Document of The World Bank FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Report No. 65108-BO INTERNATIONAL DEVELOPMENT ASSOCIATION INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORPORATION AND MULTILATERAL INVESTMENT GUARANTEE AGENCY COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP STRATEGY FOR THE PLURINATIONAL STATE OF BOLIVIA FOR THE PERIOD FY2012-2015 November 1, 2011 Bolivia, Chile, Ecuador, Peru and Venezuela Country Management Unit Latin America and the Caribbean Region The International Finance Corporation Latin America and the Caribbean Region This document is being made publicly available prior to Board consideration. This does not imply a presumed outcome. This document may be updated following Board consideration and the updated document will be made publicly available in accordance with the Bank´s Policy on Access to Information. The last Interim Strategy Note for Bolivia was discussed by the Board of Executive Directors on June 2, 2009 (Report No. 48372-BO) CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (As of October 15, 2011) Currency Unit = Boliviano US$1 = 6.97 Bolivianos WEIGHTS AND MEASURES Metric System PLURINATIONAL STATE OF BOLIVIA - FISCAL YEAR January 1 – December 31 World Bank IFC MIGA Vice President: Pamela Cox Thierry Tanoh Michel Wormser Director: Susan G. Goldmark Paolo M. Martelli Ravi Vish Co-Task Managers: Oscar A. Avalle and Eduardo Wallentin Daniel Villar Maria D. Arribas Baños and John Barham ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS AAA Analytical and Advisory Activities ASFI Autoridad de Supervisión del Sistema Financiero/ Financial System Supervision Authority CAF Corporación Andina de Fomento/Andean Development Corporation CAS Country Assistance Strategy CCT Conditional Cash Transfer CIF Climate Investment Fund COSUDE Swiss Agency for Development and Cooperation CPPR Country Portfolio Performance Review CPS Country Partnership Strategy DfID United Kingdom´s Department for International Development ENDSA Encuesta Nacional de Demografía y Salud/National Demographic and Health Survey ESW Economic and Sector Work EU European Union FDI Foreign Direct Investment FSAP Financial Sector Assessment Program GAP Gender Action Plan GDP Gross Domestic Product GEF Global Environmental Facility GNI Gross National Income GPOBA Global Partnership on Output-Based Aid GruS Group of Partners for the Development of Bolivia HOI Human Opportunity Index IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development IDA International Development Association IADB Inter-American Development Bank IFC International Finance Corporation ILO International Labor Organization IMF International Monetary Fund INE Instituto Nacional de Estadística/National Institute of Statistics ISN Interim Strategy Note JSDF Japanese Social Development Fund LAC Latin America and the Caribbean LNG Liquefied Natural Gas MAS Movimiento al Socialismo/Movement Towards Socialism MDGs Millennium Development Goals MDP Ministry of Development Planning MDRI Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative MIGA Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency MMAA Ministry of Environment and Water NDP National Development Plan NGO Non-Governmental Organization NPL Non-Performing Loan NRAIP National Roads and Airport Infrastructure Project ODA Official Development Aid OECD- Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development Assistance Committee DAC OPCS Operations Policy and Country Services ORAF Operational Risk Assessment Framework PEFA Public Expenditure and Financial Assessment PFM Public Financial Management PPCR Pilot Program for Climate Resilience PPP Public Private Partnership ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS RGAP Regional Gender Action Plan ROSC Accounting and Auditing Report on the Observance of Standards and Codes SAFCI Salud Interfamiliar Comunitaria Intercultural /Intercultural and Interfamily Community Health SDR Special Drawing Rights SIGMA Sistema Integrado de Gestión y Modernización Administrativa/Integrated Financial Management System SME Small and Medium Enterprise STATCAP Strengthening Statistical Capacity and the Informational Base for Evidence-Based Planning Project SUMI Universal Maternal and Infant Insurance Program StAR Stolen Asset Recovery TCF Trillion cubic feet UDAPE Economic and Social Policy Analysis Unit UDAPE Unidad de Análisis de Políticas Sociales y Económicas/ Economic and Social Policy Analysis Unit UN United Nations UNCT United Nations Country Team UNIFEM United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women UNODC United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime VIPFE Vice-Ministry of Public Investment and External Financing WEF World Economic Forum WGI Worldwide Governance Indicators WSP Water and Sanitation Program WBG World Bank Group WDR World Development Report YPFB Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos (the State Oil and Gas Company) ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS The World Bank Group greatly appreciates the collaboration and contributions of the Government of the Plurinational State of Bolivia in the preparation of this Country Partnership Strategy (CPS). Likewise, the team lead by Oscar A. Avalle, would specially like to thank Maria Arribas-Baños, Livia Benavides, Morten Blomqvist, Carine Clert, Ousmane Dione, Christopher Humphrey, Kelly Kiernan, Ruth Llanos, Julio Loayza, Anna Mendonça, Gabriela Orozco, Susana Pérez, German Román, Carlos Silva, Maria Alejandra Velasco and Julio Velasco for their work and contributions to the preparation of this CPS.   TABLE OF CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY ............................................................................................................. i  I. INTRODUCTION ..................................................................................................................... 1  II. COUNTRY CONTEXT AND DEVELOPMENT AGENDA .............................................. 1  A. Social and Political Context ....................................................................................................... 1  B. Poverty and Inequality Profile.................................................................................................... 2  C. Recent Economic Developments ............................................................................................... 4  D. Economic Outlook ..................................................................................................................... 7  E. The National Development Plan and Government Priorities ..................................................... 8  III. WORLD BANK GROUP PARTNERSHIP......................................................................... 9  A. Lessons Learned and Stakeholder Feedback ............................................................................. 9  Past World Bank Experience ................................................................................................... 9  Lessons Learned ...................................................................................................................... 9  Consultations ......................................................................................................................... 10  B. Proposed World Bank Group Partnership Strategy.................................................................. 10  Principles of World Bank Group Engagement ...................................................................... 10  Cross Cutting Theme 1: Gender ............................................................................................ 12  Cross Cutting Theme 2: Governance and Anti-Corruption ................................................... 15  Results Area 1: Sustainable Productive Development .......................................................... 16  Results Area 2: Climate Change and Disaster Risk Management ........................................ 19  Results Area 3: Human Development and Access to Basic Services ................................... 21  Results Area 4: Public Sector Effectiveness ......................................................................... 23  C. Implementing the Partnership Strategy .................................................................................... 25  Financial Envelope ................................................................................................................ 25  Managing Program Implementation ...................................................................................... 26  Fiduciary Aspects and Use of Country Systems ................................................................... 27  Results Orientation and Monitoring ...................................................................................... 28  Partnerships and Donor Coordination ................................................................................... 28  Trust Fund Program and Strategy.......................................................................................... 29  IV. MANAGING RISKS ............................................................................................................ 30  A. Political Risks .......................................................................................................................... 30  B. Economic Risks ........................................................................................................................ 30  C. Institutional Risks..................................................................................................................... 31  TABLES, FIGURES AND BOXES Table 1: Poverty Rates Using Poverty Line Method, 1996 to 2008 ............................................................. 3  Table 2: Income Inequality, 1996 to 2007 .................................................................................................... 3  Table 3: Status of Selected MDG Indicators ................................................................................................ 4  Table 4: Key Macroeconomic Indicators, 2005 to 2011 ............................................................................... 6  Table 5: Key Macroeconomic Projections, 2011 to 2015 ............................................................................. 8  Table 6: Bank’s Proposed and Current Lending Program .......................................................................... 24  Table 7: Bank’s Proposed and Current AAA.............................................................................................. 24  Figure 1: Bolivia GNI Per Capita and Operational Cutoff for IDA Eligibility........................................... 11  Figure 2: Selected Gender Indicators .......................................................................................................... 13  Figure 3: Selected Governance Indicators for Bolivia, 2005 - 2010 ........................................................... 15  Figure 4: Access to Improved Water and Sanitation in 2009 ..................................................................... 21  Figure 5: Total Commitments Development Partners in 2011 ................................................................... 28  Box 1: Urban Infrastructure, Component on Urban Upgrading in La Paz ................................................. 14  Box 2: Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative (StAR) ........................................................................................ 16  Box 3: The Pilot Program on Climate Resilience (PPCR) in Bolivia ......................................................... 20  ANNEXES Annex 1: CPS Results Matrix ..................................................................................................................... 32  Annex 2: CAS Completion Report FY04-11 .............................................................................................. 39  Annex 3: Consultations with Civil Society, Women’s Organizations and the International Development Cooperation ................................................................................................................................................. 75  Annex 4: Development Assistance in Bolivia ............................................................................................ 78  Annex 5: Country at a Glance ..................................................................................................................... 80  Annex 6: Social Indicators ....................................................................................................................... 83  Annex 7: Key Economic Indicators ............................................................................................................ 84  Annex 8: Selected Indicators of Bank Portfolio Performance and Management ....................................... 86  Annex 9: Operations Portfolio (IDA) ......................................................................................................... 87  Annex 10: Statement of IFC’s Held and Disbursed Portfolio..................................................................... 88  EXECUTIVE SUMMARY Bolivia has undergone a period of profound change since the Government of President Morales came to power in January 2006. The Morales administration has implemented an array of economic and social policies to empower indigenous peoples and reduce poverty and inequality. Macroeconomic results have been positive, with regular fiscal and current account balances for the first time in decades, declining public debt and steady 4.5 percent annual growth rates over the past seven years. A new Constitution was enacted in February 2009 and President Morales was sworn in for a second term in January 2010. The country faces numerous development challenges. Bolivia has one of the lowest GDP per capita levels in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region. Moderate poverty has declined in recent years, but still afflicts nearly 60 percent of the population. Poverty is even higher in rural areas, though the rate of improvement has been faster. Income inequality has also decreased, but with a Gini index of 0.56 in 2007, Bolivia remains one of the most unequal countries in LAC. Recent economic growth is vulnerable to shifts in international commodity prices and total investment is low. Social indicators have improved since the 1990s but are still well below levels in neighboring countries. And while much abated since the Government’s re- election, social and political tensions could return, especially if economic development slows. The World Bank Group (WBG) and the Government have agreed on this four-year Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) as a viable medium-term program for addressing upcoming development challenges. The conditions for the implementation of a CPS are in place—a new constitutional framework, consolidated policy environment, sound macroeconomic situation, good dialogue between the WBG and authorities and improved implementation capacities—and the Government has requested Bank support through a medium-term strategy. In May 2006 the Government launched its National Development Plan (NDP), which has been updated for President Morales’ second administration. The NDP seeks to increase state participation in strategic sectors, channel resources to labor-intensive sectors and develop specific geographic areas; introduce new social programs while scaling up existing ones; ensure greater country ownership of Bolivia’s development process and self-sufficiency in food and energy production; and undertake a profound social and political reform through the new Constitution. The updated Government Program for 2010-2015 has a strong focus on agricultural transformation to reduce rural poverty and ensure food security, and improving infrastructure to enhance development. In light of Bolivia’s greater institutional and economic stability and in response to Government requests, the WBG has developed this CPS around the NDP. After implementing two consecutive Interim Strategy Notes (ISN), the situation in Bolivia now allows for the preparation and implementation of a four-year strategy. This CPS takes into account lessons learned from previous strategies and benefitted from a comprehensive consultation process that informed the strategy’s selective approach. The CPS is designed around the principles of: (i) alignment with Government priorities; (ii) selectivity and (iii) coordination with development partners. A results matrix will track program implementation and its impact on country development goals. i The CPS proposes a program of lending operations and knowledge activities in four prioritized results areas: (i) sustainable productive development; (ii) climate change and disaster risk management; (iii) human development and access to basic services; and (iv) public sector effectiveness. These results areas respond to Government requests and the priorities outlined in the NDP, and make the most of the WBG’s comparative advantage. The Bank will also work to improve the execution of existing trust funds while searching for new ones to achieve results in these areas. Support to rural production and infrastructure will be an important focus of the CPS. Several Bank operations will be geared towards helping rural producers sustainably improve production and incomes. Infrastructure needs will also be addressed to benefit production and national economic integration. The International Finance Corporation (IFC) will focus on export- oriented clients and fostering greater private sector activity, especially among job-creating small and medium enterprises (SMEs). The CPS envisions further support to restore access to basic infrastructure damaged by natural disasters, as well as assistance to help the country adapt to climate change and integrate climate resilience into public policies. Improving access to and the quality of social and basic services will play a major role in meeting objectives, as will actions to strengthen the public sector. The Bank portfolio will help improve the coverage and quality of health and education services, including maternal and infant health, and employment programs for low-income youth. Expanding access to electricity, water and sanitation services will also be a priority. The Bank will mainstream public sector strengthening actions into all activities and seek to support the decentralization process. Further assistance will help improve the availability and quality of data for decision-making. The WBG’s portfolio will incorporate gender and governance and anti-corruption as cross- cutting themes. All results areas have a gender focus, and most projects undertake participative mechanisms to include the voices of women in project design and implementation. The WBG is working closely with the authorities to advance the governance and anti-corruption agenda through operations and technical assistance. All operations will incorporate transparency mechanisms, capacity building measures and consultation processes to strengthen governance. This four-year CPS period may involve a transition from the International Development Association (IDA) to the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD). The Government submitted a formal request to move to IBRD lending. This request will be assessed at the CPS midpoint and IBRD lending would potentially be phased in after this point. Up to the CPS midpoint review, Bolivia would only access IDA financing. Political, economic and institutional issues pose risks to this CPS, but the WBG and authorities are working to mitigate them. To mitigate political risks the WBG is targeting activities with broad political support. Institutional risks are addressed by a deep program of technical assistance in key areas as well as strengthening inclusive civil society oversight and accountability mechanisms for WBG activities. Economic risks are foremost mitigated by the Government’s ongoing sound macroeconomic management and by close monitoring and technical assistance in areas such as debt management. ii I. INTRODUCTION 1. In the nearly six years since Mr. Evo Morales was elected as Bolivia’s first indigenous president, the country has experienced significant socio-political and economic change. Driven by high commodity prices and prudent fiscal and monetary policies, Bolivia’s economy has had an annual average growth of 4.5 percent for the past seven years, increasing per capita income by 18 percent. Current account surpluses have prevailed since 2003, and the fiscal balance turned positive in 2006 for the first time in decades. Thanks to this positive macroeconomic performance and debt relief, gross public debt dropped from 96 percent of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2003 to 40 percent in 2010 while international reserves increased from less than $1 billion to nearly $10 billion over the same time span. Deposits have tripled and credits doubled in the last seven years while banks have strengthened their solvency and liquidity. The national poverty rate in Bolivia declined slightly, from 63 percent in 2005 to 59 percent in 2008, but extreme rural poverty dropped 10 percentage points over the same time period and income inequality has trended downward. 2. Despite progress, Bolivia faces major development challenges. It has one of the lowest GDP per capita levels in the Latin America and Caribbean (LAC) region, moderate poverty afflicts more than half of the population and income inequality is still very high. Recent economic growth is vulnerable to shifts in international commodity prices and total investment is low, limiting economic expansion. Productive enterprises in the rural sector—where one-third of the population lives—remain hampered by inadequate infrastructure. Informality is high, which translates into lower productivity and tax revenue. Public sector governance is weak, limiting policy effectiveness and outcomes. Gender inequalities and social indicators, while much improved since the 1990s, are still well below the levels of neighboring countries. And while much abated since the Government’s re-election in December 2009, social and political tensions could return to the fore, especially if economic development slows. 