Document of The World Bank Group FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Report No. 110813-LA INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORPORATION MULTILATERAL INVESTMENT GUARANTEE AGENCY COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK FOR LAO PEOPLE’S DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC FOR THE PERIOD FY2017 – FY2021 March 2, 2017 Lao People’s Democratic Republic South East Asia Country Management Unit East Asia and Pacific Region The International Finance Corporation East Asia and Pacific Region The Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by recipients only in the performance of their official duties. Its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank Group authorization. The previous Country Partnership Strategy was discussed by the Executive Directors on March 8, 2012 (Report No. 66692) CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS Exchange Rate Effective as of March 1, 2017 Kip 8,200 = US$1.00 FISCAL YEAR January to December ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ADB Asian Development Bank Lao PDR Lao People’s Democratic Republic AML Anti-Money Laundering LECS Laos Expenditure and Consumption Survey ASA Advisory Services and Analytics LENS 2 Second Lao Environment and Social Project ASEAN Association of South East Asian Nations LSIS Lao Socio Indicator Survey BOL Bank of Lao PDR MDG Millennium Development Goals CGAP Country Gender Action Plan MDTF Multi-Donor Trust Fund CLR Completion and Learning Review MEM Ministry of Energy and Mines COS Country Opinion Survey MIGA Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency CPF Country Partnership Framework MIWRM Mekong Integrated Water Resources CPS Country Partnership Strategy Management CPIA Country Policy and Institutional Assessment MMR Maternal Mortality Ratio CRVS Civil Registration and Vital Statistics MOF Ministry of Finance DPF Development Policy Financing MONRE Ministry of Natural Resources and EAP East Asia and Pacific Environment ECD Early Childhood Education MW Megawatt EdL Electricité du Laos NSEDP National Socio-Economic Development Plan EU European Union NT2 Nam Theun 2 FCPF Forest Carbon Partnership Facility PFM Public Finance Management FIP Forest Investment Program PLR Performance and Learning Review FY Fiscal Year PPP Purchasing Power Parity GDP Gross Domestic Product PRF Poverty Reduction Fund GNI Gross National Income SCD Systematic Country Diagnostic GOL Government of Lao PDR SDG Sustainable Development Goal HGNDP Health Governance and Nutrition SDR Special Drawing Right Development Program SEEDTA Sustainable Energy and Extractives HMTA Technical Assistance for Capacity Development Technical Assistance Project Development in Hydropower and Mining SME Small and medium enterprise Sector SOB State-owned bank ICA Investment Climate Assessment UN United Nations IDA International Development Association UNFPA United Nations Population Fund IEG Independent Evaluation Group UNICEF United Nations Children’s Fund IFC International Finance Corporation WBG World Bank Group IMF International Monetary Fund WHO World Health Organization IDA IFC MIGA Regional Vice President: Victoria Kwakwa Snezana Stoilikovic Keiko Honda (EVP) Country Director: Ulrich Zachau Vivek Pathak Merli Baroudi Country Manager: Sally Burningham Kyle Kelhofer Task Team Leader: Sally Burningham Phongsavanh Phomkong i Acknowledgements The World Bank Group is grateful to the Government of Lao PDR, in particular the Ministry of Planning and Investment and the Ministry of Finance, for their collaboration throughout the preparation of the Country Partnership Framework for Lao PDR. This document was prepared by a team consisting of Sally Burningham (Task Team Leader, Country Manager, World Bank); Phongsavanh Phomkhong (Co-Task Team Leader, Head of Office, IFC); Evgenij Najdov (Senior Economist, World Bank); Obert Pimhidzai (Senior Poverty Economist, World Bank); Elise Vanormelingen (Consultant, World Bank); Ricardo Habalian (author of the Completion and Learning Review, Operations Analyst, World Bank); and Viengsamay Srithirath (Country Officer, World Bank). Substantial inputs and comments were received from Aimilios Chatzinikolaou (Senior Operations Officer, IFC); Banthida Komphasouk (Health Specialist, World Bank); Chanhsom Manythong (Agriculture Specialist, World Bank); Christophe Crepin (Practice Manager, World Bank); Claudia Zambra Taibo (Social Protection Specialist, World Bank); Daryl Fields (Senior Water Specialist, World Bank); Fanny Weiner (Senior Public Sector Management Specialist, World Bank); Franz Gerner (Lead Energy Specialist, World Bank); Greg Browder (Lead Water Resource Management Specialist, World Bank); Heejoo Lee (Consultant, World Bank); Henrike Brecht (Senior Infrastructure Specialist, World Bank); Jean- Michel Pavy (Senior Environmental Specialist, World Bank); Kate Lazarus (Senior Operations Officer, IFC); Keomanivone Phimmahasay (author of the Country Gender Action Plan, Economist, World Bank); Khamphet Chanvongnaraz (Procurement Specialist, World Bank); Kiyotaka Tanaka (Financial Sector Specialist, World Bank); Mombert Hoppe (Senior Economist, World Bank); Morten Larsen (Senior Mining Specialist, World Bank); Phet Udom Mainolath (Program Assistant, World Bank); Plamen Danchev (Senior Education Specialist, World Bank); Puja Dutta (Senior Economist, World Bank); Robert Ragland Davis (Senior Forestry Specialist, World Bank); Satoshi Ishihara (Senior Social Development Specialist, World Bank); Sergiy Zorya (Senior Economist, World Bank); Siriphone Vanitsaveth (Senior Financial Management Specialist, World Bank); Sombath Southivong (Senior Infrastructure Specialist, World Bank); Somil Nagpal (Senior Health Specialist, World Bank); Vachraras Pasuksuwan (Operations Assistant, World Bank); and Vilayvanh Phonepraseuth (Operations Analyst, World Bank). The team acknowledges the constant guidance from Ulrich Zachau (Country Director, South-East Asia, World Bank); Lars Sondergaard (Program Leader, World Bank); Louise Scura (Program Leader, World Bank); Shabih Mohib (Program Leader, World Bank) and Daniel Street (Senior Operations Officer, IFC). ii FY 2017-2021 COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK FOR LAO PEOPLE’S DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC Table of Contents I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ............................................................................................ 1 II. COUNTRY CONTEXT AND DEVELOPMENT AGENDA ....................................... 4 2.1. Political and Social Context ........................................................................................... 4 2.2. Recent Economic Developments.................................................................................... 6 2.3. Poverty Profile .............................................................................................................. 12 2.4. Drivers of Poverty Reduction and Development Challenges ....................................... 15 III. WORLD BANK GROUP PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK...................................... 22 3.1. Government Program and Medium Term Strategy ...................................................... 22 3.2. Proposed WBG Country Partnership Framework ........................................................ 25 3.2.1. Lessons learned from the CPS Completion and Learning Review, IEG evaluation and stakeholder consultations ................................................................................................ 25 3.2.2. Overview of WBG Partnership Framework ........................................................... 26 3.2.3. Focus Areas and Objectives supported by the WBG Program ............................... 29 3.3. Implementing the FY 2017-2021 Country Partnership Framework ............................ 38 3.3.1. Financial Envelopes and Instruments ..................................................................... 38 3.3.2. Country Financial Management and Procurement Capacities ................................ 41 3.3.3. Managing Program Implementation ....................................................................... 42 3.3.4. Coordination and Partnerships ................................................................................ 42 IV. MANAGING RISKS ................................................................................................... 44 4.1. Political and Governance Risks .................................................................................... 44 4.2. Macroeconomic Risks .................................................................................................. 45 4.3. Environment and Social Risks ..................................................................................... 46 iii ANNEXES .................................................................................................................................... 47 Annex 1: CPF Results Monitoring Matrix .................................................................................... 48 Annex 2: Lao PDR CPS Completion and Learning Review ........................................................ 57 Annex 3: Selected Indicators of WBG Portfolio Performance and Management ........................ 90 Annex 4: World Bank Portfolio .................................................................................................... 92 Annex 5: IFC Portfolio ................................................................................................................. 96 Annex 6: Links between the 8th NSEDP, the SDGs, the SCD and the CPF ................................. 97 Annex 7: Lao PDR Gender Action Plan Summary ...................................................................... 99 Annex 8: Complementarity between World Bank Group, Asian Development Bank and United Nations in Lao PDR........................................................................................ 103 Annex 9: Map of Lao PDR ......................................................................................................... 104 List of Tables Table 1: Key Statistics .................................................................................................................... 6 Table 2: Lao PDR Macroeconomic Key Indicators ...................................................................... 10 Table 3: Selected Budget Indicators ............................................................................................. 25 Table 4: Lao PDR Systematic Country Diagnostic Priorities ....................................................... 27 Table 5: Indicative World Bank Group Program FY 2017-2021 ................................................. 40 Table 6: Risks to the CPF Objectives in Lao PDR ....................................................................... 44 List of Figures Figure 1: Poverty trend in Lao PDR ............................................................................................. 13 Figure 2: Mean consumption by decile ......................................................................................... 13 Figure 3: Consumption, especially by the poor, grew slower than economic growth .................. 15 Figure 4: Lao PDR 8th National Socio-Economic Development Plan goal and outcomes ........... 22 List of Boxes th Box 1: Lao PDR 8 National Socio-Economic Development Plan.............................................. 23 Box 2: Tourism in Lao PDR ......................................................................................................... 31 Box 3: Hydropower sector development and the role of the WBG .............................................. 33 iv FY 2017-2021 COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK FOR LAO PEOPLE’S DEMOCRATIC REPUBLIC Lasting Accessible Opportunities for all I. EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1. This document presents the World Bank Group (WBG) Country Partnership Framework (CPF) with the Lao People’s Democratic Republic (Lao PDR) for FY 2017- 2021. The WBG CPF aims at supporting Lasting Accessible Opportunities for all. The previous Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) FY 2012-2016, discussed by the Executive Directors of the WBG on March 8, 2012, built a solid foundation and a strong relationship with the Government of Lao PDR (GOL). 2. The CPF supports the GOL’s 8th National Socio-Economic Development Plan (NSEDP) for 2016-2020. The 8th NSEDP introduces policies intended to put Lao PDR on a path to reduce poverty and promote shared prosperity in a sustainable manner, based on green growth principles. Lao PDR’s development has advanced greatly in the last two decades, although significant challenges remain. Incomes have risen, poverty has declined, access to several key public services has improved and as a result Lao PDR met a number of its Millennium Development Goals. With GDP growth averaging 8 percent per year since 2000, Lao PDR today is a lower-middle income country with a GNI per capita of around US$1,740 in 2015 (Atlas method). However, growth has been driven mainly by exploitation of its abundant natural resources and has been less inclusive, resilient, and sustainable than for regional comparators. Widespread malnutrition and overall low consumption levels highlight the challenges that remain for the basic well-being of the country. 3. Within the country’s economic and social context and the lessons of experience, the CPF uses three selectivity filters to focus the planned WBG engagement during FY 2017- 2021. The first filter is that the CPF supports the priorities of the GOL as outlined in their 8th NSEDP. The second focuses on the priorities identified in the Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD). The third relates to the WBG’s comparative advantage including in relation to the programs of other development partners. The CPF also reflects the lessons from the Completion and Learning Review of the CPS for FY 2012-2016. The CPF reflects a shared understanding among stakeholders of the development priorities facing Lao PDR. The envisaged WBG program reflects wide consultations with the private sector, development partners, civil society and academia, and the Government. 4. The SCD for Lao PDR, completed in February 2017 (No 112241-LA), identified an overarching priority of strengthening institutions, as well as the following three development pathways: (i) sustainable and efficient management of natural resources; (ii) unlocking the potential in non-resource sectors to create opportunities; and (iii) building the assets of people to be able to take on these opportunities and to mitigate risks and protect gains. This CPF is based on the SCD analysis, findings, and development pathways. 1 5. The CPF aims to support Lao PDR to accelerate progress toward the WBG twin goals of ending extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity1. Progress toward these goals will involve maintaining the current robust growth rates, while increasing inclusiveness, lowering vulnerability, and shifting to a greener and more resilient growth pattern. The CPF is closely aligned with the WBG East-Asia and Pacific Strategy2, which focuses on five priorities: (i) inclusion and empowerment; (ii) jobs and private sector-led growth; (iii) governance and institutions; (iv) infrastructure and urbanization; and (v) climate change and disaster risk management; with a special focus on gender and nutrition. 6. The CPF aims to support 10 of the 20 objectives of the 8th NSEDP, selected based on WBG comparative advantage, client demand and key constraints to poverty reduction and shared prosperity identified by the SCD. The targeted results are closely aligned with the targets of the Sustainable Development Goals. 7. The CPF targets three focus areas for WBG engagement in Lao PDR, namely: (i) supporting inclusive growth, (ii) investing in people, and (iii) protecting the environment. These focus areas are complemented by a cross cutting theme of strengthening institutions to create a rules based environment. The CPF program is centered on Lasting Accessible Opportunities for all including sustained green growth, improved access to human and infrastructure services, and opportunities for all. 8. CPF financial envelope. The CPF financial envelope to support Lao PDR’s development for the CPF period reflects the programmed pipeline of SDR346.5 million (US$63.2 million equivalent) for FY 2017 under the International Development Association (IDA) 17 replenishment, and an indicative IDA18 core country allocation for FY 2018-2020 in the range of SDR178 to SDR200 million (US$242 to US$272 million equivalent).4 The IDA18 allocation represents an increase of approximately 60 percent from the IDA17 commitments for FY 2015- 2017, of SDR127 million (US$173 million equivalent). This new IDA financing will complement the ongoing IDA financed portfolio for Lao PDR which stands at US$347.5 million equivalent as of February 2017, complemented by US$60 million in trust fund resources. Options to use Regional IDA financing will be explored, including in particular for the energy sector. The International Finance Corporation (IFC) has a current portfolio of US$35 million. The expected increase in WBG financing provides an opportunity to significantly scale up impact in the key areas of green growth as well as malnutrition through a significant program in health, education, agriculture, and rural water supply and sanitation, the latter being the second leading cause of child stunting worldwide. The focus on green growth reflects the WBG Climate Change Action Plan.5 1 The WBG’s twin goals are: (1) to reduce the percentage of people living on less than US$1.25 a day to 3 percent at the global level by 2030, and (2) to improve the living standards of the bottom 40 percent of the population. See the World Bank Group Strategy 2013. 2 World Bank East Asia and Pacific Strategy 3 SDR stands for Special Drawing Right 4 US$ equivalent amounts for IDA use the exchange rate as of end of January 2017: SDR1 = US$1.36. 5 World Bank Group 2016. WBG Climate Change Action Plan 2 9. “One World Bank Group” coordination and collaboration among the World Bank, IFC and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency is strong and is continuing to intensify. For each expected outcome, the CPF envisages the delivery of tailored development solutions through packages of WBG knowledge, convening, and financial services. 10. The overall risk to the achievement of the CPF development objectives is assessed as Substantial. Lao PDR faces a number of risks and vulnerabilities that could significantly affect the achievement of its economic and social goals and the expected results of the WBG supported interventions under the proposed CPF. The key risks relate to weak governance; a fragile macroeconomic situation, with a high risk of debt distress; and weak enforcement of policies regarding natural resources management. Strong political commitment will be key to overcome the serious governance challenges in Lao PDR, and there are indications of such commitment by the new Government. 3 II. COUNTRY CONTEXT AND DEVELOPMENT AGENDA 2.1. Political and Social Context 11. Lao PDR is governed by a single party, the Lao PDR People’s Revolutionary Party. The 10th Party Congress of took place in January 2016, with changes in the Politburo, followed by the National Assembly elections in March 2016 and appointment of a new Government in April 2016. The new Government signaled several significant shifts towards sustainable growth, and has taken actions to tackle governance challenges, promote the rule of law and improve economic management. Lao PDR was the Chair of the Association of South East Asian Nations (ASEAN) in 2016, and hosted the ASEAN Summits in September 2016. 12. The new Government has launched efforts to improve governance in a context where there is a lack of transparency and a rules-based environment. The recognition of the need to improve the quality of public services is evolving, and mechanisms to solicit feedback and consultation are gradually being introduced (for example, consultations in drafting regulations, participatory approach to planning); however, in many instances even the few options that exist to provide voice to citizens and businesses are not effectively implemented. The opportunities for development of a dynamic and vibrant private sector are limited. The lack of a system for accountability has led to the unsustainable and often illegal exploitation of natural resources, and an inability to contain or prevent adverse social and environmental effects of industrial development. Strengthening the role of the National Assembly and transparently leveraging the roles of institutions such as the Provincial Assemblies will be critical to promote good governance at the national and local levels. 13. One of the most vivid shifts observed in the Lao PDR People’s Revolutionary Party and the new Government is the more explicit and substantive commitment to sustainability and green growth.6 This is seen to stem from the recognition of the need for improved management of important state assets. It has become apparent that while the development of natural resources will continue to be a key driver of economic growth, without an improved system to sustainably manage the natural capital, the social and environmental costs will be irreparable and may soon outweigh the economic benefits of exploitation and reduce future opportunities. The Lao PDR Constitution was amended in 2016 and included changes to the Socio-Economic Regime articles to focus relevance of national economic development to social development and the environment, and with greater emphasis on natural resources as the State’s property to be protected. The Party Congress, which convenes every 5 years, adopted the 10th Party Resolution that committed to the new Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and prioritized effective utilization of natural resources, industrialization, and modernization with principles of green development. The 15-year Vision, 10-year Strategy, and 5-year 8th National Socio-Economic Development Plan (NSEDP) adopted by the newly elected National Assembly 6 The WBG defines green growth as “growth that is efficient in its use of natural resources, clean in that it minimizes pollution and environmental impacts, and resilient in that it accounts for natural hazards and the role of environmental management and natural capital in preventing physical disasters” (World Bank 2012. Inclusive Green Growth: The Pathway to Sustainable Development). 4 all reinforce the commitment to the larger paradigm shift, naming green growth and sustainability as the orientations that will guide the Government to reaching its goal towards becoming an upper-middle-income country by 2030. 14. The effort to depart from business as usual is related to the dynamics of neighboring countries and the region as a whole. Lao PDR has long international borders, many goods markets are located across borders and inputs can be more easily sourced from abroad. Trade plays an important role in the economic development of the Lao PDR economy, and the trend toward regional integration of goods and services markets will play a critical role in attracting investments and providing growth opportunities for the private sector. However, the dominant mode of cross border transport is by road, and weak road infrastructure remains a bottleneck for trade, compounded by the limited availability and quality of logistics services to use such infrastructure. Also, demand from nearby countries for Lao PDR’s valued natural resources such as wildlife, timber and non-timber forest products is high, presenting vulnerability to illegal trade. 15. The development agenda of Lao PDR broadly embraces the internationally agreed development goals. As such, achieving the Millennium Development Goals had been a high priority for the national development. Similarly, the SDGs have been mainstreamed into the 8th NSEDP, the national development strategy 2025 and the Vision 2030. Lao PDR is one of the first countries to localize the SDGs in line with the national development context.7 Furthermore, the pristine nature of Lao PDR is highly regarded, as reflected in the country branding of “Green, Clean, and Beautiful Laos”. There is a strong political commitment to Green Growth, both domestically and among ASEAN member States. Lao PDR ratified the Paris Agreement in September 2016. 16. Lao PDR is an ethnically diverse country. The livelihoods of most ethnic minorities have deep roots in the natural environment, with resource-based development ambitions that can sometimes be at odds with environmental objectives. The population of 6.5 million is comprised of four main ethno-linguistic groups (the Lao Loum ethnic group accounts for around 67 percent of the population) and 49 officially recognized ethnicities (but there may be as many as 170 distinct ethnicities). Due to their physical isolation, many of these ethnicities rely on the natural environment for survival and livelihood and as a result are more vulnerable to natural hazards. 17. With two-thirds of the population living in rural areas, Lao PDR is an agrarian economy with low population density. Still, the country is urbanizing, with the urban population increasing by 40 percent between 2005 and 2015. The fertility rate is around three, one of the highest in the East Asia and Pacific region, posing health risks, reducing the educational and employment opportunities for women, and contributing to significant economic burden on the country. The fertility rate is high due to large unmet needs for family planning. The incidence of teenage pregnancy is very high; Lao PDR has the highest rate of adolescent pregnancies in Asia, with 4 in 10 girls becoming pregnant before the age of 18. Although the 7 In the CPF Results Framework in Annex 1, all CPF Objective Indicators and Supplementary Progress Indicators labeled as ‘SDG’ refer to localized SDGs (or country specific objectives) to which the WBG will contribute. 5 legal framework provides equal rights to men and women, the implementation is still hindered by customs, traditions, and the socio-economic characteristics of different population groups. Table 1: Key Statistics 2013 2014 2015 Total population (million) 6.6 6.8 6.5 Life expectancy 65 65 66 School enrollment, primary (%) 97.3 98.7 - Maternal mortality (per 100,000) 220 - - Under 5 mortality rate (per 1,000 live births) 79 Poverty rate based on national poverty line (%) 23.2 - - Unemployment rate (%) 1.9 - - 2.2. Recent Economic Developments 18. The Lao economy continues to expand strongly; though growth rates in recent years have been below historical averages. In 2016, economic growth moderated to around 7 percent, compared to 7.4 percent in 2015 and around 8 percent on average since 2000, reflecting flat output in mining, moderation of credit growth and public spending. With GNI per capita reaching US$1,740 in 2015 (Atlas method), Lao PDR is a lower-middle income country. With natural capital accounting for 45 percent of national wealth (2013), the growing use of natural resources contributed on average 3 percentage points of total growth during this period. At the same time, there was an increasing trend in environmental damage in Lao PDR, with natural capital depletion per capita having jumped six-fold between 2000 and 2013. Growth in the mid- 2000s was driven by mining; however, its contribution declined in recent years reflecting the decline in prices as well as weak regulatory environment. Later on, hydropower projects, largely expected to meet demand in neighboring countries, were the main source of growth with Lao PDR increasing installed capacity ten-fold between 2000 and 2016 to above 6,000 MW, mostly through engagement with national and international private sector. 19. More recently, growth has become more broad-based. Services expanded, including wholesale and retail trade, as well as tourism and transport due to spillovers from natural resource projects, some liberalization of the economy (banking sector, transport, etc.), as well as fiscal expansion. Still, services remain concentrated in low-value added traditional sectors. Agriculture, where two thirds of the labor force was engaged in 2012 (last available data), remains characterized by subsistence farms with low productivity. However, there are signs of emerging commercialization of rice production and increasing importance of other crops such as vegetables, maize, beans, coffee, banana, rubber, etc. Manufacturing grew, apart from traditional garment manufacturing, albeit from a low base and mostly confined to the special economic zones, suggesting Lao PDR firms could participate more effectively in regional supply chains. Rapid growth and an expanding consumer base also boosted construction activity in commercial and residential real estate. 20. Accommodative macroeconomic policies have contributed to challenges for economic management. A generally prudent fiscal policy up to FY 2011-2012 was replaced by 6 substantial fiscal expansion in FY 2012-2013,8 including significant public sector wage-bill increases and a surge in public investments. Combined with falling commodity prices, the fiscal deficit widened to 6 percent of GDP, arrears emerged (on public sector wages and on contracts with the private sector) and public debt, measured as a percentage of GDP, started to increase after bottoming out at 57 percent of GDP at the end of 2012. Around the same time, direct lending by the Bank of Lao PDR (BOL) to state-owned enterprises, weak oversight over the rapidly growing banking sector as well as tight management of the exchange rate against the US dollar added to demand, kept the balance of payments deficit high and the reserves low, while also increasing the risks in the financial sector. Inflation pressures have been low largely due to the lower oil price. Average inflation declined from 6 percent in 2013 to 4 in 2014 and further to below 2 percent in 2015 and 2016. 21. The authorities have recently taken some steps to consolidate the fiscal position. Moderation of wage increases, slowdown in public recruitment, spending cuts in other categories as well as efforts to improve tax collection reduced the deficit to below 4 percent of GDP in FY 2013-2014 and FY 2014-2015. However, the reliance on ad-hoc fixes rather than systemic solutions as well as prolonged weakness in commodity prices resulted in widening of the deficit to above 6 percent of GDP in FY 2015-2016. Public debt increased further to around 68 percent of GDP in 2016. The 2016 Joint International Monetary Fund-World Bank Debt Sustainability Analysis moved the country into the category of high risk of debt distress. However, the high risks are somewhat mitigated as around 20 percent of external public debt is for projects, mostly in the energy sector, which are expected to be economically viable and self-financing. 22. The current account improved, however the external deficit remains high and foreign exchange reserves remain low. Lao PDR exports of metals and timber have stagnated recently in response to lower metal prices and stricter enforcement of regulations on illegal logging. This was off-set by growing exports of electricity from new capacity coming on stream, as well as from agriculture and manufacturing products. Lower fuel prices and completion of fewer large projects lowered imports; with the current account deficit projected to narrow to 14 percent of GDP in 2016. The deficit on the current account was financed by continued strong foreign direct investment but also growing indebtedness with total public and private external debt increasing to around 98 percent of GDP in 2016. At around US$1 billion in December 2016, reserves remain low by most metrics, covering around 2 months of goods imports and one quarter of the foreign currency deposits in the banking sector. 23. The financial sector has developed but significant parts of the banking sector continue to face challenges. The financial sector has grown rapidly from a low base, outpacing the regulators’ capacity to monitor and mitigate risks. The number of banks has grown from 12 in 2006 to 42 now, and credit growth averaged more than 35 percent for a decade before slowing to around 17 percent for 2014-2016. Abetted by the slowdown and government arrears, non- performing loans started rising rapidly in 2014, especially at the state-owned banks (SOBs). Weak oversight and transparency also drove the Financial Action Task Force to dark-grey-list 8 Until 2016, the Lao fiscal year was from October 1 st to September 30th. Since January 2017, the Lao fiscal year is from January 1st to December 30th. 7 Lao PDR in 2015 for Anti-Money Laundering (AML),9 and the Country Policy and Institutional Assessment (CPIA) index for financial stability was downgraded to 1.5 in early 2016. Concerted improvements in AML since have lifted Lao PDR to the grey-list in 2016, and an exit from the grey-list is hoped for in 2017. Lao PDR has historically twice restructured SOBs, in 1989 and 2003, and due to faster growth by the private banks, SOBs are now only around 45 percent of system assets, but their lack of capital continues to be a major contingent liability. The BOL has limited capacity to deal with weak banks, with deficiencies in the regulatory and supervisory frameworks, weak enforcement capacity, no fiscal space, and non-functioning deposit insurance. The country also has no practice in resolving the insolvencies of corporates (joint last at 169th in Doing Business 2017), making non-performing loan work-outs difficult. In addition although dollarization has come down from a historic high of 80 percent, it is still 50 percent, leaving Lao PDR vulnerable to currency fluctuations. 24. The central bank’s policy to tightly manage the exchange rate, in an environment of low reserve cover, resulted in pressures on the foreign exchange market. The BOL views the exchange rate as the main intermediate target in the pursuit of its objective of stability. Backed by BOL interventions, the Kip official exchange rate against the US dollar remained stable in recent years. The strengthening of the US dollar against currencies in the region resulted in appreciation of the Kip’s real effective exchange rate, with the appreciation over the last five years reaching around 30 percent. The continued real appreciation of the exchange rate signals a loss of competitiveness of Lao PDR’s exports; though wage and unit labor costs indicators remain below what is expected at the country’s income level. Furthermore, the credibility of the de-facto pegged exchange rate in an environment of low reserves has been tested in recent months as reported shortages of foreign exchange resulted in a 4-5 percent gap opening up between the official and curb markets. In response, BOL introduced restrictions on foreign exchange sales, allowing a bit more flexibility in the official rate. 25. The economic outlook for the medium term remains broadly positive, subject to improved macroeconomic management, strengthened planning and management in the power sector, and reforms that improve the business environment. In the baseline scenario, growth is expected to average around 7 percent per year as a favorable regional economic outlook provides an important pull factor for the Lao PDR economy. China’s growth rates are expected to moderate but remain robust and Thailand is expected to recover. Following declines in recent years, copper prices are expected to edge up. Around 500-1,000 MW per year is expected to be added to the power system capacity over the medium term as power projects come on stream. This should ensure a robust outturn for Lao PDR exports and FDI. The non- resource sector is expected to remain dynamic as rents from the resource sector trickle down into higher demand and closer integration under the ASEAN Economic Community opens opportunities for the private sector. However, in the absence of improvements in economic management, macroeconomic risks and the likelihood of adverse effects on growth and livelihoods remain high. While the authorities have proposed a number of reforms, the track- record is still evolving. Similarly, realizing the opportunities for the private sector would require reforms in a range of areas that would move Lao PDR up from the current, very low, rankings on international measures of competitiveness, including governance reforms critical for the growth 9 Lao PDR narrowly avoided a black-listing in 2015 which would have resulted in sanctions. 