~~~.. -.--.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.~. ...,.... .. . WORLD BANK TECHNICAL PAPER NO. 334 \WrP 33L0 Work in progress 9 for public discussion Performance Monitoring Indicators Handbook AGRICULTURE 4 - 3g1, i', I AIUSTMUENT EDUCATION ENVIRONMENT FMANCIAI SECTOR - -x.t - : @HOUSING AND UR_AN DEVELOPMENT _.USTRY AND MINING } - _ t ~~~~~~~~~~~~~OIll AND GAS POPULAnON, HEALTH. * a _ i: AND NUrRMON ? POVERTY REDUCTION _ SECTOR DEVELOPMENT -1 ',Wiiun MANAGEMENT TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE TELECOMMUNICATIONS TRANSPORT - AND WASTEWATER Roberto lIosse Leigh Ellen Sontheimer RECENT WORLD BANK TECHNICAL PAPERS No. 256 Campbell, Design and Operation of Smallholder Irrigation in South Asia No. 258 De Geyndt, Managing the Quality of Health Care in Developing Countries No. 259 Chaudry, Reid, and Malik, editors, Civil Service Reform in Latin America and the Caribbean: Proceedings of a Conference No. 260 Humphrey, Payment Systems: Principles, Practice, and Improvements No. 261 Lynch, Provision for Children with Special Educational Needs in the Asia Region No. 262 Lee and Bobadilla, Health Statisticsfor the Americas No. 263 Le Moigne, Subramanian, Xie, and Giltner, editors, A Guide to the Formulation of Water Resources Strategy No. 264 Miller and Jones, Organic and Compost-Based Growing Mediafor Tree Seedling Nurseries No. 265 Viswanath, Building Partnershipsfor Poverty Reduction: The Participatory Project Planning Approach of the Women's Enterprise Management Training Outreach Program (WEMTOP) No. 266 Hill and Bender, Developing the Regulatory Environmentfor Competitive Agricultural Markets No. 267 Valdes and Schaeffer, Surveillance of Agricultural Prices and Trade: A Handbookfor the Dominican Republic No. 268 Valdes and Schaeffer, Surveillance of Agricultural Prices and Trade: A Handbookfor Colombia No. 269 Scheierling, Overcoming Agricultural Pollution of Water: The Challenge of Integrating Agricultural and Environmental Policies in the European Union No. 270 Banerjee, Rehabilitation of Degraded Forests in Asia No. 271 Ahmed, Technological Development and Pollution Abatement: A Study of How Enterprises Are Finding Alternatives to Chlorofluorocarbons No. 272 Greaney and Kellaghan, Equity Issues in Public Examinations in Developing Countries No. 273 Grimshaw and Helfer, editors, Vetiver Grassfor Soil and Water Conservation, Land Rehabilitation, and Embankment Stabilization: A Collection of Papers and Newsletters Compiled by the Vetiver Network No. 274 Govindaraj, Murray, and Chellaraj, Health Expenditures in Latin America No. 275 Heggie, Management and Financing of Roads: An Agenda for Reform No. 276 Johnson, Quality Review Schemes for Auditors: Their Potentialfor Sub-Saharan Africa No. 277 Convery, Applying Environmental Economics in Africa No. 278 Wijetilleke and Karunaratne, Air Quality Management: Considerationsfor Developing Countries No. 279 Anderson and Ahzned, The Casefor Solar Energy Investments No. 280 Rowat, Malik, and Dakolias, Judicial Reform in Latin America and the Caribbean: Proceedings of a World Bank Conference No. 281 Shen and Contreras-Hermosilla, Environmental and Economic Issues in Forestry: Selected Case Studies in Asia No. 282 Kim and Benton, Cost-Benefit Analysis of the Onchocerciasis Control Program (OCP) No. 283 Jacobsen, Scobie and Duncan, Statutory Intervention in Agricultural Marketing: A New Zealand Perspective No. 284 Valdes and Schaeffer in collaboration with Roldos and Chiara, Surveillance of Agricultural Price and Trade Policies: A Handbookfor Uruguay No. 285 Brehm and Castro, The Marketfor Water Rights in Chile: Major Issues No. 286 Tavoulareas and Charpentier, Clean Coal Technologiesfor Developing Countries No. 287 Gillham, Bell, Arin, Matthews, Rumeur, and Hearn, Cotton Production Prospectsfor the Next Decade No. 288 Biggs, Shaw, and Srivastiva, Technological Capabilities and Learning in African Enterprises No. 289 Dinar, Seidl, Olem, Jorden, Duda, and Johnson, Restoring and Protecting the World's Lakes and Reservoirs No. 290 Weijenberg, Dagg, Kampen Kalunda, Mailu, Ketema, Navarro, and Abdi Noor, Strengthening National Agricultual Research Systems in Eastern and Central Africa: A Frameworkfor Action No. 291 Vald6s and Schaeffer in collaboration with Errazuriz and Francisco, Surveillance of Agricultural Price and Trade Policies: A Handbookfor Chile No. 292 Gorriz, Subramanian, and Simas, Irrigation Management Transfer in Mexico: Process and Progress No. 293 Preker and Feachem, Market Mechanisms and the Health Sector in Central and Eastern Europe No. 294 Valdes and Schaeffer in collaboration with Sturzenegger and Bebczuk, Surveillance of Agricultural Price and Trade Policies: A Handbookfor Argentina (List continues on the inside back cover) WORLD BANK TECHNICAL PAPER NO. 334 Performance Monitoring Indicators Handbook Roberto Mosse Leigh Ellen Sontheimer The World Bank Washington, D. C. Copyright © 1996 The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development/THE WORLD BANK 1818 H Street, N.W. Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A. All rights reserved Manufactured in the United States of America First printing September 1996 Technical Papers are published to communicate the results of the Bank's work to the development community with the least possible delay. The typescript of this paper therefore has not been prepared in accordance with the procedures appropriate to formal printed texts, and the World Bank accepts no responsibility for errors. Some sources cited in this paper may be informal documents that are not readily available. The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the author(s) and should not be attributed in any manner to the World Bank, to its affiliated organizations, or to members of its Board of Executive Directors or the countries they represent. 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The complete backlist of publications from the World Bank is shown in the annual Index of Publications, which contains an alphabetical title list (with full ordering information) and indexes of subjects, authors, and countries and regions. The latest edition is available free of charge from the Distribution Unit, Office of the Publisher, The World Bank, 1818 H Street, N.W., Washington, D.C. 20433, U.S.A., or from Publica- tions, The World Bank, 66, avenue d'Iena, 75116 Paris, France. ISSN: 0253-7494 Both authors work in the Bank's Operations Policy Group in the Operations Policy Department. Robert Mosse is operations adviser; Leigh Ellen Sontheimer is a consultant. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Mosse, Roberto, 1944- Performance monitoring indicators handbook / Roberto Mosse and Leigh Ellen Sontheimer. p. cm. - (World Bank technical paper ; no. 334) Includes bibliographical references. ISBN 0-8213-3731-9 1. World Bank. 2. Economic development projects-Evaluation. 1. Sontheimer, Leigh Ellen, 1964- . II. World Bank. III. Title. IV. Series. HG3881.5.W57M685 1996 338.9'0068'6-dc2O 96-27346 CIP CONTENTS FOREWORD V ACKNOWLEDGMENTS VI PERFORMANCE MONITORING INDICATORS What are performance monitoring indicators? 1 Why are performance monitoring indicators important? 1 Portfolio Management Task Force findings 1 OED studies 2 Next Steps Action Plan 2 What are the advantages of performance monitoring indicators? 3 How are performance monitoring indicators developed? 4 The logical framework 4 Antecedents to the logical framework 5 Importance of clarifying assumptions 7 Hierarchy of objectives and the link to performcnce indicators 8 Organizing the hierarchy of objectives 8 Types of performance indicators 11 Results indicators 11 Risk indicators 1 4 Efficacy indicators 14 Ways of measuring performance 15 Direct measures 15 Indirect measures 15 Early pointers: intermediate and leading indicators 15 Quantitative and qualitative measures 16 Measurement scope 17 Special studies 1 7 General principles for selecting indicators 18 Problems with defining indicators 1 8 Problems with measuring impact 1 9 Indicator benchmarks and international comparators 19 How do performance monitoring indicators affect the Bank's work? 19 Economic and sector work 19 Project cycle 20 Project identification, preparation, and preappraisal 20 iii Appraisal and negotiations 21 Implementation and supervision 21 Evaluation 21 Performance indicators and project management 21 Field-level implementers 22 Implementation unit managers 22 Borrower officials and Bank staff 23 Some related issues 23 Good practice in monitoring and evaluation 23 Data collection and management 24 Institutional arrangements and capacity building 25 Feedback from monitoring and evaluation efforts and interpreting indicators 25 Relation to loan covenants 26 Working at cross purposes 26 Last word 27 Notes 27 SECTORAL NOTES ON INDICATORS 28 What topics do the notes cover? 28 How were the notes developed? 29 How are indicators selected from the notes? 29 Where are the notes available? 29 How to learn more 29 EXAMPLES OF INDICATORS 3 1 Table 1 Honduras Basic Education Project (SAR 13791-HO, March 8, 1995) 32 Table 2 Indonesia Rural Electrification Project (SAR 12920-IND, February 3, 1995) 33 Table 3 Indonesia: Second Agricultural Research Management Project (SAR 13933-IND, April 21, 1995) 35 Table 4 Lithuania Siauliai Environment Project (SAR 14981 -LT, November 9, 1995) 37 Table 5 Peru Rural Roads Rehabilitation and Maintenance Project (SAR 14939-PE, November 6, 1995) 38 Table 6 The Philippines Women's Health and Safe Motherhood Project (SAR 13566-PH, January 27, 1995) 40 Table 7 Venezuela Agricultural Extension Project (SAR 13591 -VE, March 7, 1995) 42 Table 8 Chad: Structural Adjustment Credit (President's Report P-6785-CD) 43 Table 9 Morocco: Financial Markets Development Loan (President's Report P-6633-MOR) 45 iv FOREWORD As part of ongoing efforts to improve the quality and impact of its work, the World Bank is placing new emphasis on the use of performance monitoring indicators. These indicators, which are based on a logical framework of project objectives and end- means relationships, help generate more thoughtful, logically constructed project designs. And because they serve as benchmarks against which to measure project progress toward development objectives, they result in more meaningful project moni- toring and evaluation. Over the post two years Bank staff have developed notes on suggested performance monitoring indicators for each of the main sectors in which the Bank is active. These notes offer a framework for use by task managers, borrowers, and pro- ject implementation units in analyzing the relationship between objectives and moni- torable outcomes and impacts. They also offer a menu of possible indicators. This handbook, which introduces and supplements the sector notes, is divided into three sections. The first section explains why menus of indicators were developed; provides the background on the logical framework and typology of indicators; describes how indicators are developed and applied in project design, supervision, and evaluation; and discusses important issues related to the meaningful use of indi- cators. The second section describes the sector notes on indicators and their use and explains how to get copies. The third section provides examples of performance indi- cators developed for Bank-financed projects and shows how the indicators were developed on the basis of each project's development objectives. Myrna Alexander Director, Operations Policy May 1996 V ACKNOWLE DGME NTS This handbook was edited by Patricia Rogers of the World Bank's Operations Policy Department and Meto de Coquereaumont and Paul Holtz of American Writing Corpo- ration. Laurel Morais and Christian Perez (American Writing Corporation) laid out the text. The authors are grateful to Gerald Britan (U.S. Agency for International Develop- ment), Moses Thompson (Teams Technologies, Inc.), Ulrich Thumm (Operations Evalua- tion Department, World Bank), and Deborah Wetzel (Development Economics, World Bank) for their valuable contributions and comments. The authors also thank the following Bank task managers for preparing objectives and indicators matrixes: Maria Dalupan, Hennie Deboeck, Dely Gapasin, Jose Luis Irigoyen, Rama Lakshminarayanan, David Nielson, Arun Sanghvi, Anna Sant'Anna, Stanley Scheyer, Sari Soderstrom, and Christopher Walker. vi PERFORMANCE MONITORING INDICATORS What are performance monitoring indicators? Performance indicators are measures of project impacts, outcomes, outputs, and inputs that are monitored during project implementation to assess progress toward project objectives. They are also used later to evaluate a project's success. Indicators organize information in a way that clarifies the relationships between a project's impacts, outcomes, outputs, and inputs and help to identify problems along the way that can impede the achievement of project objectives. Why are performance monitoring indicators important? In recent years several important studies-most notably the Portfolio Management Task Force Report and reviews by the Operations Evaluation Department (OED)- have found that the monitoring and evaluation of Bank-financed projects did not focus adequately on the factors that are critical for positive development impact. Both the task force and OED concluded that performance indicators should be integrated with the monitoring and evaluation procedures used by the Bank and its borrowers. The Portfolio Management Task Force Report (also known as the Wapenhans Report) Porifollo analyzed the factors that affect the development impact of Bank operations.1 As part Management Task of this analysis the task force focused on how evaluation methodologies, including the Farce findings calculation of economic rate of return and the project rating methodology, were used during project appraisal and supervision to enhance the quality of Bank-supported projects. The task force found that project ratings were not providing implementation units, borrowers, and Bank task managers with adequate feedback about progress toward development impact for several reasons: * Too much emphasis was placed on the mechanics (physical and financial) of pro- ject implementation. * The risks and factors that most influence project outcomes were poorly identified. * Objective criteria, transparency, and-since the methodology depended on the judgment of individuals-consistency across units were lacking. * Ratings tended to be overly optimistic. 1 Without appropriate feedback, none of the parties concerned with project outcomes could make appropriate, informed decisions about whether and how to adjust project design or implementation arrangements to better achieve a project's intended objectives. A related problem is that the objectives themselves are often not well thought out or clearly articulated, clouding the development of appropriate performance moni- toring indicators and making monitoring and evaluation even more difficult. Further, the task force pointed out that the Bank's traditional method of appraisal and evaluation of development impact-the calculation of economic rate of return or net present value-cannot be applied to all projects and that for some projects, a meaningful cost-benefit analysis is not feasible. Even for projects for which net present value or economic rate of return is calculated, Bank practice is to calculate it only a few times-during appraisal, during a midterm review, upon restructuring if necessary, and at the time of the Implementation Completion Report. Neither the cal- culations nor the critical variables that affect them are monitored explicitly throughout implementation. Moreover, the report pointed out, in many instances costs and bene- fits could be more easily identified and measured with performance indicators. The task force concluded that the Bank's project rating methodology and supervision reporting system should be adapted to include the use of project performance monitor- ing indicators derived from a project's development objectives and implementation plan. OED studies Two OED studies reviewing the Bank's record on the monitoring and evaluation of projects reinrorced the findings of the task force report.2 In fiscal 1 994 a study assess- ing twenty years of Bank projects found that Bank guidelines and directives on moni- toring and evaluation had not been followed adequately, either during project appraisal (when monitoring and evaluation are planned) or during implementation. But the study also found evidence that the situation was changing. A follow-up study of monitoring and evaluation plans in a sample of fiscal 1995 projects suggests that the quality of such planning has improved. The improvement is evident in the rising use of performance monitoring indicators-the share of projects with at least some indicators rose from 72 percent in fiscal 1 993 to 77 percent in fis- cal 1995. Nevertheless, the expanding use of indicators has not been matched by arrangements for data collection or monitoring and evaluation capacity-building efforts in either the Bank or borrowing countries. Relatively few projects (14 percent of the sample reviewed by OED in fiscal 1995) achieve overall good practice in com- prehensive design or use of monitoring and evaluation. And performance monitoring indicators, although more widely used, are weak in structure and usually do not fol- low a logical framework or a typology, and there is not always follow-through on data