3. This four-year World Bank Group (WBG) Country Partnership Strategy (CPS), agreed upon with the Government, proposes a viable medium-term program for addressing some of Bolivia’s challenges. During the consolidation of the reform process initiated by the election of the Government of President Morales, the WBG has operated through two consecutive Interim Strategy Notes (ISNs), following the recommendation from the 2005 Country Assistance Evaluation to use shorter-term strategies in the face of high uncertainty. Now that the conditions for the implementation of a CPS are in place—a new constitutional framework, consolidated policy environment, sound macroeconomic situation, good dialogue between the WBG and authorities and improved implementation capacity—and the Government has requested Bank support through a medium-term strategy. II. COUNTRY CONTEXT AND DEVELOPMENT AGENDA A. Social and Political Context 4. After years of political unrest, Evo Morales’ election in 2005 as the first president of indigenous origin in Bolivia brought the country a period of institutional stability. In December 2009 the Government called for early elections in which the ruling Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS) obtained 64 percent of the vote, up from 54 percent attained in the 2005 1 elections. The Morales’ Government came into power for a second five-year term in January 2010. The proposed CPS is intended to cover the rest of the Morales second administration until 2015. 5. A new Constitution was enacted in February 2009 and the legal framework for its implementation is being developed. The Constitution establishes principles such as access to public services as a fundamental right, an autonomous regime inclusive of indigenous jurisdictions, increased state participation in the exploitation of natural resources and the provision of basic public services. The National Assembly, in which the ruling Movimiento al Socialismo (MAS) party has a two-thirds majority, has passed some of the laws required to implement the new Constitution, including the reform of the electoral and judicial regimes and a provisional autonomy framework. The pending legislative agenda includes other important initiatives in areas such as labor, foreign investment, public enterprises, social oversight and participation, land and forestry. 6. Social demands and demonstrations have not ceased since the Government of Morales came into power for a second term, but are now focused on specific claims for improvement or changes in public policies, as is common in many LAC countries. Previously, opposition to the administration came from more structured regional and political sectors, mainly in the lowlands, but now protests come from organizations traditionally more supportive of the Morales administration, such as indigenous people’s organizations, labor unions and others. For example, following the Government’s December 2010 announcement to eliminate fuel subsidies and increase fuel costs by an average of 83 percent, Bolivia experienced nationwide street protests. Five days later the Morales administration reversed this decision, arguing that “the Government had listened to the people�. This episode demonstrates that the Government has realized that it needs to turn more to negotiation to create consensus among affected groups to implement public policies. 7. The Morales administration continues to argue that indigenous rights and development opportunities for the rural poor are fundamental elements of the public agenda. About two-thirds of the population identifies itself as indigenous. The indigenous population in rural areas has traditionally suffered from high levels of poverty, limited economic, social and political rights, marginalization and exclusion from public services. The new Constitution recognizes all 36 indigenous languages as official, alongside with Spanish. Bolivia is signatory to both the 1991 International Labor Organization (ILO) Convention, which recognizes the territories, languages, communities and cultures of indigenous peoples, and the 2007 United Nations (UN) Declaration on the Rights of Indigenous Peoples. B. Poverty and Inequality Profile 8. Bolivia has recorded declines in poverty and inequality during the past decade, but levels remain among the highest in the LAC region. According to official figures, moderate poverty declined from 66 percent in 2000 to 59 percent in 2008, while extreme poverty fell from 45 percent to 33 percent (Table 1). This decline is more noticeable in rural compared to urban areas. A significant proportion of the poor are indigenous, though the gap has reduced significantly in recent years. These figures, as well as more recent ones which report even further declines in poverty rates, are subject to discussion due to lack of data comparability and other 2 methodological problems. Sustained economic growth and the introduction of some innovative social programs give credence to the continuing decline of poverty in recent years, but statistics need to be improved before valid inter-temporal comparisons are made. The Bank is working with the Government to improve the reliability and comparability of poverty statistics. Table 1: Poverty Rates Using Poverty Line Method, 1996 to 2008 (% of Total Population) 1996 1997 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003-4 2005 2006 2007 (p) 2008 (e) BOLIVIA Moderate poverty 64.8 63.6 63.5 66.4 63.1 63.3 63.1 60.6 59.9 60.1 59.3 Extreme poverty 41.2 38.1 40.7 45.2 38.8 39.5 34.5 38.2 37.7 37.7 32.7 Urban Areas Moderate poverty 51.9 54.5 51.4 54.5 54.3 53.9 54.4 51.1 50.3 50.9 51.2 Extreme poverty 23.7 24.9 23.5 27.9 26.2 25.7 22.9 24.3 23.4 23.7 22.0 Rural Areas Moderate poverty 84.4 78.0 84.0 87.0 77.7 78.8 77.7 77.6 76.5 77.3 74.3 Extreme poverty 67.8 59.0 69.9 75.0 59.7 62.3 53.7 62.9 62.2 63.9 53.3 Source: UDAPE, Ministry of Development Planning, Dossier de Estadísticas Sociales y Económicas, No. 20, December 2010. Note: (p) preliminary; (e) estimated. 9. Despite improvements, high levels of income inequality still persist in Bolivia. Although the Gini index decreased from 0.62 in 2000 to 0.56 in 2007 (Table 2), this is still one of the highest in the LAC region. Inequality is greater in rural areas, where the Gini stood at 0.64 compared to 0.51 in urban areas. A 2007 World Bank study on Poverty, Inequality and Vulnerability showed that non-monetary indicators reinforce inequality. The dramatic disparities in indicators between geographic regions, income groups and ethnic origin reflect the complex social structure and history of the country. Table 2: Income Inequality, 1996 to 20071 (Gini Coefficient) 1996 1997 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003-4 2005 2006 2007 (p) Bolivia 0.6 0.6 0.58 0.62 0.59 0.60 n.d. 0.60 0.59 0.56 Urban Areas 0.51 0.52 0.49 0.53 0.53 0.54 n.d. 0.54 0.53 0.51 Rural Areas 0.61 0.63 0.64 0.69 0.64 0.63 n.d. 0.66 0.64 0.64 Source: UDAPE, Ministry of Development Planning, Dossier de Estadísticas Sociales y Económicas, No. 20, December 2010. Note: (p) preliminary; (e) estimated. 10. The Human Opportunity Index (HOI), a measure of equality of opportunities in access to basic services for children and youth, shows improvements in most indicators for 1998-2008. A forthcoming World Bank HOI study for Bolivia shows that equitable access to vaccination, nutrition, assisted birth delivery and primary and secondary enrollment have improved significantly. However, equitable access to basic sanitation and adequate housing infrastructure still show very low levels and modest advances. National-level HOI averages mask important regional disparities. While departments like La Paz and Santa Cruz show leading numbers in most indicators, others like Potosí, Chuquisaca, Beni and Pando tend to lag significantly behind. 11. Bolivia has made notable progress toward achieving some Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) but slow improvements in others, notably several health indicators. The 1 No data is available for the period after 2007. Data from more recent household surveys should help update these figures. 3 Sixth MDG Progress Report produced by the Government’s Economic and Social Policy Analysis Unit (Unidad de Análisis de Políticas Sociales y Económicas—UDAPE) concluded that important advances occurred in some areas such as extreme poverty reduction, malnutrition and gender equality, but that further efforts are needed if Bolivia is to reach the MDGs by 2015 (Table 3). Particular areas of concern include adolescent fertility, maternal and child mortality ratios, prevalence of Chagas disease, AIDS and tuberculosis, primary school completion rates and access to improved sanitation facilities. Table 3: Status of Selected MDG Indicators Most recent Baseline 2015 Goal year Goal 1: Eradicate extreme poverty and hunger Extreme poverty rate (% of population) 41.2 (1996) 26.1 a (p) 24.1 GDP growth per person employed (%) 1.9 (1990) 0.8 a (p) -- Malnutrition prevalence, weight for age (% of children under 5) 13.2 (1989) 6.1 b 6.6 Goal 2: Achieve universal primary education Primary completion rate (% of relevant age group) 74.0 (2001) 77.3 b 100 Literacy rate (% of population ages 15-24) 97.4 (2001) 99.4 a (p) 100 Goal 3: Promote gender equality and empower women Gender gap in primary completion rate 2.8 (2001) -1.8 b (p) 0 Ratio of literate female to male (population ages 15-24) 98.0 (1997) 99.6 a (p) 100 Proportion of seats held by women in national parliaments (%) -- 23 a -- Goal 4: Reduce child mortality Mortality rate, under 5 (per 1,000 live births) 129.4 (1989) 63.0 b 43.1 Goal 5: Improve maternal health Maternal mortality ratio (per 100,000 live births) 416 (1989) 229 c 104 Births attended by skilled health staff (% of total) 33 (1996) 67 a 70 Adolescent fertility rate (births per 1,000 women ages 15-19) 94.3 (1989) 88.8 b -- Goal 6: Combat HIV/AIDS, malaria, and other diseases Prevalence of AIDS (per million of inhabitants)/* 2.5 (1996) 82.6 a 13.0 Malaria Annual Parasitosis Index (per 1,000 inhabitants) 7.5 (1990) 2.8 a 2.0 Municipalities with Chagas infestation rate > 3% (percentage) 56.0 (2003) 19.6 a 0 TB cases cured (percentage of total notified cases) 71.2 (2000) 81.5 b 95 Goal 7: Ensure environmental sustainability Forest area (% of land surface) -- 53.4 a -- Protected areas (millions of hectares) 16.8 (2001) 17.1 b 17.2 Improved water source (% of population with access) 57.5 (1992) 74.6 b 78.5 Improved sanitation facilities (% of population with access) 28.0 (1992) 48.4 b 64.0 Goal 8: Develop a global partnership for development Debt service as a percentage of fiscal revenues (%) -- 47.7 a -- Telephone line and mobile cell phone users (% of the population) -- 89 b -- Internet access, inside or outside home (% of households) -- 31.2 b Source: Based on UDAPE, 2010. Sixth Progress Report on the MDGs in Bolivia. Note: (p) preliminary, a for 2009, b for 2008 and c for 2003. *The cause of the sharp increase in AIDS cases per million inhabitants is uncertain, but Bank staff believes it likely is the result of improved measurement rather than a sudden spread of the epidemic. C. Recent Economic Developments 12. Bolivia’s economy has performed comparatively well during the past decade. A favorable external environment and prudent macroeconomic policies have generated fiscal and current account surpluses, a relatively robust financial system and increased international 4 reserves. This allowed Bolivia to confront the 2008-09 global crisis with good macroeconomic fundamentals, which in combination with Bolivia’s relative isolation from international financial markets helped the country get through the crisis in good shape. Bolivia had the strongest performance in LAC in 2009, with GDP growing at 3.4 percent that year. 13. Growth has been stimulated through large investments in the gas and mining sectors in the late 1990s and early 2000s, combined with an improvement in the terms of trade. GDP growth has averaged 4.5 percent annually over the last seven years, which has translated into an 18.3 percent rise in per capita income. Mining output has almost doubled since 2006, due mostly to the foreign-financed San Cristóbal project, which began operations in 2007. Households have benefited from higher export earnings, public investment and social transfers. Furthermore, remittances have increased from US$170 million in 2003 to around US$1 billion in the last three years, representing around 5 percent of GDP. Strong exports and dynamic domestic demand have spurred other sectors including construction, manufacturing, finance, transport and communications. 14. The country has become more resilient, posting steady fiscal and current account surpluses and declining public debt levels. Current account surpluses have prevailed since 2003, peaking at around 12 percent of GDP in 2006-2008 due to booming commodity prices and growing mining export volumes (Table 4). The 2008 international crisis temporarily reduced commodity prices and Brazilian gas demand, but the current account surplus nevertheless remained at near 5 percent of GDP in 2009 and 2010. International reserves increased from US$976 million in 2003 to US$9.7 billion in 2010, equivalent to almost 20 months of imports. The public sector maintained fiscal surpluses for five consecutive years due to higher gas revenues and tax collections; public expenditure also increased but difficulties in further boosting public investment helped maintain the surplus. These fiscal surpluses together with the Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative (MDRI) diminished gross public debt from 96 percent of GDP in 2003 to 40 percent in 2010. As a result, the 2011 International Monetary Fund (IMF) Article IV Consultation for Bolivia concluded that the risk of debt distress is very low, with public and external debt indicators below risky levels even in the worse stress test scenario. Over the past few years, Fitch has upgraded Bolivia’s risk rating from B- with a negative outlook in 2005 to B+ with a stable outlook in 2010, and S&P has upgraded Bolivia’s foreign currency long-term debt rating from B- with a stable outlook in 2007 to B+ with a positive outlook in 2011. 15. While inflation is under control, higher international food prices and natural disasters have generated sporadic surges. Bolivia faced two inflation upsurges interrupted by the global slowdowns—12-month inflation rose from 4.9 percent in December 2005 to 17.3 percent in June 2008 and from 0.3 percent in December 2009 to 11 percent in July 2011. Supply issues were the main driver of the upsurges, but the Central Bank mopped up liquidity and appreciated the exchange rate to control expectations and thus avoid second-round effects. The Government has also implemented heterodox policies to control prices, including sales by public agencies, export restrictions and price controls, with mixed results. 16. The financial system is strong and expanding coverage. Banks are adequately capitalized, return on equity and return on assets average 17 and 1.3 percent, liquidity is around 35 percent and provisions reach 177 percent of non-performing loans (NPLs). Due to appreciation and measures to curb dollarization, dollar-denominated savings and credits dropped 5 to 40 and 33 percent respectively. NPLs decreased from 17 percent in 2005 to 1.9 percent in August 2011, reflecting efforts to clean up their portfolios, sound credit evaluation standards and the good economic context. Solid indicators are also reported for the large supervised non-bank financial institutions, which currently account for 27 percent of the sector’s assets. Since 2007, the financial system has expanded significantly, with deposits reaching 48 percent of GDP. Credit surged 30 percent in the last year with a strong increase in smaller credits. Hitherto unsupervised microfinance institutions are being brought under the supervision of the Financial System Supervision Authority (Autoridad de Supervisión del Sistema Financiero—ASFI), strengthening the overall financial system. 17. Bolivia’s macroeconomic stance has improved, but significant challenges remain. Industries such as mining, hydrocarbon and electricity production are operating at almost full capacity, thus limiting new sources of growth unless significant investments take place. Despite public investment levels around 10 percent of GDP, important infrastructure gaps and weak institutional capacity hurts Bolivia’s development prospects. Challenges in health and education limit the formation of human capital. Moreover, the country is highly dependent on commodity exports, which represented about 82 percent of total exports and 32 percent of total revenues in 2010. A significant drop in commodity prices has current account and fiscal implications as well as a deteriorating effect on growth. 18. Bolivia’s private sector continues to face significant challenges that limit its development. Challenges range from the country’s geographical isolation and heavy operating costs, to burdensome red tape. Bolivia’s unequal income distribution and widespread poverty restrict its domestic market. The Government has created and strengthened public enterprises in several sectors including food, mining, manufacturing and banking. Nationalization of some firms in the hydrocarbons, smelting, electricity, telecommunications, water and cement sectors poses additional challenges, which might be compounded by ongoing reforms of the regulatory framework. Both the World Bank Group’s Doing Business Report and the World Economic Forum’s Global Competitiveness Report recognize the difficulty of business entry, business operations and the investment climate. Six out of every ten urban workers is employed in the informal sector (about 75 percent of women and 60 percent of men)—one of the highest informality levels in the world—constraining the development opportunities of micro and small enterprises and overall economic growth. Foreign direct investment (FDI) and private sector investment in Bolivia as percentages of GDP are both lower than the average for IDA countries globally and for nearly all other IDA countries in LAC. Table 4: Key Macroeconomic Indicators, 2005 to 2011 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011e Real GDP growth (%) 4.4 4.8 4.6 6.1 3.4 4.2 5.0 CPI inflation (%) 4.9 4.9 11.7 11.8 0.3 7.2 7.0 Exchange rate depreciation (e.o.p, %) 0.2 -0.6 -4.5 -7.8 0.0 -0.4 -1.6 Overall public sector balance (% of GDP) -2.3 4.5 1.7 3.2 0.1 1.7 3.7 External current account balance (% of GDP) 6.5 11.5 12.1 12.0 4.7 4.6 6.8 Net international reserves (US$ billions) 1.7 3.2 5.3 7.7 8.6 9.7 12.4 Source: INE, BCB, Ministry of Economy and Public Finances and staff estimates. Note: (e) estimate. 6 D. Economic Outlook 19. External conditions improved during the first half of 2011 and gas export prices are likely to drive continued strong macroeconomic results for the year. Higher commodity prices and recovering gas export volumes to Brazil and Argentina favor Bolivian exports. The current account surplus is expected to rise from 4.6 percent of GDP in 2010 to 6.8 percent in 2011, increasing international reserves to US$12.4 billion by the end of the year. The fiscal surplus is expected to increase from 1.7 percent of GDP in 2010 to 3.7 percent in 2011 as hydrocarbon revenues increase and the Government continues to encounter capacity difficulties in increasing public investment. Growth should increase to 5 percent in 2011, boosted by internal demand and gas export volumes and prices. Inflation is expected to fall to 7 percent this year as food prices decrease and contractive monetary and exchange rate policies reduce demand pressures. 20. Growth faces additional challenges going forward. Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos (YPFB)—the state oil and gas company—has not been able to boost investment in the sector. As a result, Bolivia’s gas production capacity has stagnated, delaying the expansion of gas exports to Argentina and other markets. Neighbors are reducing their energy dependence on Bolivia by developing their own reserves and building liquefied natural gas (LNG) plants. Due to a methodological change in their calculation, Bolivia’s proven gas reserves fell to around 10 trillion cubic feet (TCF), down from the 27 TCF proven reserves measured in 2005. Mining growth prospects are modest as San Cristóbal has already reached its maximum capacity and further investments are delayed. Development of the Mutún iron ore reserve and the large lithium reserves in Uyuni have been slower than planned due to the lack of energy supply, insufficient transport infrastructure and lack of investment. Some labor-intensive sectors, in particular manufacturing, could be constrained by the lack of private investment linked to the overall business climate environment and uncertainties generated by ongoing legal reforms and restrictions on energy supplies. 21. As a result of these challenges and likely external conditions, growth is expected to converge to 3.8 percent in the medium term. Private investment is expected to remain low at around 7 percent of GDP, while commodity prices are expected to decrease, although modestly, in the upcoming years. The current account surplus should decline to 1.4 percent of GDP in 2015 if mining and gas exports stagnate, remittances decline and imports are boosted by a robust domestic demand and real appreciation. International reserves are expected to rise from US$13 billion in 2011 to US$18 billion in 2015. On the fiscal front, the surplus should gradually decrease from 3.7 percent of GDP in 2011 to near balance or a slight deficit in 2013-15, assuming hydrocarbon revenues stagnate and expenditures continue growing. The central government is also expected to run deficits and accumulate debt, but as a share of GDP gross public debt is projected to decrease from 40 percent in 2010 to 37 percent in 2014 as nominal GDP grows. This trend would be reversed by the end of the projection period due to emerging fiscal deficit. 