8 of a vibrant private sector, such as dealing with vested interest and establishing a level playing field. Crucial energy sector reforms include measures to identify markets for the rapidly increasing power generation, plan the future expansion of generation so as to improve management of water resources across various uses, increase efficiency, and ensure a matching of liabilities and sales. In addition, the degree of uncertainty over the regional and global external outlook has increased, which could affect external demand, investment, and financing flows at a time when financing requirements are set to increase considerably. Further weakening of copper, gold, coffee, and rubber prices could reduce mining and agriculture output, adversely affect livelihoods, and put further pressure on fiscal accounts. 26. Fiscal policy over the medium term will aim to improve the sustainability of public accounts; however, ambitious public investment plans are currently projected to keep the deficit and debt elevated. On the revenue side, since early 2016, import duties on fuel and vehicles have been calculated on actual invoice price rather than outdated reference prices while most fuel tax exemptions for investment projects, which cost the budget around 0.1 percent of GDP per annum, were removed in August 2016. The tax law was amended to increase the excise tax rates on a number of goods (to be effective from 2018 and is expected to generate additional revenues of around 0.3 percent of GDP), and new taxes are being considered (land, environment and property taxes). To improve tax administration, the authorities revised the value-added tax law to simplify filing and amended the implementing instruction to ensure more effective enforcement. Revenue from the mining industry (US$129 million in 2015-2016) will gradually decline as the two dominant operations wind down within the next five years. 10 These revenues will increasingly be replaced by growing revenues from the power sector (US$151 million in 2015-2016). At the same time, the authorities intend to keep a tight control over employment and wage spending, upgrade the framework for public procurement and improve public investment management. Stronger controls, renegotiation of the terms of existing liabilities, as well as the requirement to allocate 30 percent of capital spending to clearance of arrears, is expected to gradually resolve the arrears issue. These measures are expected to create some fiscal space. However, in the absence of further measures, this additional fiscal space is expected to be absorbed by the Government contribution to the Lao PDR section of the proposed Kunming – Singapore rail line11, keeping the deficit and public debt levels elevated. Careful fiscal management and, as warranted, further consolidation will be important. As part of the macroeconomic policy dialogue under the proposed Green Growth Development Policy Operation, the authorities are considering measures that would facilitate a stronger fiscal adjustment (lower deficit by around 1 percentage points of GDP on average over the CPF period compared to the baseline in Table 2) and lowering public debt to 65 percent of GDP by 2020. 10 The GOL has, so far, expressed reservations about adopting the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI), but is actively exploring a more efficient fiscal regime for the mining industry. 11 The Project has been estimated at US$6.7 billion, out of which 30 percent will be provided by a joint venture company formed between Lao PDR and China. Lao PDR will need to contribute 30 percent in the capital of this company (or around US$700 million), mostly to be borrowed from China in annual installments over the medium term. The joint venture company will need to secure the remaining 70 percent of the Project costs. Lao PDR MOF has noted that no sovereign guarantee will be provided. According to the 2012 Feasibility Study, the expected IRR is 5 percent and the repayment period of investment is 23 years. 9 Table 2: Lao PDR Macroeconomic Key Indicators (in percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated) 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020 Prel. Proj. Proj. Proj. Proj. Est. Real Economy Annual percentage change, unless otherwise indicated Real GDP growth 7.5 7.4 7.0 7.0 6.8 7.2 7.2 GNI per capita, US$ (nominal) 1,660 1,740 1,839 1,954 2,105 2,265 2,431 Export growth 16.0 -7.6 3.1 8.1 7.9 13.5 13.0 Import growth 12.7 -4.8 -3.2 14.3 10.8 8.0 6.7 GDP deflator -0.1 -0.6 1.6 3.3 3.5 3.1 3.0 Consumer Price Index (average) 4.2 1.3 1.8 3.0 3.0 3.0 3.0 Fiscal Accounts Percent of GDP Revenues 24.1 22.9 19.0 19.3 19.6 19.9 20.1 Of which mining 1.9 1.6 1.0 0.6 0.5 0.5 0.4 Of which power 1.1 1.1 1.1 1.2 1.3 1.3 1.3 Of which timber 0.2 0.5 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 0.1 Expenditures 28.0 26.6 25.2 25.5 25.0 24.5 24.2 General Government Balance -3.8 -3.7 -6.2 -6.2 -5.4 -4.6 -4.0 General Government Total Debt 64.9 65.8 68.2 70.4 71.8 71.0 69.1 Selected Monetary Accounts Percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated M2 – Broad Money (% of GDP) 55.4 59.5 62.9 67.3 71.8 76.7 81.9 Domestic Credit to Private Sector (% GDP) 38.6 43.1 46.8 50.0 54.3 58.9 64.0 Domestic Credit to Private Sector (% change) 11.7 19.3 18.0 18.0 20.0 20.0 20.0 Balance of Payments Percent of GDP, unless otherwise indicated Current Account Balance -17.9 -17.5 -14.0 -18.4 -19.8 -19.1 -17.6 Merchandise exports 35 31 29 29 29 30 31 Merchandise imports 54 49 44 46 47 46 45 Services, net 3.4 3.4 3.1 2.3 1.7 1.2 0.9 Foreign Direct Investment 12.1 12.4 8.7 10.8 12.5 12.7 10.7 Gross Reserves (US$ million, end of period) 816 987 1,002 1,129 1,259 1,371 1,506 In months of imports 1.7 2.2 2.0 1.9 1.9 1.9 2.0 Exchange Rate, (US$, average) 8,035 8,117 8,198 … … … … Other items GDP (nominal, Kip billion) 94 101 110 121 134 148 163 GDP (nominal, US$ billion) 11.8 12.4 13.4 14.6 16.0 17.5 19.2 Source: Lao PDR Ministry of Finance and World Bank staff calculations and projections, as of February 2017. 10 27. In addition, the authorities are exploring options for fiscal policy to support the transition towards green growth. To fund environment management activities, including the activities supported by the Environment Protection Fund, and to promote better management of natural resources, the authorities are considering various levies and charges, including water use and pollution discharge fees. Initial work is underway also to introduce an environmental tax. 28. Some adjustment in monetary and exchange rate policies may help Lao PDR better preserve stability. Keeping credit expansion at sustainable rates remains essential to reducing pressure on external balances and the exchange rate, especially in an environment of high fiscal deficits. The BOL aims to phase-out its lending activities, but additional interventions may be needed to ensure sustainable credit expansion. Reducing pressures on the exchange rate would require greater flexibility in the exchange rate (within the existing +/- 5 percent band) as well as policies to manage Kip liquidity. If not addressed, continued pressure on the exchange rate risks igniting inflation, testing the stability of the financial sector and the sustainability of public debt. 29. In the financial sector, BOL aims to strengthen the supervisory and regulatory frameworks, including adopting a new Commercial Bank law and Capital Adequacy regulation planned for 2017, and a new BOL law planned for 2018. Furthermore, the authorities are advancing with a restructuring plan for two state-owned banks (improving governance and recapitalization), which should help keep risks manageable. A high-level inter-agency committee already produced an options paper for restructuring and a final decision on the option is expected in 2017. The BOL has also requested private banks with weak capital levels to develop and submit for BOL approval plans to increase capital to required levels over the medium term. 30. The current account deficit is expected to widen as the railway project increases imports over the medium-term. Exports will grow as a number of hydropower projects are completed and start generating export proceeds and offset the gradual decline in mining exports which are expected to peak (in volume terms) by 2019. Improved water resource management, critical to the green growth agenda, is important to ensure sustainable development of the hydropower potential in Lao PDR. The expected gradual fiscal consolidation and continuation of trends in agriculture and manufacturing exports will also help. However, the large import content of the railway project is expected to widen the deficit by around 3-5 percentage points of GDP. FDI is expected to cover around half of the current account deficit, with debt financing, increasingly on less concessional terms, covering the remaining financing requirements. Foreign exchange reserve levels are expected to increase, though import coverage will only gradually improve. 31. With Lao PDR moving to high risk of debt distress, the space for future borrowing has narrowed significantly and concerns over debt sustainability have grown. In 2016, interest expenditures are expected to have been around 1.5 percent of GDP, exceeding for example the budgetary allocation for example to the agriculture sector. Debt servicing needs will increase from 7 percent of GDP over the last decade to 12 percent between 2016 and 2020. Fiscal slippages, including for example cost overruns on the railway project that would be borne by Lao PDR, or more difficult access to foreign markets in response to tightening global monetary conditions, would mean that debt servicing could become unsustainable. Ensuring that the debt burden remains sustainable will require gradual fiscal consolidation as well as improved 11 public debt management that will provide increased awareness of risks of non-concessional borrowing and prioritization to ensure borrowing for priority and credible projects with highest rates of return. In this regard, the revised Budget Law, which increases the public debt reporting and analytical requirements, is a welcome improvement. In addition, the proposed public debt decree, expected to be promulgated during 2017, is expected to strengthen the role of the Ministry of Finance (MOF) in managing public debt. MOF is undergoing a restructuring that will merge all debt related functions in an empowered department, and potential support from the World Bank Group is being considered. Around a quarter of external public debt is for projects in the energy sector, which are expected to be economically viable and self-financing, thus the sustainability of the public debt will depend on improved governance and operations of Electricité du Laos (EdL). 32. While the evolving macroeconomic framework has improved compared to a few years ago, the macroeconomic situation remains challenging and the commitment to consolidation is yet to be fully established. On the one hand, the fiscal and current account deficits and debt levels are high and may increase in the near term. On the other hand, the proposed fiscal measures (removal of exemptions, expansion of the tax base, strengthening of tax administration) and financial sector policies (restructuring of weak banks) appear consistent. These measures, together with stronger debt management function and better supervision and regulation of the banking sector, can result in stabilizing debt levels and improved sustainability prospects, although further adjustments may become important depending on the fiscal turnout over time. While there are increasing signs of credibility of the framework, the commitment and capacity of the authorities is yet to be tested. The public financial management agenda is now more center-stage, revenue generating measures were already introduced, BOL has received a mandate to deal with weak banks and a National Economic Steering Committee was recently established to better coordinate economic policies. Failure to make progress on fiscal consolidation, strengthen debt management, deal with weak banks and increase confidence in the exchange rate will test macroeconomic stability with severe implications for growth, public service delivery and poverty reduction. Still, without improved governance, an area where Lao PDR has had modest progress in the past, progress is unlikely to be sustained. The WBG will continue its close monitoring of developments.12 2.3. Poverty Profile 33. Poverty in Lao PDR has declined. The country met its Millennium Development Goal target of reducing extreme poverty to below 24 percent by 2015 and living conditions improved significantly. Estimates from the most recent Laos Expenditure and Consumption Survey (LECS 5) show that the poverty rate – based on the national poverty line – declined from 34 percent in 2002/03 to 23 percent in 2012/13 (around 1.5 million people). Measured using the internationally comparable poverty line of US$1.90 2011 PPP dollars a day, poverty declined 12 The WBG maintains close collaboration with the IMF on macroeconomic monitoring in Lao PDR resulting in a joint Debt Sustainability Analysis and largely shared views on developments and outlook. The latest Article IV was discussed by the IMF Board on January 30, 2017 and noted similar concerns on the fiscal, financial and exchange rate policies. 12 from 24 percent in 2002/03 to 15 percent in 2012/13 (Figure 1).13 Reaching the WBG goal of reducing extreme poverty to less than 3 percent would mean reducing the number of poor people in Lao PDR by more than 800,000. 34. Consumption levels for the majority of the population are still low by international standards. Nearly 80 percent of the population still lives on less than US$ 5.5 a day in 2011 PPP dollars, below which households are deemed to be economically insecure. This compares to less than 40 percent in Vietnam and less that 20 percent in Thailand (Figure 2). Even the richest 10 percent (excluding the very rich who are generally not captured in surveys) in Lao PDR on average live on less than the benchmark for the global middle class of US$15 in 2011 PPP dollars a day. This makes the shared prosperity agenda relevant for most of the population. Figure 1: Poverty trend in Lao PDR Figure 2: Mean consumption by decile 45 40 2011 PPP Dollars per day per capita 33.5 40 35 Poverty headcount rate (%) 27.6 35 30 23.2 30 25 25 20 23.5 20 15 18.3 15.3 15 10 10 5 5 0 0 2002/3 2007/8 2012/13 International $1.9 (2011 PPP) dollars a day poverty estimates National poverty line based poverty estimates Lao PDR Vietnam Thailand Source: LECS 5 Source: LECS 5 35. Aggregate improvements in welfare mask large differences between regions and socio-economic groups. At 29 percent, the poverty rate in rural areas was higher than the 10 percent in urban areas with the gap widening between 2007/08 and 2012/13. Rural areas accounted for 87 percent of the poor in 2012/13, compared to 80 percent five years earlier. Poverty is also concentrated in upland areas and among the less educated, and those who primarily depend on subsistence farming. Poverty is particularly concentrated among minority (non-Lao Loum) ethnic groups. About two thirds of the poor in Lao PDR are ethnic minorities, 13 Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) is a measure used to compare incomes or other economic variables in real terms, controlling for differences in price levels in different countries. The 2011 PPP conversion factors for Lao PDR suggest it became less expensive when compared to the rest of the world, implying higher purchasing power for households and consequently lower estimates of extreme poverty when welfare is priced in 2011 PPPs. There are concerns that methodological changes to the 2011 International Price Comparison exercise and lower prices of services consumed in smaller proportions by the poor, may have contributed to these lower PPPs. These issues are only relevant for poverty estimates based on the international line and do not affect poverty estimates based on national poverty lines, which are the most relevant for monitoring each country’s progress . 13 even though they only constitute a third of the population in the country. Inequality increased, with the Gini coefficient going from 32 in 2002/03 to 36 in 2012/13. 36. Gender gaps are gradually narrowing in primary and lower secondary education, however they persist in health, especially reflected in the persistently high maternal mortality, early marriages and teenage pregnancy. The Lao PDR Country Gender Assessment14 showed that early marriages and low age of first pregnancy raise the risk of health complications especially for young women. The burden of disease from biomass smoke from cooking activities disproportionately falls on women. Certain cultural and ethnic practices also have a great impact on maternal health. Women still have lower literacy rates than men, especially among the poor in the rural areas, for whom the literacy gap between males and females is 23 percentage points. Girls constitute the majority of those who have never been to school. Although gaps in enrollment have closed and the net enrollment of girls equaled that of boys in both primary and lower secondary education in 2012/13, a gender gap still persists in the access to upper secondary and tertiary education. Keeping girls in school is a key challenge. Although 76 percent of women actively participate in the labor force, among the highest in the region, most of them are engaged in informal unpaid family farm work and own account work. The wage gap between women and men also persists. The average monthly wage of female workers was about two thirds of their male counterparts. In general, the legal framework provides equal rights to men and women; however, customs and traditions, and poor socio- economic conditions of households, may limit implementation in some cases. 37. Poverty and the environment are linked, and the links are deepening, considering the increased vulnerability of the poor to faster industrial growth without shared benefits as well as to the impact of climate change. The lack of proper preventive measures by developers as well as from smaller scale activities result in downstream effects from mining, commercial agriculture and misuse of chemicals by smallholder farmers. The persistence of illegal activities is in part linked to the minimum opportunities for alternative livelihoods, but also to the absence of a strong governance system that can protect the interests of the poor against the interests of the proponents of large-scale development projects. 14 World Bank 2012. Lao PDR Country Gender Assessment (Report No. 704909). This report was prepared by the WB and the ADB, in consultation with the GOL as inputs to their respective country partnership strategies. The assessment presents gender issues into three main dimensions of gender equality – endowments, economic opportunities and agency – and also analyzes gender issues related to emerging areas of development and growing risks. The assessment is updated, where applicable, in the Country Gender Action Plan FY 2017-2021. 14 2.4. Drivers of Poverty Reduction and Development Challenges 38. Each percent increase in GDP per capita contributed to a 0.4 percent reduction in poverty in Lao PDR, compared to a 1.2 percent reduction in poverty in Cambodia and most regional and structural peers.15 Economic growth not only failed to translate into a proportionate increase in household consumption on average, but was also more favorable to the non-poor. Average consumption per capita grew by 2.2 percent per year – about 3.5 percentage points lower than GDP per capita between 2002/03 and 2012/13. At just 1.3 percent per year, consumption growth was even lower for the bottom 40 percent (Figure 3), and with a low growth elasticity of poverty of around -0.4, inequality has been rising. Building on this poverty assessment, the Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD) identified the drivers of poverty reduction and the key development challenges and proposed pathways to reduce poverty and shared prosperity. 39. Growth in household labor income was the major contributing factor to poverty reduction. This was driven by increasing households’ endowments and economic opportunities. More specifically: (i) human capital improved and educational attainment increased; (ii) access to land increased (including agriculture land in rural areas); and (iii) off-farm job opportunities expanded resulting in a decline in the share of agriculture in primary employment from 73 percent in 2002/03 to 64 percent in 2012/13. Figure 3: Consumption, especially by the poor, grew slower than economic growth 7 Bottom 40 pct consumption growth Mean per capita consumption growth 6 GDP per capita growth Annualized grpowth rate (%) 5 4 3 2 1 0 2002-2007 2007-2012 Source: LECS 5 and National Accounts data 40. Agriculture was the sector generating most income for poor people and thereby reducing poverty. Increased consumption by poor households due to agricultural growth accounted for 44 percent of poverty reduction between 2002/03 and 2012/13. In comparison, the second and third largest contributors to poverty reduction were manufacturing (14 percent) and hotels and trade activities (7 percent each). Agricultural growth averaged 4 percent, much below 15 World Bank 2012. Poverty profile in Lao PDR: poverty report for the Lao consumption and expenditure survey 2012–2013 (Report No. 100120). 15 potential for an agrarian country, and therefore failed to generate a larger impact on poverty reduction. 41. Higher education attainment facilitated the transition into off-farm employment where earnings are higher and also contributed to agriculture income growth by raising agriculture productivity. The most educated fully transitioned out of agriculture, mostly into the services sector. Those with incomplete secondary education remained engaged in agriculture but complemented farm incomes by revenues from mostly informal, low productivity household businesses which reduced underemployment. Households headed by someone with at least complete primary education remained fully engaged in agriculture, with low productivity performance. Overall, households with more education were more likely to escape poverty whether in agriculture or non-agriculture sectors. Education was a key enabling force to allow people to climb out and stay out of poverty. 42. The gap in the likelihood of exiting poverty between ethnic minorities and the Lao Loum narrows when taking into account education attainment and livelihoods, although it is not completely eliminated. About 90 percent of the difference in consumption per capita between the Lao Loum and ethnic minorities is explained by differences in endowments (few household members with post primary education and a higher share of children in the household among ethnic minorities) and poor connectivity (lack of access to electricity). 43. In the absence of an adequate safety net, the high household vulnerability has been a drag on poverty reduction. A large number of people fell back into poverty even as many others escaped, slowing the pace of poverty reduction. Half the people who were poor in 2012/13 were previously non-poor for example. The risk of falling into poverty is highest among those closer to the poverty line but this reflects high backward mobility in general as vulnerability is a problem faced by households across the entire welfare distribution. In general, households are poorly equipped to deal with frequent financial shocks. Less than a third of adults have a savings account, with rural areas faring even worse. Households largely rely on informal social networks, often leading to behaviors that reinforce the cycle of poverty or push families into poverty. 44. Households dependent on agriculture and fisheries are the most vulnerable, in part due to extreme weather events and also due to price volatility. The yearly droughts and floods are increasingly recognized by the Government as core challenges to the pressing priority to achieve higher levels of economic and social development. The majority of the families, including more share of female headed households in 2013, that recently rose above the poverty line did so by a small margin, leaving them at risk in the event of these adverse shocks. With more net sellers than net buyers of rice, food price volatility has contributed to household vulnerability. 45. Beyond natural resources, strong growth in construction and services was off-set by mediocre performance in agriculture and manufacturing. On the one hand, slow growth in productivity and profitability in agriculture limited its contribution to poverty reduction. Indeed, agriculture, where around two thirds of the labor force is engaged, grew at about 4 percent on average in the past decade, just slightly above the growth in hours worked. On the other hand, services expanded strongly but remain underdeveloped and concentrated in traditional, lower 16 value-added activities. Growth in the non-agriculture sector, largely driven by natural resources, did not result in a commensurate increase in jobs, with less than 20,000 jobs created out of the 400,000 non-agriculture jobs created from 2002/3 to 2012/3. Furthermore, a greater share of the most rewarding jobs required higher levels of education, an asset many of the poor lack thus limiting their participation in the growth process. 46. The structure of the private sector in Lao PDR, characterized by a small, low value added and inward oriented economy, reflects the burdensome regulatory environment that discourages investment. Around 98 percent of registered firms are small, most of them micro (less than 10 employees), and engaged in non-tradable sectors or sectors producing low-value- added goods and services. A large segment of the Lao PDR commercial sector is informal, with informality estimated at slightly above 30 percent of GDP. This is largely the result of a burdensome operating environment which creates incentives to stay small and, together with deficient access to finance, limits firms’ ability to invest in human and physical capital in order to grow. This affects the natural resources sector as well, where the small-scale commercial mining, hydropower, and agriculture activities have non-negligible – and cumulatively a significant impact on the environment due to small-scale farmers’ lack of capacity to employ proper safeguards and mitigation measures. Lao PDR is ranked 139th out of 190 economies on the 2017 Ease of Doing Business16 rankings, reflecting still inadequate regulation but also complicated, burdensome, and unevenly applied procedures in a large number of areas. This generates uncertainty and high costs particularly to new entrants and discourages investment which Lao PDR will require for private-sector led knowledge transfer and growth that can increase productivity and generate jobs. This has been evident in the natural resources sector as well – with investors with a good reputation in the mining and hydropower sectors less attracted to Lao PDR due to the lack of a clear regime around natural resource management. Lao PDR’s small domestic market limits the country’s attractiveness for foreign investment (other than in the hydro, mining and financial sectors), highlighting the need for strong connectivity with neighboring markets and a competitive business environment to attract efficiency seeking investments outside the natural resource sector. Membership of ASEAN and World Trade Organization has lowered barriers and increased the potential market; however, logistics and trade costs to move goods and provide services across borders efficiently remain high. A larger role for the private sector in enhancing connectivity is deemed necessary. 47. Human development outcomes in general are lagging, impairing poor people’s ability to participate in the growing economy. While progress has been made, further investment in human assets will be needed to provide poor people with opportunities to participate in the growing economy and therefore a safety net to prevent people from falling back into poverty in an event of adverse shocks is needed. One human development area which continues to lag is chronic malnutrition in young children. This is particularly worrisome given the irreversible impact that malnutrition has on these children’s lives: at 44 percent, Lao PDR has among the highest rates of stunting in the world17, especially for countries at its income level18. 16 World Bank 2017. Ease of Doing Business: Lao PDR 17 “Stunting”, or being too short for one’s age, is defined as a height that is more than two standard deviations below the World Health Organization (WHO) Child Growth Standards median. Stunting is a largely irreversible outcome of inadequate nutrition and repeated bouts of infection during the first 1000 days of a child’s life. Stunting has long 17 Among several influencing factors, the health and education levels of mothers determine their own wellbeing and that of their children’s (CGA). With an issue of early pregnancy, low quality and low utilization of health services and poverty, young mothers particularly in the rural areas have limited capacity in healthily raising their children. As a consequence, the proportion of stunted under 5 year olds declined by only 4 percentage points over a decade, from 48 percent in 2001 to 44 percent in 2012, lagging behind the reduction in monetary poverty, though more recent data may suggest a faster improvement in nutrition. The difference between the poorest and richest quintiles is also very high; making this is a key issue for economic inclusion of the next generation of Laotians. Unequal access to social services and the poor quality of services is a significant contributor to this divergence in monetary poverty and human development indicators. 48. The low quality of basic education and the very low access to early childhood education programs is a key constraint to development in Lao PDR. Findings from the Lao PDR Development Report19 show that many workers lack foundational skills such as the ability to read, suggesting an agenda that goes beyond the poor and affects the entire country. Without these foundational skills, people will struggle even in the most basic jobs and teaching them more skills would be very hard. The very low literacy level among primary students leads to higher dropout rates and lower educational attainment. Particularly concerning is the drop out of adolescent girls. In turn, once they become young mothers, a low level of education of the mother is likely to affect the family decision in sending their children to school and keeping them in. Lao PDR children spend fewer years in schooling compared to peers and the quality of education is low. Although the country increased net-enrollment in primary education to close to 100 percent in recent years; drop-out rates are high (only 77 percent of pupils starting in grade 1 reach last – fifth – grade of primary) and transition to secondary education is low (only 45 percent of children enroll in secondary education, compared to 77 percent in EAP on average). The transition rate to lower secondary schools for girls is even lower than the boys. Post- secondary graduates in Lao PDR performed almost on par with people with only primary schooling in Vietnam.20 A key supply side contributor to the low quality education outcomes in basic education is the very limited supply and access to school readiness and early childhood programs, especially among ethnic groups and disadvantaged communities. In 2015, less that 40 percent of Lao children aged 3 to 4 had access to pre-primary programs, with participation as low as 6-19 percent in the districts with higher concentration of ethnic groups and poverty. term effects on individuals and societies, including: diminished cognitive and physical development, reduced productive capacity and poor health, and an increased risk of degenerative diseases such as diabetes (Source: WHO Global Nutrition Targets 2025: Stunting Policy Brief) 18 The estimate of 44 percent is from Lao Socio Indicator Survey (LSIS) 2011/12. The next LSIS will be carried out in 2017 with results expected in late 2017, early 2018. Since the LSIS 2011/12, stunting has been measured by a number of different instruments which all show that stunting declined since 2011/12. The Lao PDR Child Anthropometry Assessment Survey 2015 (a tag-on to the National Immunization Coverage Survey) indicates the stunting rate among children under 5 may have declined by as much as 9 percent points (to 35 percent in 2015). However, different surveys present different estimates of stunting, and most observers are awaiting the results from LSIS 2017 to confirm the magnitude of the decline. 19 World Bank 2014. Lao PDR Development Report (Report No. ACS9577). 18 49. Health indicators are slowly improving, however the poor are benefiting less. Life expectancy and under-5 mortality rates have improved. Still, facility-based delivery rates, though increasing, are low (around 38 percent) and like most other health indicators, show a large difference between socio-economic groups, indicating challenges related to awareness, access and inclusion. Household air pollution, largely due to the use of solid fuels for cooking, is a large contributor to premature death and disability, disproportionally affecting the poor. Although more than 90 percent of the households have access to electricity, most continue to use firewood and some charcoal for cooking. Household air pollution from cooking is the top health-risk factor in Lao PDR. Insufficient public health sector inputs keep private health-related spending high and makes health shocks a major determinant of poverty. Furthermore, with Government spending on health less than 2 percent of GDP, the reliance on private spending and official development assistance is high. The country faces significant risks of financial and institutional sustainability with an imminent donor transition. Capacity and attention to new-age health challenges such as non-communicable diseases, road safety and mental health are low, even as they become a large share of the country’s disease burden. The country’s commitment to Universal Health Coverage poses challenges of capacity, sustainability and availability of supply – amidst fragmented programs, low public health spending and underperforming monitoring and information systems. 