collection. Next Steps In response to these concerns, Bank management has made efforts to foster the use of Action Plan performance indicators. In the Next Steps Action Plan, which was designed to imple- ment the recommendations of the Wapenhans task force, management called for incor- porating performance monitoring indicators in the project rating system used for project monitoring (through Form 590 and the Annual Report on Portfolio Performance), to 2 better monitor progress toward a project's development objectives. Management also recognized that the Bank needed to develop sector-specific indicators to help borrow- ers and Bank staff define project objectives more narrowly and to derive logical mea- sures of project outcomes and impact in order to measure achievement of project objectives. The Bank also needed to support the use of indicators in the revised project rating system. Therefore the action plan called for the sector departments within the Central Vice Presidencies to develop sets of sector-specific indicators that are most rele- vant to project design and monitoring-the sector notes on indicators discussed in the second part of this handbook. Staff would then be required to ensure that key sector- specific project impact indicators were identified in project appraisal documentation and that progress was monitored against these benchmarks. What are the advantages of performance monitoring indicators? Performance monitoring involves periodically measuring a project's progress toward explicit short- and long-term objectives and giving feedback on the results to decision- makers who can use the information in various ways to improve performance (box 1). Box 1. Uses of performance indicators STPATEGIc PtANNING. For any program or activity, From a development project to a sales plan, incorpo- rating performance measurement into the design forces greater consideration of the critical assump- tions that underlie that program's relationships and causal paths.' Thus performance indicators help clarify the objectives and logic of the program. PERFORMANCE ACCOUNTING. Performance indicators can help inform resource allocation decisions if they are used to direct resources to the most successful activities and thereby promote the most efficient use of resources. FORECASTING AND EARLY WARNING DURING PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION. Measuring progress against indicators may point toward future performance, providing feedback that can be used for planning, identifying areas needing improvement, and suggesting what can be done. MEASURING PROGRAM RESULTS. Good performance indicators measure what a program has achieved rela- tive to its objectives, not just what it has completed; thus they promote accountability. PROGRAM MARKETING AND PJBUC RELAnONS. Performance indicators can be used to demonstrate program results to satisfy an external audience. Performance data can be used to communicate the value of a program or project to elected officials and the public. BENCHMARKING. Performance indicators can generate data against which to measure other projects or programs. They also provide a way to improve programs by learning from success, identifying good performers, and leaming from their experience to improve the performance of others. QUALITY MANAGEMENT. Performance indicators can be used to measure customer (beneficiary) satisfac- tion, and thereby assess whether and how the program is improving their lives. 1. Thomas J. Cook, Jerry VanSant, Leslie Stewort, and Jamie Adrian, 'Performance Meosurement: Lessons Learned for Development Management,' World Development 23181:1303-15 (19951. 3 For the purposes of the Bank and its clients the most significant benefits of performance indicators accrue in project design (strategic planning), project supervision and monitor- ing (forecasting results), and project evaluation (measuring results and quality manage- ment). The needed information and data collection egforts become evident as project objectives are formulated. In a performance monitoring system, indicators serve as tools for measuring the flow of change. Baselines are the values of performance indicators at the beginning of the planning period; targets are the values at the end. The benefits of indicators come from their measurability and from their direct deriva- tion from project objectives, which are grounded in sector, economic, risk, and benefi- ciary analysis. Indicators specifically link a project's inputs and activities with quantified measures of expected outputs and impact. Before selecting indicators, the borrower or project implementation unit and the Bank must consider which measures of performance will tell them whether and how a project's proposed objectives are being achieved and who will benefit-thereby contributing to a more precise definition of the objectives. Borrowers and the Bank must also ask whether the necessary data are avail- able and decide what users should do in response to the indicator outcomes. With indicators, monitoring and evaluation is more compelling because it is objec- tive, not based on personal judgments or pure description. Furthermore, indicators hold a project's ultimate goals clearly in view throughout implementation. If designed and used correctly, indicators meet the specific information needs and scope of authority of all the parties concerned with implementation-field staff, implementation unit, borrower, task manager, and Bank management. The implementation unit and its subunits are most interested-and in a better position to respond to-indicators of inputs, risk factors, and outputs. The Bank and its borrowers are most interested in indicators of output, outcome, and development impact. Thus the indicators help all parties focus on the areas of greatest concern to them. How are performance monitoring indicators developed? Performance indicators must be based on the unique objectives of individual projects.3 But any set of performance indicators should also be based on an underlying logical framework that links project objectives with project components and their respective inputs, activities, and outputs at different implementation stages. The framework is objective-driven, since any action under a project should be aimed at achieving its objectives. Given the project's development objectives, the best mix of outputs to achieve these objectives and components that will yield these outputs are derived. A general schematic of the point of view of the logical framework is shown in box 2. Understanding how to derive performance indicators from a project's objectives and components requires some understanding of the concept of the logical framework. The Iogicl The logical framework is a methodology for conceptualizing projects and an analytic frmework tool that has the power to communicate a complex project clearly and understand- ably on a single sheet of paper. It is a participatory planning tool whose power depends on how well it incorporates the full range of views of intended beneficiaries 4 Box 2. Point of view of the logicl framework DEvELoWaq OSECUnE Describes the proiect's real outcome-the impac that the project's outputs will hae on the beneficiary, institution, or system in terms of changed behavior or improved perwformrc. The development objective defines the projects success. PROJECT OUuws Define what the project can 6e held directly accountable for producing-the projeds deliv- erables the goods and services it will produce. Typically, outputs are indepwdnt, synergis- tic, and integrated. Clusters of ac6ivifies that rdefine howv the products and services Wfill 6e deli-YOO (hchnical ossistance, physical infrastructure, and the lilke). Source: Team Technologies, Inc. and others who have a stake in the project design. It is best used to help project designers and stakeholders: e Set proper objectives * Define indicators of success Identify key activity clusters (project components) * Define critical assumptions on which the project is based * Identify means of verifying project accomplishments * Define resources required for implementation. As an up-front planner the logical framework can be used to help design tools for project implementation and evaluation. Knowing its advantages and limitations helps in assessing the value of the logical framework methodology at various points in the project cycle (box 3). Antecedents to the logical framework The logical framework can improve the identification, preparation, and performance appraisal process by clarifying a project's design and making it transparent to the borrower, the lender, and beneficiaries and other stakeholders. The framework assumes that projects are instruments of change and that they are selected from 5 Ibx 3. Advantages and lihitations of using the logkal framework method ADVANTAGES LMTA11ONS * Ensures that fundamental queshons are asked * May give rise to rigidity in project administra- and weaknesses are analyzed in order to provide tion when objectives and extemal factors specified decisionmakers with better and more relevant at the outset are overemphasized. This con be information. avoided by regular project reviews at which the key elements can be reevaluated and adjusted. * Guides systematic and logical analysis of the interrelated elements that constitute a . As a general analytic tool, is policy neutral on well-designed project. questions of income distribution, employment opportunities, access to resources, local * Improves planning 6y highlighting linkages participation, cost and feasibility of strategies and technology, and effects on the environment. between project elements and extemcal factors. * Facilitates common understanding and better . Is only one of several tools to be used during communication between decisionmakers, managers, project preparation, implementation, and and other parties involved in the project. evaluafion. It does not replace beneficiary analysis; fime planning; economic, financial, and * Used along vith systematic monitoring, ensures cost-benefit analysis; environmental impact continuity of approach when original project staff assessment; or similar tools. are replaced. * May facilitate communication between govemments and donor agencies once it has been adopted by more institutions. . Makes it easier to undertake sectoral studies and comparative studies in generol, if used widely. among alternatives as the most cost-effective way of achieving a desired outcome. It brings together as its antecedents several project management perspectives: * Results-oriented management. Projects begin with a set of objectives rather than components, and success is measured by the degree to which development objec- tives have been met. Management is held accountable for results. * Basic scientific method. Projects are experiments undertaken in an uncertain world. From this point of view a project is a structured process for learning about what produces results. This perspective assumes that projects are learning systems. * Systems analysis. A project, like a system, is not defined until we have defined the larger system of which it is a part. Projects take place not in a vacuum but in a rela- tionship with an external environment of organizations, institutions, and other projects. * Contract law. Every contract (project) has the same basic features: . A set of deliverables (outputs) . Circumstances that constitute force majeure (assumptions) . A meeting of the minds about what the deliverables will produce (development objective). * Cause and effect. The core concept underlying the logical framework is cause and effect. The better the cause and effect linkages between objectives, the better the pro- ject design. By definition, each project has this if-then or cause and effect logic embedded in it. If the project produces certain outcomes under certain conditions, 6 then it can be expected to achieve certain other outcomes. For example, if the project supplies farmers with improved seed and puts a credit system in place, and assuming there is adequate rainfall, then production will increase. The logical framework forces project planners to make this cause and effect logic explicit, but it does not guarantee a good design. The validity of the cause and effect logic depends on the quality and experience of the design team. Importance of clarifying assumptions Assumptions are risk and enabling factors-external conditions that are outside the direct control of the project (figure 1). Achieving objectives can depend on whether assumptions hold true. Assumptions are made about the degree of uncertainty (degree of risk) between different levels of objectives. The lower the uncertainty that certain assumptions will hold true, the stronger the project design. Failing assumptions can derail a project as often as poorly executed outputs. If cause and effect relationships are the core concept of good project design, nec- essary and sufficient conditions are the corollary. The cause and effect relationships between levels in the project's hierarchy of objectives (inputs to outputs, outputs to out- comes and impact, impact to relevance) describe the necessary conditions for achiev- ing development objectives (for definition of terms see pages 12-1 3). This is the internal logic of the project. Also important are the sufficient conditions at each level for achieving the next higher level (conditions in which the next objective can be met). The sufficient condi- Figure 1. Assumptions/risks obout external factors must also be made expliet Program jectve Assumptions caegory/Couny Risks Assislonce Slrabgy Risks Development Assumptions/ objective Risks / Otput s tAssumptions/ Components t Assumplios/\ ~Ri spks I IF | >AND \ Note: This is a simplified representation of the logical framework (shown later in box 4), highlighting the importance of assumptions and risks. The two centrol columns (blank herel would normally contain performance indicators and monitoring and supervision measures for verifying each indicator. Source: Team Technologies, Inc. 7 tions between levels in the hierarchy of objectives are the assumptions. This is the external logic of the project. The objectives hierarchy (necessary conditions) plus the assumptions (sufficient conditions) together give one a much clearer idea of the pro- ject's design. This is what the logical framework graphically represents. Hierarchy of objectives and the link to performance indicators Users of the logical framework have come to agree on a common set of terms (out- comes, results, targets, indicators, outputs, goals, achievements, development objec- tives). These terms are essentially ways of referring to or classifying objectives. The logical framework assumes that there are several levels of objectives in a pro- ject (a hierarchy of objectives). Though there is no logical limit to the number of lev- els, most project teams find it difficult to manage more than four levels effectively. The logical framework typically specifies four. The World Bank uses indicators predicated on a framework that specifies three levels of objectives: inputs for project activities, outputs of project activities, and outcomes and impacts. For the World Bank's purposes, inputs and outputs correspond strictly to project management, while outcomes and impacts correspond to the project's development objectives. The Country Assistance Strategy reflects the agreement between the Bank and its borrowers on a country's overall development goals and the anticipated means- projects, economic and sector work, technical assistance-for the Bank (and other financiers) to help achieve them. Projects must show how their objectives are relevant to the realization of overall country development goals. For any project a set of performance indicators should be designed within the logi- cal framework. The development of performance indicators begins with the project's objectives and reflects the associated hierarchy of activities and their outputs and intended outcomes for each project component. The activities conducted and the results achieved at lower levels of objectives are inputs toward the achievement of higher-level project objectives, at the institutional, sectoral, program, or country level.5 The definition of indicators at each level thus hinges on the project's ultimate objec- tive, which can be modest Ifor example, to reduce the incidence of preventable dis- ease within a given population by increasing immunizations) or more ambitious in scale (to reduce child mortality). Organizing the hierarchy of objectives The logical framework presents schematically the hierarchy of project objectives, the performance indicators for measuring the achievement of each objective, the means of verifying each indicator, and the assumptions (risk and enabling factors) critical to achieving the next objective level. Box 4 illustrates a sample logical framework for a nutrition and child development project in Uganda. The relationships among project objectives-and the need for performance informa- tion-can be also be clarified by graphically depicting the overall program logic and performance expectations in an objectives tree (figure 2). The tree begins with the over- arching development objectives of a project (consistent with the objectives of the Coun- try Assistance Strategy), lists the lower-level outputs through which these objectives are 8 Box 4. Logkai fromework for the Uganda Nutrition and Child Developmen Prsct NARRA I suMRY PEWORMANC NDICATORS MONTOING AND RSUbSIO4N ASSmwPT AmD mS6 IMPACT (impact to relevance) * Improved health, nurition, * Reduced prevalence of protein * Noainal anthropomeiric * Oiler national programs in heath and cogniive status of young energy malnutrition-measured by survey (Immunizoaion, primary healh core), children underweight preschool children- food production, primary educaion are from 25% to 13% by 2003 sustained; synergy with then programs will achieve higher projed impoct Reduced micronuirient deficiency * Demogrophic and health problems (IDM prevalence reduced survey by 50% in endemic areas, anemia in children reduced to 33%, wormlood reduced to 50%, and xeophthalmia reduced io 2% by 2003) * Net enrollment in grode 1 * Schoa enrollment records increased to 80% by 2003 OUTCOMES (outcome to impoct) * Improved childcare, nutrition, . Number of children reached by . Annual projec report * UNICEF maintains interest in and health services services partnership with projed * Improved inoome generaion * Number oF women reached * Annual projed report . Governmen signs child bill into w copocity for women by services * Partnership with other donors L sustained OUTPUTS (output to outcome) * Established community-based * Number of children and women * Projedc monitoring survey, * Decentralizoaion policy implemented childcare program who participated in program household surveys * Number of health day * Project monitoring outreach efforts lounched reports * Number of ECD daycore centers * Projedc monitoring reports established * Established micronutrient * Number oF vitamin A capsules, . Projec monitaring reports * Distrid governments continue support program iron tablets distributed . Percentge of salt iodized * Survey somple of swt sold * Established women's income * Number of women who received * Projed monitaring reports component training in skills for livelihood/ childcare enterprise ACTIVITIES INPUTS (octivity to output) * Community-6ased growth * btal $42 million, including . Adiviies will 6e verified through * Sufficient interest from communities a monitoring programs operations and maintenance and regular projed monitoring monitoring and evaluation * Heoah-day outreoch programs * Matching grants Fr oommunity ECD center * Mass media campaigns * Gronts for women's livelihood * Mothers apply new skills and capocity building knowledge * Vitamin A capsules, iron tablet distributed * Iodizing of salt a Deworming compoign Task Manager: Marib Garcia. 