 1357 1977 Banco de la Republica Agricultural Credit 64.0 _ 64.0 /2 Total /3 1,358.6 23.5 343.2 Of which has been repaid 323.0 1.3 -- Total now outstanding 1,035.6 22.2 343.2 Amount sold 31.3 Of which has been repaid 18.4 12.9 Total now held by Bank and IDA 1,022.7 22.2 TOTAL UNDISBURSED 343.2 /L Includes exchange adjustment of US$4.0 million. /2 Not yet effective. /3 The figures do not include US$60 million Fourth Telecommunications Loan, US$90 million Seventh Highways Loan and US$15 million Second Small-Scale Industries Loan which were signed in July and August of 1977. ANNEX II Page 2 of 7 B. STATEMENT OF IFC INVESTMENTS (as of July 31, 1977) Type of Amount in US$ million Year Obligor Business Loan Equity Total 1959 Laminas del Caribe, S.A. Fiber-board 0.50 - 0.50 1960-1965 Industrias Alimenticias Noel, S.A. Food products 1.98 0.08 2.06 1961 Envases Colombianos, S.A. Metal cans 0.70 - 0.70 1961-1968 Morfeo-Productos para el Hogar, S.A. Home furniture 0.08 0.09 0.17 1961 Electromanufacturas, S.A. Electrical equipment 0.50 - 0.50 1962 Corporacion Financiera Development Colombiana financing - 2.02 2.02 1962-1963 Corporacion Financiera Development - 2.04 2.04 Nacional financing 1963-1967 Compania Colombiana de Textiles 1.98 0.15 2.13 1968-1969 Tejidos, S.A. 1964-1970 Corporacion Financiera de Development Caldas financing - 0.81 0.81 1964-1968 Forjas de Colombia, S.A. Steel forging - 1.27 1.27 1966 Almacenes Generales de Warehousing 1.00 - 1.00 Deposito Santa Fe, S.A. 1966 Industria Ganadera Livestock 1.00 0.58 1.58 Colombiana, S.A. 1967-70-74 ENKA de Colombia, S.A. Textiles 5.00 2.61 7.61 1969 Compania de Desarrollo de Tourism - 0.01 0.01 Hoteles y Turismo, Ltda. (HOTURISMO) 1969-1973 Corporacion Financiera del Development - 0.45 0.45 Norte financing 1969 Corporacion Financiera del Development - 0.43 0.43 Valle financing 1970 Promotora de Hoteles de Tourism 0.23 0.11 0.34 Turismo Medellin, S.A. 1970-1977 Pro-Hoteles, S.A. Tourism 0.80 0.25 1.05 1973-1975 Corporacion Colombiana de Housing - 0.46 0.46 Ahorro y Vivienda 1974 Cementos Boyaca, S.A. Cement 1.50 - 1.50 1975 Cementos del Caribe, S.A. Cement 3.60 - 3.60 1976 Las Brisas Mining 6.00 - 6.00 1977 Promotora de la Interconexion de los Gasoductos de la Costa Atlantica S.A. Utilities 13.00 2.00 15.00 1977 Compania Colombiana de Clinker, Cement and S.A. Construction Material 2.43 - 2.43 Total Gross Commitments 40.30 13.36 53.66 Less cancellations, terminations, repayments and sales 19.89 5.63 25.52 Total commitments now held by IFC 20.41 7.73 28.14 Total undisbursed 21.33 0.74 22.07 ANNEX II Page 3 of 7 C. PROJECTS IN EXECUTION /1 1. Ln No. 575 Electric Power (Interconnection); US$18 million, December 1968. Effective date; February 25, 1969 Closing Date: original - February 29, 1972 current - July 31, 1977 The original project was completed and commercially operational in 1971. The Bank agreed that an undisbursed balance could be used to finance a 220 kv transmission line, Guatape - Barrancabermeja. The cost of the line is estimated at US$7.2 million of which about US$4.1 million represents the foreign component. Work on the line is almost fully completed. 2. Ln No. 680 Highways VI; US$32 million, June 1970. Effective date: March 29, 1971 Closing date: original - November 30, 1974 current - November 30, 1978 The largest component of the project, the paving program, has experienced considerable cost increases and delays. As of this writing, seven sections in the program are still under construction and about 200 km still to be paved. Project completion is now expected for 1979. The other components of the project were completed with much less delay. The Ministry of Public Works has taken several steps to hasten project execution and strengthen the performance of contractors. 3. Ln No. 681 Chivor Hydroelectric Power; US$52.3 million, June 1970. Effective date: September 1, 1970 Closing date: Original - June 30, 1977 Current - December 31, 1977 The project has experienced considerable delay and project costs are expected to be 35% higher than originally estimated. Work is now proceed- ing satisfactorily and the first generating units are expected to be put into service in the next few weeks. 