50. Access to basic services has improved over time however challenges remain. The electrification program in Lao PDR, which is one of most successful programs in the world, is entering the final stage, as the rate of electrification now exceeds 90 percent of households. The challenge is to reach the remaining 10 percent. Access to improved water supply and sanitation is increasing; however, gaps remain and disproportionally affect the poor. For example, only 60 percent of primary schools have water supply and toilets. The length of the road network has increased by around 50 percent over the last decade with approximately 56 percent of the rural population now having access to all weather roads, however, some areas, mostly rural, still remain unconnected, either during the wet season or throughout the year. While the quality of the roads has improved; 84 percent of national roads were in good and fair condition in 2015; only 50 percent of provincial and district roads were in good and fair condition. Additionally, road assets are vulnerable to natural disaster including flooding and landslides. 51. The country’s growth has come with a considerable impact on the country’s environment due to increasing pollution and natural resource depletion. Similar to other resource-rich countries, Lao PDR’s GDP growth has been driven by a growing use, and indeed depletion, of natural resources and on activities which have increased pollution. The costs of environmental degradation have been rising, reaching above 7 percent of GDP in 2013, which is much higher than other countries in EAP, and mainly driven by forest depletion. The country has the highest percentage of forest cover in Southeast Asia and one of the world’s highest rate of species endemism (i.e. being unique to Lao PDR) making it a global priority for biodiversity conservation. However, deforestation and forest degradation is rapid: the estimated forest cover has declined to around 40 percent of the territory in 2010 (from 70 percent in 1940 and 47 percent in 1992). Wildlife is under increasing threat from illegal hunting and loss of habitat (including aquatic ecosystems), and the rate of extinction of species is accelerating, such as the Indochinese Tiger and Irrawaddy Dolphin. Excessive salvage logging associated with mining 19 and hydropower development, illegal logging, commercial and subsistence hunting, expansion of agriculture and urbanization and infrastructure development have all contributed. 52. Beyond depletion, the opportunistic exploitation of renewable resources has made the resulting economic growth relatively inefficient. In particular, the hydropower sector may be reaching its limits for growth in the absence of management of water resources, including coordination of power facilities (“hydraulic balance”) and with non-power uses of water. Specifically, further regulation of rivers may result in projects that are less than optimal from the national perspective, and could compromise flexibility to adapt to market, environmental, social and climate changes. Yet the rules for water management from a national or even sectoral perspective are weak, as is capacity to implement the principles of integrated water resources management. 53. At the same time, economic activities are increasingly vulnerable to climate change and natural disasters. Floods and droughts, could adversely affect economic activities. Historical damage data indicate that annual expected losses range between 3 and 4 percent of GDP with the associated average annual fiscal cost equaling approximately 2 percent of government expenditures. Three of the five costliest natural disasters have taken place since 2009, including two floods in 2013. The 2015-16 El Niño was one of the strongest on record and impacted Lao PDR through lower agriculture yields, reduced hydropower production and damage from storms. Climate change projections include further increases in temperature and increased intensity and frequency of extreme events, including increased rainfall and flooding risks during the wet season. This can severely impact economic activity, such as hydropower, transport and agricultural production. 54. Lao PDR’s key development challenge is to maintain robust economic growth, while addressing institutional and human development as well as the environment degradation the country faces. Lao PDR achieved high economic growth through unsustainable use of the natural capital that converted relatively little of the resource rents from forests and mining into government revenues to invest these efficiently into human and physical capital creation or improved natural capital management. This result is a depletion of its wealth, the rate of which has nearly doubled from US$180 per capita to US$320 per capita since 2000 (measured in 2011 US$) and which will undermine the country’s capacity to sustain economic growth in the future. The Environmental Performance Index 2016 ranks Lao PDR at 148 out of 180 countries. In South-East Asia, only Myanmar – ranked 153 – is behind Lao PDR, whereas Cambodia ranks at 146, Vietnam at 131 and Thailand at 91. The development model will need to become more efficient and effective at transforming the natural resources rent into human resources development. 55. Households exit poverty by accumulating assets. More human, physical and financial capital provide a buffer against shocks and open up opportunities for transition into better paid jobs – be it domestically or through migration – but also improve the prospects for those that remain in agriculture. Financial inclusion in the form of savings accounts, remittances, insurance, and access to credit helps households that are vulnerable to income shocks, to grow out and stay out of poverty. This effect is particularly marked for women. Building skills will require increasing the quantity and quality of education people receive, especially at the early stage of 20 development but also improved access to and quality of health services, especially on nutrition- related measures (nutrition counseling, vaccines, vitamin supplements and deworming); maternal and child care, family planning and preventive and primary care. Aiming for universal access to basic infrastructure services will improve opportunities. More investment in local roads and improved road maintenance with strengthened disaster resilience could ensure universal year- round road access. While aspiring for universal coverage with water and sanitation facilities, interventions should prioritize low-access areas which exhibit high levels of stunting. Completing electrification will require innovative and low cost options for extension of the grid and scaling-up off-grid electrification. Dealing with unexploded ordnance (UXO) can increase economic opportunities and lower risks to life. 56. Importantly, addressing key human development weaknesses (such as under nutrition) requires a multi-sector approach involving interventions in a number of priority areas. Furthermore, the concentration of poor outcomes within ethnic groups raises the importance of targeted approaches and extensive outreach to generate demand for services. Finally, policies and interventions should be driven by the insight that, over the long term, migration will likely be a pathway to economic integration for a big part of the population, especially the ones in remote and rural areas where economic opportunities will continue to remain limited while the ability to deliver public services constrained. 57. Lao PDR’s dependency on natural assets, geography, economic and social legacies have together shaped a development experience of strong growth, limited inclusion and considerable risks to sustainability. Improved governance, especially increased levels of voice and accountability, a strengthened rule of law and reduced corruption will be critical. Their absence in the past has amplified low human development outcomes as well as the high environmental cost of economic activity and vulnerability to shocks and disasters. 21 III. WORLD BANK GROUP PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK 58. The World Bank Group (WBG) Country Partnership Framework (CPF) aims at supporting Lasting Accessible Opportunities for all. Within the country’s economic and social context and the lessons of experience, the CPF uses three selectivity filters to focus the planned WBG engagement during FY 2017-2021. The first filter is that the CPF supports the priorities of the Government of Lao PDR (GOL) as outlined in their 8th National Socio- Economic Development Plan (NSEDP). The second focuses on the priorities identified in the Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD). The third relates to the WBG’s comparative advantage including in relation to the programs of other development partners. The envisaged WBG program reflects wide consultations with the private sector, development partners, civil society and academia, as well as the Government. 3.1. Government Program and Medium Term Strategy 59. With multiple landmark changes taking place in 2015-2016, the Government’s development program and medium term strategy have notably taken a new tone towards greater sustainability and green growth. The 8th NSEDP (2016-2020), adopted by the newly elected National Assembly and now under implementation by the new Government, was developed in parallel with the Government’s active participation over the localization of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). The global dialogue shaped Lao PDR’s development vision and boosted the Government’s increasing attention to the sustainability of the growth pattern and the impact on the social and environmental aspects of the country’s development. Figure 1: Lao PDR 8th National Socio-Economic Development Plan goal and outcomes Overall goal: continued political stability, reduced poverty, LDC graduation by 2020, green growth development, effective natural resources management and regional and international integration Outcome 3 Outcome 1 Outcome 2 Protection of Natural Continued, Firm and Human Resource Resources and Inclusive Growth Development Environment Cross-cutting themes 1. Enhance effectiveness of public governance and administration 2. Local innovation and utilization of science, technology, telecommunications and ICT management 3. Promote and develop Women, Juveniles and Youth 60. The Government’s development program and medium term strategy is a continuation of a broad and comprehensive development strategy. The overall goal is continued political stability, reduced poverty, graduation from Least Developed Country status 22 by 2020, green growth development, effective natural resources management and regional and international integration. The 8th NSEDP targets three broad outcomes, 20 specific outputs, as well as three cross-cutting themes. Its three main targeted outcomes are: Outcome 1: Continued, firm and inclusive growth, Outcome 2: Human resources development, and Outcome 3: Protection of natural resources and the environment.21 Implementation of the 8th NSEDP aims to see GDP growth average 7.5 percent per year, GDP per capita increase to US$3,190 by 2020 and poverty decrease to 10 percent. Box 1: Lao PDR 8th National Socio-Economic Development Plan “The overall Goal is continued political stability, peace and order in the society; the poverty of the people is reduced significantly in all areas; the country is developed out of the status of Least Developed Country (LDC) by 2020 through continuous, inclusive along with sustainable growth and green growth development; maximum effective management and utilization of natural resources; the development enhanced through the national potentials and advantages; participated in regional and international integration with ownership.” Graduation from LDC status is a key long-term objective of the Government and leadership of Lao PDR.22 The 8th NSEDP targets the following outputs: Outcome 1 – Continued, Firm and Inclusive Growth Output 1 – Sustained and inclusive economic growth Output 2 – Macroeconomic stability Output 3 – Integrated development planning and budgeting Output 4 – Balanced regional and local development Output 5 – Improved public/private labor force capacity Output 6 – Local entrepreneurs are competitive in domestic and global markets Output 7 – Regional and international cooperation and integration Outcome 2 – Human Resource Development Output 1 – Improved living standards through poverty reduction using 3 builds implementation Output 2 – Ensured food security and reduced incidence of malnutrition Output 3 – Access to high quality education Output 4 – Access to high quality health care and preventative medicine Output 5 – Enhanced social welfare Output 6 – Protection of traditions and culture Output 7 – Ensured political stability, order, justice and transparency 21 Outcome 1: Continued, firm and inclusive growth by consolidating strong economic foundations and reducing economic vulnerability, Outcome 2: Human resources are developed and the capacities of the public and private sectors is upgraded; poverty in all ethnic groups is reduced, all ethnic groups and both genders have access to quality education and health services; the unique culture of the nation is protected and consolidated; political stability, social peace and order, justice and transparency are maintained, and Outcome 3: Natural resources and the environment are effectively protected and utilized according to green-growth and sustainable principles; there is readiness to coping with natural disasters and the effects of climate change and for reconstruction following natural disaster. 22 LDCs status is based on three criteria: per capita gross national income (GNI), human assets and economic vulnerability. To become eligible for graduation, a country must meet the threshold for two of these three criteria. In 2015, Lao PDR was estimated to have reached 99 percent on criteria 1, which is equivalent to US$1,232 (threshold is US$1,242), 92 percent of the graduation threshold of the second criteria (Lao PDR HAI: 61, threshold: 66) and 88 percent of the threshold for graduation on criteria 3 (Lao PDR’s EVI 36, threshold: 32) . 23 Outcome 3 – Protection of Natural Resources and Environment Output 1 – Environmental protection and sustainable natural resources management Output 2 – Preparedness for natural disasters and risk mitigation Output 3 – Reduced instability of agricultural production Cross-cutting themes Output 1 – Enhance effectiveness for public governance and administration Output 2 – Promote local innovation and utilization of science, technology and telecommunication and management of Information and Communication Technology Output 3 – Promote and develop women, juveniles and youth 61. Lao PDR mainstreamed the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) into its national development plans and is embedding the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). Around half of the proposed NSEDP’s monitoring and evaluation indicators link to the 17 SDGs with an additional goal added in Lao PDR on reduced impact of unexploded ordnance.23 Improving civil registration and vital statistics is also critical to monitoring and achieving the SDGs. Lao PDR is one of first six countries to localize the SDGs. The key transition from MDGs to SDGs is the increased attention to environmental sustainability of development, the transition which the GOL has also paid greater attention. 62. Lao PDR recognizes the link between development, sustainability and the need to mainstream environmental considerations, including on climate change. The country has ambitious plans to lower its greenhouse gas emissions (even though it accounts for a negligible amount of global emissions), while increasing resilience to climate change. The 2015 Nationally Determined Contribution identified increasing forest cover, expanding electrification and hydropower, growing the role of renewable energy and improving the road network and public transport as key mitigating actions. On adaptation, the focus is on agriculture, land use, water management, transport, urban development and public health. There is also a need to mainstream disaster risk management into public investments. If land use planning and infrastructure planning do not consider disaster risks, vulnerability and losses will further rise. Lao PDR is committed to implement its commitments, it will however require significant support. 63. The budget allocations will need to reflect the objectives to be achieved under the 8 th NSEDP. The budget has become more pro-poor over time with the allocations increasing especially to education and health sectors as shown in Table 3. The Government budget for FY 2015-2016 was approximately US$3.3 billion equivalent, of which for example about US$466 million was allocated to the education sector (US$258 per student) and US$237 million to the health sector (US$36 per person). Wages represented approximately US$1,120 million in FY 2015-2016 (above 8 percent of GDP), and their share was particularly high in these sectors. There are also significant funds from development partners which are implemented directly and thus are not included in the budget. 23 In the CPF Results Framework in Annex 1, all CPF Objective Indicators and Supplementary Progress Indicators labeled as ‘SDG’ refer to localized SDGs (or country specific objectives) to which the WBG will contribute. 24 Table 3: Selected Budget Indicators Actual Actual Actual Plan Plan 2011/12 2012/13 2013/14 2014/15 2015/16 in million US$ Total 2,296 3,119 3,250 3,256 3,314 Agriculture 98 192 91 119 90 Public Works 496 362 360 385 456 Education 258 443 454 460 466 Health 63 134 182 233 237 in % of GDP Total 25.2 29.1 28.0 26.6 25.2 Agriculture 1.1 1.9 0.8 1.0 0.7 Public Works 5.7 3.6 3.1 3.1 3.4 Education 3.0 4.4 3.9 3.7 3.5 Health 0.7 1.3 1.5 1.9 1.8 Source: Official Gazette 3.2. Proposed WBG Country Partnership Framework 3.2.1. Lessons learned from the CPS Completion and Learning Review, IEG evaluation and stakeholder consultations 64. Lessons learned from the Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) Completion and Learning Review (CLR, see Annex 2), the Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) evaluations and stakeholder engagement have informed the development of the proposed CPF. The CLR rated the overall development outcome of the FY 2012-2016 CPS as Satisfactory, and the performance of the WBG as Good. The majority of CPS objectives were achieved, with strong progress towards improved competitiveness, connectivity and inclusive development. Limited progress was made to improve governance and natural resource management. The Government has recently shown stronger commitment towards these reforms, and increased WBG engagement aims to help facilitate policy dialogue across sectoral and administrative boundaries. Other findings from the CLR include:  Focused results. The CPS, with a limited number of ambitious but achievable targets, helped maximize impact by facilitating program focus and scale, setting realistic expectations in recognition of the long term nature of development.  On the ground presence. The physical presence of WBG staff in Vientiane enhanced the dialogue and partnership with the Government, helped to identify new areas of involvement and provided crucial assistance to implementation support missions. 65. A rules-based environment and strong institutions with clear legal mandates will be critical for successful outcomes of WBG supported projects and programs in most sectors. The need to strengthen the existing regulatory and institutional framework for tackling governance and corruption are high priority areas identified by stakeholders. In addition, reforms 25 require sustained political commitment. As was demonstrated in the weak outcome of the cross cutting theme, which was focused on public financial financing management improvement, change in political commitment has serious impacts. Government ownership and commitment, resources, champions for the reform agenda, and interagency coordination, as well as technical considerations, are all major determinants of success. 66. IEG emphasized the value of continuity in WBG engagement for lasting impact. For example, continued financial and technical support to the energy sector over nearly two decades contributed significantly to the stellar progress in electricity access in Lao PDR, which increased from 15 percent in 1995 to 90 percent in 2015. 67. The WBG Country Opinion Survey 2015 (COS) highlighted that WBG knowledge is highly valued, as it contributes to the policy dialogue and supports the design and implementation of Government programs. The further consolidation of the Advisory Services and Analytics (ASA) program, previously fragmented due to the proliferation of small TF- funded activities, is expected to lead to even greater impact. Other COS findings include the perception of the WBG as a long term Government partner, with technical assistance and policy- based lending seen as the most value-adding channels of support. Moreover, the COS shows that WBG operations are seen as flexible, inclusive and fast-disbursing by policy-makers. At the same time, governance-related concerns have increased in prominence among opinion leaders since 2012. 68. Extensive public engagement with stakeholders was undertaken for both the SCD and the CPF through face-to-face engagement in various parts of the country, through Facebook, and through our website. The analysis presented by the SCD was strongly endorsed, the positive WBG role was confirmed, and the proposed WBG program of support endorsed. As highlighted in the COS, the knowledge services provided by the WBG were recognized. 3.2.2. Overview of WBG Partnership Framework 69. The WBG CPF draws on the findings of the recently completed SCD24. The CPF draws from the diagnostic undertaken by the WBG that analyzed the drivers of poverty reduction, the taxonomy of the poor, and also looked at the opportunities of growth in resource- based economies. The SCD highlighted that similar to other resource-rich countries, Lao PDR’s GDP growth has been driven by a growing use, and indeed depletion, of natural resources. Furthermore, this growth did not effectively convert to government revenues nor human and physical capital for supporting jobs or building competitiveness sectors. The SCD suggests three pathways to the WBG Twin Goals: (i) sustainable and efficient management of natural resources; (ii) unlocking the potential in non-resource sectors to create opportunities; and (iii) building the assets of people to be able to take on these opportunities and to mitigate risks and protect gains. These pathways sit in the overarching effort to strengthening institutions. Stemming from these pathways are twelve priority areas highlighted in Table 4 below. 24 World Bank 2017. Systematic Country Diagnostic (Report No 112241-LA) 26 Table 4: Lao PDR Systematic Country Diagnostic Priorities TOP PRIORITIES HIGH PRIORITIES MEDIUM PRIORITIES Promoting strategic use of Making it easier to do business Putting in place a strengthened natural resources and and create good jobs disaster risk management responsible management of the environment Increase agricultural Investing in infrastructure for Introducing a basic social productivity to support incomes growth and inclusion protection system to lower vulnerability Investing in improving nutrition Improving access to and quality Improving inclusiveness of the to achieve children’s full of health services for more financial sector to improve potential productive people access to credit and lower risks Improving quality of education and keeping girls in school Putting public debt on a sustainable path and strengthening financial sector stability Enhancing governance and creating a rules-based environment 70. The CPF aims to support 10 of the 20 objectives of the 8th NSEDP, selected based on WBG comparative advantage, client demand and key constraints to poverty reduction and shared prosperity identified by the SCD. The targeted results are closely aligned with the targets of the SDGs. 25 Certain areas such as urban development are not prioritized as other development partners, namely the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and the Japan International Cooperation Agency, are strongly engaged in those areas. An area we are revisiting is agriculture given the key role this sector plays in the economy with the approach more towards the business of agriculture and trade. Engagement with the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment (MONRE) expanded significantly over the last CPS period and will continue given the focus on sustainable development and management of natural resources as a key means to achieve green growth objectives. At the time of the last CPS the Ministry had only recently been established. Engagement with the Ministry of Education and Sports on early childhood education and quality of primary education will be refocused to maximize the World Bank (WB) contribution to relevant education SDGs. Engagement in the infrastructure sector, roads and energy in particular, will continue based on successful experience to date and continuing demand and priority. Engagement with financial sector authorities has been stepped up in order to better monitor, manage and mitigate the financial sector weaknesses that are threatening the stability and growth goals of the 8th NSEDP. Another area of support will be in disaster risk management, including disaster preparedness, hydromet systems, and early warning. Many of the results of the CPF will be achieved through the existing portfolio of projects under implementation with new support developed to build on lessons learned and to support achievement of the SDGs. 25 See Annex 6 for detailed links between the 8th NSEDP objectives and the CPF objectives. 27 71. The CPF supports the global agenda adopted by Lao PDR through the SDGs, which have been thoroughly mainstreamed into the 8th NSEDP, and the Paris Agreement on climate change, which Lao PDR ratified in September 2016. The WBG will continue collaborating closely with development partners and UN agencies, as set out in the Forward Look – A Vision for the World Bank Group in 2030.26 Lastly, the CPF is also closely aligned with the WBG East- Asia and Pacific (EAP) Strategy, which focuses on five priority areas: (i) inclusion and empowerment; (ii) jobs and private sector-led growth; (iii) governance and institutions; (iv) infrastructure and urbanization; and (v) climate change and disaster risk management; with a special focus on gender and nutrition. 72. Maintaining a gender informed portfolio. Addressing gender issues is fully mainstreamed in the WBG’s interventions. Currently around 80 percent of the ongoing portfolio of projects is gender informed, i.e. the projects address gender in their analysis, actions and monitoring dimensions. This is relatively high compared to EAP WB regional standard. The aim is to maintain this level. With private sector, IFC investment and advisory activities also aim to promote women’s role in businesses. Women own around 30 percent of small and medium enterprises (SMEs) in Lao PDR, but only about 16 percent have a loan or overdraft. Since April 2015, IFC has partnered with Banque Franco-Lao (BFL) to boost financing to SMEs owned or run by women by setting up a US$10 million facility fully dedicated to women owned SMEs along with a training program aimed at making BFL a bank of choice for women. The 2016 Country Gender Action Plan (CGAP) aligns with the three focus areas of the CPF and updates key data of the Country Gender Assessment of 2012. Through operational and analytical work it supports specific actions and targets that address the following priority areas and gender gaps: (i) addressing early marriage, adolescent pregnancy and high maternal mortality ratio (CPF Focus Area 2); (ii) low literacy among women and skills gap (CPF Focus Areas 1 and 2); (iii) equal opportunities for men and women to participate in livelihood activities and wage jobs (CPF Focus Area 1) and; (iv) low participation of women in planning and decision making at the local level (CPF Focus Areas 1, 2 and 3). The summary table of the CGAP is attached in Annex 7. 73. “One WBG coordination” and collaboration among the WB, IFC and MIGA is strong and is continuing to intensify. The WB and IFC collaboration has grown substantially over the years. WB and IFC support the water sector, to put in place a regime that can fairly and efficiently manage the water and water resources. Given the large and fast development of hydropower in Lao PDR, the collaboration is supporting both the regulatory regime as well as creating a predictable and level playing field to attract sustainable private investment. The WB and IFC also participate in the Lao PDR Forest Investment Program (FIP). This joint program, which also includes the ADB, aims to reduce greenhouse gas emissions from the forest sector. The WB supported FIP intervention works with the Government, communities and small holders, while the IFC activity works with private sector partners. There is also substantial collaboration and coordination in financial sector work, with a joint ASA program under the Finance and Markets Global Practice to improve institutional capacity, as well as, financial infrastructure and extension of loans to financial intermediaries to support access to finance, particularly for small and medium enterprises. Through the Trade and Competitiveness Global 26 World Bank Group 2016. Forward Look: A vision for the World Bank Group in 2030 (Report No. 108572). 28 Practice, WB and IFC teams work seamlessly to support the GOL’s effort to improve overall climate for businesses. 74. The CPF is informed by an extensive body of knowledge products. ASAs have been directly aligned to the financing program for maximum impact and include extensive Poverty Assessment work which has helped inform the program. This work has been undertaken in close collaboration with sector Ministries as part of the WBG program. 3.2.3. Focus Areas and Objectives supported by the WBG Program 75. The CPF targets three focus areas for WBG engagement in Lao PDR, namely: (i) supporting inclusive growth, (ii) investing in people, and (iii) protecting the environment. These focus areas are complemented by a cross cutting theme of strengthening institutions to establish a rules-based environment. The CPF program is centered on Lasting Accessible Opportunities for all including sustained green growth, improved access to human and infrastructure services, and opportunities for all. Focus Area 1: Supporting inclusive growth Objective 1.1 – Putting public finances on a sustainable path and supporting financial sector stability 76. The WBG plans several avenues of support for improvements in the management of public finances and macroeconomic stability, cognizant of the critical importance of sustained strong government ownership and leadership in the pursuit of prudent fiscal, monetary, financial, and exchange rate policies. The ongoing Macroeconomic Monitoring, including through the well regarded Lao Economic Monitor series, will continue enabling the WBG to provide real-time advice to Government on macroeconomic matters. The WBG Financial Sector Development ASA is expected to support the Bank of Lao PDR (BOL) improve Anti-Money Laundering provisions and the compliance of state-owned banks with Basel Capital Adequacy Ratios. The provision of Development Policy Financing (DPF) support will continue to be an important vehicle for policy dialogue on macroeconomic management, such as through potentially including economic management actions under the supported programs. The proposed Statistics and Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (CRVS) Project will aim to strengthen the GOL’s capacity to produce and disseminate reliable and timely macroeconomic and social-poverty statistics for the monitoring and evaluation of the 8th NSEDP targets and SDGs, and to conduct regular macroeconomic surveillance. 77. The GOL is implementing a revised State Budget Law and strengthening its budget planning, preparation and execution processes with the aim of achieving a more efficient allocation and execution of public resources. The WBG will continue supporting this process through the ongoing Public Finance Management (PFM) Modernization program. Support for strengthening governance and institutions can also be provided through DPF operations. The PFM Modernization support is also expected to help improve the business environment with the work on VAT administration, which is a key constraint to businesses, and which in turn is 29 expected to expand the tax base and increase revenues – a key objective of the Government. Support is provided for the implementation of the Government’s Long Term Fiscal Development Strategy. Support to a good PFM system for supporting service delivery across sectors, will be provided though ASA services with possible IDA financing depending on progress with PFM reforms and Government demand. To enhance accountability in the PFM processes, continuous support to strengthen the State Audit Organization and the National Assembly are key drivers. 78. The hydropower and mining sectors are significant contributors to Government revenue and the GOL is seeking to enhance effectiveness and transparent management of fiscal affairs in these sectors. WB support is currently provided through the Technical Assistance for Capacity Development in Hydropower and Mining Sector (HMTA) Project. Subject to Government demand, this support may be complemented with Lao engagement in the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative. Similarly, piloting the set-up of internal control mechanisms within the executive could be explored. Objective 1.2 – Making it easier to do business 79. While there have been improvements in aspects of the trade and business environment, Lao PDR still needs significant improvements to make it easier to do business and create good jobs. Objectives under the 8th NSEDP could potentially provide opportunities for emerging entrepreneurs. WBG will continue its support to overall improvements in trade and competitiveness. 80. Lao PDR could hasten its economic transformation by improving regulatory quality and putting in place a competitive and transparent legal framework for investment entry, protection, and incentives. The WBG will continue its support to the Ministry of Industry and Commerce’s ongoing successful trade and competitiveness program as well as carry on its work on the Lao Investment Climate. Particular efforts will be required to address non-tariff measures and cumbersome procedures. This work builds on successful support to the Customs and Trade Facilitation program (ending in June 2017) where customs clearance times and efficiency have improved. 