9 Figure 2. Partial oblectlves troe for a hypothetkal chiM health proFgm OBJECTIVE Reduce child mortality Reoding down ansvers IMPACTS Reduced Improved Improved family Expanded the questions why and incidence of nutrition health practices availoble how? -whoat do we need to do to achiev preventable care this result? disease OUTCOMES Increased polio Increased other Increased use of immunizations immunizations oral rehydration Reading across answers OUTPUTS Expanded Increased Improved public the eshon whoat ese? school availability of awareness =at dditional things immunizations vaccines do we need to do to achieve the next I= = =aobjecthve? ACTIVITIES Incrase Improve Expand supplies training facilities Reading up answers the question 'sa whato? -what is the INPUTS Provide Enforce Provide significonce af our funds regulations vaccines accomphdshments? Note that this is a partial objectives tree. Only the elements in bold are expanded in the figure to show the various activities and the intended outcomes, outputs, and inputs needed to achieve the project objective. The some treatment can be applied to all elements in the figure to complete the objectives tree. Source: Adopted from Gerald M. Britan, 'Measuring Program Performance for Federal Agencies: Issues and Opfions for Performance Indicators' (Washington, D.C.: U.S. General Accounting Office). achieved, and shows the specific inputs required to undertake project acfivities. Using an objectives tree to represent a project's goals helps verify the logic of project design and confirm that the right indicators were defined to measure performance. An objectives tree should include all the lower-evel results that are necessary con- ditions for achieving higher-level objectives. That includes external factors and assumptions about conditions in the wider project environment that do not actually fall under the control of the project-the external risk and sensitivity factors (see pages 7 and 1 4).6 These aspects must be monitored throughout the project along with impacts, outcomes, outputs, and inputs, and tested during implementation to ensure that the assumptions remain valid. In the example of the partial objectives tree shown in figure 2, each of the lower-level results is dependent not only on the factors and assumptions shown in the figure but also on others that are not shown. These could be the responsibility of the project shown in the diagram, with the details suppressed here because of space limitations. But they could also be the responsibility of another project or projects or of the government, making them a part of the assumptions and external risk factors underlying the project. 10 For example, "expanded school immunizations" depends, as shown, on "increasing supplies," "improving training" and "expanding facilities"all, according to the figure, responsibilities of the project. It also depends on "increased availability of vaccines" and "improved public awareness," which could be part of the project (though the figure does not show that) or part of another project and therefore part of the project's assumptions and external risk factors. A tool to conceptualize, design, and appraise projects, such as an objectives tree or similar analytical tool-and the performance indicators derived from it-should not be considered unchangeable.7 It should be continually reevaluated during each phase of project preparation, implementation, and evaluation. If the results analyzed during project implementation point to a need to change the means of achieving pro- ject objectives, the mix of inputs (activities to be undertaken) and definition of outputs should be adjusted and new indicators derived to measure the newly defined targets. The general steps that go into formulating project objectives and constructing the logical structure of a project are important aspects of the identification and prepara- tion stages of the Bank's project cycle (box 5).8 There are different ways to measure performance for any given variable (objective, Types of performance impact, outcome, output, input). A system of indicators anchored in the logical frame- indicators work approach is modeled in figure 3. While figure 3 shows a comprehensive system of indicators in order to provide a complete frame of reference, the elements of the system that are not covered in detail by this handbook are shown in dotted lines. These elements are included in OED's evaluations of project performance. Results indicators Results indicators measure project results relative to project objectives. Results are measured at the level determined by a project's objectives. Remember that following the logical framework approach, they should be defined starting with the impact and outcome indicators (and working backwards to the input indicators). INPUT INDICATORS. Input indicators measure the quantity (and sometimes the quality) of resources provided for project activities. Depending on the project, these can include: * Funding-counterpart funds, Bank loan funds, cofinancing, grants * Guarantees * Human resources-number of person-years for members of the implementation unit, consultants, and technical advisers * Training * Equipment, materials, and supplies, or recurrent costs of these items-for example, textbooks, syringes, vaccines, classroom facilities. OUTPUT INDICATORS. Output indicators measure the quantity (and sometimes the qual- ity) of the goods or services created or provided through the use of inputs. Depending on the project, these can include such elements as: 11 Box 5. Processes within the logical framework STEP I PROBLEM AND BENEFICIARY ANALYSIS This analysis aHtempts to answer several questions: What is the problem at stake, and who is involved in it? What are the needs, expectations, intentions, and motivations of the various stakeholders, disag- gregoted 6y gender and other relevant social criteria? Does the problem require extemal development assistance, or could it be resolved some other way2 This step is normally part of economic and sector work or of the project identification and preparation exercise when there is no prior economic and sector work, and it contributes to the formulation of the Country Assistance Strategy. STEP 2 OBJECTIVES ANALYSIS: CONSIDERATION OF ALTERNATIVES AND PERFORMANCE EXPECTATIONS This step identifies needs or problems and transforms them into solutions-specific, quantified objec- tives. Each objective may be broken down into subobjectives and outputs to be achieved at different stages of the project. There are almost always alternative ways of meeting a projects objectives, and the method chosen will affect the configuration of outputs. Thus consideration of alternatives and selec- tion of the most appropriate is part of this step. Consideration oF altematives entails economic, risk and sensitivity, cost-effectiveness, environmental and social analyses, and beneficiary consultation. Based on the objectives analysis, the main project elements-comprising the whole logical chain, including sector and project objectives, planned outputs, necessary activities, and their inputs-can be graphically represented in the logical framework or an objectives tree (see figures 1 and 2). Each element-inputs, activities., outputs, outcomes, and impacts, and the risk and enabling factors that affect thern-is measuroble. This is where indicators come in. Indicators that define and measure each of these elements are identified during the objectives analysis and project planning stage. For this reason it is essential to formulate and express project objectives and outputs in a way that allows mea- surement of both short-term and longer-term results. Definition of an output, outcome, or impact objec- tive should include: * Target group (for whom) * Quantity or level (how much) * Quality (in terms of design standards and environmental or other impact) * Time (when it should be accomplished) * Location (where it should happen) STEP 3 FINALIZATION OF PROJECT DESIGN AND INDICATORS In this step planners carefully examine the project to ensure that all its elements are logically related. Planners also assess the integrity of indicators and realism of targets at this stage, taking into account all project assumptions and baseline data, and finalize their plans. * Clients vaccinated (by a health project) * Farmers visited (an extension project) * Miles of roads built (a highway project) * Electricity generation and transmission facilities installed (a rural electrification project) * Pollution control measures installed or incentives or regulations enforced (a pollu- tion control or air or water quality improvement project). OUTCOME AND IMPACT INDICATORS. Outcome and impact indicators measure the quan- tity and quality of the results achieved through the provision of project goods and ser- vices. Depending on the kind of project, these can include: 12 igure 3. A system of indicators RISK INDICATORS DIRECT INDICATORS EFFICACY INDICATORS Relevance Risk or enabling factors -- - --------- Sustainability Risk or enabling factors Outcomes and impacts Effectiveness Risk or enabling factors Outputs Efficiency Inputs ------ Explicit development of these kinds of indicators is not required for World Bank projects. * Reduced incidence of disease (through vaccinations) * Improved farming practices (through extension visits) * Increased vehicle use or traffic counts (through road construction or improvement) * Increased rural supply and consumption of electricity (through expansion of elec- tricity network) * Reduced mortality or lower health costs (through improved family health practices or improved nutrition, or cleaner air and water) RELEVANCE INDICATORS. Some projects have intended impacts on higher-order objec- tives that are not captured by direct outcome indicators such as the ones described above. For instance, some projects have national or sectoral objectives, and for them impact must be measured at those levels. Projects may also have unintended-often negative-impacts. These too can be captured by evaluation studies. Relevance indi- cators measure trends in the wider policy problems that project impacts are expected to influence. If appropriate to the project, these indicators should be used. Depending on the project, these may include: * Improved national health as measured by health indicators (through improved health care, health system performance) * Increased farm profits and reduced food costs (through improved farming practices) * Reduced transportation costs and expanded economic development (through road construction or improvement) * Improved economic growth and enhanced consumer well-being (through expanded electrification, pollution controls, and other new technology). A system of indicators drawn from the logical framework measures the relevance of project results as well as outcomes and impacts (see figure 3). However, such effects can be very difficult to attribute to individual project results. For the Bank's monitoring purposes, therefore, measurement of results stops with project impact rel- ative to project objectives. That said, as mentioned above, relevance indicators are appropriate for objectives that are sectoral or national in scope. 13 Risk indicators Risk indicators measure the status of the exogenous factors identified as critical through the risk and sensitivity analysis (risk and enabling factors) performed as part of a project's economic analysis. These are the factors that are determined to be the most likely to have a direct influence on the outcome of various aspects of the project (for example, economic prices for power or competitive salaries for project staff)-the assumptions that are made about conditions external to the project. A project's objec- tives can only be achieved if the logical means-end relationship of the project elements is secure and the external risk factors are favorable. Efficacy indicators Efficacy indicators show how well the results at one level of project implementation have been translated into results at the next level: the efficiency of inputs, effective- ness of project outputs, and sustainability of project impact. They measure a pro- ject's efficacy in achieving its objectives, rather than its results. The logical framework approach sometimes uses these measures in addition to direct indica- tors of results. For the Bank's monitoring purposes, the measurement of results usually stops with impact: Bank staff are not expected to measure sustainability, effectiveness, or efficiency as part of project supervision or Implementation Completion Reports but rather to stick to "direct results" indicators. However, efficacy indicators can be rele- vant indicators of results if efficiency (of an institution, for example) is a project objec- tive. Moreover, OED uses these measures in its evaluations of project performance. It is for these reasons that these descriptions of indicators are included here. EFFICIENCY INDICATORS. Efficiency indicators usually represent the ratio of inputs needed per unit of output produced-for example, physical inputs, dollars, or labor required per unit of output. Accountability indicators (which are the central focus of much project and financial auditing) can be considered a subset of effi- ciency indicators. They measure the extent to which resources are available for and appropriately applied to the activities for which they were targeted. EFFECTIVENESS INDICATORS. Effectiveness indicators usually represent the ratio of outputs (or the resources used to produce the outputs) per unit of project outcome or impact, or the degree to which outputs affect outcomes and impacts. For example: * Number of vaccinations administered (or their cost) per unit decline in morbidity rate (illness prevented) or per unit decline in mortality rate * Number of farmers visited per measured change in farm practices (number of farm- ers adopting new practices), or number of farmers adopting new practices per unit increase in agricultural productivity * Miles of read built per unit increase in vehicle usage, or new road usage per unit decrease in traffic congestion. 