22. Several downside risks exist to economic growth. A reversal in the international recovery may negatively affect Bolivia’s prospects, eroding external and fiscal balances through falling commodity prices, reduced gas volume exports to Brazil and Argentina and lower remittances from Spain, the US and Argentina. Commodity exports represented about 82 percent 7 of total exports and 32 percent of total revenues in 2010, and a significant drop in commodity prices has both current account and fiscal implications. If the Government succeeds in securing partners to carry out announced investment projects, particularly in the mining and hydrocarbon sectors, medium term growth prospects may improve significantly. On the other hand, high international reserves may increase the pressure to spend or to consolidate a de facto fixed exchange rate affecting the capacity to react to external shocks. The fiscal situation could also be eroded by decentralization pressures and costs related to the nationalization process. 23. Longer term growth obstacles need to be addressed in infrastructure, the financial sector and the business environment. Important infrastructure gaps and weak institutional capacity hurt Bolivia’s development prospects. With regard to the financial sector, the recent surge in credit growth as well as the strong dependence on real estate as collateral will have to be carefully monitored. Furthermore, the Government must balance measures to foster financial inclusion, including the provision of loans through public entities and changes to the regulatory framework, with the risk of over-indebtedness and a possible deterioration in the repayment culture. The overall business environment is generally not conducive to large private sector participation. As a result private investment and productivity are low, particularly in agriculture, and informality rampant. Growth prospects are likely to thus remain limited until these important challenges are addressed. Table 5: Key Macroeconomic Projections, 2011 to 2015 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 Real GDP growth (%) 5.0 4.1 3.8 3.8 3.8 CPI inflation (%) 7.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 4.0 Exchange rate depreciation (e.o.p, %) -1.6 -0.7 -0.5 0.0 3.6 Overall public sector balance (% of GDP) 3.7 1.5 0.2 -0.6 -1.3 External current account balance (% of GDP) 6.8 5.7 4.3 2.9 1.4 Net international reserves (US$ billions) 12.4 14.3 15.9 16.3 17.6 Source: World Bank staff estimates. E. The National Development Plan and Government Priorities 24. The ongoing National Development Plan (NDP) was designed during President Morales’ first administration. In May 2006, the Government launched the NDP, built around four pillars. Bolivia Productiva (Productive Bolivia) seeks to increase state participation in strategic sectors—primarily natural resources and utilities—channel resources to labor-intensive sectors and focus on developing specific geographic areas through financial and technical support. Bolivia Digna (Dignified Bolivia) introduces new social programs and scales up existing ones, such as redistributive transfers and safety nets, to fight poverty and exclusion. Bolivia Soberana (Sovereign Bolivia) seeks greater country ownership of Bolivia’s development process while eliminating external influences on policies, a strengthened status in international forums through the maintenance of balanced relations with other countries and self-sufficiency in food and energy production. Bolivia Democrática y Participativa (Democratic and Participatory Bolivia) proposes a profound social and political reform through a new Constitution. 25. During its second administration, the Government is placing renewed emphasis on strategic areas of the NDP and has identified additional priorities. The proposed Government Program for 2010-2015 was presented in December 2009 and is based on and 8 updates the NDP. Its goals are to boost economic growth through public investment, promote productive development and improve infrastructure. In the social sectors, the Government proposes to work towards reducing inequality, eradicating exclusion and ensuring the full exercise of fundamental rights by increasing the coverage of public social services such as health, education and housing. Finally, the program aims to ensure participation and social oversight of public policies, and to gradually implement the new autonomy framework through programmatic agreements between different levels of government. 26. The NDP and sector strategies share the principles of the MDGs. The Bolivia Productiva pillar is aligned with the goal of reducing poverty and extreme poverty by identifying and implementing public policies that create opportunities for income generation. The Bolivia Digna pillar defines social programs directed at improving human development and increasing access to basic social services such as water and basic sanitation, education and health. Activities under the Bolivia Digna pillar—several of which are supported by activities envisioned in this CPS—will be especially important in addressing the health and education MDGs showing slow progress toward the 2015 goals. III. WORLD BANK GROUP PARTNERSHIP A. Lessons Learned and Stakeholder Feedback Past World Bank Experience 27. Since 2004, the WBG has adopted three consecutive short-term strategies in a context of high uncertainty. Given a volatile economic and social context, the WBG decided to implement consecutive short timeframe strategies to provide flexibility to respond to the country’s changing circumstances and needs. The last Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) for Bolivia covered the period FY04-05, and was followed by two ISNs covering FY07-09 and FY10-11. A Completion Report that reviewed the Bank’s assistance to Bolivia for the fiscal period 2004-2011 provides relevant lessons for the design and implementation of the new strategy (Annex 2). Lessons Learned 28. Fragmentation of interventions into small operations is likely to increase transaction costs for the Government and the Bank and limit their impact. Eight investment projects for an average of US$18 million were approved under the first ISN in many different areas. Although the lending program had been agreed upon with the Government, the simultaneous preparation of these many programs have proved difficult to handle. Several months were needed after project approval to reach readiness for implementation and to enter into effectiveness, sometimes due to a lack of agreements in operational issues and approaches. The second ISN was therefore more selective and only two key investment operations for a total of US$160 million were approved. The Bank worked closely with Government counterparts to foster ownership for the projects and their implementation. Selectivity and larger projects have the potential to yield greater development impacts as well as to contain transaction costs both for the Bank and the Government. 9 29. Anticipation and close attention to implementation challenges coupled with less complex institutional arrangements can reduce delays in project execution. To avoid cumbersome adjustments and amendment processes, institutional and implementation arrangements have to be kept simple and flexible. Implementation needs to be accompanied by close supervision and systematic capacity building activities. An unbiased, balanced and realistic risk assessment is needed during the design and execution of the strategy as well as in the implementation of individual operations to improve prospects for development effectiveness. This is being addressed through tools such as the Operational Risk Assessment Framework (ORAF). Consultations 30. The preparation of this CPS benefitted from consultations with a large and representative sample of civil society, including women’s organizations. A total of about 300 people participated in nine consultation workshops, which provided spaces to discuss themes linked to the strategic areas of the new CPS. Participants included representatives from women’s indigenous and peasant organizations, the private sector, non-governmental organizations (NGOs), productive organizations, municipal councils, departmental assemblies, youth and women’s groups and main donors active in Bolivia. Annex 3 describes the CPS consultation process and results in more detail. 31. The consultation process informed and validated the selective approach taken in the preparation of the CPS. The process validated WBG efforts to strengthen interventions in rural development and to continue work in urban areas with a strong gender focus. Feedback from urban and rural women’s groups and among the rural poor strongly supported the overall direction of planned CPS activities, and provided valuable perspectives that will inform project interventions and Analytical and Advisory Activities (AAA). Based on the feedback received from development partners, it was decided to intensify activities to assist the Government improve implementation and fiduciary capacity at both the national and sub-national levels. This is particularly important in view of the need to advance in the adoption of national systems. B. Proposed World Bank Group Partnership Strategy Principles of World Bank Group Engagement 32. The proposed four-year CPS is designed around three principles: (i) alignment with Government priorities; (ii) selectivity; and (iii) coordination with development partners. These principles take into account lessons learned from previous strategies and feedback received during consultations with the Government, civil society, private sector, and other development partners, and is critical to achieving country ownership and effective development results.  Alignment with Government strategic priorities: The CPS is consistent with the goals of the National Development Plan and is aligned with the pillars Bolivia Productiva, Bolivia Democratica y Participativa and Bolivia Digna and the activities envisaged within the Government Plan 2010-2015. Operations considered under the CPS target the areas in which the Government has full ownership and sufficient implementation capacity, as discussed with counterparts during CPS design. 10  Selectivity: The Government and the WBG have identified areas in which the limited IDA and IFC resources available and MIGA operations for Bolivia can achieve clear results. The WBG has strengthened its engagement with Bolivia in recent years, and implementing a CPS will permit the WBG to build on this partnership by moving to a more medium-term outlook in areas of comparative advantage.  Coordination with development partners: The WBG will continue to actively engage in donor coordination mechanisms and undertake joint operation work when appropriate notably with bilateral partners such as Brazil, Denmark, Japan, Netherlands, Switzerland and the UK and multilaterals such as the Inter-American Development Bank (IADB) and the UN system. Consultation with other donors active in Bolivia informed proposed portfolio design to avoid duplication of efforts and promote synergies with other ongoing and future development projects. 33. Building on these principles, the strategy will support a program of new lending operations and knowledge activities in prioritized areas. The WBG’s program will concentrate in four results areas: (i) sustainable productive development, (ii) climate change and disaster risk management, (iii) human development and access to basic services, and (iv) public sector effectiveness. Two cross cutting themes that will be mainstreamed in all Bank activities under each of these results areas are: (i) gender and (ii) governance and anti-corruption. Results areas and themes support Government initiatives under the NDP’s pillars of Bolivia Productiva, Bolivia Digna and Bolivia Democrática y Participativa, and complement the priorities outlined in the updated 2010-2015 Government Plan. The program will be initially financed through IDA resources, with a possible transition to financing from IBRD to be considered at the midpoint of the strategy. 34. This four-year CPS period may Figure 1: Bolivia GNI Per Capita and involve a transition from IDA to IBRD. Operational Cutoff for IDA Eligibility Bolivia has been a blend country since FY01. 2000 In 2006 its GNI per capita started to move decisively above the IDA operational cut-off 1500 Curent US dollar (Figure 1). The Government submitted a formal request to move to IBRD lending; this 1000 request will be formally assessed at the CPS midpoint. Until then, an indicative program 500 for FY12-14 of SDRs 159.9 million 1990 1995 2000 2005 2010 (equivalent of US$ 257.2 million) under IDA Operational cutoff for IDA eligibility 16 has been agreed upon with the Bolivia GNI per capita, Atlas method Government. Source: World Bank 35. Flexibility and simplified operation modalities are built into the CPS to reduce implementation obstacles and accelerate execution. The strategy provides flexibility to adjust the lending program if the situation merits, for instance to respond to shocks such as sudden commodity price shifts or natural disasters. The Government and the Bank agreed to move the pipeline towards fewer but larger operations in order to maximize the development impact while containing transaction costs for both parties, in line with recommendations from portfolio performance reviews and the 2005 Country Assistance Evaluation. In addition, greater attention 11 will be placed on implementation and institutional aspects, avoiding complex arrangements to speed up execution. 36. In tandem with the Bank’s approach, IFC will continue supporting Bolivia with a strategy that focuses on viable, high-impact private sector-led projects complemented by strategic advisory services On the investment side, IFC will maintain its focus on clients with sustainable business models that have demonstrated strong past performance and operate efficiently within regulatory frameworks mandated by Bolivia’s new Constitution. This includes projects primarily in financial markets—small and medium enterprise (SME) banking, microfinance and trade finance—agribusiness and forestry, but could also expand to other sectors should a conducive environment be in place. As part of its advisory work, IFC will continue its work to improve the investment climate by simplifying procedures at the municipal and possibly national level, and provide training to SMEs through its business advisory pillar. 37. The proposed strategy will also support the development of a flexible program of AAA and convening services tailored to the Government’s needs. An indicative set of non- lending activities has been defined for FY12, but will be kept open and flexible for the other years to ensure that the program can respond to the requirements that emerge during the implementation of the CPS. A package of capacity building and knowledge activities would be provided to prepare the country for the potential transition to IBRD financing in strategic areas such as public debt management. To complement this work, IFC advisory services could provide technical assistance and capacity building in investment climate, access to finance, and strengthening local royalty management through strategic community investment programs (Table 7). Cross Cutting Theme 1: Gender Main Challenges 38. Bolivian women face multiple challenges, in particular unequal access to productive and economic resources and high levels of poverty. Women continue to be mainly employed in the informal sector, they face difficulties accessing credit and female wages are lower than male ones for similar jobs, according to the 2008 World Bank study “Towards Gender Equity in the Economy�. In the cities of El Alto and La Paz, as much as 70 percent of young mothers live in poverty, and the majority of those who participate in the labor market are in the informal sector. Informal labor often exposes young mothers and their children to accidents, violence, abuse and abandonment. Despite gains following the 1996 Land Reform Act, cultural prejudices still limit women’s access to land and property titling. Huge data gaps exist regarding poverty, inequality and economic development among women that need to be filled in order to ensure that gender equality policies can be effective. Preliminary findings from a Bank gender study highlights the need to target information and training to rural women, considering their lower education and the fact that domestic responsibilities restrict them from participating in community capacity building. 39. Gender indicators in Bolivia are mixed relative to LAC and other lower-middle income countries. Bolivia has greater female labor force participation and political participation than the average for the region and for lower-middle income countries (Figure 2). It does better on average than lower-middle income countries in births attended by skilled health staff and in 12 the ratio of female to male secondary enrollment, but its performance is worse than the regional average. The indicators reveal that more needs to be done to raise contraceptive prevalence and lower adolescent fertility, where Bolivia lags. 40. Violence against women Figure 2: Selected Gender Indicators remains high and requires greater Births attended by attention. According to the 2008 skilled health staff % 1.0 National Demographic and Health Ratio of female to male 0.8 Survey (ENDSA), 38 percent of married secondary education 0.6 Contraceptive prevalence % enrollment 0.4 women reported having been victim of 0.2 0.0 psychological violence in the 12 months prior to the survey and 24 percent Proportion of seats held by women in national Adolescent fertility rate, births pre 1.000 women reported physical or sexual violence. parliaments, % ages 12-19 Female labor force Government Strategy participation, % of population ages 15-64   41. Bolivia has taken important Lower middle income LAC Bolivia steps to promote equal access to Source: The Little Data book on Gender (World Bank 2011) and human capital development WDI. Data are for 2009, except female to male sec. enrollment, opportunities and to give men and which is for 2008 women equal status and protection. The new Constitution and sector legislation guarantee equal rights and access to social services for men and women. Education enrollment and completion rates are almost equal for girls and boys; recent policies aim to improve health and nutrition services for pregnant women and small children. In 2008 the Government launched the National Plan for the Equality of Opportunities, including policies to favor women in six broad areas: (i) economic activity; (ii) education; (iii) health; (iv) violence; (v) institutional strengthening and(vi) participation in decision-making. Women now represent almost half of the ministerial cabinet, more than 40 percent of municipal councils and 36 percent of the Legislative Assembly. Areas of WBG Support 42. Gender will be mainstreamed into the WBG’s portfolio guided by the Regional Gender Action Plan FY12-FY14 (RGAP) and the findings of the World Development Report (WDR) 2012. The LAC RGAP outlines a strategy for the Bank to work more effectively to help client countries identify, understand and address gender issues that constrain development. In line with the RGAP and WDR 2012, the Bank will determine strategic engagements, attempt to assign resources within each new project to address gender issues, take advantage of trust funds to promote a more gender sensitive program, document best practices on gender mainstreaming and enhance gender monitoring and evaluation systems. The preparation of this CPS benefitted from consultations with women’s organizations that validated the areas identified and the gender approach taken. While a large portion of the current portfolio already focuses on gender issues, further efforts will be made to ensure that engagement not only sees women as beneficiaries, but also attempts to measure and address structural gender challenges. 13 43. The ongoing and proposed portfolio on human development and access to basic services incorporates a strong gender focus. The Expanding Access to Reduce Health Inequalities APL III Project focuses on improving the health of mothers and children through culturally-sensitive service provision, while the Investing in Children and Youth Project aims to reduce chronic malnutrition in rural children through conditional cash transfer (CCT) to pregnant women and mothers of children under two. The youth employment component provides an additional financial incentive to promote the insertion of young mothers in the labor market. Complementing this project, the Japanese Social Development Fund (JSDF) trust fund will be used to reduce childcare constraints for unemployed or precariously employed young mothers by improving 149 existing childcare centers in El Alto and La Paz. The ongoing Urban Infrastructure Project involves women throughout the preparation, implementation and decision- making stages, enabling the project to identify and address gender-based constraints and needs (Box 1). Women’s economic and domestic activities are most affected by lack of basic services such as electricity and water supply and sanitation. The proposed Water and Sanitation in Rural Areas Project and Decentralized Infrastructure for Rural Transformation II Project are expected to improve the living conditions of women. 44. In collaboration with other donor agencies, the Bank will assist in addressing the prevalence of violence against women. The Bank is a member of the Group of Partners for the Development of Bolivia (GruS) gender subgroup, which is currently focusing on violence against women. The Bank will continue participating in this group and will incorporate measures to reduce violence against women into projects and other operations where it can. For example, the Urban Infrastructure Project installed streetlights in marginal urban areas, which have reduced the number of crimes against women. Box 1: Urban Infrastructure, Component on Urban Upgrading in La Paz In supporting Bolivia’s Barrios de Verdad project, Bank financing has helped to achieve sustainable improvements in the urban infrastructure and living standards in some of the poorest neighborhoods of La Paz. Living conditions have improved particularly for women and girls, as their exposure to violence has reduced and their opportunities for equality increased:  The installation of indoor sanitation facilities and street lighting improves pedestrian mobility and women’s security.  