81. Improved access to finance among businesses, especially SMEs, is key to support job creation. WB is supporting access to finance through the ongoing SME Access to Finance Project and IFC is working with selected intermediaries in bank and non-bank financial sectors. For instance, IFC has partnered with a commercial bank on a risk sharing facility to promote access to finance among women entrepreneurs. The WBG is also currently supporting financial stability and inclusion through a program to improve regulatory oversight, creditor rights, deposit insurance, accounting standards and the financial infrastructure. 82. Consistent with its green economy model, Lao PDR is well placed to develop clean and high value agriculture products to take advantage of close-by markets which are becoming increasingly wealthy. The WBG will support these objectives through new funding to a proposed Agriculture Commercialization program and continue to support improving the challenging business and trade environment in Lao PDR, which particularly affects agricultural products and the development of an agribusiness sector aimed to serve neighboring markets. The 30 Agriculture Commercialization program aims to support commercialization and diversification of farming systems, making them more productive and competitive, climate resilient, and environmentally friendly. It aims to promote integration of farmers into commercial food value chains by building trust between farmers and agro-firms, enhancing capacity of agribusinesses in contract farming and business development, increasing access to finance, and improving competitiveness of Lao firms on domestic and foreign markets. This program will also help foster better paid jobs and support livelihoods of many rural households. 83. Tourism, and in particular eco- tourism, is increasing and provides an opportunity to create jobs while at the same time building on the green growth focus. Regional tourism in particular is growing. This is a service sector where women in particular could benefit. Through the dialogue on the Green Growth DPF and related knowledge work the WBG plans to support analysis on ways to strengthen the strategy to attract high value tourists, to brand Lao PDR as a destination, and to support SMEs to respond to the demands of this market. IFC plans to continue exploring opportunities to support the private sector to increase its level of service in the tourism sector. Box 2: Tourism in Lao PDR The number of visitors to Lao PDR grew by almost 20 percent per year in the last 10 years reaching 4.7 million tourists in 2015 and generating about US$725 million in foreign exchange revenues. The sector has created jobs for both male and more importantly to female workers and entrepreneurs in local areas over the years. Of those visitors, 3.7 million are on holiday of which a small but increasing fraction are adventure and nature-based tourists. The growth potential might lie with this segment of the tourism market. The development of environment-friendly nature-based tourism in Lao PDR provides an exciting opportunity to create jobs and fiscal revenues while preserving natural resources especially in rural areas, where options are limited particularly for women and ethnic groups. Lao PDR’s geographic location in South-East Asia, provides a solid foundation for expansion of the sector. Growth of leisure travelers and environmentally conscious consumers in the region is also creating demand for the industry. Objective 1.3 – Investing in infrastructure for growth and inclusion 84. The Government has an extensive agenda to enhance infrastructure services with a particular focus on inclusion and reaching the last ten percent of the unserved population. The WBG will support infrastructure investments in order to improve connectivity and access to basic infrastructure services. WBG support has been successful in particular in the road and energy sectors and will continue. WBG will continue to assess feasibility of Public Private Partnership in infrastructure. 85. The ongoing as well as the newly approved Lao Road Sector Projects support the implementation of the Government’s Public Works and Transport Sector five year plan 2016-2020, particularly regarding road asset management and improved climate resilience of the road network. The national road network, serving an increased traffic volume around main cities including Vientiane and transit traffic, is crucial for Lao PDR to play its role as 31 regional hub and exploit economic potential from regional integration. Investment, in particular on National Road 13, the key backbone of the country, is planned. 86. The Government has been successful in developing its hydro resources, and electricity exports to neighboring countries are contributing significantly to revenues . Lao PDR aims at utilizing unexploited hydropower resources to export clean electricity to its neighbors Cambodia, Vietnam, Thailand, and Singapore. The WBG is currently supporting the feasibility analysis of a power link with Vietnam as well as looking to put in place a renewable energy project (for hydro, wind or solar). Both IFC and MIGA are assessing selected IPP hydropower projects for potential investment in near term. MIGA will look to provide its political risk guarantees for these independent hydropower projects. 87. To improve the performance of Government oversight institutions for the hydropower and mining sectors, the WB is providing extensive analytical support through the ongoing Technical Assistance for Capacity Development in Hydropower and Mining Sector (HTMA) Project to the Ministry of Energy and Mining. HMTA has been instrumental in supporting development of a Policy on Sustainable Hydropower Development, improving the tax regime for hydropower and mining, enhancing the capacity of Government institutions in appraising and implementing mining and hydropower projects and developing mining and hydropower development strategies. Given the importance of these sectors to the economy, the Ministry has requested a proposed follow up program, the Sustainable Energy and Extractives Development TA Project (SEEDTA). IFC launched a Hydro Advisory Program in 2012 focused on improving environmental and social standards of the hydropower sector. The goal is to ensure that new hydropower projects led by the private sector adhere to good international industry environmental and social practices. The program works with both Government and the private sector through engagement with hydropower companies and financiers investing in hydropower, both in Lao PDR and from neighboring countries. IFC and the Lao Chamber of Commerce and Industry launched the Hydropower Developers’ Working Group in December 2013 which enables the private sector to be represented in the regulatory reform process. 88. Although 90 percent of households are now connected to electricity, reaching the last 10 percent of non-electrified households is on the Government’s inclusiveness agenda, which the WBG plans to support. Earlier support from both WB and IFC resulted in significantly expanded electricity networks in rural areas. The Government program to improve efficiency and reliability of power distribution in selected load areas in Vientiane served by Electricite du Laos, is supported by the ongoing Power Grid Improvement program, aiming to reduce electricity losses for overall efficiency of the sector. 89. An extensive agenda to improve the access of rural poor to basic services and strengthening their participation in development processes. The recently approved Poverty Reduction Fund (PRF) III) Project will continue supporting community-driven improvements in infrastructure in rural villages, while ensuring that women represent at least 40 percent and poorest villagers represent at least 60 percent in the decision making process. The PRF III Project and the Lao Road Sector Project II will both continue to support improvements in rural roads to increase the share of population with access to all season roads. 32 Box 3: Hydropower sector development and the role of the WBG The hydropower sector has expanded significantly with Lao PDR capitalizing on its hydropower potential and aiming to be the battery of Southeast Asia. The development of the 1,000 MW Nam Theun 2 (NT2) hydropower dam, which commenced operations in early 2010, could be considered a catalyst to the development of the sector, adding to the single previous Nam Ngeum dam. NT2 is considered to have had a major development impact on Lao PDR, and represents the start of large- scale investment program, increasing installed capacity from 640 MW in 2000 to above 6,000 MW by 2016 from around 30 hydropower facilities. A further 40 dams are under construction. Once completed by 2020, installed capacity is expected to reach 10,000 MW. Total fiscal receipts of NT2 net revenues to date are US$153.4 million, of which about 80 percent have been allocated to poverty reduction programs and projects (NT2 net Revenues received in 2016 were about US$18.6 million). Domestically this development of the hydropower sector has supported an impressive rate of local household electricity access, which now exceeds 90 percent. The WBG has played a significant role in the sector since 2005 with the approval of the NT2 project. World Bank support to the NT2 project is comprised of a WB-funded Social and Environment Project of US$24 million, as well as an IDA Partial Risk Guarantee and a MIGA Guarantee. The convening role of the World Bank was particularly impactful, bringing in other development partners including the Asian Development Bank, European Investment Bank and others, and facilitating dialogue across public and private stakeholders. Closure of the WB supported NT2 Social and Environment Project is targeted for December 2017. Challenges remain in the final year of the project, and concerted efforts are being made by the national, provincial and district governments, the project developer (NTPC), and development partners to ensure full compliance with commitments made for the project. Support to the NT2 dam has been key to the WBG’s strategy in Lao PDR. World Bank support has contributed to a successful hydropower project that was implemented on time, generates higher revenues than expected, and offers a long-term asset to the GOL. The NT2 project also established the basis for technical assistance and policy support operations. Indeed, the World Bank’s funding of the Technical Assistance for Capacity Development in Hydropower and Mining Sector Project has supported important reforms in the electricity and mining sectors, including revision of Concession Agreements, power sector structural reform, and new regional investment initiatives. 33 Focus Area 2: Investing in people Objective 2.1 – Reducing the prevalence of malnutrition 90. Malnutrition is the key area in Lao PDR where MDGs were not achieved. The rate of stunting among under 5 year olds remains stubbornly high at 44 percent. It is generally acknowledged that the first 1000 days of a child’s life must be prioritized in order to prevent the long term consequences of stunting. It is also agreed that in order to break the intergenerational cycle of under-nutrition, focus should be on adolescent girls, reproductive health including family planning, and maternal nutrition. As malnutrition is a cross-cutting matter, it is important to put greater effort to strengthen capacity for sub-national level coordination for inter-sectoral implementation of the priority actions from the National Nutrition Strategy. The expected increase in IDA funding will be used to scale up WB support to the National Nutrition Strategy in areas where WB has a comparative advantage. WB is currently providing support through a number of interventions, including through the ongoing Health Governance and Nutrition Development Program (HGNDP) which supports the national behavior change campaign (US$5 million campaign) as well as family planning, and water and sanitation interventions, and through the ongoing support to the Poverty Reduction Fund which supports access to clean water, demand creation for sanitation, and facilitates nutrition awareness raising. The CPF envisages exploring a new operation to support water supply and sanitation, the second leading cause of child stunting worldwide, supporting the Government program to increase toilet use from the current rate of about 70 percent in households and in primary schools, focusing on the hundreds of schools which do not have water or toilets. Further, the CPF envisages support to social protection program to incentivize use of health and education services, with a particular focus on adolescent girls, and with the aim to address stunting. The proposed Agriculture Commercialization program is expected to increase incomes and to help address undersupply of nutritious food for low income rural people. The WB support is provided in conjunction with other key development partners who are contributing significant funds to the National Nutrition Strategy, including the European Union with a recently approved €50 million nutrition support program and the International Fund for Agricultural Development with the Global Agriculture and Food Security Program. 91. The CPF will also increase its focus on malnutrition by ramping up advocacy, policy dialogue and knowledge work related to malnutrition. On the knowledge, ongoing work in FY 2017 includes an impact evaluation on the use of incentives to influence sanitation outcomes; and conducting a baseline of early childhood development. In the coming years, such knowledge work will continue to inform the policy dialogue and advocacy as well as the ongoing operations. Among other things, future knowledge work will include analyzing end line results from the impact evaluation of the Early Childhood Education Project (to shed light on the effectiveness of different delivery approaches to improve early childhood development). Objective 2.2 – Improving quality of primary and pre-primary education and keeping girls in school 92. Improving education outcomes is core to the development agenda of Lao PDR. Particularly, the overall needs in early childhood education are significant. Given that there 34 are currently about 200,000 children aged 3-5 years out of any Early Childhood Development (ECD) program27, the ECD investment needs are significant. The Ministry of Education and Sport’s Education Sector Development Plan 2012-2020 outlines 15 key objectives to meet SDGs 4.1, 4.2 and 4.5. The World Bank support is focused on pre-primary and primary schooling through the ongoing Second Global Partnership for Education Project (P149130) and the IDA funded Early Childhood Education Project (P145544), both of which will continue through the CPF period until July 2019. The CPF envisions follow-on support to the education sector, with a continuing focus on investing in early years. Key CPF results expected from these interventions include increased enrolment rates among 3-5 year olds and improved teaching practices in Grades 1 and 2. World Bank also supports the National School Feeding program in conjunction with the World Food Program as a means to keep children in school and provide supplement nutrition for the children. Included in this is provision of clean cook stoves as well as a behavior change element to support improved nutrition outcomes. There are several development partners actively involved in supporting the Government education program and World Bank support is complementary to this. European Union has significant programs in primary education as does Australia/Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade. The German GIZ provides significant support to vocational training as does ADB. Objective 2.3 – Improving access to and quality of health services 93. In line with Ministry of Health’s Health Sector Development Plan 2016-2020, Lao PDR aims to deliver free Maternal Child Health care and to focus on primary health care, hygiene promotion, health financing and improved human resources and governance in the sector. Like the education sector, there are a number of development partners active in the health sector including GAVI, WHO, UNICEF, and UNFPA. A key concern is that significant funding in the sector is expected to be withdrawn towards end of 2017 as Lao PDR graduates from eligibility for such funding. WB support to the Government’s health program is provided through the ongoing HGNDP (ongoing until December 2020), the focus of which is on Maternal Child Health, family planning (family planning commodities, consultation and services), nutrition (nutrition supplements for pre-pregnancy preparation and advocacy materials to promote behavioral change), and birth registration. The HGNDP is about 50 percent disbursed and is expected to need additional financing. The CPF will thus include a new Project focusing on strengthening demand for health services, particularly access to Universal Health Care. Full coverage of family planning, including meeting the unmet 20 percent demand, is planned to be financed by IDA with the support of UNFPA for delivery. A civil management information system, which will be established as part of the proposed statistics and CRVS Project, aims to support the system to expand universal health coverage. Objective 2.4 – Reducing vulnerability and inclusive access to social services 94. Formal social protection mechanisms to improve resilience should accompany investments in health and education. People are vulnerable to shocks and the access to and utilization of health and education services are low, particularly in remote areas and among certain groups. During the CPF period, the WBG aims to support elements of a basic social 27 Education Management Information System 2015-2016, Ministry of Education and Sports 35 protection system largely aimed at reducing rural vulnerability, incentivizing demand for and use of social services, and improving maternal and child health and nutrition. With a particular focus on adolescent girls, the envisaged mechanism includes allowances, school feeding and stipend programs.28 These measures will be coupled with behavioral change actions. A key issue is vulnerabilities to shocks, especially for the poor and near poor, highlighting the need for more targeted support for poverty reduction and vulnerable groups near the poverty line; the program will explore how to mitigate these, complementing ongoing programs in health, education, and poverty reduction. This aims to lay the foundation for an effective delivery system serving multiple sectoral programs in the long term. Focus Area 3: Protecting the environment Objective 3.1 – Promoting environmental protection and sustainable natural resources management 95. The NSEDP and the National Strategy on Climate Change seek to put Lao PDR on a green growth development path, and this focus is reflected in the WBG program. The approach in the green growth development policy financing series focuses on recognizing the current challenges found in the sustainability of growth, but also looking to capitalize on opportunities. More concretely, the approach being supported includes the strengthening of the regulatory regime with tools and coordination mechanisms to integrate environmental and social considerations into planning and investment decisions, a departure from ad hoc development activities to exploit natural resources. This culture of proactive management and planning will be matched by also a strengthened ‘policing’ capacity to build the rules-based environment. The operation is also geared to support the Government to strengthen fiscal policies and mobilize financing mechanisms to strategically convert natural capital to human, social, financial and physical capital. 96. The WBG will continue and increase support to Lao PDR for the protection of the environment and responsible management of natural resources, including through the ongoing Second Lao Environment and Social (LENS2) Project which supports the dedicated financing vehicle, the Environment Protection Fund (EPF), to build its capacity and credibility as a fund. The Project also provides technical support to EPF’s beneficiaries that focus on institutional capacity building and improving conservation and management of natural capital. The WB will also continue to support Lao PDR efforts to combat illegal wildlife trafficking, an international concern, with Lao PDR being the key transit route to Vietnam and China. Under the LENS2 Project, support is currently provided to the Lao Customs to enhance their detection and to other agencies to enhance enforcement. 97. In its Nationally Determined Contribution29 and National Forest Strategy to 2020, Lao PDR targets an increase in forest cover to 70 percent and envisages the sustainable management of its forest resources. The ongoing Scaling-Up Participatory Sustainable Forest 28 School feeding and stipend programs are financed under the Education Project. 29 Lao PDR 2015. Intended Nationally Determined Contribution 36 Management Project, which is financed in part by the Forest Investment Program (FIP), works through the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry to support the sustainable management of about 40 production forests and over 900 villages in sustainable livelihoods all aimed at climate change mitigation. The IFC supported forestry Project under the FIP contributes to the Government policies on reforestation, and climate change mitigation by supporting private sector forestry companies to establish viable business models involving communities, out-growers and supply chains. Under the Forest Carbon Partnership Facility (FCPF), assistance is being provided to the Government to develop a national strategy and capacities for climate change mitigation through Reducing Emissions from Deforestation and Degradation (REDD+). In parallel to the FCPF, a new Carbon Finance operation is being prepared and aims at improving the forest protection in six provinces in order to reduce Green House Gas emissions. 98. Lao PDR's key asset is the Mekong River and its tributaries. Sustainable management is critical. There is a need to ensure the capacity to manage the river basins across multiple sectors including the hydropower sector to better integrate water management factors in planning, design and operations. Support is being provided through the ongoing Mekong Integrated Water Resources Management (MIWRM) program, which is mirrored in similar programs in Cambodia and Vietnam, key riparian of the Mekong River basin, and to the Mekong River Commission. This is complemented by the work in the Ministry of Energy and Mines through the HMTA Project. Additional Financing to the MIWRM Project is intended to further support the development the rules-based environment for water use across all sectors, and the proposed SEEDTA contains a focus on mainstreaming water management, and application of any emerging water laws, in the hydropower sector. Objective 3.2 – Putting in place enhanced disaster risk management and climate and disaster resilience 99. The WB will support the Government’s goal to achieve green growth through enhancing the resilience towards natural hazards. Financing will be provided to help reduce the risk of flooding and enhance disaster risk financing capacity of Lao PDR. The Project will strengthen flood resilience in Oudomxay province, which is particularly vulnerable to floods. It will also strengthen the capacity of the Department of Meteorology and Hydrology to predict flash floods and distribute last-mile early warning communication. The WB will also support the Ministry of Finance to increase the financial resilience of Lao PDR against natural disasters and the Government’s capacity to meet post-disaster funding needs. Finally, the transport sector will be strengthened by integrating disaster resilience into the rehabilitation of roads. Building resilient roads, improving the logistical chains between farms, markets and basic services, will help reduce the poverty rate in rural areas. WB funded projects include emergency components for rapid response. Cross-cutting theme: Strengthening institutions to establish a rules-based environment 100. Strong institutions are the basis for results throughout government programs, and the WBG CPF financing and advisory program includes a strong focus on strengthening institutions. In the Ministry of Finance, the macroeconomic monitoring and the ongoing public finance management modernization program are designed to provide timely advice as needed. 37 The ongoing ASA program supports the financial sector in particular the BOL. The quality of the institutions, and the rules based environment in the financial sector will also be helped by enhancing the legal and regulatory framework, particularly around supervision and orderly bank resolutions, while also building capacity to enforce compliance. This includes Anti-Money Laundering, and Accounting and Auditing practices, which collectively will also contribute to improving the business climate and the macro-stability agenda. The ongoing project on Strengthening the National Statistical System is essential to the supporting in particular poverty data and support the collection and dissemination of gender disaggregated indicators. It is planned to follow this on with an expanded Project including support on Civil Registration and Vital Statistics a key recruitment for delivery of effective social protection programs. Several government programs including in health and education sector rely on these systems. In the Ministry of Health, the HGNDP supports the health management system. In the road sector, the recently approved Lao Road Sector Project II includes extensive support to the development of the planning and budgeting system for effective road maintenance as well support to development of e-procurement in the Ministry of Public Works and Transport for effective management of the contracting process as well as for transparency. 101. The CPF program envisages IDA DPF support, provided the macroeconomic policy framework is adequate. The DPF series currently under preparation supports the transition towards green growth in Lao PDR and strengthened resilience through improved macroeconomic management. While the outcomes of the planned DPF financing series will be most directly dedicated to the protection of the environment and sustainable management of natural resources, the overall policy reform agenda that the series will support is fundamentally oriented toward improving governance and creating a rules based environment. Underlying challenges to the shift to shared and sustainable growth have their roots in the weaknesses of the governance system to manage the development of natural resources. Dialogue with the authorities in preparation of the DPF series focuses on policy reform in specific sectors – e.g., energy and extractives, water, forest, and agriculture – around cultivating a culture of forward looking and integrated planning and management. In the mining industry, inter alia, sector agencies are in the process of implementing standardized procedures for impact assessment and evidence-based management plans. Introduction of management regime with enhanced accountability will affect a range of development goals such as public health and creating higher value businesses and entrepreneurship. 3.3. Implementing the FY 2017-2021 Country Partnership Framework 3.3.1. Financial Envelopes and Instruments 102. CPF financial envelope. The CPF financial envelope to support Lao PDR’s development for the CPF period reflects the programmed pipeline of SDR46.5 million (US$63.2 million equivalent) for FY 2017 under the IDA17 replenishment, and an indicative IDA18 core country allocation for FY 2018-2020 in the range of SDR178 to SDR200 million (US$242 to US$272 million equivalent).30 The IDA18 allocation represents an increase of approximately 60 percent 30 US$ equivalent amounts for IDA use the exchange rate as of end of January 2017: SDR1 = US$1.36. 38 from the IDA17 commitments for FY 2015-2017 of SDR127 million (US$173 million equivalent). This new financing will complement the ongoing IDA financed portfolio for Lao PDR which stands at US$347.5 million equivalent as of February 2017. The increase in IDA financing provides an opportunity to significantly scale up impact in the key areas of green growth as well as on malnutrition through a significant program in rural water supply and sanitation. The focus on green growth is in line with the WBG Climate Change Action Plan31. Options to use Regional IDA financing will be explored, including in particular for the energy sector. Lao PDR moved to blend IDA terms at the start of FY2016, as GNI per capita levels had exceeded the IDA operational cutoff for two consecutive years.32 The country is yet to build the creditworthiness needed to borrow from the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development. 103. The program is currently complemented by US$60 million in grant trust fund resources. We expect to continue to administer large trust funds for support for example in the Education sector (Global Program for Education), the Trade and Competitiveness sector (Multi Donor Trust Fund) and in the Environment sector (Forest Carbon Funds). 104. For each expected outcome, the CPF envisages the delivery of tailored development solutions through packages of WBG knowledge, convening, and financial services (see Table 5). Investment Project Financing will continue to dominate, while Development Policy Financing (DPF) is expected to be used to support the Green Growth focus and may also be used for supporting public finance management depending on progress. With IDA countries now eligible for DPF funding with a Catastrophe Deferred Drawdown Option under IDA18, options for using this instrument to complement the proposed Disaster Risk Management project will be explored. The WB also expects to explore using the Program for Results instrument for example in the health sector where current support is sector wide using government systems. To obtain economies of scale and increase impact, as well as to take account of World Bank administrative budgetary considerations to provide implementation support to the program, the proposed program envisages fewer but larger operations, on average around three new IDA funded programs per fiscal year. IDA financing is expected to leverage Government financing as well as other development partner financing. New WBG supported operations cut across Global Practices. 105. IFC has a current outstanding investment services portfolio of US$35 million in power, banking, manufacturing, and tourism sectors. The current IFC outstanding advisory services portfolio is US$13 million. During the CPF period, IFC will continue its advisory programs in strategic sectors including hydropower, forestry, and financial sectors, while seeking investment opportunities in sectors such as energy (particularly hydropower and other forms of renewable energy), financial services (bank and non-bank financial institutions), agriculture, tourism, and manufacturing industries. 31 World Bank Group 2016. WBG Climate Change Action Plan 32 Lao PDR is an IDA "gap" country, which means it receives IDA credits on blend terms (like all blend countries) because it has exceeded the IDA GNI cutoff for more than two consecutive years, but it is not yet deemed creditworthy for IBRD loans and as such is not yet in the category of blend countries. 39 Table 5: Indicative World Bank Group Program FY 2017-2021 Focus Area Key Instruments Knowledge and Convening Financing Supporting - Macroeconomic Monitoring – including Lao - Lao Road Sector Project II (FY17, US$25 m) Inclusive Economic Monitor and Public Expenditure - Loan to Banque Franco Lao – IFC (FY17, US$10 m) Growth Analysis (BB) - Loan to ACLEDA Bank – IFC (FY17, US$9 m) - Poverty Analysis (BB) - Loan to a commercial bank – IFC (FY18, US$20 m) - Public Finance Management Modernization - Statistics and CRVS (FY18, US$20 m) Analytical Program (BB and TF) - Agriculture Commercialization (FY18, US$25 m) - Financial Sector Development Analytical - Investment in hydropower (Xekatam)– IFC (FY18, US$15-20 m) Program (TF) - Competitiveness and Private Sector Development - Trade and Competitiveness Analytical Program - National Road 13 North (TF) - Rural Development / Electrification - Energy Connector Project Investing in - Civil Registration and Vital Statistics (TF) - Social protection system to reduce vulnerability and malnutrition (FY19) People - Addressing Vulnerability and Malnutrition (TF) - Additional Financing for Health Governance and Nutrition Development - Pro-poor Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Program (IDA and TF, FY18, US$10 m) (TF) - Universal Health Coverage - Education Sector Analytical Program - Water Supply and Sanitation for Health - Education in early years Protecting the - Mining (TF) - Mekong Integrated Water Resources Management Additional Financing Environment - Hydro strategy (TF) (FY18, US$ 25 m) - Energy and Extractives Analytical Program (TF) - Disaster Risk Management (FY18, US$30 m) - Hydro Advisory (IFC) - Sustainable Energy and Extractives Development TA (FY18, US$20 m) - GHG Emissions Reduction from Forests (Carbon Fund, FY18, US$30 m) - Forestry plantation & processing – IFC - Renewable Energy Project (hydro or solar or wind) – IFC Cross-cutting: - Green Growth Analytical Work (BB and TF) - Green Growth DPF series (FY17, US$ 40 m) Strengthening - Green Growth DPF series Institutions Note: ASAs above contribute to overall - Green Growth DPF series strengthening of institutions Note: BB is World Bank own administrative budget supporting World Bank teams own work. US$ amounts are indicative. 40 3.3.2. Country Financial Management and Procurement Capacities 106. Lao PDR’s financial management capacity is limited with major effects on transparency and effectiveness of the public sector’s implementation capacity. The identified capacity constraints coupled with weak public financial management systems has a significant impact on the efficient and effective use of public resources and subsequently impacts the achievement of the operations’ development objectives. WB funded project operations rely on financial management systems as agreed between the GOL and the WB, with the exception of the use of Treasury system for maintaining and disbursing funds from the Designated Account. Use of the country’s financial management system will be gradual with focus on strengthening certain areas within the sector if not the country’s public financial management system as a whole (e.g. internal audit, better planning and budgeting). Work on improving the internal audit function in the roads sector has started and will continue under this CPF. 107. The Lao PDR public procurement system is governed by a weak regulatory and institutional framework. The Procurement Monitoring Office, a unit under the Budget Directorate in the Ministry of Finance with few staff, is responsible for oversight and regulation of procurement activities for the whole country. There is little oversight on the way procuring agencies manage their procurement functions. Staff capacities need strengthening, and there is no domestic institution to provide training. Procurement markets are in nascent stage dominated by small enterprises concentrated in the capital Vientiane and other large cities. Due to its small nature as country and absence of diversified procurement markets, conflict of interest is common in public procurement and cost of capital goods is relatively high compared to neighboring countries. With strengthening economic governance and tackling corruption being high on the agenda for the proposed WBG program, a strong procurement regulatory institution mandated by a prerequisite law would be required. Such an institution would provide strong oversight and develop capacities to implement public procurement in a transparent and effective manner to facilitate development. 