14 SUSTAINABILITY INDICATORS. Sustainability indicators represent the persistence of pro- ject benefits over time, particularly after project funding ends. They could include, for example: * Disease incidence trends after external funding for a vaccination project ends * Persistence of changed farming practices after extension visits are completed * Maintenance and use of roads after highway construction ends * Persistence of institutions (programs, organizations, relationships, and so on) cre- ated to deliver project benefits. Information on performance as measured by impact, outcome, output, input, efficacy, Ways of measuring and risk indicators can be expressed and gathered in different ways. The choice of performance indicator and means of collection depend on data availability, time constraints, and cost-benefit considerations as well as the relationships between the variables. Direct measures Direct measures correspond precisely to results at any performance level. For instance, quantities of goods delivered or counts of clients served are direct measures of output, instances of change in beneficiary behavior are a direct measure of project outcome, and a decrease in infant mortality is a direct measure of project impact. A given vari- able could possibly serve as an indicator of results at any of various levels (input, out- put, outcome, or impact) depending on the project objectives. Indirect measures Indirect measures correspond less precisely than direct measures to the performance sought. They are often used where direct measures are too difficult, inconvenient, or costly to obtain. Indirect measures are based on a known relationship between the performance variable and the measure chosen to express it-for example, using lower farmgate prices as an indirect indicator of increased agricultural productivity, using declining freight or taxi tariffs as an indirect measure of decreasing traffic con- gestion, or using reduced numbers of consumer complaints as an indirect indicator of improved customer processing. Early pointers: intermediate and leading indicators At times information on likely project results is needed before final performance data are available. At other times it is important to gauge whether a project is on track even though final results have not yet been achieved. In both cases intermediate or leading indicators can provide an early assessment of performance (figure 4). Intermediate indicators measure intermediate results or intervening steps toward project objectives. They usually measure changes associated with the ultimate impact sought but for which information can be obtained earlier. For example, fertilizer pur- chases could be used as a preliminary indicator of changed farming practices, or increased nutritional knowledge as an indicator of improved eating practices. Two points must be kept in mind, however. First, intermediate indicators often represent 15 Figure 4. Early pointers Development objective Sustainable timber production -4 CL~ ~ ~~C 0 3 5 25 years I I Life of project Actual impact Source: Team Technologies, Inc. preliminary links in a causal chain, so their usefulness depends on the validity of the hypothesis that links those measures to final performance results. Second, intermedi- ate indicators sometimes represent results from initial or selected program sites, so their usefulness depends on the extent to which they prove to be representative. In addition, it is sometimes possible to identify leading indicators (or indexes of indica- tors) that are clearly linked with longer-term results. While similar to intermediate indica- tors in concept, leading indicators generally have multiple applications and a statistically valid record of reliability (for example, the U.S. index of leading economic indicators). Quantitative and qualitative measures For many Bank-financed projects, indicators of impacts, outcomes, outputs, and inputs are easily quantified, that is, measured by defined numerical values. These are typi- cally the basis for calculations of economic rate of return or net present value during appraisal. During implementation the monitoring and evaluation system of the project or entity being financed can provide these data by recording, for example, the number of students matriculated and the rate of repetition, the number of farmers visited by extension workers, or the quantities of fuel consumed, electricity sold, or technical capacity lost. Data on kilometers of road maintained, tolls collected, volume of traffic, and so on can easily be collected. In fact, there is a danger of collecting too much information. In some instances the cost of collecting data on project outcomes is high- for example, a new system may have to be developed to measure educational attain- ment. It is important to determine how precise and timely information needs to be, and who will collect it and at what cost, before information-gathering efforts are initiated. 16 A project's outcomes and impacts may not manifest themselves as directly mea- surable numeric information, however. These projects' effects may be felt more in terms of the attitudes of beneficiaries. For example, do parents now have more input into their children's education? Is teacher morale higher? A purely narrative description of these effects may be insufficient to measure results, however. It may be necessary to devise ways of measuring outcomes and impacts in quantitative terms, converting qualitative descriptions into quantitative information. This conver- sion can be achieved using survey techniques such as beneficiary assessments, rapid rural appraisals, or focus group interviews with structured questions. The information gained through these techniques can be used to calculate nominal mea- sures, rank orderings of categories, and frequency counts. Ratio and interval scales can also be used. The potential for quantifying information on project results should not be underestimated. Measurement scope Measurement scope refers to the use of sample populations. Performance indica- tors sometimes measure results directly for an entire target population (of individu- als or organizations) through administrative records, observations, or census surveys. Often, however, the scope of measurement is limited to a sample of tar- gets or sites. This approach raises an additional technical issue: how reliably can overall project performance be statistically inferred on the basis of this sample? Sometimes performance is measured in only one project setting, or in a very few, as case studies instead of statistical sampling. While case studies can provide use- ful information on how projects work (or why they do not work as expected) and how they can be improved, care must be taken (even more than in the use of sam- ples) not to assurne that results from one site necessarily represent project perfor- mance overall. Accordingly, such case studies are usually conducted in the context of speciol studies (see below) rather than as a replacement for broader performance data. Special studies Sometimes a project's routine monitoring and evaluation data do not provide suffi- cient information. If an unexpected problem arises, additional in-depth analysis through special studies can guide the way toward solving it--- and avoiding it in the future. Special studies are formative evaluations of the fundamentals of problems and their origins, and in that way differ from monitoring indicators, which are part of an early warning system. For instance, project managers might need to learn more about the causal links among project outputs, outcomes, and impacts, espe- cially when indicators reveal that the broader purposes of a project are not being achieved even though its planned outputs are being delivered. In this case some- thing clearly is wrong: the project logic may be faulty, assumptions about risk and enabling factors may be invalid, or some necessary input may be lacking. Special studies often provide important feedback for project redesign and higher-level pol- icy debates. 17 General principles for Three general principles should guide the selection of performance indicators: indica- selecting indicators tors must be meaningful and relevant, a reliable system for collecting the requisite data must be developed in a timely fashion, and the borrower's institutional capacity for using a monitoring and evaluation system-and its willingness to do so-must be taken into account. These general principles imply the following considerations:9 * Relevance. The indicators selected must be relevant to the basic sectoral develop- ment objectives of the project and, if possible, to overall country objectives. * Selectivity. The indicators chosen for monitoring purposes should be few and mean- ingful. It is recommended that the Bank monitor no more than a dozen indicators, at least half of them impact indicators that explicitly measure project impact against each major development objective. * Practicality of indicators, borrower ownership, and data collection. If performance indicators are to meaningfully reflect a project's objectives, they should be selected jointly by the borrower and the Bank during participatory project preparation, and the data they measure should be useful to both project and country. The data required to compile the key indicators must be easily available; if collecting the data will require a special effort, this need should be identified early in the project cycle and included in the project design. Data collection efforts can then be pro- grammed directly into project implementation or contracted to institutions that do survey work at the sectoral, regional, or national level. * Intermediate and leading indicators. In the absence of more definite impact indica- tors, early pointers of development impact may be used during project implementa- tion to indicate progress toward achieving project objectives. In many cases outcome indicators together with indicators of risk factors can serve as suitable intermediate or leading indicators of impact. • Quantitative and qualitative indicators. To the extent possible, performance indica- tors should allow for quantitative measurement of development impact. For some project objectives (for instance, capacity building) it may be necessary to develop qualitative indicators to measure success, which should still allow credible and dis- passionate monitoring. (For details on converting qualitative indicators to quantita- tive measures of the qualitative aspects being investigated, see pages 16--17.) Problems with defining indicators A previous section described the different types of indicators used to measure levels of performance. However, it is sometimes difficult to distinguish between a project's out- puts and outcomes, for example, or between outcomes and impacts. When defining indicators, it is important to think of the typology of indicators as a continuum mirror- ing the logical means-end relationship of the project: inputs to various activities, which yield outputs, all of which contribute to outcomes and impacts. A particular measure's logical relation to the project's strategic objective will define the type of indicator that it represents. Consider an agricultural extension project. Two possible indicators are the number of farmers trained and the number of farmers adopting the recommended techniques. 18 The second indicator is obviously an outcome, but what about the first? Training is an output of the project, but it is also an input into improving agricultural practices. This example demonstrates the need to think of indicators in terms of a continuum, with inputs leading through activities to certain outputs that lead to desired outcomes and impacts. It is not always easy to distinguish between outputs and outcomes or impacts, whereas inputs are usually straightforward. Consider a project that hopes to improve girl's employment prospects by improving their access to formal and voca- tional education. An output indicator would be the number of girls graduating from secondary and vocational schools, an outcome indicator would be the number of girls employed from project schools, and an impact indicator would be their earnings rela- tive to earlier levels or relative to average cohort earnings. Problems with measuring impact Impact indicators are the most difficult to measure and collect, mainly because of lags between project implementation and impact or, put another way, between the time of impact and the time it is feasible to collect data relating to impact. But the monitoring of project impact during implementation is one of the main motivations for using per- formance monitoring indicators. Using leading indicators and intermediate indicators as proxies for impact is a way to tackle the measurement problem. Beneficiary assess- ments, rapid rural appraisals, and focus group interviews are useful ways of collect- ing qualitative impact data. Before and after household and community surveys are excellent tools for collecting comprehensive impact data, but the time and cost required make them impractical for regular project monitoring. They are more often used during project identification, intermediate checkpoints (such as midterm reviews), implementation completion, and ex post evaluation. When selecting indicators during project preparation and appraisal, the borrower Indicator benchmarks (with the Bank's assistance, as needed) should use baseline data and comparative and international data from other programs to set targets for the indicators it will monitor-that is, the comparators minimum values that it expects to aim for. Some of the indicator menus issued by the Bank's Central Vice Presidencies provide comparator values as an indication of what is high and low for a given variable. Bank staff should consult the relevant sector departments of the Central Vice Presidencies on the selection of indicators for a pro- ject and should seek their advice on targets. How do performance monitoring indicators affect the Bank's work? Indicators play an integral role in the Bank's work, from economic and sector work, through the entire project cycle, to ex post evaluation. Indicators of sector performance can be both derived from and used in the analysis Economic and done as part of economic and sector work and used later to inform project develop- sector work ment, project impact monitoring, and sector monitoring. Besides providing a frame- work for evaluating sector performance, sector-specific performance indicators can 19 help policymakers, task managers, and Bank staff rationalize a country assistance and lending strategy, select project strategies, and create a framework for monitoring project activities (see below). Sectoral indicators, obtained from sector work or from generally available sector data, are especially useful during project identification and appraisal to clarify project objectives and later to assess impact. Project cycle A schematic representation of how performance monitoring indicators fit into the pro- ject cycle is shown in figure 5. Project identification, preparation, and preappraisal Project planning starts by defining objectives that reflect a project's desired devel- opment impact; these objectives may be hierarchically arranged but they have to be defined in terms of the measurable targets on which performance indicators will be based. The proposed objectives guide the selection of a first-round set of indicators dur- ing project identification and design. As part of the problem, beneficiary, and objectives analyses, several questions should be discussed with the borrower and other stakeholders: What are we trying to achieve? How do we measure what we are achieving? What types of indicators or measures will we need to develop? What target values should we use? The process of selecting performance indicators helps borrowers and Bank staff define project objectives more clearly, set measurable goals, and ensure that a pro- ject's activities lead logically to the realization of its objectives. During project prepa- ration it is important to develop a clear idea of the baseline values of impact indicators and the planned target values for the development impact of the project, as well as the means for measuring progress (the logical chain of indicators). This activity helps the borrower and the Bank assess the realism of project objec- tives and determine data availability and collection methods for measuring indicators. (The next section discusses issues associated with definition of objectives and data measurement.) Concentrating on how to quantify and measure impact at this stage helps the borrower and the Bank improve the design and consistency of project com- ponents to achieve the desired results as cost-effectively as possible. This effort may Figure 5. Performance indicators and the project cycle PROJECT IDENTIFIEATION, PREPARATION, PREAPPRAISAL Perform baseline studies Analyze sectoral doat Idenlify risk and enabling factors PREPARATION/ IMPLEMENTATION/ SUPERVISION/ COMPLETION APPRAISSAL SUPERVISION OOMPLETION ONWARDS Identify risk, input, Use indicators Evaluate output and Evoluate outcome and output, outcome, and lo monitor outcome indicators impact indicators of impact indicalors implemenitlion project success 20 also point to the need to develop monitoring capacity before implementing the-project or to build monitoring and evaluation capacity development into the project. Appraisal and negotiations As project planning is finalized, project objectives are translated into specific project components. Indicators for measuring progress toward each objective and for monitor- ing the provision of project inputs and the state of risk and enabling factors identified in the economic and risk sensitivity analyses are also finalized during appraisal. The implementation plan developed by the borrower and appraised by the Bank must include the performance monitoring indicators-inputs, outputs, outcome, and impact indicators-for each aspect of project implementation. During appraisal the bor- rower and the Bank agree on no more than about a half-dozen of the most important input and output indicators and about the same number of outcome and impact indica- tors-key performance indicators that the Bank will monitor. These indicators-as agreed performance benchmarks, not covenanted targets-are set out in the project appraisal documentation and in the Bank's legal agreement with the entity responsible for project implementation (see Bank Procedure 10.00, Annex B and related Operational Memorandums). In cases where target values are critical to the attainment of project objectives, the borrower and the Bank may also want to make them a covenant of the loan agreement (see page 26). Implementation and supervision During project implementation the borrower and project implementation unit monitor the indicators developed during project design, following the schedule of the imple- mentation plan. During regular supervision missions and the midterm review the Bank monitors the key indicators defined and agreed with the borrower at appraisal. These indicators form the basis for the Bank's measures of implementation performance (IP ratings) and impact (development objective, or DO ratings) on Form 590. If the indi- cators originally developed for the project become inappropriate because external conditions change or project design is restructured, the Bank and borrower develop new indicators to reflect the changed circumstances. Evaluation After implementation is completed, the achievement of project objectives is assessed using measurable indicators-the outcome and impact indicators developed during pro- ject design-that compare the project's actual impact with its intended impact. The use of indicators removes subjectivity from evaluations, giving them a more objective basis. The logic of project design governs the logic of monitoring: the implementation unit Performance monitors inputs and outputs in greater detail than does the borrowing government or indicators and the Bank. Implementation managers are primarily concerned with the tactics of pro- project management gram implementation, while borrowers and Bank staff are more concerned with the strategic implications of project implementation and alternatives for realizing project objectives. 