4. Ln No. 682 Cali Water Supply and Sewerage; US$18.5 million, June 1970. Effective date: September 2, 1970 Closing date: original - June 30, 1974 current - June 30, 1977 The loan is almost fully disbursed. /1 These notes are designed to inform the Executive Directors regarding the progress of projects in execution, and in particular to report any problems which are being encountered, and the action being taken to remedy them. They should be read in this sense, and with the understand- ing that they do not purport to present a balanced evaluation of strengths and weaknesses in project execution. ANNEX II Page 4 of 7 5. Ln No. 738 Palmira Water Supply and Sewerage; US$2 million, May 1971. Effective date: December 29, 1971 Closing Date: original - March 1, 1975 current - March 1, 1977 As of June 30, 1977, about 85% of the loan amount was disbursed. The Bank is now awaiting detailed proposals from the company as to the use of about US$300,000 still undisbursed. 6. Ln No. 740 Telecommunications II; US$15 million, May 1971. Effective date: August 16, 1971 Closing Date: June 30, 1977 Contracts for all Bank-financed goods have been signed and technical and financial consultants have been retained. Due to initial delays in the procurement of project equipment, some of the project's works will be completed 18 months behind original schedule. The loan is almost fully disbursement. 7. Ln No. 741 Water Supply (Bogota II); US$88 million, May 1971. Effective date: August 16, 1971 Closing Date: June 30, 1978 Disbursements up to June 30, 1977 amounted to 67% of this loan. Slow progress in the construction of the vital Palacio - Rio Blanco Tunnel is the main reason for the project's delay; the original contractor was replaced by another firm which is performing satisfactorily. 8. Ln No. 849 Irrigation (Atlantico II); US$5 million, June 1972. Effective date: November 14, 1972 Closing Date: March 31, 1978 The project is the second and final phase of a scheme to develop about 17,000 ha of seasonally inundated land for agricultural production. Work is continuing satisfactorily on project roads and a main drainage canal; the final two main drainage canals are scheduled to be completed during 1977. Land clearing, tertiary drainage works and allocation to farmers are behind schedule, but improved in 1976. The organization and settlement of farmers within the project areas and the technical assistance and farm credit oper- ations are not yet satisfactory. At Government request, the Bank has agreed to cancel US$2.8 million of the original amount of the loan. 9. Ln No. 860 Medium-Size Cities Water Supply and Sewerage Project; US$9.1 million, October 1972. Effective date: March 7, 1973 Closing Date: original - September 30, 1976 current - September 30, 1978 ANNEX II Page 5 of 7 As of June 30, 1977, about 50% of the loan amount was disbursed. Disbursements were delayed due to initial project management problems, but progress of works has since accelerated. 10. Ln No. 874 Guatape II lHydroelectric Power Project; US$56 million, January 1973. Effective date: March 13, 1973 Closing Date: December 31, 1978 The progress of the work is generally satisfactory except for delays in the resettlement of El Penol and Guatape villages, which means that filling the Santa Rita reservoir cannot be started before mid-1978, three years behind schedule. This would be likely to lead to an energy deficit in the interconnected system from 1978 to 1981. The revised project cost estimate is substantially above appraisal estimates, mainly due to higher costs of the works at El Penol and Guatape. The Borrower experienced serious financial problems but as a result of a series of tariff increases, the company is projected to achieve the covenanted rate of return in 1977. Finan- cial gaps, however, remain to be met if the investment program is to be com- pleted on schedule. 