108. Despite challenges in the overall public procurement system, WB funded programs have been implemented satisfactorily. Under WB funded programs implementation is undertaken through Government institutions. National procedures and national bidding documents will continue to be used under low value National Competitive Bidding contracts. No key issues or constraints to project implementation have been seen in the current portfolio, given that there is no highly complex procurement, the bulk of which is small value contracting under US$3 million. Overall usage of country systems will be limited to low value contracts under national competition, with specific agreements on complaints review mechanisms. Government capacity is effectively complemented by procurement consultants and independent technical capacity to carry out audits and reviews especially for projects with dispersed implementing agencies. All programs will employ a form of e-procurement for enhanced transparency. The bulk of procurement activities will be procured consistent with provisions of the World Bank New Procurement Framework effective July 2016. 41 3.3.3. Managing Program Implementation 109. This CPF will cover a five year period to match the timing of the 8th NSEDP with a mid-term Performance and Learning Review (PLR). The program will be flexible to evolve as demand and progress dictates. The PLR will take stock of developments and provide an opportunity to adjust as needed. Particularly with respect to DPFs, an adequate macroeconomic policy framework is a prerequisite. 110. The performance of WB-financed Government programs in Lao PDR is strong. Consistently high disbursements (IDA disbursement ratios of 25 percent or above since FY 2012 one of the highest in EAP and above the Bank-wide target of 20 percent) demonstrate strong absorption capacity. More than 70 percent of projects evaluated by the Independent Evaluation Group during the previous CPS period received satisfactory ratings in their development outcomes, reflecting robust linkages between project design, implementation and results. World Bank supported programs are implemented through regular ministry structures by Government staff, with strong implementation support from the World Bank. The program has grown from 12 IDA financed projects amounting to US$233 million at the launch of the previous CPS (March 2012) to a program of 18 projects (14 IDA financed) currently under implementation totaling US$408 million (of which IDA US$347.5 million). The average size of projects increased to US$25 million. Disbursement over this period rose from US$92 million in FY 2012 to US$170 million in FY 2016. The portfolio is currently rated 80 percent satisfactory (2 problem projects out of 18). The Trust-Funded portfolio is managed strategically, and directly supports the CPF objectives and is linked to the IDA-funded projects. The program is implemented as a one WBG and close cooperation with IFC is shown through several sectors. To complement the annual WB-ADB joint portfolio reviews hosted by the Ministry of Planning and Investment, bi-annual portfolio reviews for the WB only have also been introduced since early 2016 and will continue. 3.3.4. Coordination and Partnerships 111. The WBG has established strong partnerships with the GOL and other development partners. There is a significant development partner presence in Lao PDR. The Government seeks to harmonize donor support through the Roundtable Process chaired by the GOL and through the Vientiane Declaration, which follows the principles of the Paris Declaration. The World Bank program seeks to support Government programs, rather than standalone WBG supported Projects, and to support them in conjunction with other development partners. Examples are: (i) the Health Governance and Nutrition Development Project (ongoing until December 2020) implemented in collaboration with ADB, UNFPA, UNICEF, and WHO; (ii) the road sector financing (approved December 2016 and ongoing until December 2020) jointly with Nordic Development Fund, the European Investment Bank and the EU; (iii) the Poverty Reduction Fund with the Swiss Development Corporation; (iv) the EU Trust Fund for Public Finance Management Modernization; (v) the Second Trade Development Facility implemented through a multi-donor trust-fund supported by Australia, EU, Germany, Irish Aid and USAID; (vi) the Financial Sector Development ASA program supported by funding from Korea, Canada, and Switzerland; and (vii) the support to the nutrition agenda including with key UN partners. Lao PDR was a country for the Chief Executive Board review on collaboration on the nutrition 42 issues.33 Korean Trust Funds have played a strong role given the interest of Korea to support the development of Lao PDR (Korea Green Growth and Financial Sector support). 112. European partners (comprising the European Union, Finland, France, Germany, Hungary, Ireland, Luxembourg, Poland, the United Kingdom and Switzerland) have introduced joint programming of development resources to Lao PDR over the 2016-2020 period. This initiative, one of a handful of global joint programming efforts to improve ownership and alignment, is good practice and is expected to contribute to more efficient programming of about €500 million of European development financing for Lao PDR, almost a quarter of international development cooperation in the country. Indicative allocations of new funding for the 8th NSEDP programming period (2016-2020) include €162 million (EU), €100 million (Germany), and €89.5 million (Switzerland). 33 In November 2014, the Chief Executive Board chaired by the President of the World Bank and the UN Secretary General reviewed the implementation of the Millennium Development Goals at the country level and assessed progress made by the UN system in Lao PDR (with a focus on nutrition for women and children). 43 IV. MANAGING RISKS 113. The overall risk to the achievement of the CPF development objectives is assessed as Substantial. Lao PDR faces a number of risks and vulnerabilities that could significantly affect the achievement of its economic and social goals and the expected results of the WBG supported interventions under the proposed CPF. The key risks relate to weak governance; a fragile macroeconomic situation, with a high risk of debt distress; and weak enforcement of policies regarding natural resources management. Strong political commitment will be key to overcome the serious governance challenges in Lao PDR, and there are indications of such commitment by the new Government. Table 6: Risks to the CPF Objectives in Lao PDR Risk Categories Rating Political and governance High Macroeconomic High Sector strategies and policies Moderate Technical design of project or program Low Institutional capacity for implementation and sustainability Moderate Fiduciary Moderate Environment and social Substantial Stakeholders Moderate Overall Substantial 4.1. Political and Governance Risks 114. Lao PDR has made some progress in strengthening governance, but continues to rank low on a number of governance indicators, notably voice and accountability, control of corruption and regulatory quality. Lao PDR’s key institutional challenges stem from: commercialization of the state; fragmentation of the government; nascent capacity of the administration; and limited checks and balances. As a result, the rule of law, control of corruption, and accountability are weak, and appetite to improve the regulatory quality has been subdued. According to the Worldwide Governance Indicators34, Lao PDR ranks only around the 25th percentile on these indicators. Lao PDR scored 30 on Transparency International’s Corruption Perception Index 2016 (123rd out of 176 countries), while according to Global Financial Integrity,35 illicit financial flows were estimated at around 13 percent of GDP on average between 2006 and 2013. Vested interest may undermine the authorities’ ability to pursue the reforms supported by the CPF. Project implementation can also be adversely affected by priority changes or changes in policy. 34 www.govindicators.org 35 www.gfintegrity.org 44 115. The WBG is addressing governance risks by designing programs to support Government in improving governance in sectors of WBG engagement and support. For example in the Health and Education sectors a core objective of the WBG programs are to support improved systems of budget, accountability, monitoring and evaluation, and transparency. In the roads sector, the WBG provides support to the planning system, the financing of the sector, the road maintenance fund and transparent procurement. In the Poverty Reduction Fund there are strong community participation processes. The LENS2 Project is designed to support environmental and social assessments systems. Both the HMTA and MIWRM Projects provide support to improved management frameworks and governance structures for water resources. In the Financial Sector, governance issues related to banking supervision, accounting and auditing, bank resolution, bank licensing, Anti-Money Laundering/Combatting Financing of Terrorism and payments are being addressed through the ongoing ASA program. 4.2. Macroeconomic Risks 116. The macroeconomic risks are assessed as high. The on-going uncertainty in the global economy and related enhanced volatility in commodity prices could negatively affect the Lao economy by reducing demand for its exports and put further pressure on the already low reserves. However, risks from domestic economic management policies are probably greater at this moment. The liquidity and solvency of fiscal accounts may be tested in case the announced fiscal consolidation is derailed and if public debt management function is not upgraded promptly, including steps to limit the government’s exposure to contingent liabilities (off-budget spending, and cost overruns). Similarly, failure to address weaknesses in the financial sector can trigger a larger instability and create a significant fiscal burden that the budget cannot absorb. If not addressed, continued pressures on the exchange rate risk igniting inflation, testing the stability of the financial sector and sustainability of public debt. There are also upside uncertainties, as the baseline scenario takes a relatively conservative assumption on the power projects that will come on stream. If fiscal consolidation is derailed it would mean that reduced fiscal space would delay the GOL from implementing some priorities supported by the CPF. In addition, without an adequate macroeconomic policy framework, the DPF series could be delayed. 117. The WBG program envisages support to Lao PDR through Development Policy Financing (DPF) provided adequate macroeconomic policies are in place. At this time, despite the challenging macroeconomic situation, the evolving macroeconomic framework does contain a broadly consistent set of policies which, if implemented, are expected to result in gradual stabilization of debt levels and improvement of sustainability prospects. However, DPF support will be evaluated on a case-by-case basis and will be provided if macroeconomic policies are assessed as adequate and judged sustainable at the time of that assessment. Throughout the CPF period, prospective or ongoing DPF support is expected to be a vehicle for dialogue and engagement on macroeconomic policies. One example is the discussion on the inclusion of economic management actions under the Green Growth DPF series currently under preparation. The previous Poverty Reduction Support Operations DPF series was largely successfully implemented, although it stalled in recent years as progress with reforms in Public Finance Management (PFM), the fiscal regime for natural resource sectors and the business environment 45 slowed. Related IDA financing to support the PFM agenda in the previous CPS did not proceed. A renewed dialogue on PFM has begun with the new Government during 2016. 4.3. Environment and Social Risks 118. Lao PDR’s natural resources – minerals, forests, water resources, and biodiversity – have been intensively exploited. This has played out in the forestry sector where forest cover (70 percent in 1940) has reduced from 47 percent in 1992 to 40 percent in 2010, with estimates of US$ 1.5 billion in logs at the Vietnam and China borders when Lao PDR had a logging ban in place, and with recovered revenue in the Treasury of only about US$15 million. Hydropower development has contributed to the logging issue. A moratorium on approval of new metal mining investment was introduced due to the social risks posed by the environmental and social impacts. Notwithstanding, actual enforcement has remained weak due to overlapping institutional mandates combined with staffing and budget constraints. A Strategic Environmental and Social Assessment for the mining industry has identified a critical need for improved and standardized procedures for environmental and social impact assessments as well uniform procedures for monitoring and enforcement of operators. In addition, economic activities are increasingly vulnerable to climate change and natural disasters. The yearly droughts and floods are recognized by the Government as core challenges to the pressing priority to achieve higher levels of economic and social development. Natural disasters also have important fiscal implications for the Government. 119. The overall environmental and social risks remain substantial, although there are indications of strong commitment by the new Government to put Lao PDR onto a sustainable green growth path, helping reduce and mitigate the related risks. Several WBG funded Projects have been and will continue supporting government programs and investments with these goals – including HMTA Project, Scaling-Up Participatory Sustainable Forest Management Project, and LENS II Project as well as IFC’s Lao Hydro Advisory and Forestry Projects. While the implementation of the Nam Theun 2 Project continues facing some environmental and social challenges, which the authorities and private project owners are monitoring and managing carefully with the support of the WBG and other project financiers and stakeholders, there has been overall adequate management of environment and social requirements under World Bank Group funded projects. 46 ANNEXES 47 Annex 1: CPF Results Monitoring Matrix Focus Area 1: Supporting inclusive growth As set out in the SCD, growth, poverty reduction and shared prosperity will depend on a growth strategy that is supported by the private sector as the engine of growth. WBG support towards a more productive private sector for more and better jobs will focus on (i) good connectivity and infrastructure; (ii) increased agricultural productivity, and (iii) ensuring fiscal sustainability through revenue mobilization and quality of spending functions for improved debt management and financial sector stability. This focus area will also support Outcome 1 of the 8th NSEDP, which centers on Sustained and Inclusive Growth through agriculture modernization, infrastructure development, improved competitiveness and macroeconomic stability. Objective 1.1: Putting public finances on a sustainable path and supporting financial sector stability Intervention Logic: Sustaining economic growth in a more challenging global environment will require fiscal sustainability and macroeconomic stability. In this regard, containing the fiscal deficit is important to ensure public debt remains at sustainable levels. Concurrently, financial sector stability will be important for a sound macroeconomic framework and promoting a vibrant business environment. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 1. Annual NSEDP is underpinned by a macroeconomic % Increase of registered tax payers who Knowledge and Convening framework with prudent deficit target in order to keep pay VAT. o Macroeconomic Monitoring – Lao Economic debt on a sustainable path o Baseline: 75% (registered tax payers: Monitor and Public Expenditure Analysis o Baseline: Public debt of 68% of GDP at end 2016 2,777 of which 2,086 are paying (P148008) o Target: Public debt of 65% of GDP or less by VAT) o Public Finance Management Modernization 202036 o Target: 85% (10 % increase or 275) (P158658) o Financial Sector Development Analytical Reduction in wage bill: Program (P160715) o Baseline: 8.4% of GDP in FY15/16 o Target: 7.4% of GDP in 2020 Financing On-going: 2. Public reporting, and compliance with regulations of Bank of Lao PDR laws and related o Strengthening the National Statistical System the Capital Adequacy Ratio, by types of banks: regulations revised toward compliance Project (P129825) – closes June 2017 o Baseline: Not reported with international standards (SDG 10.5: o Technical Assistance for Capacity o Target: > Regulatory minimum Regulation and M&E financial market Development in Hydropower and Mining institutions): Sector (P109736) – closes Sept 2018 36 The 65% target for the public debt to GDP ratio is expected to be achieved with the implementation of policies envisaged to be supported by the DPF series. As of February 2017, these policies are still to be agreed and finalized. In the absence of these policies, the baseline scenario projects public debt at 69% of GDP by 2020 and this framework is presented in Table 2 of the CPF. 48 o Baseline: 0 laws/regulations (2016) Pipeline: o Target: 5 laws/regulations (2021) o Green Growth DPF series (IDA 17, 18 and 19) (P159956) o Statistics and CRVS (IDA 18) Objective 1.2: Making it easier to do business Intervention Logic: The weak business and financing environment is evidenced by investment and trade regulations which are generally restrictive, and often inconsistent and uncertain. Improving the business climate and markets is amongst the government’s p riorities in order to attract private sector capital, essential for the creation of jobs and the reduction of poverty. WBG engagement would focus on (i) improving the business environment and the competitiveness of the Lao private sector, and (ii) increasing productivity of agriculture by supporting a shift from rice self-sufficiency to more competitive rice-based farming systems and high value niche products. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 3. Improving the Getting Credit System: Value of financing facilitated by the Credit Knowledge and Convening o Baseline: 55 (Doing Business-2017 Distance to Bureau o Trade and Competitiveness Analytical Program Frontier) o Baseline: US$ 1.27m equivalent (P146216) o Target: more than 60 (DB-2021) (Kip 10,344m) (2014) o Poverty Analysis (P156311) o Target: greater than US$ 1.33m o Financial Sector Development Analytical equivalent (Kip 10,843m) (2022) Program (P160715) o Lao Credit Bureau Phase 2 (IFC - 600450) 4. Reduced mean number of days to clear imports Number of days to obtain an operating o Lao Secured Transactions Phase 2 (IFC - (SDG 8.a: Aid for Trade commitments) license (ICA-ES) 6005235) o Baseline: 2.85 (average of last two ICAs) o Baseline 16.3 o Lao Payment Systems (IFC - 579207) o Target: not go beyond 2.5 days o Target: Less than 13 5. Change in value of agricultural production per hectare Financing On-going: of agricultural land in the Project areas (SDG 2.3) o Customs and Trade Facilitation Project o Baseline: US$ 715/ha (P101750) – closes June 2017 o Target: US$ 820/ha o Second Trade Development Facility Project (P130512) – closes Sept 2018 o SME Access to Finance Project (P131201) – closes June 2019 o ABL Lao Kip Loan (IFC - 631193) o Electricite Lao (IFC - 28141) o BFL Risk Sharing Facility (IFC - 32726) o KS Resort – Sofitel LPB (IFC - 27914) o Essilao (IFC - 32557) 49 Pipeline: o Agriculture Commercialization (P161473) (IDA 18) o Competitiveness and Private Sector Development (IDA 18 and TF) IFC Pipeline: o Additional investment in selected commercial banks Objective 1.3: Investing in infrastructure for growth and inclusion Intervention Logic: Good connectivity and infrastructure are a vital prerequisites for functioning markets and international competitiveness, and even more so in a landlocked country like Lao PDR. The WBG’s program will support improved transport logistics through investments in infrastructure, technology and strengthened sector regulation, increased access to infrastructure services in rural communities through community-driven investments, and increased energy efficiency. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 6. Share of rural population with access to an all-weather Roads in good and fair condition as a share Knowledge and Convening road (SDG 9.1) of total provincial and district roads in o Lao Roads PPP (IFC - 600156) o Baseline: 53% Project area. o Poverty Analysis (P156311) o Target: 57% o Baseline: 50% o Pro-Poor Rural Water Supply and Sanitation o Target 65% (P161074) 7. Electricity losses per year reduced in the Power Grid Improvement Project area Financing o Baseline: 22% On-going: o Target: Less than or equal to 14% o Road Sector Project (P102398) – closes Sept 2017 8. Percentage of poor villages in the 43 poorest districts o Road Sector Project II (P158504) (IDA 17) – with improved access to at least one basic service (i.e. approved Dec 2016 - closes Aug 2022 water supply, education, health, rural road) o Power Grid Improvement Project (P149599) – o Baseline: 0% closes March 2020 o Target: 75% o Poverty Reduction Fund III (P157963) – approved May 2016 - closes June 2020 Pipeline: o National Road 13 North (IDA 18) o Sustainable Energy and Extractives Technical Assistance Project (IDA 18) o Energy Connector Project (IDA 18) o Rural Development / Electrification (IDA 18) 50 IFC Pipeline: o Investment in hydropower (Xekatam) (FY18) Focus Area 2: Investing in people Eliminating extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity involves enabling the accumulation of human capital, particularly health, education and nutrition, to ensure a healthy and productive population in the future. This Focus Area will center on improving nutrition in the early years and the quality and inclusiveness of health and education services with a view to allow future generations to reach their full potential. These objectives are closely aligned with Outcome 2 of the NSEDP, where outputs 2, 3, 4, and 5 concentrate on improved nutrition, education, health and social welfare. In addition, improvements in human assets will support the country’s graduation from Least developed Country status, also a key goal for Lao PDR. Objective 2.1: Reducing prevalence of malnutrition Intervention Logic: Investing in people begins with ensuring good nutrition status in the early years of life, during which there is a limited window to maximize each individual’s ability to reach her full potential. Lao PDR still has more than 40 percent of under 5 year olds suffering from chronic under-nutrition (i.e., they are “stunted”). The causes of stunting in Lao PDR are numerous and multi-sectoral, including: (i) generally poor infant and young child feeding practices are generally poor; (ii) suboptimal food diversity and nutrient; (iii) a large number of undernourished pregnant women; (iv) high disease burden among young children; (iv) poor sanitation and unsafe water; and (v) Lao-specific cultural beliefs and food taboos among the 49 ethnic groups are not always conducive to good nutrition. As such, accelerating progress in reducing stunting will involve a multi-sectoral approach that will include interventions to improve access to water and sanitation, toilet use in schools and remote communities and improved maternal health and pregnancy care. 9. Stunting rates of under 2 year olds in targeted areas Number of female village facilitators Knowledge and Convening (SDG 2.2) trained in SBCC in target districts o Addressing Vulnerability and Malnutrition o Baseline: 42% (administrative data): (P160711) o Baseline: 0 o Target:<33% o Midline: 300 Financing o Target: 600 On-going: 10. Number of villages declared open defecation free in o Health Governance and Nutrition Development targeted priority districts Program (P151425) – closes Dec 2020 o Baseline: 0 o Poverty Reduction Fund III (P157963) – o Target: 200 approved May 2016 - closes June 2020 Pipeline: o Social protection system to reduce vulnerability and malnutrition (IDA18) o Additional Financing for Health Governance and Nutrition Development Program (IDA 18 and TF) o Universal Health Coverage (IDA 18) 51 o Water Supply and Sanitation for Health (IDA 18) o Agriculture Commercialization (IDA 18) o Investing in early years (ECD/Early Grade Reading) (IDA19) Objective 2.2.: Improving quality of primary and pre-primary education and keeping girls in school Intervention Logic: One third of Lao’s second graders cannot read a single word, limiting their ability to continue schooling (and, later, become productive workers). Especially for low-income children, the problems start early, with a large proportion of 6 year olds arriving unprepared to learn. To tackle this challenge, WBG support will focus on enhancing early grade literacy outcomes by piloting a new early grade reading pedagogy approach, and providing primary schools with more resources (through block grants) to enhance their learning environments. The CPF also aims to expand the access to and quality of formal and informal early childhood education programs. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 11. Percentage of pre-school aged children (3-5 year olds) Primary education dropout rate Knowledge and Convening attending ECD/ECE/preschool program increases in (disaggregated by gender) o Evaluation of Early Childhood Development target areas (SDG 4.2.2) o Baseline (2015-16): 4.7 (F:4.5) Services (P156227) – Closes Feb 2017 o Baseline (2015/16): 11% (F: 11%) o Target: 4.0 (F:3.8) o Quality of Education in Lao PDR (P153341) – o Target: 48% (F: 48%) Closes Feb 2017 12. Number of out of school children of primary age, Financing (SDG 4.1.2) On-going: o Baseline (2015-16): 8,761 (F: 5,217) – around o Early Childhood Education Project (P145544) – 1.2% of total boys and 1.5% of total girls closes July 2019 o Target: 6,500 (F: 3,000) o Second Global Partnership for Education (P149130) – closes July 2019 Pipeline: o Education in early years (IDA) Objective 2.3: Improving access to and quality of health services Intervention Logic: Addressing health barriers to skills acquisition and labor market participation would be essential for ensuring that all individuals have the capacity to contribute to productivity and are in the position to enjoy human development outcomes. WBG support will include measures aimed at improving financial protection for health, addressing a key dimension of vulnerability and impoverishment- catastrophic health expenditure. Moreover, efforts will continue to improve reproductive and child health outcomes, as well as to prepare the health system for the epidemiological transition to non-communicable diseases. 52 CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 13. Maternal mortality rate (SDG 3.1.1) Number of pregnant women who received Knowledge and Convening o Baseline: 197 (2015 - WHO, UNICEF, UNFPA, the 4th Antenatal Care contacts o Addressing Vulnerability and Malnutrition World Bank Group, and United Nations o Baseline: 94,511 (18 provinces, (P160711) Population Division Maternal Mortality 2016, based on DHIS2) – around o Pro-Poor Rural Water Supply and Sanitation Estimation Inter-Agency Group, Maternal 53% of total births (P161074) Mortality in 1990 – 2015) o Target: 10% increase over baseline o Target: 180 Financing Number of children age 12-23 months who On-going: 14. Number of women who deliver with a skilled birth received the third dose of DPT containing o Health Governance and Nutrition Development attendant at home or at a health facility (SDG 3.1) vaccine (DPT3) by their first birthday Program (P151425) – closes Dec 2020 o Baseline: 95,528 (18 provinces, 2016, based on o Baseline: 74.6% (according to DHIS DHIS2) – around 53% of total births 2) Pipeline: o Target: 10% increase over baseline o Target: Over 85% coverage o Additional Financing for Health Governance and Nutrition Development Program (IDA 18 15. Number of new women aged 15-49 years adopting and TF) long term family planning methods in target o Universal Health Coverage (IDA 18) provinces (data will be disaggregated for adolescent o Statistics and CRVS Operation (IDA 18) girls aged 15-19 years): o Baseline: 45,746 women (14 provinces, 2016, based on HGNDP DLIs/ DHIS2) o Target: 10% increase over baseline Objective 2.4: Reducing vulnerability and inclusive access to social services Intervention Logic: As noted in the SCD, the pace of poverty reduction in Lao PDR has been modest compared to regional peers, and inequality has widened. Vulnerability is high - even when people move out of poverty, and these gains are put at risk by frequent shocks -especially among ethnic minorities and people in rural and upland areas. Thus, there is a critical need to introduce a government-led social protection program to reduce vulnerability and malnutrition in the short term, while laying the foundation for an effective delivery system serving multiple sectoral programs in the long term. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 16. Program beneficiaries as a share of the rural National targeting system developed and Knowledge and Convening population in the selected districts used for more than one program. o Addressing vulnerability and malnutrition o Baseline: 0% o Baseline: 0 (P160711) o Target: 50% o Target: >1 Financing Potential additional indicators to be discussed with On-going: Government and to be included at the time of the CPF o Poverty Reduction Fund III (P157963) – Performance and Learning Review approved May 2016 - closes June 2020 53 Pipeline: o Social protection to reduce vulnerability and malnutrition (IDA 18) Focus Area 3: Protecting the environment Natural resources have delivered growth and can continue to do so if properly managed. Therefore, putting in place effective systems for responsible natural resource management will be critical to ensure sustainability of growth and social gains over the medium term. Moreover, given the high levels of vulnerability in Lao PDR, enhanced disaster risk management and climate resilience is also critical to protect the incomes and livelihoods of the poor and bottom 40 percent. This Focus Area supports Outcome 3 of the NSEDP on the Protection of Natural Resources and the Environment, and particularly the first two outputs encompassing natural resources management and preparedness for natural disasters and risk mitigation. Objective 3.1: Promoting protection of the environment and responsible management of natural resources Intervention Logic: Rich forest biodiversity has seen fast decline, driven by multiple factors including industrial development and activities for livelihood that are exacerbated by lack of governance systems. Development of natural resources such as water and minerals that have driven the country’s growth in the last decade is on track of depletion without systematic governance regime to ensure sustainability of these assets or to nurture the sector in an inclusive manner. An emerging concern is the pollution agenda, a consequence of industrial activities and changing consumer behavior. The WBG intervention therefore focuses on supporting the Government in strengthening the governance regime in institutional, technical, and policy aspects. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 17. Area brought under enhanced biodiversity protection Knowledge and Convening measured by the score of management effectiveness o Lao Forestry advisory (IFC - 594367) (SDG 15.1) o Lao Hydro Advisory (IFC - 589087) o Baseline: 0 o Green Growth Analytical Work (P162394) o Target: 1.2 million ha (Area increases as score increases from one level to another) Financing On-going: 18. Forest area brought under forest landscape o Second Lao Environment and Social Project management plans (Hectare) (SDG 15.2) (P149130) – closes June 2021 o Baseline: 0 o Scaling-Up Participatory Sustainable Forest o Target: 750,000 ha Management (P130222) – closes Aug 2018 o Technical Assistance for Capacity 19. At least three river basin plans approved by MONRE. Development in Hydropower and Mining o Baseline: 0 Sector (P109736) – closes Sept 2018 o Target: 3 plans o Mekong Integrated Water Resource Management (P104806) – closes March 2018 o Nam Theun 2 Social and Environmental Project (049290) – closes Dec 2017 54 20. Number of publicly available annual reports on the Improved Power Strategy/ White paper Pipeline: implementation of policy on sustainable hydropower o Baseline: Existing strategy (2016) o GHG Forest Emissions Reduction (Carbon development (2016-2021). o Target: White paper issued by Funds) (P125082) o Baseline: 1 MEM (2018); White paper o Mekong Integrated Water Resources o Target: 5 presented to the Government for Management Additional Financing (IDA 18) endorsement (2019) (P159447) 21. Number of Priority Pollution Watch Sites for which Improved Mining Sector Strategy o Sustainable Energy and Extractives monitoring reports are regularly updated and publicly o Baseline: Existing strategy (2016) Development Technical Assistance (IDA 18) disclosed. o Target: Revised/update mining o Baseline: 0 sector strategy issued by MEM IFC Pipeline: o Target: 3 Priority Pollution Watch Sites (2018); Revised/update mining o Forestry plantation & processing sector strategy presented to the o Renewable energy Project (hydro, solar or Government for endorsement wind) (2019) Objective 3.2: Putting in place enhanced disaster risk management and climate and disaster resilience Intervention Logic: Economic losses from disasters are an increasing threat to sustainable development, impeding poverty reduction and inclusive growth in Lao PDR. Highly disaster-prone, Lao PDR needs to invest in disaster risk management to protect its development gains. While this implies certain upfront costs, global experience suggests that the direct and indirect benefits exceed these costs. Resilient investments can save lives, decrease losses, and protect future growth. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 22. Length of road receiving climate resilience periodic Financing maintenance o Baseline: 0 km On-going: o Target: 687 km o Road Sector Project II (P158504) – approved Dec 2016 - closes Aug 2022 23. The Department of Meteorology and Hydrology of MONRE has enhanced the early warning system and Pipeline: climate information system (SDG 1.5 & SDG 13.1). o Disaster Risk Management Project (IDA 18) o Baseline: No (P160930) o Target: Yes 24. Lao PDR has access to immediate financing in response to an eligible emergency o Baseline: No o Target: Yes 55 Cross-cutting theme: Strengthening institutions to establish a rules-based environment While embracing market economy concepts, Lao PDR’s governance arrangements to support the transition have been evolving very gradually. The arrangements provide stability but the rule of law is weak, appetite to improve the regulatory quality has been subdued, and corruption is widespread. Strengthened institutions will thus be critical for achieving results in each of the three Focus Areas, and is aligned to the first of the three cross-cutting themes of the 8th NSEDP which looks to Enhance Effectiveness for Public Governance and Administration. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress Indicators WBG Program 25. Percentage of Category 2 investment projects with Knowledge and Convening complete disclosure of relevant information through o Green Growth Analytical Work (P162394) integrated database and public information platform, and having a valid ECC, prior to approval of Financing concession agreements (related to an NSEDP indicator).37 On-going: o Baseline: 0% o Nam Theun 2 Social and Environmental Project o Target: 50% (P049290) – closes Dec 2017 o Technical Assistance for Capacity 26. Establishment of Standard Operation Procedure Development in Hydropower and Mining (SOP) for Hydropower Plant Development. Sector (P109736) – closes Sept 2018 o Baseline: No SOP o Second Lao Environment and Social Project o Target: Applied SOP (P149130) – closes June 2021 Pipeline: o Green Growth DPF series (IDA 17, 18 and 19) (P159956) 37 This is an indicator that is contributed by two results indicator (Green Growth DPF and LENS2) 56 Annex 2: Lao PDR CPS Completion and Learning Review January 23, 2017 CPS Board Discussion: March 8, 2012 CPS Progress Report (Board Presentation): September 16, 2014 Period Covered by CPS Completion Review: FY12-16 INTRODUCTION 1. This Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) Completion and Learning Review (CLR) reviews the experience of implementing the FY12-16 World Bank Group (WBG) CPS for Lao PDR (Report No. 66692). The CLR document provides a self-assessment of (a) the extent to which the CPS was successful in achieving its stated objectives; (b) the WGB performance in terms of the design and implementation of the program; (c) the CPS alignment and contribution to the WBG Twin Goals of eliminating poverty and boosting shared prosperity; and (d) lessons learned from the implementation of the CPS program that have informed the preparation of the FY17-21 Country Partnership Framework (CPF). 2. The CPS supported implementation of the Government of Lao PDR’s ( GoL) 7th National Socio-Economic Development Plan (NSEDP), whose overarching objectives were to achieve Lao PDR’s Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) and pave the way for Least Developed Country graduation by 2020. In addition, the 7th NSEDP sought to support sustained strong economic growth and greater economic diversification, enhanced sustainability, and sustained political stability and peace. The CPS focused on areas of the 7th NSEDP identified by GoL as priorities for WBG support, with the overall objective of strengthening institutions for sustainable and inclusive development. Thus, CPS support was structured around the cross- cutting theme of stronger public sector management expressed through three strategic objectives: (i) competitiveness and connectivity; (ii) sustainable natural resource management; and (iii) inclusive development. 3. This CLR is based on the regular monitoring of implementation progress of the CPS and the WBG-supported program using the CPS results framework (see sub-annex 1), the CPS Progress Report, Implementation Status and Results Reports for the World Bank-financed portfolio of projects in Lao PDR, Implementation Completion and Results reports, and Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) assessments. The report has also benefited from dialogue and consultations with the WBG country team, GoL counterparts, and development partners in Lao PDR. The overall CPS Development Outcome is rated Satisfactory, with 93 percent of all CPS targets achieved—of which 56 percent are considered fully achieved, 11 percent mostly achieved, and 26 partially achieved. 57 I. SUMMARY OF KEY FINDINGS AND RATINGS 4. Lao PDR achieved its MDG of halving extreme poverty to below 24 percent by 2015. The proportion of the population living below the national poverty line dropped from 33.5 percent in 2002/2003 to 23.2 percent in 2012/201338. Improved living standards reflected greater access to basic services such as electricity, which doubled to more than 90 percent over the same period, and improved water sources, which tripled to 75 percent. Most other MDGs were achieved or exceeded, such as halving maternal mortality, lowering child mortality, increasing the primary education enrolment rate, and reaching gender parity in primary and secondary education. However, malnutrition remains persistently high, with stunting affecting 44 percent of children under the age of 5 in 2012. 5. Poverty reduction was supported by a strong average annual GDP growth rate of 8 percent over the last decade, and over 7 percent through the CPF period, largely driven by the natural resource sectors, particularly hydropower and mining. However, given the limited impact of resource sectors on labor demand and incomes of poor households, inequality as measured by the Gini coefficient increased by 11 percent between 2002/2003 and 2012/2013; gains from growth were lower for the bottom 40 percent than for the rest of the population, and the growth elasticity of poverty was notably lower than in other countries in the region, particularly for ethnic minority groups. Also, vulnerability remained high, with two-thirds of the population still living on less than $2 a day (measured as 2005 purchasing power parity/PPP).39 Another critical concern was the rapid rate of natural resource depletion (more than twice the average rate in other countries at similar levels of development) which questions the long-term sustainability of growth and welfare gains. 6. The CPS overall development outcome is rated Satisfactory. This rating is based on an assessment of the achievements under each strategic CPS strategic objective and result area, which collectively comprise the CPS Results Framework. The assessment determined that 93 percent of all CPS targets were largely achieved, with 56 percent fully achieved. Strong progress was made toward the first (Competitiveness and Connectivity) and third (Inclusive Development) CPS strategic objectives, where major achievements under a number of results areas have been especially remarkable in terms of development impact in Lao PDR. Achievements under the second strategic objective (Natural Resources Management) and the cross-cutting theme (Stronger Public Sector Management) were also notable, although 2 of 13 CPS targets under these two areas were not achieved. 7. The overall rating of the WBG performance is Good. Building on a five-decade long relationship with Lao PDR, the WBG maintained its strong partnership with the Government and development partners. The financing and knowledge program supported the achievement of substantial results in all strategic objectives. Of 16 projects implemented during the CPS period and evaluated by the Independent Evaluation Group (IEG), 12 received satisfactory level ratings 38 The last survey measuring poverty data (Lao Expenditure and Consumption Survey - LECS 5) was conducted in 2012/2013. These surveys are carried out every five years, with the next one (LECS 6) expected to take place from April 2017 to March 2018. The results of LECS 6 are likely to be available in 2019. 39 Unless otherwise specified, the currency used throughout the CLR is the U.S. dollar. 58 in overall Bank and Borrower performance, and 11 in achievement of outcomes (see Sub-Annex 3). Portfolio performance was strong, with consistently high disbursement ratios, timely resolution of implementation challenges, and close monitoring of fiduciary and safeguards risks. Bank-supported programs were successfully implemented by existing Government agencies and served to enhance the capacity of formal Government structures. The CPS also identified and mitigated other critical risks to the program, including limited institutional capacity, weak regulatory frameworks, and vulnerability in the face of the global economic slowdown. Lastly, the program maintained flexibility to respond to an evolving dialogue with Government counterparts, incorporating lessons drawn from prior engagements. 8. Although prepared prior to the articulation of the WBG Twin Goals, the CPS was closely aligned with the goals of eliminating extreme poverty and sustainably boosting shared prosperity. Strategic Objective 1 and 3 aimed to strengthen the inclusiveness of growth by supporting increased job creation and household incomes, and expanding the provision of basic services to the poor, including electricity, education, and health. Strategic Objective 2 and the Cross-Cutting Theme supported the sustainability of growth and welfare gains by promoting improved natural resource management, environmental protection, and sustained macroeconomic stability. 9. Implementation of the CPS yielded the following important lessons for future engagement: (a) political economy factors as drivers of Government ownership and commitment; (b) strong consolidated ASA program as a key strength and highly valued by the client; (c) the value of on-the-ground presence and leadership; (d) the importance of engagement in community-driven interventions; and (e) continuous training as the basis for sustained improvements in public sector competences in low education contexts. II. CPS DEVELOPMENT OUTCOME 10. The overall CPS Development Outcome is rated Satisfactory, with 93 percent of all CPS targets achieved, among which 56 percent were fully achieved, 11 percent mostly achieved, and 26 percent partially achieved (see Table 1). Approximately two-thirds of Result Area objectives were achieved or mostly achieved, and major progress was made toward both the first (Competitiveness & Connectivity) and third (Inclusive Development) CPS strategic objectives. Adding to the strong overall achievement of CPS targets, the specific, major achievements under Results Areas 1.2, 3.1 and 3.3 have been especially remarkable in terms of their development impact in Lao PDR, contributing to transformative improvements in access to electricity, maternal mortality rates (MMR) and access to infrastructure and services in rural areas. For these reasons, and considering the still notable achievements under the second strategic objective (Natural Resources Management) and the cross-cutting theme (Stronger Public Sector Management), even while 2 CPS targets were not achieved and 7 were partially achieved, the overall Outcome is rated Satisfactory. 59 Table 1. Achievement of CPS Targets by Result Area and Rating Level Number of CPS Targets Result Area Mostly Partially Not Rating Achieved Achieved Achieved Achieved Strategic Objective 1: Competitiveness and Connectivity Result Area 1.1: Strengthened Government Mostly Capacity to Support Growth Diversification 1 2 0 0 Achieved and Competitiveness Result Area 1.2: Increased access to improved infrastructure services in transport and energy* 3 0 0 0 Achieved Strategic Objective 2: Sustainable Natural Resources Management Result Area 2.1: Strengthened Governance and Management Of Hydropower and Mining Partially 0 0 2 0 Sectors, including Sustained Nam Theun 2 Achieved Implementation Result Area 2.2: Sustainable Environmental, Mostly 2 0 1 0 Social and Water Resource Management Achieved Result Area 2.3: Sustainable Management 0 0 2 1 Not Achieved and Protection Of Forests and Biodiversity Strategic Objective 3: Inclusive Development Result Area 3.1: Increased Utilization and Quality of Essential Maternal and Child Health 1 0 0 0 Achieved Services* Result Area 3.2: Expanded Access to and Mostly Improved Quality of Primary Education in 2 0 1 0 Achieved Targeted, Disadvantaged Districts Result Area 3.3: Improved Access to Basic Services and Markets, and Community 4 0 0 0 Achieved Participation in Rural Areas* Cross-cutting Theme: Stronger Public Sector Management Result Area 4.1: Strengthened Government Partially Capacity for Macroeconomic Management and 1 0 0 1 Achieved Policy Coordination Result Area 4.2: Strong Linkages Between Mostly Planning, Fiscal, Borrowing Strategy, and 0 1 0 0 Achieved Annual Budgeting Result Area 4.3: Improved Financial Partially Management for Appropriate Revenue 1 0 1 0 Achieved Management Percentage for each rating level 56% 11% 26% 7% *Areas with exceptional development outcome Strategic Objective 1. Competitiveness and Connectivity 11. WBG support to this objective focused on promoting economic diversification and competitiveness by strengthening the regulatory framework for the private sector, and increasing access to infrastructure in transport and energy. Although resource sectors brought significant benefits to Lao PDR, they have not generated the broad-based and sustainable job and income creation needed for long-term shared prosperity. In this context, the CPS sought to support the creation of a more enabling business environment for non-resource 60 private sector development, with an emphasis on trade facilitation. In addition, the CPS supported improvements of the national and provincial road networks, and increased access to electricity in rural areas. All CPS targets under this objective were either achieved or mostly achieved, and WBG support contributed to a continued strong improvement in household access to electricity. 12. Progress toward establishing a more enabling trade and business environment in Lao PDR was substantial, with landmark achievements such as WTO accession in 2013 and ASEAN Chairmanship in 2016. WBG lending, Trust Funds (TFs), and Advisory Services and Analytics (ASA) supported implementation of WTO accession and ASEAN commitments, the implementation of an automated customs systems (ASYCUDA) and of an Enterprise Law, and the approval of an Investment Law. Key indicators of reduced private sector trade and compliance costs include reductions in the mean number of days required to process imports and to obtain operation licenses, which dropped from 3.3 to 2 and from 17.7 to 16.3, respectively, between 2012 and 2016. Moreover, the risk-based approach to customs inspections facilitated a substantial drop in the proportion of inbound cargo subject to physical inspection, from 100 percent in 2011 to 52 percent in 2015. As a result of these and other achievements, and despite significant remaining challenges, Lao PDR’s 2017 Doing Business ranking improved to 139 of 190 economies, from 163 of 185 economies surveyed in 2013. 13. The increase in electricity supply in Lao PDR continued the successful trajectory of the previous decade, with household access to electricity rising from only 15 percent in 1995 to 80 percent in 2012 and 90 percent in 2015. The Bank-financed Rural Electrification Program 1 and 2 supported this objective by providing electricity to more than 100,000 rural households. Connectivity and transport costs also improved, with contributions from the Bank- financed Road Sector Project, which contributed to an increase in the proportion of provincial roads in good or fair condition from 46 percent in 2010 to 60 percent in 2016, and the upgrade of 171 km of national roads. The high cost of supplying electricity to the unserved households in very remote areas, and the limited allocation of resources to road maintenance, are some of the remaining challenges. Strategic Objective 2. Sustainable Natural Resource Management (NRM) 14. This strategic objective focused on strengthening governance and regulatory frameworks to manage an increasingly prominent and complex natural resource sector. Forests, agricultural land, water and hydropower potential, and mineral resources constitute more than half of the country’s total wealth. Growing pressures to exploit this natural bounty from within the country and the region raised NRM-related risks. In this context, the CPS aimed to support the Government to generate transparent and standardized conditions governing investments and concessions in the hydropower and mining sectors, and further develop the legal and regulatory frameworks to promote the conservation of the country’s natural capital . Achievement of this objective remains a work in progress, with 2 out of 8 CPS targets being fully achieved, 5 being partially achieved and 1 being not achieved. 15. Much progress has been made in the management of natural resources, including in hydropower and mining. The Technical Assistance for Capacity Development in Hydropower 61 and Mining Sector (HMTA) Project supported the creation of a Government Policy on Sustainable Hydropower Development currently under implementation. Standard Environmental and Social Obligations (SESOs) have been introduced for all new Hydropower Concession Agreements, and IFC’s Lao Environmental and Social Standards Advisory Program has been working on simplifying the SESOs and mainstreaming environment and social obligations into some Concession Agreements. The HMTA project (in collaboration with the German GIZ) has also supported the preparation of guidelines for and training in environmental and social inspections of mine operations. The guidelines have yet to be standardized in the updated Mineral Development Agreement, which is expected to be completed in 2017. Major remaining challenges include improving (i) integrated water resource management within the planning, design, operations and monitoring of hydropower developments; (ii) inter-ministerial coordination monitoring; and (iii) capacity to enforce upgraded laws, regulations and policies on sustainable natural resource management. 16. The WBG supported the GoL to strengthen the country’s resilience to natural hazards. At the national and provincial levels, institutional and implementation capacity were enhanced to integrate disaster and climate resilient principles into public infrastructure investments across different sectors, to reduce the vulnerability of the population and the economy. The disaster risk management program also supported the Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment to improve hydro-meteorological forecasts in the high priority basins through capacity building and network improvements. An Early Warning Strategy, Early Warning Standard Operating Procedures, and a draft hydromet law were developed. Moreover, disaster risk financing frameworks were enhanced through the development of risk-financing strategies. The activities delivered solutions to the client, many of which subsequently generated government and World Bank-funded activities, including the Lao Road Sector Project 2 (FY17), Lao PDR South East Asia Disaster Risk Management Project (FY17/18 pipeline), and Lao Green Resilient Growth Development Policy Financing (FY17 pipeline). 17. The CPS continued to support the implementation of the Nam Theun 2 (NT2) Social and Environment Project (P076445), which was approved in 2005, with operations commencing in 2011 (when the electrification rate was approximately 73 percent). The project continues to receive high-level corporate attention from WBG management given its importance to the country and to the global agenda on hydropower. Substantial revenues continue to flow to the Lao Treasury and are being used to support eligible poverty programs. The NT2 Nakai Resettlement Program has delivered housing, health, and education benefits for the 6,300 NT2 re-settlers on the Nakai Plateau, as well as new infrastructure and financial and technical support to take advantage of new livelihood opportunities. Resettled households have reached the household income target, with 3 percent currently receiving direct support from the project. Vulnerable households will benefit from a social safety net program from the Nam Theun 2 Power Company (NTPC) to be in place until 2035, and poor households living below or at risk of slipping below the household income target will receive health care, education, and additional programs dedicated to building sustainable livelihoods. 18. Key issues on environmental aspects, in particular of the NT2 watershed, as well as social aspects related to sustainability of incomes, continue to be actively managed with a view to project closure in December 2017. With regard to the NT2 watershed, actions are 62 being pursued to move accountability of the Watershed Management Authority to the central Government, to improve management and oversight. The NT2 Resettlement Implementation Period was extended to December 2017 primarily to ensure the sustainability of re-settler livelihoods. GoL convened a Joint Working Group with NTPC and participating international financial institutions, including the WBG and the Asian Development Bank (ADB), to develop a Consolidated Action Plan for the Nakai Plateau. The plan will cover the four livelihood pillars noted in the Concession Agreement (agriculture and livestock, forestry, fisheries, and off-farm incomes), as well as cross-cutting issues of poor/vulnerable populations, ethnic minorities, and gender. 19. CPS achievements in the area of improved management and protection of forests and biodiversity were modest. Progress was made toward the establishment of management plans for National Protected Areas (NPA) and Production (PFA) and Protection (PF) of forests; and 39 PFAs were approved by the Government in December 2016. High demand for natural resource use and competing interests over forested land continue to pose important challenges. Logging and cross-border trafficking of high-value timber to neighboring countries are perceived to be high, as is deforestation from shifting agriculture. The Government has set the goal of increasing forest cover to 70 percent of the country by 2020, and the WBG is supporting the exploration of options for a shift toward green growth development. IFC’s Lao Forestry project supported private sector forestry companies to establish viable business models involving communities, out-growers and supply chains. The project contributed to the Government policies on poverty alleviation, forestation and climate change, and is part of the National Investment Plan of the Lao Forest Investment Program (FIP). In September 2015, IFC formalized an advisory services agreement with a private firm to help the company improve its social risk management. IFC and the firm are working together on stakeholder identification and engagement planning, including free, prior and informed consent (FPIC) in the company's operating procedures. IFC’s support will further strengthen the firm’s program with farmers and improve its community engagement according to international best practices. Strategic Objective 3. Inclusive Development 20. WBG support to Lao PDR’s inclusive development agenda focused on improving access to and quality of basic services in rural and disadvantaged areas. In particular, the CPS aimed to (a) increase the utilization and quality of maternal and child health services; (b) improve the quality of and access to primary education; and (c) strengthen access to basic services through enhanced community participation. CPS results under this objective contributed to strong development impact in Lao PDR, with 7 out of 8 CPS targets being achieved or exceeded. Important examples include improvements in maternal and child health services, which supported a substantial drop in the country’s MMR, and improved service delivery in rural areas reaching over 10 percent of the country’s population. However, further actions will be needed to strengthen the inclusiveness of growth in Lao PDR. 21. WBG investment and knowledge support contributed to achieving the MDG of halving the MMR. The Health Systems Improvement Project and Health Governance and Nutrition Development Project contributed to free maternal and child health services in selected provinces and Health Equity Funds to pay user fees for the poor. Moreover, the Community 63 Nutrition Project piloted conditional cash transfers, the first in Lao PDR, to pregnant women and women with new-born babies to increase utilization of pre-and post-natal care. As a result of this and other interventions, the MMR dropped 39 percent, to 220 per 100,000 live births, between 2009 and 2014, births attended by trained health personnel rose from 35 to 50 percent between 2010 and 2015, and infant and under-5 mortality rates continued to decline, meeting the national MDG targets. Nonetheless, maternal mortality remains high compared to neighboring countries such as Cambodia and Vietnam, and the country continues to face a major challenge in addressing widespread malnutrition, with stunting affecting 44 percent of children under the age of 5 as of 201240. 22. Lao PDR achieved near-universal primary education enrolment, with the net enrolment ratio reaching 98.5 percent in 2014. The Education Development Project II, the Education for All Fast Track Initiative and the Poverty Reduction Fund II (PRF II) supported the construction and rehabilitation of 760 schools in rural and disadvantaged areas, and the strengthening of education quality assessment systems. Key results in this area include an increase in primary completion rates in 56 targeted disadvantaged districts, from 54 percent in 2009 to 78 percent in 2015, and the development of a System for Learning Assessment, which has been fully operational since 2013. However, primary education quality and secondary education enrolment continue to be important challenges, with students scoring very poorly in Early Grade Reading assessments and only 45 percent of children enrolling in secondary schools, compared to a 77 percent average in the East Asia and Pacific region. 23. The CPS supported improved service delivery to poor and remote areas through participatory and gender-sensitive platforms. The PRF II and the Khammouane Development Project provided improved access to basic services, markets, and livelihood opportunities to more than 800,000 beneficiaries (approximately 12 percent of the country’s population) in 965 remote villages. Support provided was channeled through participatory planning processes, building capacity in more than 390 villages to plan, implement, and monitor their own development activities. These interventions targeted the most vulnerable segments of society, namely non Lao-Thai ethnic groups and women, and strengthened women’s decision-making role in their communities. Finally, participatory approaches were also used to promote the adoption of rice seed multiplication technologies in 150 targeted villages, leading to increased rice production, from 5,000 tons in 2010 to 7,900 tons in 2015. Cross-Cutting Theme: Stronger Public Sector Management 24. The CPS identified institutional capacity (which constrained GoL’s ability to design and implement its development programs) as a cross-cutting challenge in Lao PDR. As 40 The estimate of 44 percent is from Lao Socio Indicators Survey 2011/12. The next LSIS will be carried out in 2017 with results expected in late 2017, early 2018. Since the LSIS 2011/12, stunting has been measured by a number of different instrument which all show that stunting has declined since 2011/12. The Lao PDR Child Anthropometry Assessment Survey 2015 (a tag-on to the National Immunization Coverage Survey) indicates the stunting rate among children under 5 may have declined by as much as 9 percent points (to 35 percent in 2015). However, different surveys present different estimates of stunting, and most observers are awaiting the results from LSIS 2017 to confirm the magnitude of the decline. 64 fiscal revenues from natural resources gain more prominence as a source of development spending, the degree to which expenditures translate into development outcomes increasingly depends on the Government’s ability to formulate and coordinate policy. Thus, WBG support under this theme focused on (a) strengthening Government capacity for macroeconomic management and policy coordination; (b) building strong linkages among planning, fiscal and borrowing strategies, and annual budgeting; and (c) improving public financial management (PFM). Progress under this theme was notable, with 3 out of 5 CPS targets achieved or mostly achieved, and 1 partially achieved. 25. Support to this theme was provided through a series of Development Policy Operations (DPOs) and technical assistance to (a) improve the Government’s ability to generate reliable macroeconomic and poverty statistics; (b) develop a comprehensive Fiscal Strategy; (c) amend the Budget Law; and (d) consolidate government accounts under the Treasury Single Account (TSA). A Public Financial Management Project and the last DPO of the series, the Poverty Reduction Support Operation 10 (PRSO10), did not materialize because of a weakened PFM dialogue with the Government. 26. CPS progress toward improved macroeconomic management was notable, though important challenges remain. Inflation dropped from 6 percent in 2013 to 1.3 percent in 2015, and remained below real GDP growth rates throughout the CPS period. On the other hand, the budget deficit changed erratically, increasing to 6 percent of GDP in 2013 but declining to 3.7 percent in 2015. A sizable budget deficit and off-budget spending pushed public debt to around 65 percent of GDP, while an unspecified but seemingly significant amount of arrears continues to exist. The number of banks and the amount of credit provided continued to grow rapidly over the CPS period, particularly for private banks, which now account for 50 percent of system assets. However, weak oversight and transparency led to a downgrade of the Country Policy and Institutional Assessment (CPIA) index for financial stability in early 2016, though ASEAN integration and recommendations from the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) have been helpful in galvanizing financial sector reforms. The CPIA index for the economic management cluster had improved to 3.7 in 2012, but fell back to 3.3 in 2015 as a result of growing public debt and concerns regarding the fiscal deficit. 27. Fiscal revenues increased to 18.4 percent of GDP in 2015, from 15 percent in 2010. Approximately one-third of the increase originated from increased value-added tax (VAT) receipts and another third from non-tax revenues (fees, dividends, and overflights). Despite the significant increase, the tax base remains narrow as a consequence of numerous exemptions and weak administration, while tax payment remains difficult and most businesses remain under the presumptive tax regime. A rudimentary macro-fiscal framework for 2016-2020 was produced and approved by the National Assembly in early 2016, though with limited links to the 8th NSEDP. As a result, key planning processes remain disconnected, and ad hoc budgeting practices continue to limit the Government’s ability to translate priorities into policies. External auditing has improved, with increased capacity in the State Audit Office (SAO) and presentation of a SAO report to the National Assembly. However, annual financial audits are still to be conducted for all Government entities, and the SAO report has not yet been made publicly available. 65 66 III. WORLD BANK GROUP PERFORMANCE 28. The WBG’s overall performance is rated Good. The CPS was closely aligned with the country’s development objectives as stated in the 7th NSEDP, and, as noted earlier, a large majority of CPS targets were rated as achieved. Program design remained relevant and consistent, with ambitious but realistic CPF objectives married to the flexibility to respond to changing priorities and Government demand. Performance of the lending and TF portfolio was strong, knowledge support was substantial and closely aligned with the CPS objectives, and the WBG worked in close coordination with other development partners. 29. Client perception of the WBG continues to be positive according to the most recent Client Opinion Survey conducted in July-August 2015. The WBG is perceived as a long-term development partner in the country, with strong collaboration with the Government and other stakeholders. WBG operations are perceived as inclusive, flexible, fast-disbursing, and as having strong links to the private sector. The WBG greatest assessed value in the country also changed from financial resources in 2012 to technical assistance and policy-based lending in 2015, and perceptions of the WBG’s effectiveness and staff preparedness improved significantly. Recommendations include the provision of more WBG knowledge, data, and statistics on Lao PDR’s economy, and greater outreach to civil society groups. Opinion leaders thought that the main challenges for the country were on governance and education, followed by poverty, rural development, and corruption. Corruption and governance were of rising concern to opinion leaders compared to 2012. Tackling corruption, rural development, and job creation were the leading responses with respect to ways to reduce poverty. Furthermore, opinion leaders noted that ill-considered reforms and inadequate citizen participation contributed to the slow pace of some reforms. 3.1. Design of the CPS Program 30. WBG engagement focused on Stronger Institutions for Sustainable and Inclusive Development in full support of the 7th National Socio-Economic Development Plan. In particular, the CPS contributed to the 7th NSEDP goals of promoting high and sustainable growth and achieving the MDGs (see Figure 1). The results framework consolidated objectives into concise, ambitious, and realistic priority targets that served as guiding principles for the WBG program throughout the CPS period. Moreover, lessons from the strategy were incorporated into CPS design, including the need to (a) embed capacity-building activities into broader programs of WBG engagement; (b) reduce portfolio fragmentation by supporting larger operations with greater impact; and (c) maximize the use of knowledge products as the basis for high impact engagement. 31. Critical risks to CPS implementation were identified and successfully mitigated. These included limited institutional capacity to manage the sustainable use of the country’s natural resources, a sizeable budget deficit, PFM challenges and governance risks, and possible shocks stemming from the global economic slowdown. To mitigate these risks, the WBG leveraged its combined resources to support the Government to improve the regulatory frameworks for the resource and non-resource sectors, strengthen budget oversight, as well as support fiscal consolidation through the PRSO series and ASA. Moreover, the WBG and the IMF collaborated to strengthen the dialogue around the financial sector, to address the 67 weaknesses and risks in the sector and support the Government’s policy objectives for inclusive growth. Despite the global slowdown, Lao PDR sustained high growth rates and poverty reduction with fiscal accounts remaining within manageable levels, though stronger consolidation remains important. Figure 1. World Bank Group Country Partnership Strategy in Lao PDR, 2012-2016 3.2. Implementation of the CPS Program 32. CPS implementation proceeded largely as anticipated, yielding robust results in most areas of engagement. Of 16 projects implemented during the CPS period and evaluated by IEG, 12 received satisfactory-level ratings in overall Bank and Borrower performance, and 11 in achievement of outcomes. The program followed country systems closely, with projects being successfully implemented by existing Government agencies, and supported the provision of technical assistance in procurement, financial management, and safeguards. Close attention was also paid to the strengthening of monitoring and evaluation (M&E) frameworks at the project 68 level, and M&E capacity-building activities were provided to counterpart ministries and implementing agencies, focusing on results framework design, routine monitoring functions, and impact evaluation. The CPS results matrix was revised at CPS Progress Report (CPSPR) stage to correct baselines, adjust targets and refine indicators to ensure focus on outcomes and consistency with available data (See sub-Annex 4). The WBG worked closely with the Government and development partners to continue supporting the implementation of the NT2 project, developing a clear action plan to ensure all Project Affected People reach the household income target, and ensuring sustainability of livelihoods. 