Childcare facilities, community and recreation centers enhance women’s economic opportunities, allowing them to engage in productive activities outside the home.  Ensuring that women have land titles and assets increases their social status and provides them with access to formal banking systems. 45. Emphasis will be placed on integrating gender into the sustainable productive development and the climate change and disaster risk management areas to improve equal access to productive and economic resources. The Community Investment in Rural Areas Project has a strong gender focus, separating resources for investments identified by women. The Land for Agricultural Development Project has also been gender targeted. The Bank is making use of a Gender Action Plan (GAP) trust fund to gather gender information and generate new knowledge on gender roles in rural Bolivia to guide the inclusion of gender in both the climate change and disaster risk management and the sustainable productive development areas 14 of the CPS. Wherever feasible, IFC investment and advisory projects will also seek to actively include and benefit women, particularly in rural and peri-urban areas. 46. The Bank will assist the Government in addressing the lack of gender-specific data. Through the census and household surveys in the Strengthening Statistical Capacity and the Informational Base for Evidence-Based Planning Project (STATCAP), accurate up-to-date information will become available, allowing for sex-disaggregated data. This will serve to better target public policies to address gender inequalities and assess their impact on the well being of women.  Cross Cutting Theme 2: Governance and Anti-Corruption  Main Challenges 47. Governance and transparency Figure 3: Selected Governance Indicators for remain weak in Bolivia, despite recent Bolivia, 2005 - 2010 efforts by authorities. Public perception surveys regularly indicate Control of Corruption that the population perceives Rule of Law governance and corruption as critical Regulatory Quality issues for the country. Despite showing Government Effectiveness significant improvements in the Political Stability perception of corruption and voice and accountability, the Worldwide Voice and Accountability Governance Indicators (WGI) for 2010 0 10 20 30 40 50 also show a decline in other indicators 2010 2005 Percentiles such as rule of law and regulatory Source: Worldwide Governance Indicators, 2011. quality (Figure 3). In addition, the 2010-2011 Global Competitiveness Report ranks Bolivia’s judicial independence 129th out of 139. Government Strategy 48. Various initiatives exist to promote better governance and to fight corruption. The 2009 Constitution establishes key principles with respect to transparency, access to information and anti-corruption measures. As a result, the Ministry of Institutional Transparency and Fight against Corruption was created, a national policy on transparency and anti-corruption was approved and the Law to Fight Corruption, Illegal Enrichment and Fortune Investigation was passed. This law includes heavy penalties for corrupt contractors and civil servants, reinforces the already mandatory declaration of assets for all public officials and establishes retroactivity for corruption cases. Areas of WBG Support   49. The WBG is working closely with authorities to help move forward the ambitious governance, transparency and anti-corruption agenda. The Bank is continuing to assist Bolivia’s efforts against corruption under the Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) initiative, a cooperation begun in 2009 with the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC) (Box 2). The Government has expressed interest in reforming the national procurement system, and 15 the Bank has indicated its willingness to undertake joint technical assistance with the IADB to develop and implement a national procurement strategy. Technical assistance is being considered for the institutional framework for tackling corruption, including the Ministry of Institutional Transparency and Fight against Corruption. 50. Bolivian authorities have shown a commitment toward greater transparency and social oversight to reduce corruption and improve governance, and the WBG is supporting this agenda throughout its activities. All projects under the proposed CPS will include transparency mechanisms and institutional strengthening measures, and will assess incorporating a strategy for corruption risk mitigation. The Bank has begun using social oversight mechanisms—including in the Urban Infrastructure Project and the Participatory Rural Investment II Project—and will scale up these practices to encourage accountability and transparency. Furthermore, the Government has expressed interest in participating in the Open Data Initiative and the WBG Access to Information Policy. The WBG is also following the Government’s lead regarding greater access to information for civil society. Not only is the WBG making more project information available, but it is actively seeking new ways to disseminate information via traditional and new media and participation in public events. Box 2: Stolen Asset Recovery Initiative (StAR) StAR is a partnership between UNODC and the World Bank providing technical assistance for international asset recovery. Bolivia requested StAR assistance in 2009. With StAR support, an inter-institutional working group (GIRA) was created to coordinate the identification, investigation and prosecution of cases. Bolivia has also requested financing for projects related to witness protection legislation and in the verification of asset disclosures. The witness protection program is managed by UNODC. The asset disclosure program is followed by the Bank and has two components: (i) prioritizing asset disclosures to be verified, and (ii) launching a pilot program for verification. Both components are already in advanced stages. On the Bank side, Financial Market Integrity (FPDFI) and Transparency and Accountability (FPDTA) are the main providers of StAR assistance. Results Area 1: Sustainable Productive Development Main Challenges   51. One of Bolivia’s key development challenges continues to be generating dynamic economic activity to address the country’s high rates of poverty, especially in rural and peri-urban areas. As stated in the WDR 2008, the agricultural sector is essential to growth, poverty reduction and food security. However, agriculture yields in Bolivia are substantially lower than in its neighboring countries, partially due to inferior technology, weak institutions dealing with agricultural innovation and limited irrigation areas. Income generation for rural producers, in particular women, is often constrained by limited access to land, insufficient market integration and difficult access to consumption markets. Despite recent advances, the incidence of moderate and extreme poverty in rural areas—especially among women—continues well above the already high national average. Public investment in rural development is still insufficient when compared to the needs of the sector. 16 52. Addressing infrastructure needs and promoting economic integration is critical for Bolivia’s development. Despite progress during the last decade, huge infrastructure gaps remain, in particular in transport and productive infrastructure at the decentralized and community levels. Precarious national and rural roads limit access to markets and constrain productive development. In addition to being a landlocked country, Bolivia’s difficult topographical and geological conditions make infrastructure development expensive and challenging. Airports have limited facilities and lack basic safety and security equipment, impeding regional development and touristic activity. Poor rural communities lack basic infrastructure which, compounded by a lack of coordination among different government levels, constrains the provision of productive services such as irrigation. 53. The country’s labor-intensive SME sector requires development support, in particular access to finance. SMEs represent over 90 percent of total enterprises in Bolivia, employing around 70 percent of the labor force. However, their productivity is very low—in particular for those firms managed by women—and they face severe obstacles to development, including low access to productive credit, a heavy regulatory and tax burden and insufficient vertical and horizontal integration. These limitations reduce the growth potential of the country as a whole. Government Strategy 54. The Government has laid out a wide-ranging strategy for generating more productive opportunities in the Bolivia Productiva pillar of the NDP, with a strong emphasis on rural development and the SME sector. The plan proposes agriculture transformation to reduce rural poverty and ensure food security, improving distribution of and access to land, improving farmers’ access to markets and providing better productive equipment and infrastructure. This transformation envisions improving innovation systems to spur agricultural productivity and the sustainability of small farmers. The Government also highlights that local productive equipment and infrastructure is key for improving agricultural productivity, requiring coordination with and the participation of sub-national governorates as well as communities and producer organizations. 55. One of the key goals of Bolivia Productiva is developing transport infrastructure. The Government believes that the country requires better transport links to enhance the development of regions outside the main road axis and in specific productive sectors, including agriculture, mining and tourism. The Government plans to improve or build several roads to improve integration with neighboring countries and offer greater export opportunities to isolated regions, such as the northern region of La Paz where it is promoting an agro-industrial complex. The Government also intends to build or upgrade several airports to promote economic activities. 56. The development of productive SMEs is critical in the NDP’s efforts to diversify the economy and boost employment. The Government aims to provide comprehensive support to labor-intensive sectors, in particular SMEs. The Government implemented the second-tier Productive Development Bank to provide low interest credit to producers in prioritized sectors that have limited access to other financial sources. It is also building an institutional development framework to improve small producers’ access to local and foreign markets, provide them with 17 technical assistance and training, promote productive clusters and lift other constrains for growth. Areas of WBG Support 57. Responding to pressing development needs and Government objectives, the WBG will support upgrading sustainable agricultural productivity. The Bank will continue assistance to the agricultural sector through the ongoing Rural Alliances Project and the proposed Rural Alliances II Project, which promote access to markets. The recently approved Agricultural Innovation and Services Project is expected to contribute to the availability of improved technologies and other innovations and enhance productivity growth, food security and the income-earning potential of Bolivian families dependent on agriculture and forestry. The Land for Agricultural Development Project will continue promoting land access for small farmers, with a special focus on women. The Participatory Rural Investment II Project enhances productivity through the provision of technical assistance accompanied by local infrastructure investments. The proposed Integrated Community-Driven Territorial Development for Remote Communities in the Amazon trust fund will promote environmentally sustainable land use planning and production, working specifically with women’s organizations. 58. The IFC will finance private initiatives in sustainable agribusiness and forestry. In the agribusiness sector, IFC expects to remain focused on export-oriented clients able to add value to locally produced raw materials as well as generate or preserve jobs in rural areas in a sustainable manner. It also hopes to extend its agribusiness activities into new areas such as forestry and begin working with new partners such as cooperatives and indigenous groups on projects that are both environmentally and economically sustainable, as is the case with the Empresa Forestal SLV operation approved in FY11. In addition, IFC is backing a regional Responsive Soy program to improve crop productivity and the sales of small and medium soybean farmers, and promoting the adoption of environmental and social standards to increase the acreage of sustainably managed land. 59. The WBG will continue to promote the economic integration of the country through the provision of transportation infrastructure. The Bank will support the development of northern Bolivia through the ongoing National Roads and Airport Infrastructure Project, which will improve the year-round transit on the San Buenaventura-Ixiamas national road and the safety and reliability of the Rurrenabaque Airport. The airport renovation will allow economic expansion by facilitating access for higher-income tourism and ecotourism. IFC will be attentive to opportunities for private sector participation in infrastructure projects under a conducive regulatory framework. This includes potential opportunities in public private partnership (PPP) operations on both the investment and structuring side, should there be a demand from the public and private sectors for such support. 60. During the CPS timeframe, improving access to productive infrastructure in rural areas will be a priority. The Bank is bolstering access to sustainable basic infrastructure and services through the recently approved Community Investments in Rural Areas Project through which empowered rural communities will identify, prepare, implement and maintain small development sub-projects that respond to their priority needs; providing special attention and priority to projects benefiting women. The Participatory Rural Investment II Project is scaling 18 up institutional arrangements between national, departmental and municipal governments and civil society for the sustainable management of sub-national public investment in selected productive sectors. In addition, the Lake Titicaca Local Sustainable Development Project supports the provision of tourism infrastructure. 61. The WBG will foster greater private sector activity, especially among job-creating SMEs. The IFC stands ready to widen the range of advisory services it provides to clients in Bolivia, such as continuing deployment of its Business Edge SME training program and business licensing/permit simplification at the sub-national level. Should the opportunity arise, IFC could provide technical assistance as well as investment support for mining and other extractive industries activities. Critical areas of support could be environmental and social aspects as well as revenue management related to royalties and taxes. To promote access to credit, IFC expects to continue focusing on opportunities for SME lending and risk management with banks, and fostering further innovation in Bolivia's microfinance sector. The Bank is providing advice on access to finance for SMEs through the Financial Sector Assessment Program (FSAP) jointly prepared with the IMF, and the Financial Sector Review. The Bank remains open to include future activities geared toward SME promotion and development. 62. MIGA has recently received preliminary inquiries by investors and will proceed once a strong developmental case can be built and efforts are judged to be complementary to broader WBG engagement. At present MIGA has no outstanding contract of guarantees in Bolivia. The latest contract in Bolivia covered an equity investment by the Banco de Crédito del Peru into its subsidiary in Bolivia; it expired in FY10 at the termination of the contract. MIGA has received preliminary inquiries by investors with interests in the financial, infrastructure and oil and gas sectors in Bolivia. These inquiries are still at a very early stage and the financing arrangements are not yet in place. After years of little activity and many institutional changes in the country, there is a need to reach out and explain how MIGA can support Bolivia. Results Area 2: Climate Change and Disaster Risk Management Main Challenges 63. Improving the capacity for disaster risk management and promoting adaptation to climate change are critical challenges for Bolivia. The country is highly vulnerable to natural disasters and climate change phenomena such as floods, droughts and glacier retreat, which in turn affect water supply, water management, irrigation systems, hydropower generation and transportation infrastructure. The impacts on sustainable productive development as well as on living conditions for both rural and urban poor can be considerable, as La Niña and El Niño weather events have demonstrated. Improving sustainable land and water resource management as well as reducing pollution should complement climate change adaptation efforts to ensure long-term impact. Government Strategy 64. The Government has taken an active role in addressing the risks inherent in Bolivia’s vulnerability to natural disasters and climate change. Sector plans on risk management are in place in agriculture and water and health, among others, as well as contingency plans for events such as droughts, flooding and fires. The Government is currently 19 working on a National Program for Risk Management that will identify strategies and actions to mitigate impacts of and respond to natural disasters. Sector programs under the framework of the National Mechanism for the Adaptation to Climate Change promote actions for climate change adaptation and develop capacities to mitigate risks associated with climate change. Watershed management has been identified as a way to introduce a multi-sector climate change approach at the local and regional level. Areas of WBG Support 65. The Bank is supporting natural disaster and climate change management with a mix of project lending, trust fund interventions and AAA. During the CPS period, the ongoing Emergency Recovery and Disaster Management Project will continue restoring access to basic infrastructure damaged by El Niño and La Niña phenomena, and strengthening the Government’s ability to respond to natural disasters. The Bank will continue assisting Bolivia’s efforts to adapt to climate change in prioritized sectors through mechanisms such as the two phases of the Pilot Program for Climate Resilience (PPCR), which are expected to play a strategic role in integrating climate resilience at different levels of governance mainly in the water sector and disaster risk management (Box 3). The program will be gender-informed and emphasize the collection of gender-disaggregated data. The ongoing trust fund on Rapid Glacier Retreat in the Tropical Andes (PRAA), funded by the Global Environment Facility (GEF) and other donors, is expected to provide important inputs to the PPCR. In coordination with the Government, the Bank will continue looking for trust fund opportunities to strengthen the CPS in these areas. Financed by the GAP trust fund, a forthcoming gender study investigating the changing gender role in natural resource management and gender-differentiated vulnerabilities to climate change is being finalized. Currently the Bank is implementing the Strengthening Environmental Management and Institutions NLTA to generate knowledge in the areas of mining pollution in watersheds, solid waste management and environmental health. The Reducing Risk for Biodiversity Conservation Using Adaptive Fire Management, financed by the Development Marketplace (2009), aims to reduce forest fires in a climate change context. Box 3: The Pilot Program on Climate Resilience (PPCR) in Bolivia The PPCR pilots ways to integrate climate risk and resilience into development planning. Funded and managed by the Climate Investment Funds (CIF), it is operated jointly by the Bank and IADB and has two phases. Phase I aims to strengthen climate information systems, to mainstream climate change resilience in public sector management and to prepare a climate resilient investment program for Phase II. Phase II will address climate change through a participative and integrated approach to river basin management and will include two investment projects: (i) climate resilience of urban water supply in La Paz and El Alto; and (ii) climate resilience in the Rio Grande Watershed. Technical assistance will also further strengthen Government capacities to pursue climate-resilient development and to extend the lessons from the PPCR to other investments, mainly through the improvement of the national planning and investment systems. 20 Results Area 3: Human Development and Access to Basic Services Main Challenges 66. As one of the poorest countries in the hemisphere, Bolivia faces tremendous human development deficits, due in part to the limited access to social services and safety nets. Child and maternal mortality rates as well as adolescent fertility rates are high in comparison to other countries in the LAC region and to other lower-middle income countries and disparities in health outcomes between rural and urban areas and between different income groups remain significant. Chronic malnutrition affects one out of five children under three nationally and one out of three children in rural areas (2008). Bolivia has high net primary enrollment rates, but completion rates are low. Secondary education is characterized by low enrollment and high repetition and dropout rates, due largely to the opportunity cost of schooling and supply shortages. Generations of young have migrated to urban and peri-urban areas in the pursuit of better opportunities for income generation. However, the open unemployment rate for youth 15- 24 years old was almost 12 percent in 2007, three times that of the general population. More than 90 percent of the young are employed in the informal sector. The process of urbanization has also been accompanied by the disintegration of informal safety nets and the emergence of problems such as the abandonment of children. 