11. Ln No. 903 Development Finance Companies V; US$60 million, May 1973. Effective date: November 9, 1973 Closing Date: December 31, 1977 The loan is fully committed. Disbursements are expected to be completed by the Closing Date. 12. Ln No. 920 Education III; US$21.2 million, July 1973. Effective date: January 10, 1974 Closing Date: original - June 30, 1977 current - December 30, 1979 Project implementation had been suspended in mid-1975 pending rede- finition of sector priorities.by the Government. Implementation has resumed recently after the Bank agreed to reallocate part of the loan to finance rural primary schools instead of rural secondary schools as originally proposed. As the number of primary school graduates increase, the primary schools will gradually become secondary school centers. 13. Ln No. 926 Sixth Railway Project; US$25 million, August 1973. Effective date: December 6, 1973 Closing Date: original - June 30, 1976 current - December 31, 1977 The operation of the railway has improved and for the first time since 1974 the 1976 traffic approximately equalled the previous year's level (in terms of ton-kms it was slightly higher). The financial condition of the ANNEX II Page 6 of 7 railway, however, continued to deteriorate as tariff increases have not kept pace with cost increases. In 1976, the operating ratio of 137 did not meet the appraisal target of 104. As a result, the railway has requested financial support from the Government. Track rehabilitation work and procurement have improved, but derailments and availability of rolling stock continue to be poor. 14. Ln No. 971 Preinvestment Studies Project; US$8 million, March 1974. Effective date: June 27, 1974 Closing Date: December 31, 1978 The Bank has approved 26 sub-projects. Commitments under the Bank loan are proceeding at a satisfactory rate. 15. Ln No. 1071 Small-Scale Industry; US$5.5 million, January 1975. Effective date: May 20, 1975 Closing Date: June 30, 1978 After a slow start due to a change of management in Corporacion Financiera Popular, the beneficiary institution, commitments are moving well and progress is satisfactory. The second tranche was released by the Bank in view of the satisfactory performance of CFP. It is expected that the loan will be fully committed by December 31, 1977. 16. Ln No. 1072 Second Multi-City Water Supply and Sewerage Project; US$27 million, January 1975. Effective date: April 14, 1975 Closing Date: June 30, 1980 There were substantial delays in making the eight subloans effective. The last subloan (Barranquilla) was made effective on September 9, 1976. After a slow start, project implementation has progressed steadily in most cities. 17. Ln No. 1073 Telecommunications III; US$15 million, January 1975. Effective date: April 14, 1975 Closing Date: December 31, 1978 Thus far, US$8.9 million has been disbursed. Contracts for all Bank-financed goods have been awarded, and work is proceeding satisfactorily. 18. Ln No. 1118 Caqueta Rural Settlement Project; US$19.5 million, June 1975. Effective date: April 1, 1976 Closing Date: October 31, 1979 This loan became effective on April 1, 1976 after a six-month delay. Since then, implementation has proceeded rapidly and some of the lost time regained. Road and bridge construction is well ahead of schedule (79 km have been completed). School construction, however, is behind schedule, while the credit program is proceeding well. ANNEX II Page 7 of 7 19. Ln No. 1163 Cordoba 2 Agricultural Development Project; US$21 million, September 1975. Effective date: March 30, 1976 Closing Date: December 31, 1980 A few months after effectiveness, the Government decided to give responsibility for project civil works to another agency. This decision delayed the initiation of the project. Implementation is now proceeding satisfactorily, but still behind schedule. 20. Ln No. 1223 Sixth Development Finance Companies Project; US$80.0 million, March 1976. Effective date: September 1, 1976 Closing Date: June 30, 1980 This loan is proceeding satisfactorily and according to schedule. 21. Ln No. 1352 Integrated Rural Development Project; US$52.0 million, January 1977. This loan was signed on January 7, 1977 and has not yet become effective. Works, however, are proceeding as scheduled. 