33. WBG Commitments and Portfolio. The Investment Project Financing (IPF) portfolio nearly doubled during the CPS period, with $324 million new commitments in a variety of sectors, including energy and extractives, environment, social development, education, transport, and health. In addition, two Development Policy Operations totaling $40 million supported enhancements to the macroeconomic and fiscal management frameworks. IFC accumulated committed investments in Lao PDR since 1998 total $77 million, with a current outstanding portfolio of $29.52 million in the energy, financial services, health, education, and tourism sectors. Table 2. Portfolio by Sector, IDA and Recipient-Executed Trust Funds (June 2016, $ million) Recipient-Executed Trust IDA Total Fund (RETF) Sector $ No. of $ No. of $ % % % No.* million IDA million Grants million Environment and 71.0 19.8 3 24.1 31.9 4 95.1 21.9 5 Natural Resource Social Development 66.6 18.5 2 16.9 22.3 1 83.5 19.2 2 Energy and Mining 55.8 15.5 2 0 0 0 55.8 12.8 2 Transport 48.8 13.6 1 0 0 0 48.8 11.2 1 Education 28.0 7.8 1 16.8 22.2 1 44.8 10.3 2 Health, Nutrition, and 26.4 7.4 1 0 0 0 26.4 6.1 1 Population Water 26.0 7.2 1 0 0 0 26.0 6.0 1 Finance and Markets 20.0 5.6 1 0 0 0 20.0 4.6 1 Economic Policy 16.5 4.6 2 17.9 23.6 2 34.4 7.9 3 Total 359.1 100 14 75.7 100 8 434.8 100 18* *Some projects have both IDA and TF as sources of funding; hence the overlapping number of sources of funds. 69 Table 3. Key indicators of Portfolio Performance – IDA (February 2017, $ million) Indicator FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 Number of Projects 11 12 16 15 14 Net Commitment Amount 189.9 233.4 328.8 356.7 359.1 Number of Projects at Risk 3 4 4 2 2 Commitment at Risk 33.0 85.0 75.2 40.0 48.0 Problem Projects 2 2 2 2 2 Disbursement Ratio (%) 27.0 45.6 28.9 23.4 24.6 Disbursement Amount 92.2 129.3 161.9 162.9 169.3 34. IDA Portfolio Performance. As of February 2017, there were 14 ongoing World Bank- financed projects, with a total net IDA commitment of $359.1 million. Disbursement performance was strong, with disbursement ratios above 23 percent during the CPS period, reflecting close Government-WBG collaboration and timely resolution of implementation challenges. 35. Knowledge Programs. A total of 41 ASA products supported achievements in all four CPS objectives and cross-cutting theme (see Sub-Annex 2). ASA supported a deepened understanding of key challenges in trade, investment climate, gender, macroeconomic monitoring, health, education, and protected area management. Key examples include the “flagship” analytical work for Lao PDR during FY12-14, the second Lao Development Report on Skills/Human Resource Development, which used a multi-sectoral and cross-country comparison approach to shed light on the key human resource development issues, and recommended policy actions with an active participation of the Government and stakeholders. In addition, the programmatic Lao PDR Economic Monitor (published annually) contributed to policy analysis on the key macroeconomic, fiscal, and sectoral challenges facing the country. The Trade and Competitiveness Analytical program and IFC investment climate advisory services contributed data-driven analysis as part of a larger program supporting the country’s trade agenda, together with the Second Trade Development Facility Project (P130512) and the Customs and Trade Facilitation Project (P101750). The PRF II Impact Evaluation (P131675) is another key example, as it confirmed the PRF II’s positive impact on access to services in poor rural communities and yielded important lessons that informed the design of the recently approved PRF III Project (P157963). 36. Procurement. A Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability assessment was conducted in 2010 and rated competition, value for money and procurement at overall D+. The key issues observed included (i) absence of data to assess procurement spend and extent to which open competition is used; (ii) absence of a mechanism to deal with procurement complaints; (iii) weak implementation and procurement monitoring capacity; and (iv) limited use of electronic means of procurement. This regulatory environment persisted during the CPS period. The Bank financed portfolio used a mix of Bank Procurement Guidelines for high value contracts and Government Decree for low value contracts, with additional safeguards agreed for each project. Overall procurement performance was satisfactory but increased cases of fraud and corruption and conflict of interest were observed during the CPS period. The Bank in agreement with GoL 70 implemented measures to mitigate these issues across the portfolio. The GoL further strengthened and adopted national harmonized bidding documents in September 2016 to strengthen the operating environment. 37. Financial Management. Overall financial management performance of most projects has been Satisfactory or Moderately Satisfactory. Overall compliance with the financing agreement with respect to project submission of audit reports and Interim unaudited Financial Reports has been largely complied with. Throughout the implementation life of projects, the Bank financial management team continued to provide support and advice to ensure adequacy of financial management arrangements. Financial management capacity in the public sector remained weak, and Bank teams continued to provide technical assistance to ensure adequacy of financial management arrangements. 38. Safeguards. National safeguard-related policies are relatively ample. Nevertheless, capacity in compliance monitoring remains inadequate to catch up with the rapidly growing number of resource-based development projects, particularly in hydropower, mining, infrastructure and agri-business. On-going support has been provided through the Lao Environment and Social (LENS) project to enable key GoL agencies (especially Ministries of Environment, Agriculture & Forestry, and Energy & Mines) at the national and local levels to effectively translate the legal framework into practice and ensure safeguards compliance by project developers. Important progress was made on the implementation of the NT2 project. Resettled households reached the household income target, with 3 percent currently receiving direct support from the project, and key environmental and social aspects of the project continue to be actively managed with a view to project closure in December 2017. 39. Partnerships. Lao PDR continues to be a Least Developed Country and to attract significant grant-based development resources for high priority areas. A substantial number of IDA-financed projects are co-financed or parallel-financed by other partners, including ADB, Australia, EU, Finland, Germany, Ireland, Japan, Switzerland and the United States. The WBG program also benefitted from partnerships with a number of global trust funds in areas such as infrastructure, disaster risk reduction and education. Thus, more than $100 million in recipient- executed and co-financing TFs administered by the Bank were signed during the CPS period. Moreover, the Bank serves as co-chair of the Government Sector Working Groups on Infrastructure (with ADB and Japan), Macroeconomics (with ADB), and Natural Resource Management and Environment (with Germany), and continues to work closely with development partners in the support to the NT2 project. 71 IV. ALIGNMENT WITH WBG CORPORATE GOALS 40. While the Lao CPS was prepared before the WBG adopted the Twin Goals, the country’s own development program and the CPS were well ali gned with the corporate goals of sustainably eliminating extreme poverty and boosting shared prosperity. In particular:  The Competitiveness and Connectivity Strategic Objective sought to support the Government to develop a diversified economy with a growing non-resource private sector to strengthen the links between economic growth and higher incomes for the poor. Also, financing critical infrastructure investments in the electricity and roads sectors aimed at securing household access to basic services.  Engagement under the Sustainable Natural Resources Management Strategic Objective sought to promote the sustainability of growth by improving natural resource management, better managing revenues and environmental impacts of the hydro and mining sectors, and protecting the country’s forests, biodiversity and water resources.  The Inclusive Development Strategic Objective sought to promote universal health coverage for the poor, access to and quality of education, and improve provision of basic services through community-driven participatory approaches in the poorest regions of the country.  Finally, the Stronger Public Sector Management Cross-Cutting Theme sought to support a more effective use of Lao PDR’s resources to strengthen development outcomes, in particular reduction of poverty and inequality. Moreover, support to the Statistics Office sought to strengthen the capacity to compile, analyze, and disseminate poverty-related statistical information. V. LESSONS AND SUGGESTIONS FOR FY17-21 CPF 41. The analysis of the implementation of the FY12-16 CPS together with the key findings of the Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD) suggest a number of important lessons that could help inform the design and implementation of the FY17-21 Country Partnership Framework (CPF):  Considering political economy factors as drivers of Government ownership and commitment is critical for program design. This implies complementing good project design and ongoing implementation support with engagement at the right level of Government and with a dedicated counterpart. Ensuring full commitment to difficult reforms at the political level is crucial to maintain program efficacy. Moreover, understanding and anticipating possible implementation constraints is important to determine the appropriate level of ambition of the WBG’s program.  A strong consolidated program of ASA is a key strength of the CPS and highly valued by the client. ASA interventions contributed to the policy dialogue and were utilized in the design and implementation of Government programs. The overall success of the WBG ASA 72 work will likely make it a key component of the next program of support. Moreover, a focused and realistic results matrix facilitates the consolidation of the WBG’s financing and knowledge program for maximum impact.  Presence and program leadership on the ground provide immediate and prompt response to client needs and emerging opportunities. The physical presence of Bank staff in Vientiane enhances the dialogue and partnership with the Government, helps to identify new areas of involvement, and provides crucial assistance to implementation support missions.  Engagement is critical in community-driven interventions such as the PRF and the Khammouane Development Project, and it is as important as the provision of infrastructure. A community-driven development project can only achieve its goals if it succeeds in generating participation and empowerment to secure local ownership, commitment, and ultimately sustainability. Moreover, the involvement and commitment of beneficiaries in all aspects of an activity, from planning to implementation and monitoring, engenders a sense of ownership among key stakeholders and ensures buy-in, efficient implementation and sustainability.  In contexts where the level of education is low, single-session trainings are likely to be insufficient for staff to absorb and retain technical knowledge from the training. Competency-based training and retraining, as well as frequent supportive supervision, are all necessary to ensure more sustained improvements in relevant competences and, ultimately, the quality of public services. 73 Sub-Annex 1. Lao CPS Program Results Matrix Strategic Objective 1. Competitiveness and Connectivity Result Area 1.1. Strengthened Government Capacity to Support Growth Diversification and Competitiveness CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period More predictable, lower FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Increasing integration into the regional compliance cost regulatory - Trade Development Facility Project (ASEAN) and international economy environment that is supportive WTO accession achieved (P106165) (closed FY13) (WTO) is driving reforms, but overall the of diversification and (Feb 2013) - Second Trade Development Facility regulatory environment remains complex, competitiveness, with Project (P130512/P159060) (FY13-17) lacks transparency, and is applied with significant improvements in the - Eight Poverty Reduction Support lack of predictability and consistency. In a following illustrative (P125298) (closed FY13) landlocked economy that depends on investment climate indicators - Ninth Poverty Reduction Support integration into regional markets and related to regulations, taxes, Operation (P143025) (closed FY14) participation in supply chains, the permits, licenses, and trade: - Customs and Trade Facilitation Project continued divergence between laws and (P101750/P144992) (FY08-17) their application, limited availability of 1. Mean number of days to Achieved - Small and Medium Enterprises Access to skills, and remaining high overall trade import (number of days Finance Project (P131201) (FY14-19) and logistics costs continue to add a from arrival of goods to - IFC Commercial Loans to SMEs through burden for investing and doing business, customs release)(Source: selected commercial banks affecting competitiveness in key non- ES) - IFC investment in manufacturing natural resource sectors that provide the Baseline: 5.7 (2009) 3.3 (2012) greatest scope for diversified growth, Target: 2.0 (2015) 2 (2016) ASA employment generation, and poverty - Trade SWAp Implementation TA reduction. 2. Percentage of inbound (P115251) (FY12) cargo subject to physical Mostly achieved - Export Competitiveness TA (P116372) inspection (Source: LCD) (FY12) Baseline: 100 (2011) 60 (2013) - Investment Climate Assessment (P116395) Target: 40 (2015) 52 (2015) (FY12), Lao PDR Investment Climate Assessment 2014 Update (P133659) 3. Mean number of days to (FY15) obtain an operating license Mostly achieved - DTIS Update and WTO Accession (Source: ES) (P125044) (FY13) Baseline: 26.1 (2009) 17.7 (2012) - Improving Efficiency of Payment Systems Target: 15 (2015) 16.3 (2016) (P128597) (FY14) - National Single Window Preparation 74 Program (P130772) (FY14) - Lao PDR Development Report 2014 (P129902) (FY15) - Services-Manufacturing Linkages (P150968) (FY16) - Incidence and impact of NTMs (P150969) (FY16) - Labor Impact of Lao Export Growth (FY16) (P150970) - IFC TA Lao Licensing Project (FY13-16) - IFC TA on Investment Climate and Access to Finance (FY17) Result Area 1.2. Increased access to improved infrastructure services in transport and energy CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period Improved road services and FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT There is a strong correlation between sustainability of road - Rural Electrification Phase I Project of the access to basic infrastructure and the investments as measured by: Rural Electrification (APL) Program incidence of poverty. Many parts of the (P075531) (closed FY12) country still lack all-season road access 4. Km of upgraded national Achieved - Rural Electrification Phase II Project of the critical to receiving basic services and roads Rural Electrification (APL) Program providing market access. Baseline: 0 (2011) 130 (2013) (P110978) (closed FY15) Target: 171 (2015) 171 (2015) - GMS Power Trade (Lao PDR) Project (P105331) (closed FY15) 5. % of provincial roads in Achieved - Road Sector Project (P102398/P129347) good and fair condition (FY10-18) Baseline: 46 (2010) 51 (2013) - Power Grid Improvement Project Target: 60 (2015) 64 (2015) (P149599) (FY15-20) Increased access to electricity ASA by rural households in villages - Transport Sector Enabling Environment in project provinces, as Assessment and Pipeline Screening measured by: (P130298) (FY13) - Trade and Transport Facilitation 6. Number of new households Achieved. WBG support Assessment (P125045) (FY14) Electricity supplied by the national power electrified (grid and off contributed to a continued - Clean Stove Initiative in the East Asia and grid for the remaining 10% of households grid) substantial increase in Pacific Region (P130355)(FY16) will be expensive as these are located in household access to - IFC – PPP Financial Advisory on Road No. very remote areas. To supplement further electricity, from 80% to 90% 13 (FY16) grid expansion, off-grid and mini-grid 75 during the CPS period. electrification solutions can be utilized for REP I some part of the remaining households Target: 65,250 (2012) 66,879 (REPI) [2012] REPII Baseline: 0 (2010) Target: 37,700 (2015) 47,255 (REPII) [2015] Strategic Objective 2. Sustainable Natural Resource Management Result Area 2.1. Strengthened Governance and Management of Hydropower and Mining Sectors, Including Sustained Nam Theun 2 Implementation CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period Governance and management FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Investment in hydropower and mining of hydro and mining sectors - Lao Environment and Social Project (LENS) sectors has grown in scale and scope, strengthened as indicated by: (P090693) (closed FY 13) exacerbating the need for systematic - Second Lao Environment & Social Project planning and coordination among a 7. Core standardized terms Partially achieved. (formally Protected Area and Wildlife) number of concerned ministries; existing and conditions for (LENS II) (P128392/P128393/P152066) planning arrangements and coordination hydropower and mining (FY14-21) among departments within a ministry and investment agreements - TA for Capacity Development in across related government institutions are adopted. Hydropower and Mining Sector still complex and there are gaps and (P109736/P148755) (FY10-19) overlaps. Baseline: Current system For the hydropower sector, - Lao Nam Theun 2 Power Project (P076445) characterized by concession Government is now using (FY05-18) There have been improvements in recent agreements unique to each Standard Environment and years in policies and regulatory project, which differ Social Obligation (SESO) in ASA environment, but effective significantly in terms and concession agreements. - NT2 Revenue Management Arrangement operationalization of the policies and conditions (2011) However, these are not yet (annual) (P143169/P146729) regulatory framework is still a work in Target: Government puts in fully standard and are still - Collaborative Leadership for Development: progress. place policies and regulations being improved. For the Capacity Building for Sustainable Natural that provide for core mining sector, a draft Mining Resource Management (P152545) (FY 17) standardized conditions within Development Agreement has - IFC Environment and Social Standards in the concession agreements (2015). been developed and should be Hydropower Sector Advisory Services approved by Government by (FY12-17) Sustained NT2 implementation the end of 2016. as indicated by: On NT2: Resettlement of 6,300 people was successfully concluded in 2005. 76 8. NT2’s resettlement Partially achieved. 97 Socio-economic monitoring conducted in implementation program percent of re-settlers have 2012 indicated that 97% of re-settler successfully concluded by met income targets, and the households meet Household Income 2015. remaining 3 percent are Targets specified in the Concession currently receiving support. Agreement. The resettlement Baseline: Relocation of all re- implementation period was extended to settlers completed in 2008; December 2017 to allow for further livelihood support programs measures to increase the sustainability of underway. the livelihoods of the re-settlers. Target: All re-settler household incomes reach NT2 target of rural poverty line by 2014. Result Area 2.2. Sustainable Environmental, Social, and Water Resource Management CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period Improved natural resource, FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Rapid economic growth and increased environment and social - Lao Environment and Social Project foreign and domestic investment in management capacity as (LENS) (P090693) (closed FY 13) natural resource sectors pose challenges indicated by: - Second Lao Environment & Social Project to quality of investment and (formally Protected Area and Wildlife) sustainability. Much of the NRM legal 9. Provincial departments of Achieved (LENS II) (P128392/P128393/P152066) and regulatory framework is evolving. NRE (PONRE) established (FY14-21) Improvements to existing policies, laws, and functioning in selected - Mekong Integrated Water Resources and regulations as well as new ones are provinces: Management (IDA Regional) (P104806) required. Baseline: 0 (2011) PONRE established in 17 (FY12-18) Target: 5 (2015) provinces and started - Mainstreaming Disaster and Climate Risk Wide gap remains between poorest and “functioning” (2013) Management into Investment Decisions richest segments of population on access 10. % of Concession (P129182) (FY16) to improved sanitation, at 13% and 99% Agreements for respectively. The sector has not been hydropower projects Achieved ASA given enough attention and priority for signed after the - Post Disaster Needs Assessment after funding. In addition, the budget transfers effectiveness of the new Typhoon Haima in 2011 (P111149) (FY12) to the local level are not made in a timely EIA decree (March 2010) - Food Security Strategy TA (P127954) fashion. that include standardized (FY12) environmental and social - Strengthening Water Supply, Sanitation, requirements and Hygiene Sector Coordination in Lao Baseline: 0% (2011) 80% (2013) PDR (P132249) (FY15) Target: 60% 100% (2015) - Sanitation Marketing in Lao PDR (2015) (P132368) (FY16) 77 - Impact Evaluation on Use of Incentives and 11. Water Law (1996) revised Partially achieved. Pro-Poor Sanitation Outcomes (P161318) Government changed the text of the and approved by 2015. (FY18) Water Law without consultation, rolling - IFC Environment and Social Standards in back four years of effort. However, the Hydropower Sector Advisory Services discussions with Government are ongoing (FY12-17) and Water Law is to be submitted to the National Assembly in June 2017. Result Area 2.3. Sustainable Management and Protection Of Forests and Biodiversity CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Forestry, ecosystem services, and 12. Number of management - Sustainable Forestry for Rural Development biodiversity contribute tremendously to plans developed and Partially achieved (SUFORD) Project (P064886) (closed FY the economy and to the livelihoods of approved at national level 12) forest-dependent communities. for National Protected - Lao Environment and Social Project Institutional capacity constraints, high Areas(NPA) and (LENS) (P090693) (closed FY 13) demand for natural resource use, and Production (PFA) and - Second Lao Environment & Social Project competing interests for forested land pose Protection Forest (PF) (formally Protected Area and Wildlife) challenges. Areas: (LENS II) (P128392/P128393/P152066) NPA PFA PF 1 (NPA), 16 (PFA), 0 (PF) (FY14-21) For NPAs, the institutional structure is Baseline: (2011) 1 16 0 [2013] - Scaling Up Participatory Sustainable Forest being organized but the process is Target: (2015) 3 20 2 1 (NPA), 39 (PFA), 0 (PF) Management Project (P130222) (FY13-19) protracted because of the lack of [2016]. - LA - FCPF REDD+ READINESS leadership both at central and provincial (P124549) (FY14-17) levels. Also the need for multiple 13. Number or percent of co- Not achieved provinces to work together complicate management / community ASA institutional set-up. The same institutional agreements signed and - Collaborative Leadership for Development: weaknesses of DFRM and PONREs have acknowledged at national Capacity Building for Sustainable Natural limited initiating investment in more government level: Resource Management (P152545) (FY 17) NPAs and contributed to lack of proper NPA PFA VFO* - IFC Forestry Investment Program (FIP) – management plans. Baseline: (2011) 0 62 723 0 (NPA), 65 (PFA), 723 support to private sector forestry companies Target: (2015) 50%** 105 800 (VFO) [2013] to establish viable business models Mapping and management plans are 0 (NPA), 65 (PFA), 723 involving communities, out-growers, and underway, but no formal agreements * Village Forestry Organization (VFO) (VFO) [2015] supply chains (FY13-18) because co-management / community is the umbrella term that encompasses agreements cannot be signed for villages Village Forestry Committees (VFC) and Village Forestry Association within PFAs until the PFA management (VFA). plans are approved. 39 PFAs (forest ** 50% of villages inside 2 NPAs. management plans) were approved by the Government in December 2016 and 2 are 78 14. Benefit-sharing still pending due to security issues in the mechanisms designed and Partially achieved concerned areas. As the plans have now implemented: been approved, the community NPA PFA agreements can be ratified for roughly Baseline: (2011) 0 8 0 (NPA), 8 (PFA) [2013] 1,000 villages. Target: (2015) 50%* 20 1 (NPA), 8 (PFA) [2016] villages * 50% of villages inside 2 NPAs. Strategic Objective 3. Inclusive Development Result Area 3.1. Increased Utilization and Quality of Essential Maternal and Child Health Services CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period Increased utilization and FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Steady and significant progress on several quality of health care, - Health Systems Improvement Project key health outcomes over past decades. particularly for poor women (P074027/P124906) (closed FY16) However, maternal mortality remains and children in rural areas in - Community Nutrition Project (P114863) high (also compared to Cambodia and provinces targeted by the (closed FY14) Vietnam). project as evidenced by: - Avian and Human Influenza Control and The country continues to face a major Preparedness Project (P100081) (closed challenge in addressing widespread 15. Percentage of births FY13) under-nutrition: 1/3 of all children under 5 attended by trained health Achieved. Maternal and child - Health Governance and Nutrition remain underweight and almost half are personnel health services interventions Development Project (P151425) (FY15-21) stunted. contributed to a substantial Underlying these outcomes are low levels drop in the MMR of 39% ASA of coverage and inequitable utilization of - Government Spending on Health in Lao MCH services. Low dietary diversity is PDR: Evidence and Issues (P143570) another key problem. Baseline: 16 (2005) 42 (2012) (FY13) Inequalities related to economic status 35 (2010) 55 (2015) - Maternal and Child Health & Nutrition in and ethnicity are found to be Target: 50 (2015) Lao PDR: Evidence from a Household considerable. Survey in Six Central and Southern Out of pocket payments continue to be Provinces (P144126) (FY13) high (40% compared to 25% EAP - Out-of-Pocket Expenditures on Maternal regional average) and there is a high and Child Health (P143433) (FY14) reliance on external financing (27% of - Health Human Resource Study (P143997) total health spending in 2013). (FY15) - Strengthening Health Financing Systems for Universal Health Coverage in Lao PDR (P151272) (FY16) 79 Result Area 3.2. Expanded Access to and Improved Quality of Primary Education in Targeted, Disadvantaged Districts CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period Increased access by children in FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Direct relationship between poverty and rural communities in priority - Second Education Development Project educational status, with low education districts, as indicated by: (P078113) (closed FY14) leading to continued poverty and further - Education for All – Fast Track Initiative low education. 16. % primary completion rate Achieved (EFA/FTI) (P114609) (closed FY14) in 56 targeted - Early Childhood Education Project (disadvantaged) districts (P145544) (FY14-20) Main problem of access in targeted Baseline: 54 (2008-9) 64 (2012-13) - Second Global Partnership for Education districts is presence of incomplete Target: 64 (2012-13) 68 (2015) (P149130) (FY15-20) schools, which do not provide full five years of elementary schooling. 17. Number of students ASA enrolled in primary Partially Achieved - Adolescent Girls Initiative Phase I and II education in targeted (P120599/P131816) (FY14) districts - Skilled Workforce for Laos: Identifying the Baseline: 314,044 (2008-9) Opportunities (P125502) (FY14) 326,389 (2010-11) - School-Based Management Study 339,216 (2011-12) 321,620 (2012-13) (P131089) (FY14) Target: 353,000 (2012-13), 324, 740 (2015) - Skills & Knowledge for Greater Growth of which 47% are female. of which 47.4% are female and Competitiveness in Lao PDR (P126867) (FY14) Improved systems to assess - Lao Development Report on Skills quality of primary education as (P129902) (FY15) indicated by: - Quality of Education (P153341) (FY17) Achieved 18. System for Learning Assessment fully System in full operation in operational by 2013 2013 Result Area 3.3. Improved Access to Basic Services and Markets, and Community Participation in Rural Areas CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period Improved access to basic FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Policy-making at all levels is services and markets and - Rice Productivity Improvement Project characterized as top-down. Legal space livelihood opportunities as (P114617) (closed FY 12) for the development of civil society indicated by: - Lao Upland Food Security Improvement organizations is extremely limited. 80 Achieved. The KDP and the Project (P120909) (closed FY 12) 19. Number of direct PRF supported improved - Livelihood Opportunities and Nutritional beneficiaries of targeted services delivery to over Gains Project (closed FY 15) programs 800,000 beneficiaries, - Khammouane Development Project (KDP) approximately 12 percent of (P087716/P127176) (closed FY 16) Baseline: 0 (2008) the country’s population. - Poverty Reduction Fund (PRF) II Target (revised, 2014): 184,000 (P123480/P153401) (FY11-17) (2016) [KDP only] 205,366 (2016) [KDP only] - Poverty Reduction Fund (PRF) III (P157963) (FY16-20) Improved livelihoods as indicated by: ASA - Country Gender Assessment for Lao PDR 20. Increased production of (FY13) rice seed (R1, R2 and R3) Achieved - Poverty Measurements and Monitoring in participating areas from (P146141) (FY16) Baseline: 5,000 tons (2010) 6,700 (2012) Target: 6,000 tons (2013) 7, 900 (2015) Enhanced local participatory planning processes as evidenced by: 21. # of communities able to 278 Kumbans successfully planned, plan, implement, and Achieved implemented, and monitored their monitor their activities activities provided in Kumban Development Plans that were developed Year 1:182 (2012) [PRFII only] by villagers based on participatory Year 2:270 (2013) [PRFII only] planning processes. PRF’s participatory Year 3:270 (2014) [PRFII only] planning process is not fully integrated in Year 4:270 (2015) [PRFII only] 278 (2016) [PRF II only] district and provincial planning processes as both processes are conducted in 22. Adoption of participatory parallel. PRF started integrating both planning processes by Achieved. processes as the single planning process. communities and district and provincial authorities Target 105 (KDP+AF) + 270 566 (KDP+AF) + 278 (PRFII) (PRFII) (2016) 81 Cross-Cutting Theme: Stronger Public Sector Management Result Area 4.1. Strengthened Government Capacity for Macroeconomic Management and Policy Coordination CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period Quality of macroeconomic FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Macroeconomic situation remains policies and management as - Eighth Poverty Reduction Support vulnerable. The fiscal deficit increased to indicated by: (P125298) (closed FY13) 6% of GDP in 2013 but has since been - Ninth Poverty Reduction Support Operation reduced to around 4% with the fiscal 23. Macroeconomic policies Achieved. However, (P143025) (closed FY14) consolidation resulting from ad-hoc including debt macroeconomic fragility and - Public Finance Management Strengthening measures, rather than systemic fixes, management policy risks continue due to Program MDTF (P108787) (closed FY14) including on strengthening non-resource responsive to natural contingent liabilities and - Strengthening the National Statistical revenue collection and containing resources sector public investments. System Project (P129825) (FY13-FY17) spending. The sizable budget deficit and developments and - Lao PDR Tenth Poverty Reduction Support off-budget spending pushed public debt to coordinated in a way that Operation (P147564) (Dropped) around 65% of GDP while an unspecified maintain internal and (but significant) amount of arrears external balances ASA continues to exist. While the country was - Lao Economic Monitor (P146673/P157829) reclassified to moderate risk of debt Target: Budget deficit less Budget deficit 3.7% of GDP (annual) distress in early years of the CPS, the than 5% GDP; inflation (2015) - Investment Climate Assessment (P116395) progress has been partially reversed with below rate of economic Inflation 1.3% (2015) (FY12) the country classified at moderate, but growth. - Investment Climate Assessment 2014 borderline to high risk of debt distress. Update (P133659) (FY15) 24. CPIA Macroeconomic - Improve Efficiency of Payment Systems The external deficit remains high and management cluster Not achieved (P128597) (FY14) increasingly financed by borrowing. The improves - Public Expenditure Analysis (P158831) exchange rate policy continues to focus (FY17) on tight management of the kip/$ Baseline (2011): 3.36 3.3 (2013) - Public Finance Management Modernization exchange rate, resulting in further Target: (2015): above 3.7 3.3 (2015) Strategy (P158658) (FY18) appreciation of the currency and keeping foreign exchange reserves low. A significant part of the financial sector may be in distress, reflecting weak commercial orientation of some state-owned banks and lack of compliance with supervisory standards in some banks. 