67. Increasing access to basic services Figure 4: Access to Improved Water and is critical to improve the living conditions Sanitation in 2009 of the most vulnerable sectors of the population, in particular those living in Rural Urban Access to 37% rural areas. Large parts of the rural improved population in Bolivia live in remote areas sanitation 50% and do not have access to basic services such as electricity, drinking water and sanitation. Indigenous people, who represent Access to 54% the vast majority of the rural population, are improved 88% water disproportionately affected by the uneven distribution and poor quality of basic infrastructure. The rural population is 0% 20% 40% 60% 80% 100% comparatively dispersed and unconnected, Percent of the population leaving communities in considerable Source: MMAA, 2009. isolation. Although coverage of rural basic services and infrastructure has increased significantly in recent years, it remains low due in part to high costs. Only half of the population in rural areas has access to water and 37 percent to improved sanitation services (Figure 4). The rapid urbanization process of the last two decades has generated additional challenges. As cities grow, the cost of meeting basic needs increases and cities struggle to meet service demands, especially in marginal peri-urban areas where the majority of poor urban dwellers live. Government Strategy 68. The Government has demonstrated a strong commitment to improve access to social services such as health, education and youth employment programs. The Government proposes a universal health care insurance system and a comprehensive plan of medical 21 infrastructure and equipment. Special attention will be placed on promoting the use of health services by mothers and children in rural and indigenous areas. The ongoing CCT Bono Juana Azurduy promotes the use of health services by pregnant women and children under two to reduce chronic malnutrition and infant and maternal mortality. In terms of education, the Government is working towards expanding coverage and improving the quality of service. Additional reforms call for universal and free education and day care, giving prominence to early childhood development. In youth employment, the Government seeks to facilitate the insertion of young workers into the labor market. 69. The expansion of basic services, such as electricity, water and sanitation, is seen as a basic human right. In terms of energy, the Government proposes to increase the coverage of electricity in rural areas and peri-urban areas through the use of renewable energy sources. For water and sanitation, the Government’s priority is to expand rural and peri-urban coverage for consumption and irrigation. The National Plan for Basic Sanitation 2009-2015 seeks to extend the provision of sustainable services and strengthen public, cooperative and community service providers. The Government’s goal is to increase the coverage of drinking water services to 90 percent and sanitation services to 80 percent by 2015. Areas of WBG Support 70. The Bank will continue supporting improved access to and quality of health services. The ongoing Expanding Access to Reduce Health Inequalities Project aims at enhancing maternal and infant health in targeted areas so that the current gaps between regions and chronic malnutrition among children under two years of age are reduced and health insurance coverage is increased. The Investing in Children and Youth Project is reinforcing the objectives of reducing chronic malnutrition and improving women’s health during pregnancy in rural areas by supporting the implementation of the Bono Juana Azurduy CCT. 71. The Bank will also provide assistance to the education sector as well as to the youth employment generation policies and childcare initiatives. The ongoing Secondary Education Transformation Project is designed to help increase access to quality primary and secondary education in La Paz. The Investing in Children and Youth Project has a component supporting Mi Primer Empleo Digno, which is improving the employability of low-income youth via vocational in-class training session and internships in private sector firms. This program encourages the participation of young mothers by providing a greater stipend. A proposed operation under the Japanese Social Development Fund (JSDF) will pilot culturally appropriate early childcare in vulnerable urban municipalities. At the Government’s request, the Bank will continue providing technical assistance related to its social protection initiatives through the ongoing programmatic Social Safety Net NLTA and the proposed Social Protection Beneficiaries Registry NLTA. Possible technical assistance in education is also being discussed. 72. A human development project has been programmed to respond to emerging needs in this area. The Government has requested that the Bank maintain flexibility to respond to emerging needs in the human development sector. As such, the CPS is proposing a human development project that will be defined in the future. 22 73. Expanding access to basic services will continue to be a priority. In electricity, the GPOBA on Decentralized Electricity for Universal Access is financing the installation of solar power in rural areas and the proposed Decentralized Infrastructure for Rural Transformation II will expand sustainable rural electricity coverage with diversified options, primarily through renewable energy. The ongoing Lake Titicaca Local Sustainable Development Project and the Community Investments in Rural Areas Project will help expand water and basic sanitation services. The Water and Sanitation Program (WSP) will continue providing technical assistance and building capacity in key institutions to enhance the sustainability of investments in both urban and rural areas. In addition, the Government has requested the Bank’s assistance in developing a new water and sanitation project to improve coverage in rural or peri-urban areas. Building on the successful experience of the Urban Infrastructure Project, the CPS proposes the Urban Infrastructure II Project to continue urban upgrading, enhanced mobility and expanded sewerage coverage in urban areas. All of these operations are expected to have an important effect on the well-being of women, since they bear most of the burden caused by the lack of basic services. Results Area 4: Public Sector Effectiveness Main Challenges 74. A key obstacle to development and poverty reduction in Bolivia is the limited effectiveness of the public sector. The lack of a clear legal framework based on the new Constitution makes coordination among different government levels difficult, creating disagreements over responsibilities and hampering the design and implementation of public policies, especially at the sub-national level. Capacity gaps constrain the central government’s ability to manage public policies. Another key obstacle is the limited amount of timely, reliable data with which to design policies and measure results. The last Population and Housing Census was carried out in 2001 and the last Agriculture Census in 1984 and household surveys are not representative at the departmental level or in the main cities. These challenges create particular difficulties when trying to implement programs to address the complex problems of multidimensional welfare, for example gender, rural development or adaptation to climate change. Government Strategy   75. The Government’s objective for this results area is to improve public sector efficiency. In July 2010 the Legislative Assembly passed the Law of Autonomies to enhance governability by increasing participation and decision-making at the local level. The involvement of the affected communities in the design, implementation and oversight of programs and projects is a key aspect of the NDP’s Bolivia Democrática y Participativa pillar, and is being mainstreamed throughout public sector interventions. The Government intends to pass legislation to address contentious issues such as the distribution of fiscal resources and other problems created when sub-national legal regulations do not concur with the Constitution, and how indigenous statutes will be approved and implemented. Aware of the importance of reliable data for public policy, the Government has decided to undertake two censuses and strengthen collection techniques and analysis methodologies. 23 Table 6: Bank’s Proposed and Current Lending Program Amount Approval Closing Project Name Instrument (US$ FY FY mill) Proposed Program Urban Infrastructure II 2012 .. SIL 24 Decentralized Infrastructure for Rural Transformation II (Access to Renewable 2013 .. APL 25 Energy) Rural Alliances II 2013 .. SIL 40 Water and Sanitation 2013 .. SIL 70 Human Development 2013 .. SIL 20 Pilot Program for Climate Resilience Phase II 2013 .. RETF 36 Ensuring Quality in the National Statistical System of Bolivia 2012 .. BETF 0.24 Early Child Development–JSDF 2012 .. RETF 3 Integrated Community Driven Territorial Development for Remote Communities 2012 .. RETF 2.3 in the Amazon Current Program Community Investments in Rural Areas 2012 2017 SIL 40 Agricultural Innovation and Services 2012 2017 SIL 39 National Roads and Airport Infrastructure 2011 2017 SIL 109.5 Strengthening Statistical Capacity and Informational Base for Evidence-Based 2011 2015 SIL 50 Planning Investing in Children and Youth 2008 2014 SIL 17 Expanding Access to Reduce Health Inequalities APLIII 2008 2014 APL 18.5 Emergency Recovery and Disaster Management 2008 2012 ERL 16.9 Lake Titicaca Local Sustainable Development 2008 2013 SIL 20 Participatory Rural Investment II 2008 2013 SIL 20 Secondary Education Transformation 2008 2013 SIL 10 Land for Agricultural Development 2008 2012 SIL 15 Urban Infrastructure 2007 2012 SIL 30 Rural Alliances 2005 2014 SIL 58.4 Pilot Program for Climate Resilience Phase I 2011 .. RETF 1.5 Decentralized Electricity for Universal Access GPOBA 2008 2013 RETF 5.2 Adaptation to the Impact of Rapid Glacier Retreat in the Tropical Andes 2008 2013 RETF 2.3 Reducing Risk for Biodiversity Conservation using Adaptive Fire Management 2011 2013 RETF 0.2 Integrating Gender into SD operations 2012 .. BETF .. Table 7: Bank’s Proposed and Current AAA Approval Name Instrument FY Proposed Program Social Safety Nets V, VI 2012 NLTA Social Protection Beneficiaries Registry 2014 NLTA Multidimensional Poverty Phase II 2012 NLTA Public Sector Governance II, III, IV 2012 NLTA Poverty Assessment 2013 ESW Poverty Map Update 2014 NLTA Current Program Public Sector Governance I 2012 NLTA Strengthening Environmental and Natural Resource Management 2012 NLTA Report on the Observance of Standards and Codes in Auditing and Accounting 2012 ESW Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) 2010 NLTA Financial Sector Review 2011 ESW FSAP Update 2011 ESW   24   Areas of WBG Support 76. The WBG will continue supporting Bolivia’s decentralization process. The ongoing Participatory Rural Investment II Project calls for developing strategies and tools for the adequate implementation of the law as well as public policies to improve institutional and fiscal decentralization in the short, medium and long term. The Bank will also assist the implementation of autonomies through the ongoing programmatic Public Sector Governance NLTA that addresses a specific Government request on decentralized public investment. Additionally, some sub-national authorities have requested a Sub-National Public Expenditure and Financial Assessment (PEFA) to assess the financial management at the regional and municipal level. The Bank is also supporting the Government’s efforts to bring a more participatory approach to development through community involvement in several current projects such as the Urban Infrastructure Project and the Community Investments in Rural Areas. 77. The Bank will continue providing technical assistance for key issues requested by the Government to strengthen management. Non-lending technical assistance will play a major role in the Bank’s relations with Bolivia, addressing capacity constraints that limit policy and program effectiveness. The Bank and Government are discussing possible technical assistance to address the lack of an independent procurement agency, with a view to maximizing the efficient use of limited fiscal resources. The proposed Report on the Observance of Standards and Codes (ROSC) in Auditing and Accounting will provide the Government and other interested parties with a comprehensive analysis of accounting and auditing standards in the public and private sectors. Through the StAR initiative, the international community has provided training to the Ministry of Transparency to increase its capacity in verifying assets declarations and recovering stolen assets hidden abroad. 78. The informational base for a monitoring and evaluation system will be improved. The STATCAP Project is helping prepare the forthcoming Population and Housing Census and Agriculture Census as well as improving household surveys. These tools will provide critical data to guide decision-making on a wide array of public policies, including the allocation of resources to sub-national governments to more effectively implement new autonomy legislation. Complementing this activity, the proposed Ensuring Quality in the National Statistical System of Bolivia trust fund will help build capacity in the National Statistics Institute. Furthermore, the ongoing programmatic Multidimensional Poverty and the proposed Poverty Map Update and Poverty Assessment will provide a set of tools to better understand poverty and design public policies. C. Implementing the Partnership Strategy Financial Envelope 79. The IDA16 indicative allocation for Bolivia is Special Drawing Rights (SDR) 159.9 million for FY12-14. In accordance with IDA’s Performance-Based Allocation system, Bolivia’s indicative allocation for the FY12-14 period is SDR153.1 million in credits (equivalent to approximately US$246.3 million) and SDR6.8 million in hard term credits (equivalent to 25 approximately US$10.9 million). Two operations for US$79 million originally envisaged under the previous ISN have been approved under IDA 16. The allocation for FY12 is SDR56.5 million (SDR2.6 million in hard terms), while the amounts for FY13 and FY14, SDR55.7 million (SDR2.4 million in hard terms) and SDR47.7 million (SDR6.8 million in hard terms) respectively, are indicative.2 The CPS proposes a frontloading of IDA resources in FY12 and FY13 in order to ensure continuity of ongoing projects that close during the first and second year of the CPS. This would be done in accordance with the implementation guidelines of the IDA16 Resource Allocation Framework. 80. IBRD lending to Bolivia may be envisaged after the midpoint of the CPS timeframe. Up to the CPS midpoint review, Bolivia would only access IDA financing. IBRD lending would be considered after the midpoint of the CPS timeframe and its phasing in would depend on: (i) the continuation of a sound macroeconomic environment, building on recent progress in this area, and (ii) progress in improving the investment climate as evidenced by an increase in private investment including increasing FDI inflows in connection to the large planned extractive industry projects that underpin growth under the Government’s medium term macroeconomic framework. Potential lending volumes may be determined at the midpoint of the CPS and will depend on IBRD’s lending capacity and demand from other borrowers. Managing Program Implementation 81. The current portfolio comprises 13 investment projects for a total of US$444 million, of which US$354 million remains undisbursed. Four projects, constituting a total of US$238 million, have been approved in calendar year 2011 and will soon start implementation, while three operations are expected to exit the portfolio in FY12. In addition, a recipient- executed trust fund in renewable energy for US$5.2 million is expected to close in FY13. Eight trust funds for US$3.57 million were approved in FY11, two of them recipient-executed and the remaining Bank-executed. The approval and execution of grants will require particular attention, given the country’s poor record in the implementation of recipient-executed trust funds. 82. The execution and quality of the portfolio have shown important improvements in recent years. The Bank will continue to work with the Government to consolidate these gains in portfolio performance. The disbursement ratio reached 23 percent in FY11, a significant increase compared to the 12 percent reached in FY08 and FY09. The percentage of projects at risk decreased from 45 in FY09-10 to 27 in FY11 and the realism index reached 100 percent. The Bank is working to improve the pro-activity index, currently at 50 percent and to support projects with implementation delays or those at risk of not achieving their development objectives (currently around one-third of the portfolio). 2 Actual allocations will depend on: (i) Bolivia’s performance; (ii) its performance relative to that of other IDA recipients; (iii) the amount of overall IDA resources; (iv) changes in the list of active IDA-eligible countries; (v) terms of financial assistance provided (grants or loans); and (vi) the amount of compensatory resources received for MDRI. Since Bolivia’s per capita gross national income (GNI) has remained above the IDA operational cut off for more than three consecutive years, new terms will now apply for credits effective FY12. These will have a maturity of 25 years, with a five-year period of grace and a 1.25 percent per annum interest rate. For hard term credits the lending terms are 25 years of maturity with a five-year period of grace and an interest rate based on the IBRD fixed rate equivalent minus 200 basis points. In addition to the IDA16 indicative allocation, the MDRI will continue providing a notional equivalent of US$40 million per year in budget support. 26 83. The Bank and the Government have been carrying out bi-annual Country Portfolio Performance Reviews (CPPRs) to address systemic issues affecting the pipeline and active portfolio, as well as project-specific issues. This exercise has proved successful in reaching clear agreements on milestones for projects under preparation. It has also helped to identify actions aimed at removing obstacles impeding smooth project execution. Frequent meetings with the Minister of Development Planning and officials from the Vice Ministry of Public Investment and External Financing also take place to further support implementation. During the CPS period, the Bank and the Government will continue these detailed revisions on a bi-annual basis or even increase the frequency if the situation calls for greater attention. 84. Greater attention to implementation and institutional capacity as well as to the adequate assessment of risks is required to maintain project execution and improve development effectiveness. Close supervision is critical in a context of generally weak technical capacity and institutional changes in Government counterparts. Capacity building has not always been sustainable given the high levels of staff turnover in executing entities. Thus, technical and fiduciary teams need to continue providing day-to-day guidance to counterparts. Early and complete assessments of risks and identification of mitigation measures are also required to promote a smooth implementation. Tools such as the ORAF are helping to address these challenges. Improvements are taking place, as evidenced by portfolio indicators such as the increase in the disbursement ratio, the drop in the percentage of projects at risk and a recent Operations Policy and Country Services (OPCS) review of the country portfolio, but there is still much room to improve development effectiveness. Fiduciary Aspects and Use of Country Systems 85. Important steps have been taken towards strengthening public financial management (PFM) systems in Bolivia, though some weaknesses persist. In 2009 the Bank and IADB jointly carried out a PFM assessment following the PEFA framework. The assessment showed that important steps have been taken towards enhancing PFM systems in Bolivia, mainly in relation to expanding the integrated financial management system (SIGMA) both at the central and sub-national level, implementing a well-functioning Treasury Single Account, and improving treasury-related functions including debt management. However, budget formulation and execution still have weaknesses related to internal control and audit functions as well as limited legislative scrutiny over budget bills. Following the PEFA results, the Government designed an action plan, which in its first stage is focusing on enhancing revenue-generating functions (customs and taxation offices). 