22. Ln No. 1357 Second Agricultural Credit Project; US$64.0 million, February 1977. This loan was signed on February 4, 1977 and has not yet become effective. ANNEX III Page 1 of 2 COLOMBIA NUTRITION IMPROVEMENT PROJECT SUPPLEMENTARY DATA SHEET Section I: Timetable of Key Events (a) Time taken to prepare project: 2 years (b) Agency which prepared project: DNP (c) First presentation to Bank: October 1975 (d) First mission to review project: January 1976 (e) Departure of appraisal mission: January 1977 (f) Completion of negotiations: July 1977 (g) Planned Date of Effectiveness: January 1978 Section II: Special Bank Implementation Actions Intensive supervision of the health, family gardens and monitoring and evaluation components would be scheduled in the first year of project implementation to assist in the initial stages of implementation of those components. Section III: Special Conditions 1. Assurances were obtained that: (a) By January 1, 1978, the Borrower would prepare a health care training program satisfactory to the Bank (paragraph 42). (b) By January 1, 1978, the Borrower would hire local consultants, whose qualifications and terms and conditions are satisfactory to the Bank, for positions in the MOH and the regional health offices (paragraph 42). (c) The list and scope of activities to be financed under the Project Management Fund would be agreed upon by the Borrower and the Bank (paragraph 48). (d) The Borrower would complete an evaluation, under terms of reference satisfactory to the Bank, of the community health care system by September 30, 1978 and revise the pace and scope for the system's development on a basis satisfactory to the Bank (paragraph 49). ANNEX III Page 2 of 2 (e) The PAN Group would be adequately staffed through 1985 with key staff having adequate qualifications and job descriptions (paragraph 51). (f) The Borrower would maintain existing arrangements for the recovery from beneficiaries of (i) a portion of investment costs of the health posts and the water supply system and (ii) the entire operating and maintenance costs of the water supply system (paragraph 57). (g) The Borrower would recover at least the costs of drugs and medicines from beneficiaries of the community health system (paragraph 58). (h) Beneficiaries would contribute at least 50% of the costs of installing latrines and their shelters (paragraph 58). 2. A condition of effectiveness would be that INAS and ICBF each sign subsidiary agreements with the Borrower and MOH sign a subsidiary agreement with DNP (paragraph 61). 3. Disbursements for activities undertaken by each of the remaining agencies would be made only after its subsidiary agreement with the Borrower had been signed (paragraph 61). 7i3- - ~~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~~~~~74- 7'0- Rik alhov \ \ 50 U T H A §ICO}b +;' ' }R i gOe 12, - 23MAGDALi- I r t ' l { \ M7r0~~~~~~~~~codmbo b_ > o \ < Li \&~~~~~~ ~ ~ ~~~ ~~CESAR/ lo .i/ .dtP7t1 ... ... ptl bys e/h 'S~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~ ~~~~~~~OT /I )SU C REl Vl/ll*as za-1ae \ X ,¢ "'s " ' i t < ? ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~ ~~V E N E Z U E L A - c t i - - ~~Brranf , _ - - '. Ocean A//anco_ ATLANTICO '~~~rI~ T.:. OcIar C, rgn , I - /_ _ r a r | | ~ 'F F- ! | ~; ' 2_ A R A U C A \ -- ~ 0 tir tr,v,tah' sl,rr rl-, -It rta brettl , ,f - _ ,X * P~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ aIESR crrryrro re poo Or rOe l 1a'; ''i i/1 1-i4 l''~a 'i ~''-v \ ,, 1^!'- -MorZ, , )SU,CRE1 .& - ANARE O c e a n 401 , --'tt ,i:..r,,,,. - , V I C H A D A oi 1`r1 H I I -1 K%t '--';.tgs 1% / rnV A U P E S o. E C ADO 4 - COLOMBIA c NUTRITION IMPROVEMENT PROJEC NUTRITION PROGRAM REGIONS A M A Z O N ASi D.ppuI.men, F-non-d by USAID P-oj.c }I O c Altn 4/I.t !ISq *,n lwt.tLC Ci-te ~I ____de(meers Arsl-Cimote _ B R A Z I l \- 1 Above 4,000 below 7- Alpan -1 _ _! 000 - 4,000 below 12- Mooln .. I-d ; 2,000 - 3,000 Not less thon 12- Cold E R U , .1000 - 2p000 Not la. rt- 175- Te.pet . _Up f. 1,000 Oe, 24 Hot *~~ iRNers o jl / 4--R_ = Lw-oitwraool bou.do-ie, KOkETERS 20-cr 7,8- 7MIl;ES _- 0°- .. . iD