82 Result Area 4.2. Strong Linkages Among Planning, Fiscal, Borrowing Strategy, and Annual Budgeting CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period 25. Ensuring NSDEP8 is FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT A rudimentary macro-fiscal framework anchored within a medium - Eighth Poverty Reduction Support for 2016-2020 was produced in early term budget framework Mostly achieved (P125298) (closed FY13) 2016 and approved by the National - Ninth Poverty Reduction Support Operation Assembly, but without evidence that this Baseline: No medium term (P143025) (closed FY14) was utilized in the finalization of the budget framework 2011 - Public Finance Management Strengthening NSEDP8. In addition, the 2016 Program MDTF (P108787) (closed FY14) amendments to the Budget Law further Target: NSEDP8 contains a - Lao PDR Tenth Poverty Reduction Support elaborate the requirements for a medium- medium-term fiscal framework Operation (P147564) (Dropped) term planning framework and it is with a discussion of medium- expected that the five-year plan will form term macro-fiscal outlook ASA the basis for the 2017-2019 medium-term (2015) - Lao Economic Monitor (P146673/P157829) budget framework. However, it remains (yearly) unclear how realistic the framework is - Investment Climate Assessment (P116395) and whether there will be a closer link (FY12) among the annual NSEDPs, the fiscal - Improve Efficiency of Payment Systems strategy, and the MTBF. (P128597) (FY14) - Investment Climate Assessment 2014 Update (P133659) (FY15) - Public Expenditure Analysis (P158831) (FY17) - Public Finance Management Modernization Strategy (P158658) (FY18) Result Area 4.3.Improved Financial Management for Appropriate Revenue Management CPS Outcomes and Achievements at End of World Bank Group Modes of Engagement Issues and Obstacles Indicators CPS Period Improve tax policy and FINANCIAL INSTRUMENT Important to note that improved revenue administration as demonstrated - Eighth Poverty Reduction Support collection came at a time when major by (P125298) (closed FY13) revenue sources were under pressure - Ninth Poverty Reduction Support Operation (falling metal and fuel prices). Around 1/3 26. Increase revenue to GDP Achieved (P143025) (closed FY14) of the improvement came from increase in ratio - Public Finance Management Strengthening VAT receipts and another 1/3 from non- Program MDTF (P108787) (closed FY14) tax revenues (fees, dividends, and Baseline (2010): 15% 18.5% of GDP (2014) - Strengthening the National Statistical overflights). The tax base remains narrow 83 Target (2015): 18% or above. 18.4% of GDP (2015) System Project (P129825) (FY13-17) as a consequence of numerous Refers to domestic tax and - Lao PDR Tenth Poverty Reduction Support exemptions and weak administration. non-tax revenues (excludes Operation (P147564) (Dropped) There have been only modest grants) improvements on tax administration and ASA as a result, tax payment is still difficult, - Lao Economic Monitor (P146673/P157829) and most businesses remain under the 27. Enhance fiscal (annual) presumptive tax regime. There have been transparency and external Partially achieved - Investment Climate Assessment (P116395) limited efforts to reform and simplify oversight (FY12) VAT collection and reform the - Improve efficiency of payment systems presumptive taxation system. Baseline: Summary of Audit (P128597) (FY14) Report published but financial - Investment Climate Assessment 2014 audit not comprehensive (2010) Update (P133659) (FY15) State Audit Office (SAO) is gradually - Public Expenditure Analysis (P158831) increasing its capacity. Because of a lack Target: Audit report for budget (FY17) of resources, annual financial audits are execution covers entire central - Public Finance Management Modernization not conducted for all entities in government and provincial Strategy (P158658) (FY18) accordance with their legal expenditures and is published - IFC Lao Tax Simplification Project (FY13- responsibilities. The SAO report, together with key findings annually FY16) with key findings is presented to the (2015) National Assembly. However, the report is not made publicly available and while its quality is improving, it is yet to meet good international practice. 84 Sub-Annex 2. Advisory Services and Analytics in Lao PDR – FY12-16 Deliveries CPS Strategic Objectives Sustainable Stronger Compet. and Natural Inclusive Public Connectivity Res. Mgt. Developmt Sector Mgt. FY12 TA Lao PDR Post-Disaster Needs Assessment (P111149) X Laos Food Security Strategy TA (P127954) X Lao PDR Trade SWAp Implementation TA (P115251) X Lao PDR Export Competitiveness TA (P116372) X ESW Lao Economic Monitor (May 2012) (P128011) X Lao PDR Investment Climate Assessment (P116395) X X FY13 TA Lao PDR DTIS Update and WTO Accession (P125044) X LA - Adolescent Girls Initiative (Phase 1) (P120599) X Operationalizing Disaster Risk Management (P129182) X Strengthening the In-Country Capacity for Disaster X X Recover Planning (P144268) ESW Lao Economic Monitor (November 2012 and June X 2013) (P132641) Transport Sector Enabling Environment Assessment X (P130298) Government Spending on Health in Lao PDR: Evidence X X and Issues (P143570) Maternal and Child Health & Nutrition in Lao PDR: Evidence from a Household Survey in Six Central and X Southern Provinces (P144126) Country Gender Assessment Update for Lao PDR X FY14 TA Lao PDR Improve Efficiency of Payment Systems X X (P128597) National Single Window Preparation Program X Skilled Workforce for Laos: Identifying the X Opportunities LA - Adolescent Girls Initiative (Phase 2) (P131816) X ESW Lao Economic Monitor (January 2014) (P146673) X Out-of-Pocket Expenditures on Maternal and Child X Health (P143433) School-based Management Study (P131089) X Skills & Knowledge for Greater Growth and X Competitiveness in Lao PDR (P126867) Lao PDR Trade and Transport Facilitation Assessment X (P125045) FY15 85 CPS Strategic Objectives Sustainable Stronger Compet. and Natural Inclusive Public Connectivity Res. Mgt. Developmt Sector Mgt. TA Lao PDR Health Human Resource Study (P143997) X X Strengthening Water Supply, Sanitation and Hygiene X Sector Coordination in Lao PDR (P132249) ESW Lao Economic Monitor (April 2015) (P157829) X Lao Development Report 2014 (P129902) X X Lao PDR Investment Climate Assessment 2014 Update X X (P133659) FY16 TA Where Are The Poor? Lao PDR 2015 Census-Based X Poverty Map (P156311) Strengthening Health Financing for Universal Health X Care (P151272) Sanitation Marketing in Lao PDR (P132368) X Clean Stove Initiative for EAP-Lao PDR (P130355) X X ESW Lao Economic Monitor (May 2016) (P157829) X Services-Manufacturing Linkages (P150968) X Incidence and Impact of Non-Tariff Measures X (P150969) Labor Impact of Lao Export Growth (P150970) X Nutrition in Lao PDR: Causes, Determinants, and X Bottlenecks (P132582) Government Spending on Health in Lao PDR X Lao PDR Health Center Workforce Survey X Maternal and Child Health Out-of-Pocket Expenditure X and Service Readiness in Lao PDR (Update 2013) Ongoing (FY17 and FY18 Delivery) TA Collaborative Leadership for Development: Capacity X Building for NRM (P156347) Quality of Education in Lao PDR (P153341) X Public Finance Management Modernization Strategy X (P158658) Lao PDR’s Public Investment and Financing Systems X X ESW Lao Economic Monitor (P158830) X Impact Evaluation of Use of Incentives and Pro-Poor X X Sanitation Outcomes (P161318) Poverty Reduction Fund Impact Evaluation (P131675) X Public Expenditure Analysis (P158831) X 86 Sub-Annex 3. IEG Evaluation of Projects Implemented during CPS Period Closing Overall Bank Overall Borrower Proj ID Project Name IEG Outcome FY Performance Performance Lao PDR Sustainable Forestry for Rural P064886 Moderately Unsatisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Development P075531 Lao PDR Rural Electrification Phase I Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory P077326 Lao PDR Poverty Reduction Fund Project Unsatisfactory Moderately Unsatisfactory Moderately Satisfactory 2012 Lao PDR Avian And Human Influenza P100081 Satisfactory Satisfactory Satisfactory Control P114617 Lao PDR Rice Productivity Improvement Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory P122847 Lao PDR PRSO7 Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Satisfactory P090693 Lao PDR Environment and Social Project Unsatisfactory Moderately Unsatisfactory Moderately Satisfactory 2013 P106165 Lao PDR Trade Development Facility Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Satisfactory P078113 Lao PDR Second Education Development Moderately Satisfactory Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory 2014 P108787 Lao PDR Public Fin. Mgnt. Streng Moderately Unsatisfactory Moderately Unsatisfactory Unsatisfactory Lao PDR FPCR TF for Lao PDR on P114863 Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Nutrition: CNP P105331 Lao PDR GMS Power Trade Project Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory P114609 Lao PDR Catalytic Fund Efa/Fti Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Satisfactory 2015 Lao PDR Upland Food Security P120909 Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Satisfactory Improvement Project P110978 Lao PDR Rural Electrification Phase II Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Lao PDR Health Services Improvement 2016 P074027 Moderately Unsatisfactory Moderately Unsatisfactory Moderately Satisfactory Project 87 Sub-Annex 4: CPS Progress Report Changes to the CPS Results Matrix Original CPS Results Framework Changes made at the time of Reason for change CPSPR Outcome 1.2 Indicator 6: Number of new households Separated the targets for REP1 and To be consistent with electrified (grid and off grid) REP2 the projects. Outcome 2.1 Milestone for indicator 7. Number of Indicator 7 is unchanged. To be consistent with qualified specialists and skilled workers in Changed the target of milestones the project. hydropower and mining sectors. Target: to: “At least 350 civil servants and 50% increase in high level sector 3,461 students and teachers receive specialists to at least 1 2 year advanced training and benefit from the level. learning program (2015)” Outcome 2.3 Indicator 12: Number of management Changed the target (2015) for NPA To be consistent with plans developed and approved at national to 3. the project. level for National Protected Areas (NPA) and Production Forest Area (PFA) and Protection Forest Area (PF) -- Target (2015) for NPA: 4 Indicator 13: Number or % of co- Corrected the baseline values. management/community agreements Added the target value. signed and acknowledged at national government level: NPA PFA VFO NPA PFA Baseline: (2011) 0 62 723 VFO Target: (2015) 50%* 105 800 Baseline: (2011) 0 723 0 Target: (2015) 50%* 830 Corrected the baseline value. TBD NPA PFA Indicator 14: Benefit-sharing mechanisms Baseline: (2011) 0 8 designed and implemented. Target: (2015) 50%* 20 NPA PFA villages Baseline: (2011) 0 16 Target: (2015) 50%* 20 villages Outcome 3.1 Indicator 15: OPD cases per capita at Drop the indicator. This is not relevant to public health centers and district hospitals the CPS and outcome- oriented. Milestones of Indicator 16: Percentage of Drop the following milestones: There is no direct births attended by trained health personnel Number of people assisted by HEF linkage between the in project provinces indicator and these Number of district implementing milestones. free deliveries and inpatient care for children under 5 88 Original CPS Results Framework Changes made at the time of Reason for change CPSPR Outcome 3.3 Indicator 20 : Number of direct Add the target value: The target value was beneficiaries of targeted programs 57,000 (2015) missing. Indicator 22: % of poorest villages in Drop this indicator. PRF targeting is at participating provinces reached. kumban level and difficult to obtain data at village level. Source: Lao PDR FY12-16 Country Partnership Strategy Progress Report 89 Annex 3: Selected Indicators of WBG Portfolio Performance and Management 90 World Bank Key Portfolio Performance Indicators Investment Project Financing by IDA only (as of February 2017) FY17 Key Indicator FY12 FY13 FY14 FY15 FY16 Q3* Number of Active Projects 11.0 12.0 16.0 15.0 14.0 14.0 Total Commitment (US$ m) 189.9 233.4 328.8 356.7 359.1 347.5 Average Project Value (US$ m) 17.3 19.5 20.6 23.8 25.7 24.8 (no.) 3.0 4.0 4.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 Projects at risk (%) 27.3 33.3 25.0 13.3 14.3 14.3 (no.) 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 2.0 Actual Problem Projects (%) 18.2 16.7 12.5 13.3 14.3 14.3 (no.) 1.0 2.0 2.0 0.0 0.0 0.0 Potential Problem Projects (%) 9.1 16.7 12.5 0.0 0.0 0.0 (%) 17.4 36.4 22.9 11.2 13.4 13.8 Commitments at Risk (US$m) 33.0 85.0 75.2 40.0 48.0 48.0 Disbursement (US$ m) 92.2 129.3 161.9 162.9 169.3 156.9 Disbursement Ratio (%) 27.0 45.6 28.9 23.4 24.6 10.6 Undisbursed (US$ m) 96.8 102.7 167.8 183.2 176.6 173.7 Average age of Projects (years) 4.1 4.1 3.9 4.0 4.1 4.3 * Note: Data as of February 2, 2017 91 Annex 4: World Bank Portfolio Knowledge and Convening (as of February 2017) Sector Study Title Status Macroeconomics and Lao Economic Monitor Annual Fiscal Management Lao PDR Systematic Country Diagnostic Publication 2017 Completed Public Expenditure Analysis 2017 Finance and Markets Financial Sector Development 2019 Governance Public Finance Management Modernization Strategy 2017 Trade and Programmatic Studies on Trade and Competitiveness Competitiveness • Lao PDR Investment Climate Assessment Completed 2014 • Lao PDR Services-Manufacturing Linkages Completed 2016 • • Incidence and Impact of Non-Tariff Measures Completed 2016 • Labor Impact of Lao Export Growth Completed 2016 Policy Dialogue on Agricultural Commercialization and Diversification 2017 Poverty Programmatic Studies on Poverty • Poverty Profile in Lao PDR Completed 2014 • Drivers of Poverty Reduction in Lao PDR Completed 2015 • Poverty Maps Completed 2016 • Pilot study on improving poverty targeting methodology in Lao PDR 2017 Energy and Clean Stove Initiative in the East Asia and Pacific Region 2017 Extractives Social, Rural & Poverty Reduction Fund II Impact Evaluation and Studies Completed 2016 Resilience Health, Nutrition Programmatic Studies on Health and Nutrition and Population • Government Spending on Health in Lao PDR Completed 2013 • Maternal and Child Health & Nutrition in Lao PDR Completed 2013 • Out-of-Pocket Expenditures on MCH Completed 2014 • Lao PDR Health Human Resource Study Completed 2015 • Strengthening Health Financing for Universal Health Care Completed 2016 • Nutrition in Lao PDR: Causes, Determinants and Bottlenecks Completed 2016 Water Programmatic Studies on Pro-Poor Rural Water Supply and Sanitation • Sanitation Marketing in Lao PDR Completed 2016 • Policy note on targeted subsidies for pro-poor sanitation 2018 Education Programmatic Studies on Quality of Education in Lao PDR • Evaluation of formal and non-formal Early Childhood Development 2017 and School Drop Outs Social Protection Lao Development Report: Expanding Productive Employment for Completed 2014 and Labor Broad-Based Growth Addressing Malnutrition in Lao PDR 2018 Environment and Capacity Building for Sustainable Natural Resource Management 2017 Natural Resources Economic Potential of Green Growth in Lao PDR 2018 92 Financing (as of February 2017) Approved Project Loan/TF Approval Closing Percent Implementing Project Name Amount ID Account Date Date Disbursed Agency (US$) Lao Statistics Strengthening the Bureau, Ministry P129825 National Statistical TF 14613 17-May-13 30-Jun-17 8,000,000 62% of Planning and System Project Investment IDA 54490 3-Jun-14 30-Sep-18 8,900,000 0% TA for Capacity Ministry of Development in IDA H9470 3-Jun-14 30-Sep-18 8,900,000 77% P109736 Energy and Hydropower and Mines Mining Sector IDA H5390 12-Jan-10 30-Sep-18 8,000,000 100% Customs IDA H8430 28-May-13 30-Jun-17 6,500,000 64% Customs and Trade Department, P101750 Facilitation Project Ministry of IDA H4030 17-Jun-08 31-Dec-13 6,000,000 100% Finance TF A3946 19-Dec-16 30-Sep-18 1,300,000 0% Second Trade Ministry of P130512 Development TF 14189 28-Mar-13 30-Sep-18 9,900,000 72% Industry and Facility Project Commerce IDA H8190 4-Dec-12 30-Sep-18 4,000,000 81% Small and Medium IDA H9580 10,000,000 40% Ministry of P131201 Enterprises Access 9-Jun-14 30-Jun-19 Industry and to Finance Project IDA 54710 10,000,000 44% Commerce IDA H7890 26-Jul-12 30-Sep-17 21,000,000 100% Ministry of P102398 Road Sector Project Public Works and IDA H5470 25-Mar-10 30-Sep-17 27,800,000 100% Transport Ministry of Lao Road Sector 31-Aug- P158504 IDA 59200 13-Dec-16 25,000,000 0% Public Works and Project 2 (LRSP2) 22 Transport Electricite du Power Grid 31-Mar- Laos, Ministry of P149599 Improvement IDA 56750 23-Jun-15 30,000,000 7% 20 Energy and Project Mines Poverty Reduction Lao Poverty P157963 IDA 58270 24-May-16 30-Jun-20 30,000,000 0% Fund III Reduction Fund Health Governance IDA D0730 13,200,000 53% and Nutrition Ministry of P151425 23-Jun-15 31-Dec-20 Development Health IDA 56760 13,200,000 0% Project IDA H9100 14,000,000 80% Ministry of Early Childhood P145544 2-Apr-14 31-Jul-19 Education and Education Project IDA 53700 14,000,000 0% Sports Second Global Ministry of P149130 Partnership for TF 18969 14-Apr-15 15-Jul-19 16,800,000 10% Education and Education Sports IDA 56200 29-Apr-15 30-Jun-21 15,000,000 3% Environment Protection Fund, Second Lao TF 16619 14-May-14 30-Jun-21 6,830,000 15% Ministry of P128393 Environment and Natural Social Project IDA H9150 2-Apr-14 30-Jun-21 4,500,000 100% Resources and Environment IDA 53830 2-Apr-14 30-Jun-21 12,500,000 0% 93 Project Loan/TF Approval Closing Approved Percent Implementing Project Name ID Account Date Date Amount Disbursed Agency Nam Et-Phou (US$) Louey Tiger Wildlife 31-Mar- P113860 Landscape TF 13181 28-Feb-13 879,000 90% Conservation 17 Conservation Society Project Scaling-Up 31-Aug- IDA H8520 31-May-13 19,000,000 54% Ministry of Participatory 18 P130222 Agriculture and Sustainable Forest 31-Aug- TF 15286 8-Aug-13 12,830,000 51% Forestry Management 18 Ministry of 31-Mar- Natural Mekong Integrated IDA H6750 8-Mar-12 18,000,000 91% 18 Resources and P104806 Water Resources Environment Management 31-Mar- Mekong River IDA H7620 8-Mar-12 8,000,000 49% 18 Commission Ministry of FCPF Readiness 15-Mar- P125082 TF 14777 4-Mar-14 3,600,000 44% Agriculture and Grant 18 Forestry Nam Theun 2 Ministry of Social and P049290 IDA H1550 31-Mar-05 31-Dec-17 20,000,000 100% Energy and Environment Mines Project TOTAL 407,639,000 IDA 347,500,000 Trust Funds 60,139,000 94 CPF results from ongoing programs (as of February 2017) Commitment Project Ratings41 Undisb. Project Closing Project Sector 2017 2018 2019 2020 2021 Amount Overall Bal. ID PDO IP Date ($m) Risk ($m) Macro Economics Strengthening the National Statistical P129825 & Fiscal 8.0 MS MS S 06/30/2017 3.1 System Project Management TA for Capacity Development in Energy & P109736 25.8 S MS S 09/30/2018 9.7 Hydropower and Mining Sector Extractives Trade & P101750 Customs and Trade Facilitation Project 12.5 MS S L 06/30/2017 2.2 Competitiveness Second Trade Development Facility Trade & P130512 15.2 S S M 4.6 Project Competitiveness 09/30/2018 Small and Medium Enterprises Access P131201 Finance & Markets 20 MS MS S 06/30/2019 10.3 to Finance Project P102398 Road Sector Project Transport & ICT 48.8 S S M 09/30/2017 0.0 P158504 Lao Road Sector Project 2 Transport & ICT 25.0 S 28/08/2022 24.5 Energy & P149599 Power Grid Improvement Project 30.0 S MS M 03/31/2020 27.1 Extractives Social, Urban, P157963 Poverty Reduction Fund III 30.0 S S M 06/30/2020 29.0 Rural, Resilience Health Governance and Nutrition Health, Nutrition & P151425 26.4 MS S S 12/31/2020 18.8 Development Project Population P145544 Early Childhood Education Project Education 28.0 MS MU M 07/31/2019 14.9 P149130 Second Global Partnership for Education Education 16.8 MS MU S 07/15/2019 15.2 Second Lao Environment & Social Environment & P128393 38.8 MS MS H 06/30/2021 31.1 Project Natural Resources Scaling-Up Participatory Sustainable Environment & P130222 31.8 MS MS S 08/31/2018 14.2 Forest Management Natural Resources Mekong Integrated Water Resources P104806 Water 26.0 MS MS S 03/31/2018 1.4 Management Nam Theun 2 Social and Environment Environment & P049290 20.0 MS MU H 12/31/2017 0.0 Project Natural Resources 41 Project Development Objective (PDO) and Implementation Progress (IP) possible ratings are: Satisfactory (S), Moderately Satisfactory (MS), Moderately Unsatisfactory (MS), and Unsatisfactory (U). Overall risks are: High (H), Substantial (S), Moderate (M), and Low (L). 95 Annex 5: IFC Portfolio (as of February 2017) IFC Investment Services Project Name Client Sector Loan & Guarantees IFC (OA) (US$ m) EDL Rural Elect. Electricite Lao Infrastructure 9.64 Essilao ESSILOR Lao Health & Education 9.45 ABL Lao Kip Loan Acleda Lao Finance and Markets 8.95 BFL RSF BFL SME RSF Finance and Markets 5.00 KS Hotels (closed in January 2017) KS Resort LP Tourism & Retail 2.02 TOTAL 35.06 IFC Advisory Services Project Name Sector Project Size (US$) Lao Licensing Reform Trade and Competitiveness 595,194 Lao Hydropower E&S E & S and Governance 4,729,898 Lao Forestry Agribusiness 3,353,058 Lao Roads PPP Cross-cutting Advisory 1,694,190 Lao Payment System Finance and Markets 842,025 Lao Credit Bureau Phase 2 Finance and Markets 1,159,453 Lao Secured Transactions Phase 2 Finance and Markets 975,288 TOTAL 13,349,106 96 Annex 6: Links between the 8th NSEDP, the SDGs, the SCD and the CPF 8th NSEDP SDG SCD CPF Focus Area 1: Supporting inclusive growth [1.1] Promote inclusive and sustainable Increase agricultural Objective 1.2 Sustained and inclusive economic growth, employment productivity to support Making it easier to do economic growth and decent work for all [Goal 8] incomes, Making it easier to business do business and create good jobs [Priority 2, 6] [1.2] Putting public debt on a Objective 1.1 Macroeconomic stability Promote peaceful and inclusive Putting public finances on a sustainable path and societies, provide access to justice sustainable path and [1.3] strengthening financial sector for all and build effective, supporting financial sector Integrated development stability; Improving accountable and inclusive stability planning, budgeting and inclusiveness of the financial institutions [Goal 16] accountability sector to improve access to credit and lower risks [Priority 5, 11] [1.4] Ensure access to affordable, Investing in infrastructure for Objective 1.3 Balanced regional and reliable, sustainable and growth and inclusion Investing in infrastructure local development modern energy for all, Make sustainable cities and human [Priority 7] for growth and inclusion settlements [Goal 7, 11] [1.5] Improved public/private labor Ensure inclusive and quality force capacity education for all and promote lifelong learning [Goal 4] [1.6] Local entrepreneurs are competitive in domestic and global markets Strengthen means of [1.7] implementation and revitalize the Regional and international Global Partnership for Sustainable cooperation and integration Development [Goal 17] Focus Area 2: Investing in people [2.1] End poverty, Ensure sustainable Investing in infrastructure for Improved living standards water and sanitation for all; growth and inclusion through poverty reduction using Remove UXO obstacle to human [Priority 7] 3 builds implementation development [Goal 1, 6, 18] [2.2] Invest in improving End hunger, achieve food security malnutrition to achieve Objective 2.1 Food security ensured and and improved nutrition, incidence of malnutrition children’s potential Reducing prevalence of sustainable agriculture [Goal 2] [Priority 3] malnutrition reduced Objective 2.2 Improving quality of Improving quality of [2.3] Ensure inclusive and quality education and keeping girls in primary and pre-primary Access to high quality education education for all and promote school [Priority 4] education and keeping girls lifelong learning [Goal 4] in school [2.4] Ensure healthy lives and promote Improving access to and Access to high quality health quality of health services for Objective 2.3 well-being for all at all ages Improving access to and care and preventative medicine [Goal 3] more productive people [Priority 8] quality of health services Promote inclusive and sustainable Objective 2.4 [2.5] Introducing a basic social economic growth, employment Reducing vulnerability and Enhanced social welfare protection system to lower and decent work for all [Goal 8] inclusive access to social vulnerability [Priority 10] services 97 8th NSEDP SDG SCD CPF [2.6] Reduce inequality, Promote Protection of traditions & culture peaceful and inclusive societies, provide access to justice for all [2.7] and build effective, accountable Political stability, order, justice and inclusive institutions and transparency [Goal 10, 16] Focus Area 3: Protecting the environment Ensure sustainable consumption production patterns, Conserve [3.1] and sustainably use oceans, seas Promoting strategic use of Objective 3.1 Environmental protection and and marine resources, Protect, natural resources and Promoting protection of the restore and promote sustainable responsible management of environment and responsible sustainable natural resources management use of terrestrial ecosystems, the environment [Priority 1] management of natural forests, combat desertification, resources and halt and reverse land degradation and biodiversity loss [Goal 12, 14, 15] [3.2] Putting in place a Objective 3.2 Preparedness for natural Take urgent action to combat strengthened disaster risk Putting in place enhanced disasters and risk mitigation climate change and its impacts management [Priority 9] disaster risk management and [Goal 13] climate and disaster resilience [3.3] Reduced instability of agricultural production Cross-cutting theme: Strengthening institutions to establish a rules based environment Promote peaceful and inclusive [CC.1] societies, provide access to justice Enhancing governance and Cross-cutting Enhance effectiveness for public for all and build effective, creating a rules-based Strengthening institutions to governance and administration accountable and inclusive environment establish a rules based institutions [Goal 16] [Cross cutting theme] environment [CC.2] Promote local innovation and Build resilient infrastructure, utilization of science, technology promote inclusive and and telecommunication and sustainable industrialization management of ICT [Goal 9] [CC.3] Achieve gender equality and Promote and develop women, empower all women and girls juvenile and youth [Goal 5] 98 Annex 7: Lao PDR Gender Action Plan Summary Link to SCD Link to CPF CGAP Primary Causes Interventions at project World Bank Sample CGAP Output/Outcome Pathways Focus Areas Priorities level Group Indicator Operations Enhancing Cross-cutting Voice and - Culture, norms - Advocacy and training - Poverty - PRF sub-projects are identified, planned Institutional theme: Agency: and attitudes - Promote participatory Reduction and implemented through participatory quality and Enhancing - Limited law planning for Fund II processes that involve at least 40 percent creating a Governance Promote enforcement community and (PRF) of women and at least 60 percent of the rules-based and Creating participation of - Low kumban development - PRF III poorest villagers in planning, decision- environment a Rules women in representation at plans and making implementation and monitoring Based planning and provincial and identification of sub- - % of PRF III sub-projects prioritized by Environment decision local levels projects. The selection women making at the of sub-project for - % of PRF III sub-projects prioritized by local level financial support by ethnic groups kumban committee, which include elected villagers including women and ethnic group. Unlocking Sharing Access to - Investment climate - Matching grants and - TDF2’s - Increased share of firms with female the potential Growth Economic constraints to advisory to eligible Business management/ownership participation in non- Opportunities: business growth entrepreneur Assistance - Increase in share of female resource - Limited Facility owned/managed businesses supported sectors to Equal opportunities for using advisory services (benefiting from create opportunities formal sector work Business Assistance Facility matching opportunities for men and - Access to land and grants) women to credit participate in - Low agriculture - Advisory services on - IFC’s project - Number of women-owned/ run SME livelihood productivity financial product on Risk borrowers receive finance during the life activities and development and risk Sharing of the SME RSF wage jobs - Limited sharing facility Facility connectivity sensitive to needs of (SRF) with a - Remote rural female entrepreneurs commercial communities with bank, BFL limited access to Bank services 99 Link to SCD Link to CPF CGAP Primary Causes Interventions at project World Bank Sample CGAP Output/Outcome Pathways Focus Areas Priorities level Group Indicator Operations - Improving road - Road Sector - At least 26,500 people (49% female) connectivity Project I most of whom live by the road side, served with paved road along NR1B and 6A. - Road Sector - Share of rural population with access to Project II an all-season road (National) - Share of women participating in paid routine maintenance work (percentage) - Improving agriculture - Agriculture - In preparation productivity Commercial ization Project Building the Human Endowments: - Low school - Promote the - Second - Percentage of Grade 2 students in pilot assets to be Development attendance, high representation, role and Global schools who cannot read a single word, take up Low literacy drop-outs capacity of the Partnership disaggregated by gender opportunities among women - early marriage Inclusive Education for Education - Number of female village facilitators and to and skills gap Centre under MOEs in Project trained in SBCC in target districts mitigate risks school based (administrative data) and protect management support gain Early marriage, team adolescent - Provide financial pregnancy and support and capacity high maternal building for schools in mortality rate their management to achieve quality standards, - Improve teaching and learning for early grade literacy - Encourage women stakeholders (school principals, VEDCs members, pedagogical advisors) in school based management 100 Link to SCD Link to CPF CGAP Primary Causes Interventions at project World Bank Sample CGAP Output/Outcome Pathways Focus Areas Priorities level Group Indicator Operations training, which include gender aspects in safeguard modules - Provide scholarships, - Early - Net enrollment rate of 3 and 4-year-olds school meals and build Childhood in target districts (disaggregated by school facilities to Education gender) attract girls’ Project - Net enrollment rate of 5-year-olds in attendance. target districts (disaggregated by gender) - Primary education dropout rate (disaggregated by gender) - Number of out of school children of primary age (SDG 4.1.2) - Inadequate access - Support - Health - Number of women who deliver with a to services in rural implementation of Governance skilled birth attendant at home or at a areas health sector reform and Nutrition health facility (SDG 3.1) - Unmet demand for and Multi Sectoral Development - Number of pregnant women who family planning Food and Nutrition Project received the 4th Antenatal Care contacts - Inadequate levels Security Action Plan - Number of new women aged 15-49 years of maternal and adopting long term family planning child nutrition methods in target provinces - Percentage of children age 0-6 months exclusively breastfed. - Maternal mortality rate (SDG 3.1.1 - To be defined - Social - Under discussion protection Project Sustainable Protection of Risks: - Natural disasters - Promote gender - NT2 Social - Vulnerable/marginalized people aware of and Efficient the Vulnerability to - Migration sensitive and and project in. & benefits – male (Number, management Environment emerging risks - Inadequate participatory planning , Environment Core Supplement) of natural and low benefit incentives to monitoring and Project - Vulnerable/marginalized people aware of resources sharing from promote socially mitigation mechanisms project inv. & benefits – female NRM responsible - Promote gender (Number, Core Supplement) investments and balanced project - Project beneficiaries – male and female 101 Link to SCD Link to CPF CGAP Primary Causes Interventions at project World Bank Sample CGAP Output/Outcome Pathways Focus Areas Priorities level Group Indicator Operations weak enforcement community institutions (number) (number, Core Supplement) of environmental - Promote gender requirements sensitive income generation and skill development - Community education on health and domestic households matters - Capacity building in - Road Sector - Preparation and implementation of three- adaption to climate Project II year rolling climate resilient road change and disaster - maintenance plans, on annual basis risk management (Yes/No) - Design and finance - Length of road receiving climate resilient climate resilient periodic maintenance (Km) transport infrastructure (Cumulative)42 42 Although these two indicators are not direct sex-disaggregated indicators, achieving them do imply impacts of climate change and disasters on the road and living conditions of female and male population. Women may find themselves less resilient in a case a disaster strikes. 102 Annex 8: Complementarity between World Bank Group, Asian Development Bank and United Nations in Lao PDR Under the Lao PDR Country Partnership Framework (2017-2020), the WBG team will collaborate with the United Nations under its UN Partnership Framework (2017-2021) and the Asian Development Bank under its proposed Country Partnership Strategy (2017-2021) towards the achievement of common objectives as spelled out in the 8th National Socio-Economic Development Plan (2016-2021) and the Sustainable Development Goals, along the outlined tentative linkages depicted below. This information is as of 31 December 2016 and is subject to change based on the ADB Country Partnership Strategy 2017- 2021. Asian Development Bank World Bank Group  Poverty Reduction & Green Growth  Agriculture, natural  Agriculture Development resources, and rural  Trade development development  Improving efficiency and  Strengthening urban-rural UNPF Pillar I. reliability of power linkages Inclusive Growth, distribution  Private sector development Livelihoods and  Integrated Water Resources  Tourism development Management Resilience  Regional Cooperation and  Strengthening management Integration including of protected areas & biodiversity conservation biodiversity conservation  Support to Roads  Disaster Risk Management  Improving secondary  Improving pre-primary and education and higher primary education quality education, and TVET quality UNPF Pillar II.  Increasing coverage and  Health system and improving quality of early governance development Human childhood education  Development of urban sector Development  Health governance and and water supply and nutrition development sanitation  Social Protection  Strengthening capacity and  Improving access to basic service delivery in public services sector UNPF Pillar III.  Strengthening public sector  Supporting national Governance management including Public governance and public Finance Management (cross- administration reform cutting) 103 Annex 9: Map of Lao PDR 104