86. The Bank will continue to increase its reliance on country systems. The steps taken by the Government to upgrade PFM systems have allowed the Bank to increase reliance on country systems, and the current portfolio relies widely on existing arrangements related to budgeting, accounting, internal processes and procedures through the use of SIGMA and Treasury Single Account for fund flow arrangements. Those arrangements are strengthened or supplemented only when the nature of a project calls for it, mainly in relation to financial reporting and auditing. During the current CPS program, the Bank will continue seeking opportunities to deepen the use of country systems, agreeing on certain strengthening measures at the institutional or sector level. Given the importance of good quality financial reporting, an accounting and auditing ROSC will be carried out as part of the current strategy. In terms of 27 procurement, the Government intends to push a reform of the national procurement system. If there is interest, the Bank will continue working with the IADB in supporting the application of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development’s Development Assistance Committee (OECD-DAC) methodology for assessing the quality and effectiveness of the procurement system and in developing and implementing a national procurement strategy. Results Orientation and Monitoring 87. A results matrix will track the implementation of the Bank’s program and its impact on country development goals. Most of the results will be delivered from projects under implementation. Thus, the results matrix (Annex 1) is largely composed of ongoing projects for which impact indicators should be available by the end of the proposed strategy. New operations will span beyond the CPS period and their final outcomes will materialize in the future. However, their expected outcomes have been included in the results matrix. The matrix is organized around the results areas of the proposed program and is mainly based on the results framework of each individual operation, including a strengthened focus on gender. The Government’s NDP establishes the vision and strategic orientation for achieving the country’s development objectives, but specifies few development outcomes and indicators. Therefore, higher-level results were taken from the Government’s intention to achieve the MDGs and sector strategies. The matrix also includes the expected outcomes of the most relevant trust funds. The results framework will be updated in the CPS Progress Report to reflect progress in achieving goals and to incorporate the results proposed by the operations that will be approved in the next two years. 88. Over the CPS timeframe the Bank will support the Government in strengthening its capacity for results-based management. Through the implementation of the STATCAP Project the Bank will be better positioned to support the Government build institutional capacity for results-based management. The project will also help improve the Government’s informational base of reliable, timely, accurate and representative information. Information generated through the Population and Housing and Agricultural Censuses will permit tracking some development outcomes and assessing core indicators. Partnerships and Donor Coordination 89. The streamlined coordination of official Figure 5: Total Commitments development aid (ODA) and other financing is Development Partners in 2011 critical to achieve the objectives set out in the CAF Government’s NDP. Although most public Other 29% investment is now financed with domestic 22% resources—72 percent in 2009 compared to 37 percent in 2005—ODA and other financing remain Venezuela important to implement the NDP. The largest 4% development partners measured by commitments EU 5% are the Andean Development Corporation (CAF), China IADB, the World Bank, Brazil, China and the 5% IDB European Union (EU), comprising about three- Brazil 19% 8% WB quarters of the total (Figure 4 and Annex 4). ODA 8% directed towards the health and education sectors Source: Ministry of Development Planning. 28 has been reduced considerably over the last decade, while ODA to the transport sector has increased substantially. 90. While some traditional donors are phasing out of Bolivia, a number of new ones are increasing their commitments. Whereas traditional donors such as Denmark, the Netherlands and the United Kingdom are either phasing out or have terminated their bilateral assistance to Bolivia, the Morales administration is making use of new sources of funding and technical assistance to implement its ambitious program, including Brazil, Colombia, China, Russia, South Korea and Venezuela. The new donors form a highly diverse group and provide a new dynamic to the different types of financial support and technical expertise when compared to traditional donors. South-South cooperation has become increasingly important for the Government. The Bank has provided valuable technical assistance through the South-South Experience Exchange Trust Fund on multidimensional poverty, cash transfer programs and education. 91. The Bank makes a special effort to coordinate with other development partners. The GruS was established in late 2006 as a platform to better support the Government and its development agenda. Most traditional bilateral and multilateral development agencies are members of the GruS and many of them have aligned their assistance to the NDP and are working towards the implementation of the Paris Declaration and the Accra Action Plan. More recently, non-traditional partners such as Colombia, Korea and Brazil have expressed their interest in working more closely with the GruS. The Ministry of Development Planning is responsible for donor coordination and participates in GruS’s work. In addition, the Bank is an active member of the United Nations Country Team (UNCT). Consultations were carried out with the GruS and with local representatives of non-traditional donors such as China, Korea and Brazil as part of the design of this proposed CPS. Trust Fund Program and Strategy 92. Trust funds are an important financing source for the Bank’s country program in Bolivia. Trust fund resources are used to support Bank policy dialogue and operations through co-financing and background analytical work, and also play an important role in knowledge transfers through South-South capacity building activities. The recent work on CCT and rural development in the context of the South-South trust fund are good examples of activities supported by trust funds. Trust funds also help pilot innovative ideas such as the JSDF Trust Fund on Early Childhood Care and Development and Gender. Trust funds can thus help to leverage Bank resources further and are used as a unique platform for donors to strengthen partnerships and cross-fertilization. 93. Implementation of the WBG trust fund portfolio has been effective, but there is room for improvement. These include more strategic alignment and realistic assessment of the capacity and time needed for implementation and achievement of results. Selection criteria have been developed and will be applied to trust funds more systematically by the Bank’s team. 29 IV. MANAGING RISKS A. Political Risks 94. Social demands to change specific public policies or projects could escalate, delaying implementation of the NDP. Social organizations, including some indigenous groups, have started to mobilize seeking public policy changes. Unable to channel their dissatisfaction with specific policies through formal institutions, these groups are moving their agenda forward through protests and demonstrations. Discontent may spread and intensify if the Morales administration fails to build consensus with dissenting social groups and create common ground to face policy implementation challenges. Furthermore, the process of aligning the legal framework and institutions to the new Constitution could create short-term uncertainty and delay the implementation of public policies. 95. The Bank is working to mitigate these risks through the selective, targeted nature of interventions proposed under the CPS. The focus of CPS activities—sustainable productive development, adaptation to climate change and disaster risk management, access to basic and social services for the rural and urban poor, and support for public sector effectiveness—are supported by Bolivian society of all political inclinations, as validated during the extensive CPS consultation process. Hence these projects are unlikely to suffer setbacks from potential political turmoil, and positive project outcomes could work toward reducing some of the causes of social tensions and protest. Furthermore, Bank-provided technical and financial assistance on decentralization and autonomy legislation, statistical capacity and anti-corruption measures will help strengthen governance in Bolivia. B. Economic Risks 96. Despite strong recent economic performance and macroeconomic policy, Bolivia is vulnerable to a number of short- and medium-term risks. If the global economy recovers, inflation may rise due to higher international food prices and foreign exchange inflows, while the competitiveness of labor-intensive, non-traditional exports may be affected by exchange rate appreciation. On the other hand, lower commodity prices and lower gas export volumes to Brazil may erode the strong fiscal and external accounts. The nationalization process and the ongoing reform of the legal framework are affecting the investment climate and potentially reducing medium-term growth prospects. The hydrocarbons, mining and electricity sectors are close to operating at maximum capacity and few large investment projects have taken place in the last years. Additional private and public investment is needed to maintain Bolivia’s good macroeconomic performance. Public investment is currently hampered by capacity constraints, but if the public sector executes its ambitious pipeline investments, the Central Bank’s capacity to control inflation may be undermined. Private activities may also be affected by interventions in the economy, including price and export controls on food and restrictions on portfolio decisions of financial institutions. 97. Short-term economic risks are mitigated first and foremost by the prudent macroeconomic management of Bolivian economic authorities. As noted by the IMF’s most recent Article IV consultation and as demonstrated during the recent financial crisis, Bolivia is well positioned to withstand short-term economic shocks due to restrained fiscal and monetary 30 policy and a declining debt profile. The Bank, in tandem with the IMF, will continue to closely monitor macroeconomic developments and offer technical assistance when requested by the authorities. Some potential areas for technical support include public debt management, in light of the projected mild fiscal deficits by 2014 due to increased investment spending and mechanisms to manage hydrocarbon income. Looking toward more long-term growth prospects, the proposed Bank strategy is focused on productive development—in particular in the rural, labor-intensive sector and in productive infrastructure—which will support more dynamic and diversified economic activity. C. Institutional Risks 98. Bolivia faces numerous institutional challenges, including weak public sector capacity, poorly defined responsibilities among different levels of government and stresses caused by illegal activity and corruption. Wages are too low to attract and retain skilled officials and, as a consequence staff turnover in public sector institutions is high and capacity building is difficult. The recently approved Autonomies Law has only partially clarified the responsibilities of different levels of government and has left contentious issues unresolved, in particular the distribution of fiscal resources. Formal coordination mechanisms between different government levels are not in place, hindering the implementation of some projects and programs. In addition, the failure to improve the efficiency of sub-national governorates and other levels of authority could pose risks to the Bank’s portfolio, especially in terms of financial management. Bolivia’s illegal drug trade and contraband problems can—as noted in the WDR 2011—further stress institutions through corruption and rent seeking practices. 99. The Bank is working in several directions to reduce the risks posed by institutional weakness. Joint semi-annual CPPRs will continue to be carried out with the Government to monitor project design and implementation. Bank technical and fiduciary teams will continue providing day-to-day guidance to counterparts during the preparation and execution phases of projects to improve implementation and ensure the achievement of intended objectives. Additionally, the design of operations will follow a more strategic approach, avoiding complex institutional arrangements, promptly identifying risks to strengthen institutional capacity components and building on existing arrangements and experienced entities whenever possible. Transparency issues are being addressed through a number of actions. For example, two of the Bank’s rural development projects that transfer funds directly to the community level, include increased monitoring processes, disbursements that occur in tranches and public accountability mechanisms for the local authorities that manage funds. Guidelines on fraud and corruption in Bank-financed operations are intended to contain corruption risk, as is the country’s participation in the StAR Initiative supported jointly by the Bank and the UN. 31 Annex 1: CPS Results Matrix World Bank Group Program Country Development Goals Issues and Obstacles CPS Outcomes Milestones (and Partners) Results Area 1: Sustainable productive development Reduce extreme poverty in rural Excluded groups have difficult Household income for families that Farms selected and acquired by Productive Ongoing lending: areas by increasing agricultural access to productive land. This have accessed to land increased Associations in the area of intervention  Land for Agricultural productivity limits their capacity for Baseline: 0 % (2008) Baseline: 30 (2011) Development Project generating income in rural areas. Target: 50% increase (2015) Target: 120 (2014)  Rural Alliances Project and Incidence of extreme poverty in rural AF areas Beneficiary families that acquired farms in  Participatory Rural Investment Baseline: 53.3% (2008e) the area of intervention II Project Baseline: 506 (2011)  Agricultural Innovation and Source: UDAPE, Dossier de Target: 2,200 (2014) Services Project Estadisticas Sociales y Economicas, 2010 Percentage of total beneficiaries of the Land Proposed lending: Project who are women  Rural Alliances II Project Target: 50% (2013) TFs: Income generation capacity for Income and volume marketed of Number of financed alliances with  Proposed JSDF on Integrated rural producers is constrained by rural productive units allied increased IRR>12.5% Community Driven Territorial their difficult and unpredictable Baseline: 0 (2006) Baseline: 0 (2006) Development for Remote access to consumption markets. Target: 45% increase after three sales Target: 540 alliances (2014) Communities in the Amazon under alliance (2015)  Ongoing Integrating Gender New wage-earning jobs in target areas into SD operations generated Baseline: 0 (2006) IFC: Target: 809,590 person-day (2015)  Empresa Forestal SLV Yields in Bolivia are substantially Number of innovations led by INIAF Number of projects funded by the research  Regional Responsive Soy Program lower than in its neighbors and adopted by producers fund partially due to inferior Baseline: 0 (2011) Baseline: 0 (2011) agricultural technology. The Target: 2 innovations (2015) Target: 20 (2014) Co-financing: institutions and partnerships in Agricultural Innovation and Services Project charge of agriculture innovation Number of innovation policies developed by and extension are also weak. INIAF and approved by the Ministry of Rural COSUDE (US$2.6MM) Kingdom of Denmark (US$2.3 Development and Land (MDRyT) Baseline: 0 (2011) MM) Target: 2 (2014) Value of sales generated under Number of farmers reached by IFC sustainable managed land partners/clients Baseline: 0 (2011) Baseline: 0 (2011) Target: to be defined (2015) Target: 1,000 (2014) 32 World Bank Group Program Country Development Goals Issues and Obstacles CPS Outcomes Milestones (and Partners) Address infrastructure needs and Precarious national and rural Transport costs to the San Rehabilitate the 113,6 Km of San Ongoing lending: promote economic integration roads limit access to markets by Buenaventura-Ixiamas road users Buenaventura to Ixiamas road. (2015)  National Roads and Airport imposing high transportation reduced Infrastructure Project costs. Baseline:  Community Investments in Buses: $4.41 cents/Km (2010) Rural Areas (PICAR) Large trucks: $2.05 cents/Km (2010)  Participatory Rural Investment Target: II Project (PDCRII) Buses: $1.50 cents/Km (2015)  Lake Titicaca Local Large trucks: $0.95 cents/Km (2015) Sustainable Development Project Airports have limited Percentage of inbound and outbound Passenger terminal, control tower, taxiway infrastructure and lack basic flights operated at the Rurrenabaque and apron at Rurrenabaque’s airport are built TFs: safety and security equipment. Airport per the published schedule (2014).  Ongoing Integrating Gender increased into SD operations Baseline: 65% of the total scheduled flights (2010) Co-financing: to the PDCRII Target: 90% (2015) COSUDE (US$4.5MM) Kingdom of Denmark Small municipalities and poor Social Capital Indexa in beneficiary Community (of which women’s) subprojects (US$10.9MM) rural communities lack basic communities improved of PICAR that achieve at least 75% of their infrastructure and cannot finance Baseline: 0% (2011) expected results medium and large productive Target: 75% (2015) Baseline: 0% (2011) infrastructure projects. Target: 75% (2014) Lack of coordination among Number of municipalities applying Productive investments of PDCRII co- government levels constrains the co-financing practices for productive financed by departmental governments and/or provision of productive investments municipalities, under the framework of their infrastructure. Baseline: 0 (2007) competencies Target: 180 municipalities (2015) Baseline: 0% (2007) Target: 100% of investments (2013) Promotion of labor-intensive SME Small and Medium Enterprises Decision-makers informed on the Financial sector assessments delivered to the Ongoing AAA: represent over 90 percent of total findings of the financial sector client  FSAP enterprises in Bolivia, using assessments  Financial Sector Review. around 70 percent of its labor force. However, their Access to finance for MSMES Number of new loans to MSMEs generated IFC: productivity is very low as they increased as measured by the number Baseline: 0 (2010)  Financing to banks and face severe obstacles to their of loans in the banking sector Target: 150,000 (cumulated 2011-2014) microfinance institutions development, including low Baseline: 594,000 (2010)  Advisory services on the access to productive credit, a Number of jobs generated/supported by IFC financial sector heavy regulatory and tax burden, partners/clients’ activities  Business Edge SME training a The Social Capital Index is a composite survey-based indicator. 33 World Bank Group Program Country Development Goals Issues and Obstacles CPS Outcomes Milestones (and Partners) and insufficient vertical and Baseline: 0 (2009) program horizontal integration. Target: 1,500 jobs, with at least 20% in rural  Business licensing/permit areas simplification Cost savings associated with the Number of construction permits granted Co-financing: to the FSAP implementation of simplified under reformed procedures in the IMF procedures for obtaining construction municipalities of La Paz, Cochabamba, Santa permits generated Cruz and Montero Baseline: 0 (2009) Baseline: 0 (2009) Target: US$ 3.5 million (2015) Target: 4,605 (2013) Reduced average number of days required to obtain a construction license in target municipalities Baseline: 249 (2009) Target: 90 (2013) Reduced average cost incurred when complying with business regulations to obtain a construction license Baseline: US$1,565 (2009) Target: US$950 (2013) Results Area 2: Climate change and disaster risk management Restore access to basic infrastructure The poor living in vulnerable Disaster Risk Management Infrastructure facilities restored in the area of Ongoing lending: and strengthen the Government’s areas have been adversely framework focusing on vulnerability intervention of the Emergency Recovery and  Emergency Recovery and ability for disaster risk management affected by natural disasters. reduction and infrastructure Disaster Management Project Disaster Management Project Bolivia experienced particularly rehabilitation is adequately Baseline: 0 (2007) large losses in 2006-07 due to the implemented Target: 216 facilities TF: El Niño phenomenon (almost 4%  Ongoing Integrating Gender of GDP). Disaster risk Disaster Risk Management Units established into SD operations management has to be in sectors and departments streamlined across sector Target: 9 target sectors, and 9 departments institutions and levels of (2015) government. Recommendations for a National Risk Management System submitted to the MDP for consideration (2012) Reduce social, economic and Bolivia is highly vulnerable to Climate resilience strategy at sector Provide technical assistance for: TF: environmental vulnerability to climate change. and territorial level formulated →Formulation of the strategic program for  Ongoing Pilot Program for climate change (2015) climate resilience Climate Resilience (PPCR) →Integral diagnosis and design for Phase I 34 World Bank Group Program Country Development Goals Issues and Obstacles CPS Outcomes Milestones (and Partners) strengthening of systematic observation  Ongoing Adaptation to the network Impact of Rapid Glacier →Strengthening of information and Retreat in the Tropical Andes knowledge generating institutions  Ongoing Reducing Risk for →Integration of climate resilience in Biodiversity Conservation planning, investment and the public using Adaptive Fire management structure Management  Ongoing Integrating Gender into SD operations  Proposed PPCR Phase II AAA:  Proposed Strengthen Environment Management Co-financing: to the PPCR IADB ($40 million) Results Area 3: Human development and access to basic services Support human development in rural Chronic malnutrition affected Percentage of 2 year-old children Proportion of people with access to a basic Ongoing lending: and urban areas 20% of children under 3 years of with a height for age below 2Z score package of health, nutrition or population  Expanding Access to Reduce age in 2008, 30% in rural areas. in the area of intervention of the ICY services in the intervention area increased Health Inequalities APLIII Percentage of children with chronic and APLIII projects reduced (universal health insurance)  Investing in Children and malnutrition