21 To meet the different information needs of the various stakeholders, performance indicators usually need to be hierarchically structured. This structure can be accom- plished through nested networks of partially overlapping performance information sys- tems in which lower-level performance indicators are summarized, or selectively skimmed, as a basis for higher-level information. The following sections describe the different performance indicators and information needs of the various actors responsi- ble for project implementation. (This information is summarized in box 6.) Field-level implementers Implementation managers are primarily concerned with the methods used to imple- ment a particular project or program component. Within their relatively narrow areas of responsibility, they need to know that necessary inputs (human, financial, and phys- ical resources) are available and that planned outputs (goods and services) are being produced. They also need to know that resources are being used legitimately, that financial accountability is ensured, and that inputs are being efficiently transformed into outputs. Implementation managers in the field also need at least some information on program outcomes and impacts; that is, they need to know the extent to which pro- gram outputs are achieving their intended results so that they can fine-tune project implementation and motivate performance. Implementation unit managers The managers of an implementation unit (or of whatever organizational unit is responsi- ble for overall project management) are usually responsible for implementing an entire Box 6. Project management and performance information needs IMPLEMENTERS IN THE FIELD NEED * Input indicators a Output indicators * [Efficiency indicators] e Risk indicators * Some outcome and impact indicators THE IMPLEMENTATION UNIT NEEDS * Summary input and output indicators, including site-comparative indicators as appropriate * Outcome indicators, including site-comparative indicators as appropriate * [Effectiveness indicators] * Risk indicators a Impact indicators THE BORROWER AND THE BANK NEED * Summary input indicators * Summary output indicators a Risk indicators * Key outcome, impact, [and relevance] indicators e [Sustainability indicators] Note: Indicators in brackets are not a required part of Bank monitoring or project supervision. 22 program or a major project component. This responsibility involves a range of activities, often across a number of sites, aimed at achieving some strategic objective. Because these managers have a primary responsibility for project implementation, they should play a supporting role in defining strategic objectives, choosing among them or articulat- ing the underlying policies from which these objectives derive during project preparation. Implementation unit managers are concerned with managing their program better, selecting and fine-tuning project activities to improve outcomes, and enhancing project impact. Thus they need summary information on project inputs and outputs, particularly comparative information across sites, so that they can identify emerging problems and direct managerial attention and resources to solving them. More important, they need comparative information on project outcomes. Implementation managers also need at least some information on project impact to validate the significance of their project strategy. Borrower officials and Bank staff Representatives of the borrower and Bank staff are primarily concerned with strategic management. They have participated in articulating the policy assumptions that underlie the project and the strategic objectives the project is intended to achieve. Moreover, they must continue to push these objectives in the context of a dynamic external environ- ment. Thus they need summary information on project inputs and outputs to be sure that any emerging implementation or outcome problems are being identified and addressed at appropriate project management levels and to be able to answer questions about the project. To manage strategically, however, borrowers and Bank staff most need compar- ative information on project outcomes and impacts and risk factors. When impact is measured in relation to the cost of project inputs, this information can also feed directly into a performance-based budget system. In addition, in the context of the Country Port- folio Performance Review or Country Assistance Strategy update, the borrower and Bank managers need information on the national trends to which projects are expected to contribute. Some related issues Several factors that are part of good practice in monitoring and evaluation are integral to the effective use of project performance data, in particular data collection and man- agement, the institutional arrangements for managing information, and the use of feed- back from monitoring and evaluation. In addition, users need to be aware of the difference between loan covenants and indicators and potential pitfalls in the definition of indicators. For performance monitoring indicators to work, a management structure and incentives that value results must be in place. Performance indicators are a tool: on their own they can do nothing, but in the proper environment they inspire action. It is critical that managers-Bank, borrower, and project managers-regard perfor- Good practice in mance measurement as an integral part of their institution's mission and strategic monitoring and plan.10 Often they do not; instead, they see it as an adjunct to the plan, in the same evaluation 23 way that they may see evaluation as a requirement to be satisfied after the more important work of project implementation is done."l To be effective monitoring and evaluation must be addressed during project design. Once project planners have carefully defined the strategic objectives and selected logical indicators, their next consideration should be the requirements for data collection and management, institu- tional arrangements and capacity building, and the use of feedback from the data. Data collection and management The nature of a variable determines the logical source of data about it. Indicators of inputs and of some outputs of project activities are derived primarily from project records; however, indicators of some outputs, outcomes, and impacts may require that data be collected using surveys or special studies, including those that use participa- tory methods. Where it is possible, it is almost always better to piggyback regular sur- veys onto existing nationally or internationally supported surveys (such as the Living Standards Measurement Study) than to create a data collection facility. Special stud- ies may be managed by the project unit directly or subcontracted to a private entity. Any proposal to collect data for an indicator requires a discussion of: * Objectives of the study or survey * Sources of data * Choices and proposed method of collection * Likely reliability of the data. Collection of some indicators, particularly outcome and impact indicators (such as morbidity and mortality rates, educational achievement, or crop production) may depend on the existence and quality of national census or survey systems. Before choosing such project indicators, the borrower and the Bank must confirm that the necessary systems are in place and reliable and that the available data are statisti- cally valid for the population or area covered by the project. The complexity of statis- tics and the problems of attributing causality mean that in many cases it is better to use service delivery and beneficiary response as proxy measures than to attempt to measure impact directly. Many output indicators are derived from records kept by the participating agen- cies, often at project field sites. For this reason, for purposes of project monitoring and evaluation design (including indicator selection), project planners should examine the implementer's record-keeping and reporting procedures to assess its capacity to generate data. The essential points are that data should be collected and used close to the source and that data collection be cost-effective and reliable. It is important not to create a separate measurement bureaucracy within a project structure. Having such a bureau- cratic home for data production is not usually cost-effective and presents the risk that those responsible for producing the data may have little contact with those responsi- ble for using it. Thus the data users do not fully understand what is behind the num- bers they are given to use, and the data collectors have little appreciation for the 24 issues that stakeholders and senior project managers face, for which performance data would be useful. Just as performance measurement should be fully integrated with project design, information generated should be integrated with the project's management structure. As with any other project component, the benefits of using per- formance data must at least equal the cost of collecting them. A project can provide the best information at the least cost by using existing data, sampling techniques, rapid appraisal methods, and other creative collection methods. A few other considerations about data collection should guide the design of indica- tors. Above all, the data should measure results, not just processes. The performance measured by the data should focus on what the project is accomplishing, especially in terms of its impact on people. The point is not only to know what projects are doing, but to know whether they are doing any good. Selectivity is desirable. Performance analysis should be limited to the few areas that are directly relevant to the project's strategic objectives, as defined by the borrower and Bank. Finally, performance measurement systems should use data that are not construed as threatening by those who are reporting it. Simply telling project managers- whether borrowers, Bank staff, or those working for them-to report data on their pro- jects without actively involving them in the performance measurement process, without explaining how and by whom the data are going to be used, and without assuring them that the data will not be used to judge them personally is likely to be viewed as threatening. Relying on such a compliance mode of performance measurement is likely to backfire, not only minimizing manager ownership but also likely producing bureaucratic resistance and possibly data corruption. Institutional arrangements and capacity building Data collection arrangements have implications for the institutional arrangements between the implementation unit, the borrower, and the Bank. The rationale for indica- tors demands that the indicator data be of value to the borrower, not just to the Bank. A project's overall monitoring and evaluation design should build on the reporting arrangements already used by the implementation unit and the borrower, while further developing the technical skills they need to plan information needs, design data collec- tion, execute studies and surveys, analyze data, and report results in a format that is relevant to project management. If necessary, the Bank can finance technical assistance and equipment required to design and implement monitoring and evalua- tion systems and to meet training needs. Feedback from monitoring and evaluation efforts and interpreting indicators Care should be taken to time data collection activities so that information will be available when it is needed, for example at the time of the Bank's portfolio or midterm reviews. Projects for which operating performance standards are specified as an objective, or for which decentralized processes call for local capacity to plan and manage work programs and budgets, will need special consideration of how indica- tor findings are used to inform decisions. 25 Project indicators are best interpreted through comparison. Ideally, impact is evalu- ated by comparing baseline data with project outcomes, to provide an idea of what the indicators would be if the project had not been carried out. But because such analysis is sometimes not practical, analysis of indicators can use other kinds of comparisons: actual results relative to targets, before and after analysis, time series (more illustrative than simple before and after comparisons), or comparisons of control groups. Trends or fluctuations are common in the values that are used to measure outputs or outcomes and impacts. If this is the case, time series or control groups should be used. Time series data capture trends or fluctuations, and control groups help verify attribution of causality. For example, the control group chosen is critical for compar- ing the increase in average educational attainment or income among a project's ben- eficiaries with the increase in a nonproject area: the control group must be identical to the project sample in all respects other than the presence of the project. Finally, any interpretation of indicators must consider the relationship between exogenous factors and the indicators they may influence. This is one reason why the monitoring of risk factors is so important. Relation to loan Indicators are facts about project implementation results, not actions. Thus standard covenants practice by the Bank and borrowers is to consider performance targets as indicative and not legally binding. The understanding is that the agreed targets are used primarily to gauge progress in project implementation and in realizing development objectives. However, in instances where attainment of certain indicators or targets is considered essential to the attainment of a project's objectives (for example, in the case of certain financial indicators of a profit-making entity supported by a project), these indicators (target values) should be incorporated in the legal documents not only as performance benchmarks but also as a loan covenant (see page 21). Working at cross Projects sometimes lack well-defined objectives because the borrower and the Bank purposes cannot agree on what a project's purposes are or should be. For example, it is some- times unclear whether a project's ultimate objective is to transfer resources or to truly alleviate poverty. A project's purposes and strategic objectives must be agreed on early, and performance indicators provide the clearest guide for management action when they logically reflect clear program priorities. In practice, however, programs may encompass multiple and even conflicting objectives. While it is difficult to portray multiple strategic purposes within a single objectives tree or logical framework, it may sometimes be possible to define parallel objectives trees reflecting these multiple pur- poses. The performance data could then be useful in making decisions that result in tradeoffs among competing objectives, especially if such objectives can be prioritized or weighted. 12 Another difficulty is that clearly defined objectives bring a measure of accountabil- ity that may make some officials uncomfortable. In some cases ambiguous project objectives may, in fact, be politically desirable. Delineating useful performance indi- cators may prove difficult if this is the case; and in the absence of willingness to com- mit to clearly defined objectives, the Bank should dissociate itself from the project. 