Baseline: 38% (2008) Baseline: 35% (2007) Youth Target: 0% Target: 22% (2015) Target: 80% (2014)  La Paz Secondary Education Transformation Project Source: Zero Malnutrition Program Proportion of children under 2 years old who participate in the growth monitoring sessions Proposed lending: in the area of intervention increased  Hunan Development Project Baseline: 0% (2007) Target: 80% (2013) TFs:  Proposed JSDF on Early Child Reduce maternal mortality rate Maternal mortality rate is high, Coverage of institutional deliveries Proportion of pregnant women living in the Development Baseline: 229 per 100,000 live births especially in rural areas increased targeted area with complete prenatal controls (2003) Baseline: 67% (2009) increased AAA: Target: 104 per 100,000 live births Baseline: 43% (2007)  Ongoing Social Safety Nets (2015) Target: 70% (2013)  Proposed Social Protection Beneficiaries Registry Source: 2010 Progress Report on the Proportion of women receiving post natal care MDGs within seven days of delivery increased Baseline: 13% (2007) Target: 30% (2013) 35 World Bank Group Program Country Development Goals Issues and Obstacles CPS Outcomes Milestones (and Partners) Urbanization has increased in the Enrollment in secondary education in Number of new school infrastructure last two decades, raising the the Municipality of La Paz increased constructed, equipped and furnished demand for education, especially Baseline: 3,416 students (2008) Baseline: 0 (2009) at the secondary level where Target: 5,137 students (2015) Target: 4 schools (2012) marginality and dropout rates are high. Increasing education quality Number of school infrastructure renovated, is also paramount. equipped and furnished Baseline: 0 (2009) Target: 3 schools (2012) Promotion rate in secondary Students enrolled in the Incentive Program to education in the Municipality of La reduce risk of drop-out Paz increased Baseline: 0 (2009) Baseline: 86.2% (2008) Target: 5,130 (2012) Target: 90.3% (2015) Informal and formal safety nets Quality of childcare services Percentage of ECD services with revised are scarce in urban areas, improved in the pilot districts of the quality standards including a baseline and affecting in particular women and municipalities of La Paz and El Alto targets for improvement children Baseline: 0 (2011) Baseline: 0 (2011) Target: 149 existing centers Target: 149 centers (2013) improved (2015) Percentage of ECD services certified by the project meeting quality certification standards Baseline: 0 (2011) Target: 67% (100 centers) (2013) More than 20,000 youth are Low-income youth beneficiaries of Proportion of youth enrolled in the skills expected to enter the labor market Mi Primer Empleo Digno with development program completing the in-class every year in the 12 largest cities. regular employment and improved phase of the program Open unemployment among labor incomes four months after the Baseline: 0 (2008) individuals under 25 grew from end of the internship phase increased Target: 80% (2012) less than 5 percent in 1996 to Baseline: 0% of all beneficiaries who more than 14 percent in 2005. completed the internship every year Proportion of youth completing the internship for the target population. (2008) Baseline: 0 (2008) Target: 50% (2015) Target: 80% of those who complete the in- class phase (2012) Percentage of beneficiaries of skills development program that are women Target: 40% (2012) 36 World Bank Group Program Country Development Goals Issues and Obstacles CPS Outcomes Milestones (and Partners) Expand access to basic services Rural communities have poor Sustainable electricity access in Contracts for the provision of Ongoing lending: access to basic services. beneficiary remote and dispersed SHS/photovoltaic systems to beneficiary  Decentralized Electricity for Indicator: rural areas expanded using solar families of the GPOBA signed Universal Access (GPOBA) Percentage of the population with In 2007 less than half of the rural home systems/photovoltaic systems  Community Investments in access to electricity in rural areas population had access to Baseline: 0 (2011) Rural Areas Baseline: 52% (2010) electricity. The access of isolated Target: more than 7,000 households,  Lake Titicaca Local Target: 90% (2015) rural areas to the national micro-enterprises, schools and/or Sustainable Development electricity grid is not cost health centers (2015) (water and sanitation sub- Percentage of the population with effective due to low population component) access to drinking water density. Access to lighting solutions (pico Output-based service contracts between the  Urban Infrastructure Project Baseline: 74.6% (2008) PV) for poor households targeted by Government and private sector service Target: 90% (2015) the GPOBA increased providers signed as a key mechanism for the Proposed lending: Baseline: 0 (2011) Government’s electrification program for  Decentralized Infrastructure Percentage of the population with Target: 1,650 households (2015) dispersed households under the new Universal for Rural Transformation II access to improved sanitation facilities Access Policy  Water and Sanitation in Rural Baseline: 48.4% (2008) Areas Target: 80% (2015) Coverage of water and sanitation Number of new households with Precise indicators to be defined once Water  Urban Infrastructure II services is still low; in rural areas access to drinking water increased and Sanitation Project is approved Source: NDP and National Plan for only half of the population has Baseline: 0 (2011) AAA: Basic Sanitation 2009-2015 access to water and 37 percent to Target: to be defined  TA provided by the Water and sanitation services. Sanitation Program Number of new households with Precise indicators to be defined once Water sanitation services increased and Sanitation Project is approved IFC: Baseline: 0 (2011) Target: to be defined  Ongoing (Telecel Bolivia Loan) and potential telecom Total number of mobile phone Number of mobile phone connections operations connections increased (Telecel) Baseline: 7.1 million (2010) Baseline: 2.1 million (2009) Target: 2.5 million (2014) Results Area 4: Public sector effectiveness Support the decentralization and Municipal governments have to Municipal governments’ Carta Municipal governments’ Carta Organica Ongoing lending: autonomy agenda and the national develop their Cartas Organicas Organica (constitution) approved (constitution) developed  Participatory Rural Investment planning system (municipal constitution) to and put into practice Baseline: 0 (2011) II Project effectively put in place Baseline: 0 municipalities with their Target: 100 municipal Carta Organica (2012) decentralization and autonomy Carta Organica (2011) AAA: regime Target: 200 municipalities with their  Ongoing Public Sector Carta Organica (2015) Governance NLTA Indigenous and Peasant Autonomies Indigenous and Peasant Autonomies with Co-financers: with their Statutes approved at the their Statutes elaborated COSUDE (US$4.5MM) 37 World Bank Group Program Country Development Goals Issues and Obstacles CPS Outcomes Milestones (and Partners) local level Baseline: 0 (2011) Kingdom of Denmark Baseline: 0 (2011) Target: 11 (2012) (US$10.9MM) Target: 11 (2015) Institutional strengthening and The central government’s lack of ROSC delivered to the client Ongoing Lending: capacity building capacity constrains its ability to  Strengthening Statistical manage public policies. Capacity and Informational Base for Evidence-Based Monitoring and Evaluation is Demographic and agriculture Complete the gender informed III National Planning Project constrained by outdated and no- information through a population Agricultural Census (2012)  Stolen Asset Recovery (StAR) representative information. The census, an agricultural census and last population census was two household surveys updated, Complete the gender informed Population and AAA: carried out in 2001, and the last including gender disaggregation Housing Census (2012)  Ongoing Multidimensional agriculture census in 1984. Poverty II Household surveys are not Complete two rounds of the new Continuous  Proposed Poverty Map Update representative at department level Household Survey representative at  Proposed Poverty Assessment nor in main cities departmental and main cities level with  Ongoing ROSC in auditing gender dimensions incorporated (2012 and and accounting 2013) TFs:  Proposed, Ensuring Quality in the National Statistical System of Bolivia 38 Annex 2: CAS Completion Report FY04-11 I. Introduction 1. This Country Assistance Strategy Completion Report (CASCR) provides an evaluation of the Bank Group assistance to Bolivia for FY04-FY11 period. One Country Assistance Strategy (CAS) and two Interim Strategy Notes spanned this period. The Joint IBRD, IDA, IFC and MIGA FY04-FY05 CAS for the Republic of Bolivia (Report No. 26838-BO) was submitted to the Board in January 2004. The Joint IDA and IFC FY07-FY09 ISN for the Republic of Bolivia (Report No. 36095) (ISN I) and the Joint IDA and IFC FY10-FY11 ISN for the Plurinational State of Bolivia (ISN II) were submitted to the Board in October 2006 and April 2009, respectively. 2. This CASCR was prepared using as background information the CAS, the two ISNs, the latest Implementation Status Reports (ISR) for projects in the Bank’s Bolivia portfolio, Implementation Completion and Results Reports (ICR) for credits that closed during the period, and by the Bolivia 1999- 2004 Country Assistance Evaluation (Report No. 33493, 2005) prepared by the Bank’s then Operations Evaluation Department. II. Findings of the Self-Evaluation Program Performance Rating: Moderately Satisfactory Bank’s Performance Rating: Satisfactory 3. Program Performance. It is difficult to rate Program Performance since the CAS and ISN I did not provide Results Matrices, per sea. This CASCR retrofit a Matrix for the entire period, based on the expected outcomes as described in each of the strategy documents (Annex I). The Program Performance during the CAS period achieved its main objective: help maintain macroeconomic stability so as to contain the social and economic impact of the crisis. This addressed one of the critical short-term issues facing the Government at the time, and allowed the Bank in the next phase of the Program, covered by ISN I to focus on and address more structural issues that had led to the country’s difficult social and political issues. Performance under ISN I and ISN II, were more long-term in nature, seeking to address the long-standing issues that were at the root cause of social, political and economic crisis Bolivia was facing. The tremendous changes in Bolivia’s legal, institutional and political environment made progress towards the Program’s objectives challenging. On balance, the Program achieved good progress toward most major expected outcomes, with some shortcomings in the area of governance and support to the public sector, which will undoubtedly be the focus of increased support in the future. Program Performance is rated Moderately Satisfactory. 4. Bank’s Performance. The Bank’s Performance over the CASCR period is rated Satisfactory. The Bank demonstrated ability to adjust and adapt to the difficult environment in which it was operating, flexibility in designing its strategies by preparing short-term CAS and ISN that reflected critical issues, ability to respond to changing priorities by the different Administrations and the emergencies they faced, and, more importantly, the ability to engage effectively and productively with a Government that from the outset had expressed extreme skepticism towards the Bank. Compared with the situation and prospects in 2006, the Bank has in place a solid relationship and dialogue with the Government, and a program of support to ongoing projects and non-lending services, together with a pipeline of new a Results Matrices were not prepared for several reasons: (1) at the time of the CAS, results matrices were not required; (2) results matrices are not required for an ISN, although ISN II did include one that spanned the results of ISN I; (2) each strategy covered a very short timeframe, which allowed at the most to complete the preparation and approval of the interventions included in the strategy, and therefore it would be hard to identify and measure any results and indicators during that period. 39 operations that together aim to address the fundamental issues that generated the conditions that led to crisis in Bolivia. III. Review of the Progress Made Towards Achieving Country Level Goals 5. Bolivia’s country level goals can be divided in two phases over the CASCR period. Although some of the Government’s objectives and programs, especially those that addressed promoting rural sector, environment, service delivery, were carried over across the CASCR period, the country’s goals in 2004 and 2005 were very short term in nature, and aimed at addressing the economic, political and social issues that Bolivia was facing. The election of President Morales in December 2005 with a clear majority and representing previously excluded groups provided a mandate to build a more inclusive society. As a result, country level goals became more long term in nature. Country Level Goals 2004-2005 6. Goals. In 2004, Bolivia’s situation was difficult and uncertain, the result of the volatile confluence of three trends—economic, political and social—that had been building up over several years. These had led to escalating social unrest that culminated in the forced resignation of President Sanchez de Lozada, and the assumption of Vice President Mesa in October 2003 in accordance with constitutional processes. On the economic side, three features stood out--a lack of progress in poverty reduction and high inequality, a vulnerability of the economy to external shocks, and a precarious fiscal situation. On the political side, there had been growing disenchantment with the overt use of political patronage and tolerance of corruption on the part of traditional political parties. Finally, on the social side, there was an increasing impatience with the levels of inequality, particularly in land distribution, and indigenous groups who felt that they had received little from the exploitation of natural resources in the past, were increasingly suspicious of Government plans to export natural gas. The government of President Mesa moved quickly to formulate a two phase plan to put the country back on a stable footing: (i) a first phase through the planned completion of a Constitutional Assembly, and (ii) a second phase from the end of the planned Constitutional Assembly to the end of the Presidential term in August 2007. The first phase would pursue three political and three economic objectives. On the political front, the objectives were: (i) revising the Hydrocarbons Law; (ii) submitting the decision to export natural gas from new sources to a public referendum; and (iii) calling for a Constitutional Assembly to modify the then existing Constitution. On the economic front, the objectives were: (i) restoring fiscal balances; (ii) reorienting some public expenditure toward high-visibility programs that responded to underlying factors that led to social conflict, especially in sensitive geographical areas; and (iii) re-launching anticorruption efforts to improve the business environment. 7. Progress. The first phase of President Mesa’s political agenda was never fully completed by the time of his resignation in June 2005, when a transitional Government took over until new Presidential and Congressional elections were held in December 2005. Of the three political objectives, only two were implemented, and with mixed results. The Gas Referendum, which served as input into the new Hydrocarbons Law, was approved by a strong majority in July 2004. It provided legitimacy to tackle the sensitive gas export issue, abrogate the previous law, recover the property of hydrocarbons at the well- head, reestablish the state-owned Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos, and use gas to negotiate access to the Pacific Sea. However, its ambiguous wording produced different interpretations by political parties and social movements alike on how to handle gas ownership and fueled an intense debate that resulted in a Law that satisfied neither nationalists nor energy companies. Bolivia’s tax revenues from natural gas became significantly higher than those of other countries in the region. In May 2005, Congress approved a 18 percent royalty/32 percent non-deductible direct tax that was based on production rather than revenue. The law explicitly stated that fiscal revenues could not drop below 50 percent of the hydrocarbon production value. With increasing tensions between the Government and gas 40 companies, and increasing uncertainty, foreign direct investment plummeted. There had also been little progress towards the Constitutional Assembly scheduled to take place during the second half of 2006, and no consensus regarding the criteria of representation in the Assembly. On the economic front, President Mesa’s administration was largely successful. With fast disbursing assistance from both the Bank and the IADB, the Government was able to close the 2004 financing gap, and with the Central Bank handling of incipient runs on bank deposits and the exchange rate, macroeconomic stability was maintained. Favorable external conditions and the new hydrocarbons tax regime, together with constrained spending due to slow execution of public investment contributed to significantly reduce the overall 2005 budget deficit to 1.5 percent of GDP down from 8 percent of GDP in 2003. In the fight against corruption, results were mixed. The Government enforced a 80 percent reduction in “reserved expenditures�, and appointed a Presidential Delegate for Anticorruption, but few actions were taken. Country Level Goals 2006-2011 8. Goals. When President Morales assumed office, Bolivia was facing a new political and economic reality. The protests and previous instability had diminished the influence of traditional parties (the Government had a majority in Congress) and brought new actors, mainly from the social movements. Investment, particularly foreign, had been negatively impacted due to unrest and to uncertainty around the government’s development agenda. 9. The Government’s May 2006 National Development Plan (the Plan) has a strong focus on poverty reduction and inclusion and proposed a profound social and political reform through a new Constitution. The Plan is based on four pillars: (i) Bolivia Productiva (Productive Bolivia) that seeks to increase the role of the state in strategic sectors—primarily natural resources and utilities—while boosting labor-intensive sectors and integral territorial complexes through financial and technical support; (ii) Bolivia Digna (Dignified Bolivia) that includes social programs—such as redistributive transfers and safety nets—to fight poverty and exclusion; (iii) Bolivia Soberana (Sovereign Bolivia) that seeks greater country ownership of Bolivia’s development process without external influences on policies, strengthened status in international fora through balanced relations with other countries, and self-sufficiency in food and energy production, and (iv) Bolivia Democrática y Participativa that redefines power relations, transferring political power to social and indigenous movements. The Constitutional Assembly was valued not only for its substantive outcome—dealing with complex issues like decentralization, land and territory, and collective rights—but for the process itself, which was expected to give voice to all Bolivians and strengthen national unity. 10. Progress. Implementation of the Plan shows significant progress in some key areas while lagging in others. Over the last four years, the Government increased its participation in strategic sectors by nationalizing hydrocarbons, telecommunications, electricity, and mining companies, and creating several small public enterprises. It has also expanded cash transfers to the elderly and launched cash transfer programs to promote primary education attendance and the use of health services and neonatal care for pregnant women and young children. The new Constitution was enacted in February 2009, and the legal framework that will allow its implementation is being drafted, increasing social participation and enhancing decentralization. The Government was less effective in boosting labor-intensive sectors, as private investment remains sluggish. Public investment has been constrained by institutional problems that delayed Government initiatives to increase the coverage of public services, build additional infrastructure, industrialize natural resources, and create more public enterprises. 11. There have been several promising developments, although many challenges remain. Due to the relative isolation of its financial sector from the global markets, Bolivia’s GDP grew by 3.4 percent in 2009 (the highest in the region) despite the global crisis, while maintaining a current account surplus and near balance in fiscal accounts. Growth in 2010 reached 4.1 percent as hydrocarbons output rebounded as 41 the result of recovering gas demand in Brazil, and other sectors continued robust growth. Overall economic growth, together with the introduction or scaling up of cash transfer programs, is likely responsible for reductions in moderate and extreme poverty: between 2000 and 2007, poverty and extreme poverty dropped from 66 to 60 percent and from 45 to 38 percent respectively. Still, poverty is significantly higher in rural areas, calling for differentiated strategies for urban and rural areas, as proposed in the Plan, and progress in improving income distribution has been limited. Agricultural GDP continues to rise—contributing 20 percent to GDP and employing about 65 percent of the country’s workforce it is one of the main drivers of the economy—but has achieved only modest average growth due to structural and institutional challenges. Substantial efforts are being made to modernize the sector and to enhance productivity. 