26 In the end performance monitoring indicators and the feedback they provide are only Last word as good as the underlying analysis (economic and financial analysis, economic and sector work, social and environmental assessment) supporting the project design, and the data to be assessed over time. The logical framework approach to project formu- lation is only a structure for project design and evaluation, not the full extent of project design or evaluation. None of the tools described in this handbook can replace sound economic, financial, social, environmental, and risk and sensitivity analysis or comprehensive monitoring and evaluation. Together, the analysis, the logical frame- work, and the indicators form a system for continuous analysis and a holistic approach to project design, monitoring, and evaluation. Notes 1. Effective Implementation: Key to Development Impact, September 1992. 2. An Overview of Monitoring and Evaluation in the World Bank, OED Report 13247, June 30, 1994, and Monitoring and Evaluation Plans in Projects Approved in Fiscal Year 1995, OED draft report, October 6, 1995. 3. The logical framework approach and indicator typology described in this section draw extensively from material prepared by R. Moses Thompson, Team Technologies Inc.; Gerald M. Britan, 'Measuring Program Performance for Federal Agencies: Issues and Options for Performance Indicators,' prepared for the U.S. General Accounting Office, 1991; and 'Guidelines for Result-Based Planning, Management and Monitoring," preliminary version, from the Swedish International Development Agency, January 1995. 4. Several formal techniques for collaborative project planning and management are variations on the overall logical framework concept described here: Logical frameworks, ZOPP, and TeamUP, for example. Appendix 1 of the World Bonk Porticipation Sourcebook (February 1996) describes ZOPP (objectives- oriented project planning), TeamUP, and other methods and tools that support participatory development, and provides additional references. 5. The relationship among project objectives may also involve aggregation across spoce, with results in different project locations added to yield regional objectives and achievements. Hierarchically linked and spatially aggregated objectives often exist in tandem. For instance, a notional child health project whose overall objective is to reduce child mortality may have a subobjective of reducing the incidence of preventable disease by educating and inoculating a certain number of individuals nationwide-that is, the sum of the individuals reached by individual clinics throughout the notion. 6. See also Handbook on Economic Analysis of Investment Operations (Washington, D.C.:World Bank, 1996), Chapter 10, "Risk and Sensitivity Analysis." 7. Various formal logical framework techniques use tools such as problem and objective trees, situation and SWOT (strengths-weaknesses-opportunities-threats) analyses, and project planning matrixes to graphi- cally represent the problem, beneficiary, and objectives analysis. 8. Even if a borrower is not explicitly aware of or does not follow the logical framework approach in designing a project, the Bank can follow the approach to appraise the project. 9. This discussion draws heavily on a report of the East Asia Working Group on Project Performance Monitoring Indicators prepared for consideration by the East Asia Regional Management Group. The work- ing group included staff from the East Asia Region, the Asia Technical Department, Human Resources Ser- vices, OED, and Operations Policy. 10. For additional discussion, see Monitoring and Evaluotion Plans in Staff Appraisol Reports Issued in Fiscal Year 1995: A Follow-up to OED's Report 'An Overview of Monitoring and Evaluation in the World Bank,' OED Report 15222, December 29, 1995. 11. Thomas J. Cook, Jerry VanSant, Leslie Stewart, and Jamie Adrian, "Performance Measurement: Lessons Learned for Development Management," World Development 23(8): 1303-15 (1995). 12. Briton, p. 20. 27 SECTORAL NOTES ON INDICATORS To help Bank staff and borrowers select and use performance indicators, the Bank is developing sectoral notes that discuss the use of indicators in relation to the major objectives or categories of problems normally addressed in Bank-financed projects. Each note includes menus of possible indicators. What topics do the notes cover? Eighteen sectoral notes will eventually be prepared. They will cover each sector in which the Bank works and areas of emphasis that cross economic and social sectors, such as environmental concerns, poverty reduction, public sector management, and technical assistance. Of the sector performance indicator notes planned, seventeen have been issued: Agriculture Poverty reduction Economic adjustment Power Education Private sector development Environment Technical assistance Financial sector Telecommunications Housing Transport Industry and mining Urban development Oil and gas Water and wastewater Population, health, and nutrition The only note that remains to be issued is public sector management (expected in June 1996). All of the notes except one are in their first edition, that is, they will be revised as the Bank and its clients gain experience with the use of indicators. (The education note is in its second edition and is considered to be an example of best practice.) Further work on these notes will: • Standardize them to make them more consistent with the methodological framework described earlier * Incorporate more best practices and lessons learned * Incorporate international comparator data at the global and regional levels to facil- itate benchmarking among countries, provinces, regions, and so on, to appreciate what is high or low in a given instance. 28 How were the notes developed? As part of the Next Steps Action Plan, the Central Vice Presidencies, sector depart- ments, and Development Economics Vice Presidency were asked to develop sector- specific performance monitoring indicators. The Operations Policy Department (OPR) coordinated the efforts to develop the indicator notes, facilitating the exchange of ideas among sector departments and reviewing the product. After several departments had produced drafts, OPR formed a quality review group comprising senior staff from the Regions, the Central Vice Presidencies, and OED. The group reviewed all of the notes and developed a framework for consistency in approach. From these initial efforts, the Bank developed the framework for performance indi- cators that has been applied in most of these notes. Most of the sector notes: * Follow a typology of indicators based on a logical framework approach to project design (indicators of project inputs, outputs, outcomes, impacts, risk and enabling factors, efficiency, effectiveness, and relevance); and • Provide an executive summary, a menu of recommended key indicators, and real examples of indicators used in Bank-financed projects. How are indicators selected from the notes? The notes are reference materials to specific sectors and to overarching concerns such as poverty reduction, macroeconomic adjustment, and environmental issues. They are meant to guide task managers and borrowers in applying performance monitoring indicators. They are not, however, intended to replace the judgment or knowledge of task managers or borrowers. The notes provide menus of indicators that are neither exhaustive nor mandatory-indicators are project-specific and must be customized by the borrower and task manager to project, sector, and country circumstances. Since every project has its own unique objectives, task managers and borrowers must develop indicators that correspond to these objectives, and not restrict themselves to the menus provided in the notes. Conversely, care should be taken not to "order the entire menu;" rather, it should be treated as an indicative list from which to choose the most appropriate selections. Where are the notes available? The notes are issued by the originating Central Vice Presidencies to all Senior Opera- tions Advisers, directors, project advisers, and sector division chiefs. Staff members should have received copies of the notes pertaining to the sectors that their department covers or have been notified that the notes are available. Additional copies are avail- able from the originating departments. The notes will also be available in electronic form through the Bank's Enterprise Network (contact the relevant task manager listed below to confirm a note's electronic availability). The departments, task monagers for the notes, and persons to contact for a copy of the note are 29 Sector Department Task manager Contact person and extension Agriculture AGR Cornelis de Haan Joyce Saboya 38959 Economic adjustment DEC Deborah Wetzel Deborah Wetzel 31698 Education* HDD Sverrir Sigurdsson Joe-Shin Yang 81418 Environment ENV John Dixon John Dixon 38594 Financial sector FSD David Scott/ Hedia Arbi 34663 Monika Queisser Housing ond urban development TWVU Patricia Annez Laura O'Connor 37009 Industry and mining IEN Felix Remy Elisa Torre 80323 Oil and gas IEN VVilliam Porter Kyran O'Sullivan 32722 Population, health, and nutrition HDD Tom Merrick Vivion Octran 33639 Poverty reduction PSP Soniyo Carvalho Soniya Carvalho 35705 Power IEN Jean-Pierre Charpenlier Kyran O'Sullivan 32722 Private sector development PSD Syed Mahmood Shirley Wallace 38 1 3 1 Public sector management PSP Michael L.O Steven.s Michael Stevens 37493 Technical assistance OPR Nimrod Raphoeli Nimrod Raphaeli 84015 Telecommunications IEN Rogati Koyani Rogati Koyani 34515 Transport TWU Colin Gannon Colin Gannon 85784 Water and wastewater TWU Guillermo Yepes Rose Poole 33749 * Second edition note issued. How to learn more Besides developing their second-edition notes, the Central Vice Presidencies are dis- seminating the first edition notes and advising Regional staff on the use of performance monitoring indicators. The Central Vice Presidencies will continue to sponsor workshops on their indicator notes and, when requested, advise project staff on all aspects of the use of performance monitoring indicators. In addition, the Bank's Learning and Leadership Center is providing training on performance indicators as part of its regular courses on project preparation, appraisal, and supervision. 30 EXAMPLES OF INDICATORS The following examples of key performance indicators were developed for several Bank-financed projects. These projects represent current best practice in the use of performance monitoring indicators; most were highlighted in OED's fiscal 1995 follow-up review of monitoring and evaluation (Monitoring and Evaluation Plans in Staff Appraisal Reports Issued in Fiscal Year 95, Report 15222). For each project, a matrix presents the project's objectives, with indicators of inputs, outputs, risk factors, outcomes, and impacts. The matrixes do not list all the detailed indicators listed in the borrower's Project Implementation Plan; they only show the key indicators that the Bank will monitor as the basis for project supervision and evaluation. These matrixes were devised by the project's task managers with OPR's guidance. The information set out in these matrixes was also given in the Staff Appraisal Report for each of the projects, although not in this format. In the future the most important project outcome and impact indicators, such as those presented in these matrixes, should be listed in every project appraisal document and monitored using Form 590. 31 Table 1. Summary of objectives and key performance indicators, Honduras Basic Education Project (Staff Appraisal Report 1 3791 -HO, March 8, 1 995) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECIIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on ...) (of project activities) Improve quality * IDA credit ($30 million) * Strengthening the * 10-20% increase in of lecirning and student * Government funds institutional capacity students' test scores performance in the ($9.8 million) of the Ministry of Education * I 0% reduction in repetition primary education cycle * German lKfW) funds may take longer to and dropout rates ($1 3 3million) achieve than anticipated * 5-10% increase in future Inadequate provision earnings of primary school Funds will be uised to~ of counterpart funds graduates from poor families * Train primary and *30,000 trained teachers, by the government preprimary teachers, principals, and supervisors principals, and supervisors * Supply textbooks., 4.3 million new textbooks didactic materials, and and 20,000 library books, ~ibrory books 8,500 poor rural students with didactic materials each year *Encourage bilingual - 60% of indigenous education primary students receive bilingual education * Finance external - 8 rounds of math aind evaluations of student Spani-sh te5st applied to academic achievements 20% of primary students * Improve schools ini poor * 290 expanded or rural areas and appoint rehabilitated and furnished additionail teachers rural schools; 1, 200 new rural preschool programs Strengthen capacity *IDA, bilateral, and * Reorganize Ministry of *30% reduction in of the Ministry of government funds will Education administrative costs Education to deliver finance technical * Decentralize services to * 40% reduction in basic education services assistance, equipment, 1 8 departments central staff office improvements5, staff * Municipalities maintain * Budget deficits avoided training, monitoring and schools * Lower teacher absenteeism evaluation efforts, and * Greater efficiency in the use teacher performance of public resources for basic incentives educaition services, as mneasured by lower overhead costs (by X%) Task manager. Anna Sant'Anna. 32 Table 2. Summary of objectives and key performoance Indicotors, Indonesia Rural Electrification Prolect (Staff Appraisal Report 12920-IND, February 3, 1995) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the prolect) dependent on. .. iof project octivities) Expand coverage and * IBRD loan ($398 miliion) Expand electricity None. Well within PLN's * Supply electricity to 7,000 supply of electricity to * Government/PLN funds network implementation and additional rural villages covering rural areas ($442.8 million) * 28,000 kmc of MV lines financial capacity 2. 1 million new customers * Ministry of Cooperotives * 35,000 kmc of LV lines customers * Meet electricity consumption ($0.5 million) * 1.3 million poles targets of 35-45 kilowott hours * 833 MVA distribution a month, depending on region Funds will be used to transformers * Increase penetration of procure equipment, televisions, radios, and other works, consultants, and appliances training and technical * Increase rural household assistance for capacity electrification from 32% to more building than 40% by 1998 Establish incentives for * Publish small power * PLN may be slow to * Strengthen the enabling private sector and local purchase tariff and stondard enter into power purchase environment for private sector cooperatives to provide a power purchase contract for contracts and cooperatives to generate, larger share of rural sale of electricity by private * Delayed implementation distribute, and sell wholesale electricity distribution and generators to PLN of the policy and regulotory and retail-level power from renewable energy * Esiablish bulk supply framework to oversee retail renewable energy sources. generation for rural tariff for sale of bulk electricity pricing and service aspects * Increase megawaits and power supply of private distributors megawatt hours of non-PLN generation provided by renewable energy from 0 to 75 megawatts and 300 megawatt hours a year by 1998 e Increase the number of cooperatives engaged in electricity distribution who buy bulk power from PLN * Reduce power generation requirements from high-cost diesel plants to 75 megawatts and 200 megawatt hours by 1998 Table continues on the next page. 33 Table 2 (continued) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUT OUTPUT ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOME/IMPACT OBJECTIVES for project activitiesl produced by the projectl dependent on. .. (of project activities) Advance the efforts initiated under the First Rural Electrification Project to place the rural electrification program on an efficient and sustainable footing by * Enhancing the efficiency * Expand PLN raining * Training program not * Increase from 2,000 to of rural electricity delivery program to enable village-level keeping pace with targets 4,000 the number of village by increasing and technicians to undertake cooperatives engaged in strengthening local selected distribution and distribution-related operations participation customer service functions and maintenance and customer Itroining target numbers to be service functions, increasing determined) coverage from 7 million to 1 2 million rural customers * Enhance PLN's ability to extend its customer base without proportionately increasing its organizational size a Improve staff productivity index from already high 250 customers per employee Maximizing the economic * Convert 30,000 small * Week management * Target 36 million kilowatts benefits of rural electricity by rural businesses to electricity by PIN per year increase in electricity promoting its productive uses for production purposes consumption by rurol businesses * Create the potential for 15,000 new jobs in rural businesses and increased human capital developmeni and participation benefits to village cooperatives Initiate pilot programs to Complete four pilot projects: * PLN delays in timely * Generate data on test new designs and * Single Wire Earth Return completion of pilot projects adaptability of lechnical options construction management systems * Improper implementation and construction management methods with the potenlial * Reinforced concrete pole limits value of operational techniques and savings potentiol for further lowering the * Low-cost substations experience in rural electricity delivery costs of rural electricity * Contract administration * 10-25% reduction in costs, extension and intensifioation company depending on program * 15-20% reduction in costs of rural electricity delivery in next stage of government's rural electricity program Task manager: Arun Sanghvi. 34 Table 3. Summary of objedtives and key performance Indicators, Indonesia: Second Agrickutural Research Management Proled (SAR 13933-IND, April 21, 1995) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES For project activities) produced by the project) dependent on .) (of project activities) Establish ond operate * IBRD loan ($63 Eight agricultural technology * Sustainability of local * 25% increase in adoption of eight agricultural tech- million) assessment institutes with new counterpart funding locahon-specific techinologies and nology assessment * Government counterpart and rehabilitated facilities * Relocation of MRD best practices tested by institutes in 12 provinces to funds J$38.8 million) and equipment offering. staff to regional locations agricultural institutes serve as regional centers * Dotabases on AEZ * Strengthening of * Decentralize agricultural for farming systems Funds will finance civil characteristics and extension and support research and development research and tech- works, equipment, books, regional information services at local levels system, focused on local needs, nology transfer training, research, and * Support services for farmers in place within five years technical assistance and extension workers * 30% increase in number of on-farm triols, demonstrations, The eight institutes will create and technology tronsfer five year research and activities involving agricultural development master plans institutes' clients and receive staff training * Train 75% of agricultural and technical assistance institutes' staff in research and under this component extension methods, technical fields, and farming systems * Increase arlention to social and gender issues in research and development planning, project design and implementation, and monitoring and evaluation a Ensure that o more responsive and decentralized research and development system is in place within five years e 10% increase in productivity of major farming systems * Improve dissemination of information and new technology to farmers and users Reform research and * Introduce standard * Increased commitment * Adopt slandard research development management research and development of local governments to and development management at the regional level to management procedures support decentralized procedures for planning, priority ensure relevance of research tested by the agricultural research and seiting, monitoring and evalua- and development to users institutes development tion, finance, and administrolion and to improve research * Develop databases on * 20% increose in use of quality and effectrveness AEZ characteristics in nine databases by MRD, agricultural additional agricultural institutes, local governments, and institutes universities for national and local * Set up information and planning and policymaking accounting systems in * Implement research and 1 7 agricultural institutes development master plans and * Create fiveyear research annual plans and projects in and development master plans 1 7 agricultural institutes for nine odditional * Increase technology transfer agricultural institutes support for farmers, extension * Establish three pilot soil workers, and clients by the labs for farmers agricultural institutes and their * Provide staff training and colfborators technical assistance on research * Increose AARD staff l(bout and development management 70% in agricultural institutes for nine additional agricultural and project implementation institutes, the MRD Secretariat, units) trained in research and and reseorch institutes development tools and practices Table continues on the next page. 35 T . 3 (citued) RISKS AND CRMCAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUM?P1ONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND MPACTS OBJECTIVES for project octvities) produced by the project) dependen on ... (of project activities) * Manage insituts and staff beher * Increase gavernment allocation for agricultural research and development (to 1 % of agricukural GDP) Fund research in priority * 25% increase in reseorch * L.inted government * 5% increase in governmrent areas at national reseorch outputs from projects on courhrpart funds for allocation for agricultural research institutes to support regional pnority areas (livestck, priority areas and and development; 10% increase resech and development hsheries horticuiture, tree disciplines in funds for priority areos and programs craops) and priority disciplines disciplines fbioiechnolpg, agribusiness, * 25% increase in number of morketing, sociobogy) technologies generated by * Rehobilitate speciolized national research institutes for loboratories in selected national on-farm testing and demonstration research insritutes by agncultural institutes * Train scientisb ond provide * Rehabilitate specialized tachnicol support in priority loboratories in national research areas and discipines institutes to support priority areas and disciplines * 10% increase in number of trained scientists (posigroduate) in notional research institutes vwvrking on priority areas and disciplines * Generate high-quolity research in nraional research insfHtutes and agriculural institutes * Secure increased and sustained funding for priority research areas and disciplines Improve access to * Colloborating inslituions' * Improve technologies and * Iaeased language * 30% increase in number of eenmaly generated counterpart funds new information from joinl capacity of AARD staff colobortive projects and technobgies and projects under the University * Icreased commiment activihes vith intemational and strengthen collaboration Grant Program of ensemnl groups to Asio-Pocific research oenters with Asia-Pocific and * Inroduce nevw echnolo- colaborate and fund local universities, and the privote international centers, the gies, monagement tools, and joird octivilies sector private sector; and stondard methods from joirt * increase exposure of universihes projects vwith Asia-Pacific and Indonesian scientists ond international centers, NARS, monagers to international and universities, and the privte regional forums and 20% increase sectr in number of scientific papers in * Trin staf and joint popers referred journals from the Scientific Echange * 25% increase in scientists, Program managers, and agriculturol institute staff trained outside Indonesia * Increase exposure of Indonesian scientists and managers to global research system * Foster collaboration among NARS and between NARS and IARCs Task manager: Defy Gaposin. 36 Table 4. Summary of obectives ii key perfonrmce hWktos, Uthuonla Slaulal Envlunnt Proedt (Stuff Appraisal Reort 1498l-IT, Nvovmbw 9, 1995) RISKS AND CRITICAl INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services [The outcome is OUTCOMES AND MPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on .. I (of project activitiesl Reduce pollutant * IBRD loan ($6.2 million) * Rehabilitate sewer network * Problems with securing * Increase treated waste- loads from the Siouliai * Bilateral gronts ($8.54 * Rehabilitate wastewater locol funding water from 40,000 cubic area into the Upper million) treatment plant meters a day to 50,000 Lielupe River Basin * Government funds * Construct new wastewater cubic meters a day 1$7.6 millioni treatment plant * Reduce nitrogen, M Municipality funds * Implement pollution control phosphorus, and other ($0.4 million) measures at pig farms pollution at the trectment * Implement pollution control plants' outlets, at the mouth Funds will be used to measures for agricultural runoff of the Lielupe River, and at procure equipment, works, the wastewater treatment consultants, and technical plant, from X tons a year to assistance itrainingl Y tons o year * Reduce pollution levels at selected points downstream from agricultural pilot sites and pig farms 9 Lower (by XX} health care costs * Increase (by X%) tourism revenues * Increose international political goodwill Improve quality, * Rehabilitate equipment * Ability to adjust tariffs * Improve drinking water reliability, and cost * Provide new equipment * Revenue collection quality (lower iron content efficiency of water * Restructure water utility difficulties and softer potable water) supply and wastewater * Troin people * Political difficulties * Ensure fewer breaks and services in Siauliai with organizational trouble calls on the water restructuring (staff supply and distribution system reduction) and the wastewater collection and conveyance system * Provide an adequate operating ratio (less than 85%) and odequate working ratio (less than 70%X for the water utility Improve local and * Provide monitoring and * Potential coordination * Ensure regular and regional environmental laboratory equipment difficulties between accurale monitoring of water quality monitoring and * Provide other equipment concerned parties quality enforcement system in * Train people * Ensure regular enforcement the Upper Lielupe River * Develop management plans visits at pollution sources Basin to reduce industrial pollution and sludge * Develop emergency management plan Task manager: Sari Soderstrom. 37 Table 5. Summary of obledives and key performance indicators, Pon Rural Roads Rehabilitation and Maintenacne Project (Staff Appraisal Report 1 4939-PE, November 6, 1995) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on ... (of project octivities( Reduce tronsport costs * IBRD loan ($90 million) * Bring 5,000 km of rural * Favorable macroeconomic * 80% of communities in ond increase reliability ' Inter-American roads up to adequate conditions and terms of program areas linked by a of vehicular access in Development Bank loan standards for traffic trade reliable and affordable rural areas to expand ($90 million) * Bring 2,500 km of * Favoroble natural public transportation system markets for ogricultural * Government funds connecting roads up to conditions in project area * 30% lower freight toriffs for and nonfarm products by: ($70.2 million) good condition * Security situation does not transport of agricultural output * Maintain 7,500 km prevent execution of works * 30% lower possenger * Integrating inaccessible Funds will be used to of roads routinely according * Local construction industry tariffs for transport in rural zones with regional procure technical to guidelines developed develops capacity to areas economic centers assistance, equipment, under the project undertake large volume * 30% increase in and works of works commercial traffic (buses, pickups, and trucks) within three years of completion of road improvements * Alleviate rural poverty in the 1 2 poorest departments (X% change in poverty measure) * Improving transport * Improve 220 km of streets * Communities willing to * Reduce dust pollution and conditions in rural in at least 300 villages participote and commit increased traffic and pedes- villages * 20% of iniegrated rood resources trian safety in 200 villoges projects include a non- * Successful coordination * Improve traffic conditions motorized transport with other programs to and 25 villages develop component enhance access to inter- capacity to manage the mediate means of transport unclassified neKworks of trocks * Raise living standards for .5 million rural residents through increased Iby Y%) infrastructure access Increase employment * Contract out to local * Continued government * Generate 35,000 one- through rehabilitation communities and contractors support for poverty year equivalent nonskilled and maintenance of at least $250 million eradication policy and seosonal jobs rural roads invested in works the project * Generate more than 4,000 nonskilled permanent jobs Table continues on the next page. 38 Table 5 (confloed) RISKS AND CRlTICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the projectl dependent on ... I (of project activities) Increase institutional Provide technical assistance for: * Government commitment to * Establish rural roads unit copocity at the local level * Planning and manogement empowering municipalities within MTC to plan and and increase capacity for of rural roads within MTC, * Municipalities' porticipation monitor rurol rood invesinment small and medium-size PERT-PCR, and lcol in the technical assistance and transporafion performance enterprises to manage and governments program * Revise fundional and carry out sustainable * Developing microenterprises * System of intergavernmental jurisdictional classification maintenance and upgrading and small and medium-size iransfers and local revenue of roads and inventory of roods enterprises for road maintenance sources in place as a resuh of all public roods * Developing the local of the decentralization agenda * Streamline local government construction industry. procurement procedures in Studies on: accordance with the action * Local Road Administration plan developed under the Practices Local Roods Administration * Rural Roads Funding Practices study * Implement mechanism to secure funds for rural maintenance agreed between central and local governments in accordance with the action plan developed under the Rural Roads Funding study * Encourage more than 300 local contradors and consultants to register with PERT-PCR and participote in projec activities * Ensure that 100 microenter- prises and small and medium- size participate in routine maintenance * Ensure that 60 lof 1 17) provincial municipalities adopt institutional programs designed under the project Task manager: Jose Luis Irigoyen. 39 Table 6. Summry of objedives and key performace Indacators, The Philippires Womn's Hotho and Saf Motherhood Prolet (Staff Appraisal Report 13566-PH, January 27, 1995) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS iResources provided iGoods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on... j (of project activities) Improve health status * IBRD loan ($18 million) * Increase proportion of of low-income women of * ABB loan ($54 million) women receiving prenatal and reprodudive age by * KfW cofinancing postnatal care, family increasing substantially ($14.24 million) planning, and RTI/STD and their use of effective and * EC cofinancing ($1 3 cervical cancer management sustainable health care million) from X% to Y% services. Specific * AIDAB cofinancing * Lower from 60% to X% development objectives: ($10.55 million) the share of lowerincome * LGU counterpart funds women not attended by a ($26.66 million) trained physician * Increase from X% to Y% the share of pregnant and lactating women completing micronutrient supplementation regimes * 25% drop in share of wvomen contracting puerperal infections (among the total number of diagnosed pregnancies) * 10% drop in share of low birthweight newborns * Reduce matemal mortality rate from 208 per 100,000 live births to X per 100,000 by 2005 * Lower fertility rate from 4.3% to X% by 2005 * Improving quality range, Micronutrients, food * Increase from X% to Y% the * LGUs have the managerial * Ensure that 90% of and access to women's fortifioation, immunizations, share of women with access to and technical capocity to women referred with health services delivery kits, drugs and motemal and prenatal implement the project obstetric complications ore supplies, health facilities care, family planning, RTI/STD monaged correctly renovation, technical and cervicol cancer oore, and * Adequate cash flow to * 25% increase in women assistance, and medical counseling support project acfivities referred and appropriately and laboratory * Ensure that X% of the * Most LGUs decide to managed for RTls in the ten equipment to: population resides within Y km porticipate in the project provinces * Strengthen maternal of a health facility * Sufficient and effective * 20% increase in women and prenatal core * Ensure that X% of women coordination by the various detected and managed for facilities and services who sought care through a donors is developed and cervical cancer in the 1 5 * Strengthen family heolth facility were satisfied maintained provinces plOanning services with the services * Implement RTI/STD prevention management program * Design and implement cervical cancer screening program Table continues on the next page. 40 Thbl 6 (continu.d) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on ...) (of project activities) * Strengthening LGU Technical assistance, * Increase to X% onthe-job * Skills leamed in training * Ensure that less fhan 25% of capocity to manage health workshops and training, competency levels of staff programs by midwives health focilities report stock-outs services and DOH capacity broadcast time, office trained in clinical, diagnostic, and barangay health of essential dwugs to provide technical, finon- and other equipment, counseling, interpersonal, workers are used * Reduce cost of logistics to cial, and logistical support travel, salaries honoraria, communication, historr effectively as community less than 8% of value of incremental operating taking, and referral outreoch tools commodities costs, supplies, computer practices * Midwives and barangay hardware and software, * Increase to X% the health workers are not warehouse construction timeliness and accuracy too averburdened with and renovation, vehicles, of procurement and distribution additional patients to logistics, and material of drugs, reagents, and other deliver quality services production publication, medical supplies * Local contractors and and distribution contracts consulting firms have the to: technical expertise to conduct * Design and implement studies in-service training program for public health care workers * Establish and operate project monagement office * Strengthen notionol public health and logistics system * Increasing local * Designed and imple- * Form X community * Ensure that at least 80% of and NGO involvement in mented household-evel partnerships to empower those surveyed are aware of women's health programs community outreach women and their communities one preventive intervention for programs to improve their health RTls, two symptoms of RTIs, and * Designed and imple- * Provincelevel LGUs conduct one complication due to RTI. mented integrated infor- X training programs * Ensure that at least 90% of mation, education, and * Fund X proposals women surveyed know about communication strategy submiffed by NGO antenatal Tr injections and iron * Designed and imple- partnerships at community folate supplements mented community level partnerships program * Improving knowledge * Consultants, studies, * Complete X studies bose for health policy monitoring, and on the costeffectiveness of formulation evaluation service delivery options * Improve health policy framework leading to increased cost-effectiveness of various options to deliver health services to women * Establish protocols for better detection and diagnosis of RTIs and eorly cervical cancer Task managers: Stanley Scheyer, Maria Dalupon, and Rama Lakshminarayanan. 41 Tab 7. Sommnry of obletWvs _I key perfomance idiators, Venezuela Aglcultural Extension Proec (Staff Appraisal Report 13591-VE, March 7, 1995) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on ...) (of project activitiesl Help poor farmers raise * IBRD loon 1$39 million) * Establish extension offices * Availability of counterpart * Farmers learn about and their productivity and * Government funds in each state and municipality funding adopt new technologies incomes ($21 million) (18 states and 180 * Sufficient administrative (measure: X beneficiaries adopt * State government funds municipalities) coordination in at least one technology Help small famiers ($1 1 milionl * Provide 50 training programs establishing a new recommended by the improve the environmental * Municipal government for extensionists each year nationwide program extension servicel sustainability of their funds ($6 millionl * Provide four extension visits * Extensionists learn new agricultural activities * Farmers funds to each form each year, technologies from universities ($2 million) covering 90,000 farmers and specialists (measure: X * Fund at least twm annual visits training events and field days Funds will be used by subject motter specialists each year, with Y extensionists to train agricultural to every municipality's farms participating) extensionists, establish and extension offices * Applied research conducted new extension offices, * Sponsor one field day each to address farmer's expressed and provide extension year in every state needs (measure: X field trials visits to farmers * Sponsor two field trials each conducted by specialists yeor in every municipality together with extensionistsl * Establish Farmers associations * Higher incomes for 90,000 in every municipality beneficiaries (measures: X°h0 of * Coordinate montly meetings participating farmers have yield of extensionists and subject increases over previous matter specialists in each stae period, average yield increase Y/ of participating farmers increase their net income over previous period) * Economic growth in rural communities (measure: average net income change over pevious period of participating famers) * Less environmental domage (soil degradation, erosion, runoff) caused by poor farmers (measure: X pots on participating farms with environmental improvement over previous period Task manager: David Nielson. 42 Table S. Summary of obledives and key perfonmance indiktors, Chad: Strudural Adjustment Credit (President's Report P-6785-CD) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided IGoods and services iThe outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on ...) (of project activities) Resbore publik sector capacity and improve pubik secor finances Civil service reform * $30 million * Complete a civil service * No renewal in political unrest * Reduce civil service vmge * Capocity-building census * Sufficient institutionol capocity bill from 5.8% of GDP in project ($9.5 million) * Abolish automoaic wage * New administration follows 1995 to 5.1 % in 1998 increases through on program * Prepare an organizational chort for civil service Public finance * Introduce single taxpayer * Increase revenue from 9% rehabiliiation code of GDP in 1995 to 11.5% * Reform special enterprise in 1998 regimes in line with regional economic agreements * Renegotiate customs treatment for private firms and public enterprises e Centralize collection of all international trade taxes e Establish exoneration quotas for imports by diplomats Increase development and poverty alleviation impact of public spending Demobilization * Reduce army size, with * Cut army from 47,000 to assistance for resettlement 21,000 soldiers Public expenditure * Abolish off-budget management operations * Eliminate arrears to domestic suppliers Development of public * Reach agreement with In 1996 budget: expenditure program IDA on 1996 budget and * Limit wages and salaries for 1996 and capital 1996-98 public investment to 5.7% of GDP expenditure program program * Limit goods and services for 1996-98 to 2.6% of GDP * Lmit overall current expenditures to less than 13.5%ofGDP * Limit capitol expenditure to less than 14% of GDP Table continues on the next page. 43 Taleb 8 (cont0Ined) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS [Resources provided IGoods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on ...) (of project activitiesj Improved resource * Increase resources for In 1996 budget: allocation to social primary health, primary educa- * 26% increase in allocation sectors tion, welfare of women and to educotion, heolth, ond children, and road maintenance women and social affairs over 1995 level (20% real increase( * 43% increase in road maintenance, from CFAF 2.8 billion in 1995 to CFAF 4.0 billion in 1996 Create favomble nvironmient for prisvte seor gwth Strengthened judicial * Simplify procedures * Increase pivate investment and regulatory environment fr licensing businesses from 1.4% of GDP in 1995 to * Amend Articles 116 and 4.5% in 1998 (excluding 142 of labor code impact of Doba oil) - Simplify investment code * Amend the business code, including compony and bankruptcy laws * Ratify OHADA Financial system * Sell public shares of BTCD restructuring and BDT * Sell Meridien's share in BMBT * Reduce public sector membership on the board of CNPS * Prepore action plan to settle government's debt to CNPS and CNRT State enterprise divesiture * Liquidate SONACOT, BICIT Coisse Sucre, and FIP * Prepore Hotel du Chari, BIEP, INT, and ONHPV for privatization * Offer SONAPA, SOTEC, BDT, BTCD, and BMBT for privotization * Initiate divesiture strategy for STEE ONPT, TIT, COTONCHAD, and SONASUT Cotton sector reform * Launch COTONCHAD * Increase producer price for human resource development firstgrade cotton from CFAF strategy 1 20 per kilogram to CFAF 140 * Improve producer pricing per kilogram * Adopt twopart cotton * 10% annual increase in producer pricing mechanism cotton exports between 1995 and 1998 Task managers: Amadou Cisse and Emmanuel Akpa. 44 Table 9. Summary of obledives and key performace Indiators, Morocco: Finandal Markets Development Loam (President's Report P-6633-MOR) RISKS AND CRITICAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND LMPACTS OBJECTIVES for projed activities) produced by the project) dependent on ...) lof project activities) Treasury financing Enoble Treasury to finance * IBRD loon ($250 * Eliminate mandatory Treasury * Nonagricultural GDP grows * Increase ratio of Treasury itself at market terms million) bond to sight deposits ratio from 2. in 1995 to 3.2% bond auctions to total Treasury in 1996, to 3.6% in 1997 domes6c debt from 25% in 1995 to 30% in 1996, to 35%in 1997 Increase liquidity of * Technical assistance * Adopt lw on negotiable * Ratio of debt outstanding to public securities and * Debt management-- securities GDP falls from 221 % in 1995 strengthen secondary $50,000 (France; * Issue Central Bank circulars to 200% in 1996, to 182% markets for Treasury bonds on Treasury bond tenders in 1997 Eliminate remaining * Accounting- * Eliminate fiscal incentives * Current account deficit/GDP tax bias $75,000 (Froncel on Treasury bonds ratio falls from 3.5% in 1995 to 2.9% in 1996, to 2.8% in 1997 Strengthen public debt * Complete training program * Budget deficit/GDP ratio falls management system from 3.5% in 1995 to 3.0% in 1996, to 2.5% in 1997 * Fixed capital Formation/GDP ratio increases from 21.2% in 1995 t 22.0 in 1996, to 22.8 in 1997 * No deterioration in banks' Finoncial condition Indirect monetory conto Implement indirect * Central Bank sets bose rates * Limit ratio of Central Bank monetary control policy * Issue Central Bank circular estob- advance rate to interbonk lishing terms and conditions of its rate maximum spread to 2% interventions in monetary market through 1997 * Calculate reserve requirement on a daily basis Liberalize interest rates * Eliminate ceiling on lending rates Capital market developrmnt Diversify financing * Technical assistance * Issue decrees on stack * Increase corporate bond sources for private firms, for a central depository exchange issues from 0 in 1995 to strengthen accounting and delivery and * Implement accounting DH 2 billion in 1996, to fromework, and deepen poyments system- framework DH 4 billion in 1997 capital markets $1 million (Francel * Present draft low on corporations * Incrrease ratio of stock to House of Representatives market capitalization to GDP * Approve rules governing from 17% in 1995 to 19% national council for accounting in 1996, to 23% in 1997 * Present drah law on preporation, publication, and cerfification of consolidoted financial accounts * Eliminote government guarantees on domestic bond issues by public enterprises * Develop occounting rules for insurance companies Table continues on the next poge. 45 Te 9 (Cethied) RISKS AND CRmCAL INPUTS OUTPUTS ASSUMPTIONS (Resources provided (Goods and services (The outcome is OUTCOMES AND IMPACTS OBJECTIVES for project activities) produced by the project) dependent on ...) (of project activities) Increase institutional * Technical assistance for * Compete study of and Same as above (increase savings contractual savings- achon plan on potential role corporate bond issues, stock $600,000 (Francel of institutional investors market capitalization) Encourage investors to * Technical assistance * Define trading fees trode securities onrfloor on stock exchange and increase transparency operations, upgrading, of stock exchange and troding (CIDA) operations Strengthen securities * Implement action plan to commission and stock strengthen securifies commission exchange and stock exchange Bknmng syslen Accelerate prvatization * Sell state's shares in BCP, program BNDE, and CIH Establish foreign * Announce creation of forex exchange market market * Issue circular establishing forex market and modalities of operafions * Issue accounting standards for foreign currency operations by banks * Eliminate initial minimum IDH 100,000) required to open nonresident Moroccan accounts in foreign currencies * Increase foreign currency limits of exporters of goods and srvices from 5% and 10% to 20% Strengthen bonk * Develop offsite and on-site supervision supervision * Submit regular reports prepored by independent external auditors oertified by the Central Bank Task manager: Emmonuel Forestier. 46 Distributors Oi ~ F.wCHNA P&aarroc SA L CosrruTocnau Sansor SPA Navesan hronrnabn Center SINGAPORE, TAIWAK Van Diarrms E r WerM DiShibUtors of Chra Frralciat6Eronox 35 StnamStr. 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Box 3196 1294 AJRom Fed Fax (1)40-88-30-56 PO Box 13056 Uriiseady Pre LUmed Riyadi 11471 SW6YZENLAO Onms0ChnsKRB3W8 TelAvri61130 TlseCwOwBuildingJetldro Tat: (1)477-3140 L4x iiePayol Tdt61-74143 GERMANY Te()9 5461423 Priate Mod Bg 5095 Faxx (1)477-2940 Serniickub trSw9 F&ac 613-741-5439 UNO-Vs Far (3) 541442 budan Ce4-brte 30 URL, htMii1wabxrLC/-eufi Poppledler Ai 55 Tat: (22)41-13506 1002 LauttxW 53115 Brm Pattie Aedspib ES Fasx (22)41-2856 iat 028441-3229 Tt MO 212940 tdres birrr enSie Fax (021(3414251 Fax (228)217492 P0.B 19562 Jerral Tel- 21271219 RECENT WORLD BANK TECHNICAL PAPERS (continued) No. 295 Pohl, Jedrzejczak, and Anderson, Creating Capital Markets in Central and Eastern Europe No. 296 Stassen, Small-Scale Biomass Gasifiersfor Heat and Power: A Global Review No. 297 Bulatao, Key Indicatorsfor Family Planning Projects No. 298 Odaga and Heneveld, Girls and Schools in Sub-Saharan Africa: From Analysis to Action No. 299 Tamale, Jones, and Pswarayi-Riddihough, Technologies Related to Participatory Forestry in Tropical and Subtropical Countries No. 300 Oram and de Haan, Technologiesfor Rainfed Agriculture in Mediterranean Climates: A Review of World Bank Experiences No. 301 Mohan, editor, Bibliography of Publications: Techinical Department, Africa Region, July 1987 to April 1995 No. 302 Baldry, Calamari, and Yameogo, Environmental Impact Assessment of Settlement and Developmenit in the Upper Leraba Basin No. 303 Heneveld and Craig, Schools Count: World Bank Project Designs and the Quality of Primary Education in Sub-Saharan Africa No. 304 Foley, Photovoltaic Applications in Rural Areas of the Developing World No. 305 Johnson, Education and Training of Accountants in Sub-Saharan Angloplhone Africa No. 306 Muir and Saba, Improving State Enterprise Perfornance: The Role of Internal and External Incentives No. 307 Narayan, Toward Participatory Research No. 308 Adarnson and others, Energy Use, Air Pollution, and Environmental Policy in Krakow: Can Economic Incentives Really Help? No. 309 The World Bank/FOA/UNIDO/Industry Fertilizer Working Group, World and Regional Supply and Demand Balances for Nitrogen, Phosphate, and Potash, 1993/94-1999/2000 No. 310 Elder and Cooley, editors, Sustainable Settlement and Development of the Onchocerciasis Control Programme Area: Proceedings of a Ministerial Meeting No. 311 Webster, Riopelle and Chidzero, World Bank Lendingfor Small Enterprises 1989-1993 No. 312 Benoit, Project Finance at the World Bank: An Overview of Policies and Instruments No. 313 Kapur, Airport Infrastructure: The Emerging Role of the Private Sector No. 314 Valdes and Schaeffer in collaboration with Ramos, Surveillance of Agricultural Price and Trade Policies: A Handbookfor Ecuador No. 316 Schware and Kirnberley, Information Technology and National Trade Facilitation: Making the Most of Global Trade No. 317 Schware and Kirnberley, Information Technology and National Trade Facilitation: Guide to Best Practice No. 318 Taylor, Boukambou, Dahniya, Ouayogode, Ayling, Abdi Noor, and Toure, Strengtlening National Agricultural Research Systems in the Humid and Sub-humid Zones of West and Central Africa: A Frameworkfor Action No. 320 Srivastava, Lambert and Vietmeyer, Medicinal Plants: An Expanding Role in Development No. 321 Srivastava, Smith, and Forno, Biodiversity and Agriculture: Implicationsfor Conservation and Development No. 322 Peters, The Ecology and Management of Non-Timber Forest Resources No. 323 Pannier, editor, Corporate Governance of Public Enterprises in Transitionial Economies No. 324 Cabraal, Cosgrove-Davies, and Schaeffer, Best Practicesfor Photovoltaic Household Electrification Programs No. 325 Bacon, Besant-Jones, and Heidarian, Estimating Construction Costs and Schedules: Experience withi Power Generation Projects in Developing Countries No. 326 Colletta, Balachander, Liang, The Condition of Young Children in Sub-Saharan Africa: The Convergence of Health, Nutrition, and Early Education No. 327 Valdes and Schaeffer in collaboration with Martin, Surveillance of Agricultural Price and Trade Policies: A Handbookfor Paraguay No. 328 De Geyndt, Social Development and Absolute Poverty in Asia and Latin America No. 329 Mohan, editor, Bibliography of Publications: Technical Department, Africa Region, July 1987 to April 1996 No. 332 Pohl, Djankov, and Anderson, Restructuring Large Industrial Firms in Central and Eastern Eunmpe: An Empirical Analysis No. 333 Jha, Ranson, and Bobadilla, Measuring the Burden of Disease and the Cost-Effectiveness of Health Interventions: A Case Study in Guinea i~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ i%P~~~~~~ I I I I ,i S . !I -~~~~~~a - :~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~u. 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