12. Bolivia is broadly on target towards achieving MDG goals. In education important initiatives have been implemented such as the literacy program Yo Si Puedo and the Bono Juancito Pinto cash transfer for primary students. As measured by enrollment rates, schooling for children aged 12 and below is nearly universal. Still, extending coverage and improving quality remains a challenge, mainly in the pre-primary and secondary levels where in 2007, the net enrollment rates were just 38 percent and 57 percent, respectively. The Assembly has recently passed a new Education Law that will gradually enter into force over the coming years. The Government introduced initiatives to expand access to and improve quality of health services and to support improved nutrition. The new Constitution and legislation guarantee equal rights for men and women, and equal access to social services. Infant mortality in urban areas fell from 44 deaths per 1,000 live births in 2003 to 36 in 2008; progress in rural areas stagnated during this period, however. There have been some advances for maternal health, but little impact on outcomes. The Government has expanded the coverage of the Universal Maternal and Infant Insurance Program (SUMI) and introduced a new approach to reduce cultural barriers to access health services. The Zero Malnutrition Program (ZMP) and the CCT Bono Juana Azurduy were introduced to prevent and tackle malnutrition in pregnant and breastfeeding women and children under two years, and to promote increased use of health services. 13. Governance, effective policy coordination and public sector efficiency require more attention but there have been important initiatives in terms of anti-corruption and transparency. The Government took measures to increase social control and accountability, strengthen transparency and access to information and enhance anticorruption measures, including a national policy on transparency and anticorruption approved in July 2009, the Law to Fight Corruption, Illegal Enrichment and Fortune Investigation approved in March 2010, and the creation of a Ministry of Institutional Transparency and Fight against Corruption. President Morales was re-elected with 64 percent of the votes in December 2009. IV. Highlights of the Detailed Evaluation of the Program Performance in influencing the CAS outcomes as laid out in the results matrix Objectives of Bank Assistance 14. The Bank Group’s CAS supported the first phase of the Government’s agenda (para. 7) and concentrated assistance as follows: (i) support to key economic and political processes; (ii) macroeconomic stability and growth; (iii) promoting the rural sector and the environment; (iv) improving service coverage and quality in the social sectors, and (v) public sector modernization, governance and transparency. ISN I prioritized: (i) good governance emphasizing anticorruption; (ii) fostering job creation through inclusive growth; and (iii) social inclusion through improved public service provision. ISN II prioritized: (i) productive development and support to production; (ii) sustainable development; (iii) human development; and (iv) governance and support to the public sector. This section evaluates the Program’s performance according to the retrofitted CAS outcome classifications under the column CASCR Evaluation in the Table 4 (Annex 2.4). 42 Progress in Influencing CAS and ISN Outcomes 15. Support to Key Economic and Political Processes. While the Bank’s assistance towards this CAS outcome was delivered through technical assistance on the hydrocarbons legislation and an IDF grant to support the coordination of the Constitutional Assembly, it is not clear that it provided an impact on softening the transition of key economic and political processes, which were by definition, short term, and expected to be influenced through other means. Furthermore, through a Nationalization Decree in mid-2006, the Government increased its control of the hydrocarbon industry, and the state oil company, Yacimientos Petrolíferos Fiscales Bolivianos (YPFB), will hold at least 50 percent plus one of the total shares of companies “capitalized� and/or privatized back in the 1990s. To continue operating, oil companies had to sign new service contracts with YPFB that will handle all hydrocarbon commercialization. While the new Hydrocarbons Law served to increase government revenues, Bolivia has faced challenges in realizing investments to increase its gas production capacity, as YPFB has not been able to boost sector development. In retrospect, the Bank was and is not well positioned or qualified to provide support to political processes of the magnitude that Bolivia faced at the time. 16. Macroeconomic Stability and Growth. Support from the Bank and IADB was instrumental in sustaining macroeconomic balance during 2004, thereby helping contain the social and economic impact of the political crisis. Bolivia’s macroeconomic situation was fragile, with a fiscal deficit between 8 and 9 percent of GDP and a large financing gap. A package of policy-based fast-disbursing assistance including an Emergency Economic Recovery Credit, a Social Safety Net Credit, and funding of wages and salaries of civil servants under an ongoing Institutional Reform Project provided a rapid infusion of liquidity to support the end-of-year US$94 million fiscal gap caused in part by the ongoing social and political tensions and episodes of civil unrest and the drop in external financing (amounting to 0.1 percent of the overall deficit in terms of GDP) that resulted largely by the difficulties in producing a Poverty Reduction Strategy (which in turn led to postponing the Bank’s planned US$30 million Poverty Reduction Strategy Credit and the IMF’s Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility). This assistance allowed the Government to maintain critical social programs. With the changes in the hydrocarbons regime, Bolivia’s previous customary fiscal deficits have turned into surpluses that together with relatively favorable external conditions have resulted in improvements in economic growth, even though private investment has remained low. 17. The Bank-financed Bank and Corporate Sector Restructuring Program (BCRP) supported important financial sector legal, regulatory and institutional reforms—including the confirmation of the Superintendency of Banks and Financial Entities as the exclusive authority in matters of prudential norms and regulations, strengthening the financial sector and reducing the risk of future systemic financial crises. The reforms supported by the first phase are in place, but priorities have focused now on broadening and deepening access to credit, particularly to small and medium enterprises and agriculture, and not towards corporate restructuring that was to be the focus of a second phase. The Bank complemented its financial assistance towards this strategic objective with a strong program of analytical and advisory services including a Public Expenditure Review (carried out jointly with the IADB); Poverty Assessment which fed into the design of Bank-financed operations; a Country Economic Memorandum (CEM) focused on employment-generating economic growth and policies aimed at improving investment climate and boosting exports, a Credit Bureau Assessment carried out as part of the Western Hemisphere Credit Bureau Initiative, a series of Financial Sector Notes to update knowledge on the sector (described in para. 21 below) and a recently-concluded Financial Sector Assessment Program. Non-lending Technical Assistance studies on the private sector (on topics such as urban alliances, partial credit risk guarantees, moveable assets as collateral) were also delivered to support preparation of a project on urban alliances, but the project was eventually dropped due to frequent changes in the counterparts. Despite the difficult environment for private sector investments in Bolivia, IFC continued 43 its effort to implement its support strategy based on the selective provision of financing for viable, high- impact projects, monitoring its portfolio as well as providing technical assistance and capacity building. However, IFC’s outstanding investments have declined from US$235.3 million in September 2005 to US$39.4 million in January 2011. 18. Productive Development and Support to Production, including Sustainable Development. The CAS recognized the importance of promoting the rural sector in order to reduce poverty (estimated at about 90 of the rural population) and inequality and contemplated actions aimed at improving conditions for productive activities and creating income-generating opportunities. Infrastructure, mainly rural roads, access to basic services and land, sustainable productive initiatives, and biodiversity conservation were prioritized. There have been some important initiatives supported by lending, that have made promising progress towards improving living and economic conditions in rural areas through improved infrastructure, and, at the same time, developed innovative approaches, adapted to Bolivia’s reality, to ensure that the rural population would benefit from the jobs generated by the projects. The Participatory Rural Investment Project II (PDCR II) is helping to develop practical instruments to ensure coordination in public investment and reduce duplication of efforts and has acquired increased relevance within the constitutional reform, which intends to clarify inter-governmental relations. Rural municipalities have conducted participatory transportation planning that has provided complete information on road networks, categorizing each road according to the population served, condition, and maintenance or upgrading need. On this basis, mayors and communities have defined their priorities, taking into account their budgetary capacity. The PDCR II also helped communities implement spot improvements as the key modality of intervention in the road network. This has allowed municipalities and communities to focus on year-round accessibility, rather than speed of circulation. The cost of road improvements has fallen by approximately half, allowing the project to finance 900 kilometers of roads with just US$4 million, directly benefiting close to 220,000 people in the remotest areas of the country that now have access to an all-season road. The success of the Rural Alliances Project, has led the Government to create the Empoderar program, intended as the main line of action to improve access to markets, production and competitiveness on the part of poor rural producers. Success in implementing grants that are managed by the producer organizations themselves has served as an example for other rural development programs. The project has had significant impact, as it is focused on an important conceptual shift from producer support focused on the needs of producers and their organizations, without regard for market competitiveness to support for market opportunities of producer organizations, as demonstrated in alliances with buyers who express a specific demand. Over 13,000 families received direct benefits from 296 producer subprojects financed, of which 83 percent have positive financial results. The National Land Administration Project (NLAP) obtained important achievements, including legislation and regulations necessary for carrying out streamlined land regularization, and the establishment of the National Agrarian Tribunal as a special part of the Judicial Branch. After five full years of operation, the NLAP had opened 50 tribunals and resolved 1,684 cases of agrarian land rights disputes. In addition, land registries in nine departmental capitals and three regional centers transferred to the Instituto Nacional de Reforma Agraria (INRA). The Land for Agricultural Development Project (LADP) is establishing a decentralized beneficiary-driven land distribution mechanism that is allowing organized landless or poor farmers to acquire suitable agricultural loans and implement investment projects which would put them on a sustainable, higher income livelihood paths by providing a revolving line of credit to finance land purchases and matching grants for infrastructure and productive investments on the purchased lands. Productive Associations, established and supported under the project, are responsible for the repayment of the land acquisition loans and the acquired lands serve as collateral. The LADP is particularly relevant, since land is a high-visibility issue that is the cause of potentially explosive conflicts between indigenous/peasant groups and large landowners in the eastern part of the country. Despite implementation issues, the Indigenous Peoples Development Project (Indigenous LIL) financed--together with indigenous producer groups--40 pilot investments in the areas of community tourism, handicraft production and marketing and basic processing of renewable natural resources and both demonstrated 44 that community groups can manage funds successfully and revealed the institutional and regulatory practices that place barriers in transferring resources directly to social organizations. 19. Support to infrastructure development also produced important outcomes, both to promote growth and exports and increase access of rural areas to markets and services. The Abapo-Camiri Highway within the transport corridor which links Bolivia with Argentina and Paraguay is estimated to have reduced transport costs, vehicle operating costs, travel time from Santa Cruz to Yacuiba and traffic volumes on this now all-weather road have increased by 138 percent. In addition, access for rural communities was provided by the rehabilitation and maintenance of some adjacent access roads. The Road Rehabilitation and Maintenance Project has rehabilitated priority sections of the national road network resulting in increases in freight transport and passenger transport. Rehabilitation of the priority Calamarca-San Pedro and Boyuibe- Yacuiba sections provides continuity to the Abapo-Camiri highway and access to Mercosur markets and has contributed to a reduction in freight transport tariffs from Bolivia’s lowlands to Argentina, and an increase use of those roads by trucks. Equally impressive, the Project introduced a successful results-based routine maintenance program for the entire primary road network) by fostering the use of micro-enterprises in the routine maintenance of roads—keeping the roads clean and preventing their deterioration. The Decentralized Infrastructure for Rural Transformation Project--the second largest Bank-financed renewable energy-based electrification project in LCR--is expanding and improving electricity delivery as a catalyst for the development of rural areas. It is financing competitively awarded subsidies to the private sector to expand electricity services and supporting expansion through solar systems in isolated rural areas and grid densification in peri-urban areas. With a new regulatory framework for rural electrification and the establishment of a financing mechanism for the program, Programa Eectricidad para Vivir con Dignidad, the Project has installed solar home systems in the poorest rural areas, benefiting an estimated 45,000 people. In addition, solar home systems have been installed in schools and clinics, benefiting an additional 30,000 people; public lighting has been provided for 20,000 in poor, urban areas. The Urban Infrastructure Project has exceeded its original targets in providing access to sewage connections, and property values as measured by the cost of rent in participating poor neighborhoods in La Paz have increased over four times what had been expected due to improved access to basic urban services. The Government has expressed interest in a possible additional financing and the Municipal Services Study, currently under preparation, will provide inputs towards a larger potential intervention in the provision of basic infrastructure to the urban poor. 20. The Bolivian economy is strongly exposed to natural disaster risks, and these affect mostly the poor. A joint Damage and Loss Assessment estimated the La Niña flood of December 2007 alone to have caused damages and losses worth US$443 million overwhelming the Government’s ability to respond to rehabilitation and recovery needs. The Emergency Recovery and Disaster Management Project and a related Additional Financing have supported rehabilitation of the productive capacity in affected communities. They respond to the objectives of the Government’s National Plan for Sustainable Rehabilitation and Reconstruction (PRESS), and the 2008-2010 Rehabilitation and Reconstruction National Plan that aim to strengthen the ability to respond to future disasters by moving from a reactive to a proactive approach by investing in risk mitigation measures and by improving risk evaluation in planning and reconstruction. The Sustainability of the National System of Protected Areas GEF Project has had important results in ten of the 22 protected areas, and has provided minimum infrastructure and equipment to ensure effective management and operation of each area. A key achievement is that communities within and around the areas are increasingly involved and committed to the conservation following environmental education in communities neighboring the areas, and the piloting of sustainable, biodiversity-related, income-generating activities within areas and their buffer zones. 21. Bolivia faces important challenges to improve its traditionally weak investment climate to spur private sector development, and the Bank’s non-lending assistance focused on providing analysis and policy options. A study on Policies for Increasing Firms’ Formality and Productivity assessed the 45 productivity constraints faced by Bolivian firms, identifying policies to encourage their productivity and formality. These policies vary according to the size of the firm and were prioritized to formulate a comprehensive support program. Following from this, the Bank provided several analytical works to, inter alia, provide advice on productivity and trade issues (including logistics), evaluate specific issues on informality among women entrepreneurs and evaluate the Bolivian trade policy and its effects on non- traditional labor-intensive exports. A series of Financial Sector Notes followed a modular approach to foster dialogue and accommodate topics of interest to the Government. Topics included the transitioning of financial cooperatives into the regulatory sphere, and comparing the applicable regulatory framework with regional standards. This study, in combination with a South-South Dialogue with Mexico on their experience in bringing cooperatives under prudential oversight, has helped the Government refine its reform agenda. Another report in this series focuses on outreach to rural areas and assessing the financial sector’s potential role in fostering productive sector credit. The Bank and the government are currently exploring possible follow-up to implement some of the findings. 22. Human Development. Although it remained among the poorest countries in the Latin America region, Bolivia had made considerable progress in social outcomes in the decade preceding the CAS. Building on the Social Safety Net SAC, two Social Sector Programmatic Credits protected this performance from the political volatility and macroeconomic situation in the 2004-2005 period. Together, this policy-based lending resulted in improved sector policy frameworks, congruent with accelerating progress towards the MDGs, and promoted results-based orientation and accountability. The only area in which advances were limited was for water and sanitation, where political conflicts led to the suspension of the Aguas de Illimani water concession in El Alto. This policy reversal led to the withdrawal of the water and sanitation sector from the programmatic operation, and a reduction in the amount financed. At the time of the ISN I design, Bolivia still faced substantial social inequality. Education coverage had shown improvement, but universal coverage remained a considerable challenge—particularly for rural and indigenous populations—and the quality of education was very low. Complemented by comprehensive sector work, lending was highly successful in promoting decentralized management and community participation and produced promising results. Under the Education Quality and Equity Strengthening Project the average years of schooling for students in project areas increased from 6.1 to 7.4, the percentage of students with satisfactory academic achievement in Grade 3 increased from 89.9 to 91.2 percent, and gender disparities in average years of schooling were reduced. The Secondary Education Transformation Project, has so far provided the intended new infrastructure, enrolled 4,500 students in an incentive program to reduce the risk of drop-out, and supported 178 schools in the preparation of School Improvement Plans aimed at improving education quality. Following the successful Health Sector Reform Project that closed in 2003, the Second Health Sector Reform Project was successful in increasing the coverage of births attended by trained health personnel which increased from 54 percent to 57 percent, complete prenatal care attendance from 33 percent to 40 percent; early neonatal hospital mortality remained at eight per 1,000 live births; the number of pneumonia cases attended in health services increased from 112,000 to 174,000; and the percentage of children with iron supplement (third iron dose) increased from 8 percent to 20 percent. Eighty five percent of project beneficiaries belong to the two lowest wealth quintiles population, indicating a high pro-poor targeting. The Expanding Access to Reduce Health Inequalities APLIII was approved in 2008 but is facing implementation challenges. With poverty reduction at the center of President Morales’ agenda, the Bank has provided continuous non-lending assistance and evidence-based analysis aimed at informing the Government’s social protection strategy under the Programmatic Social Protection AAA. As a result of the success of this AAA in terms of its support for client engagement and dialogue to inform strategy, the program is now in its fifth year of continuous implementation, providing just-in-time assistance on a programmatic basis. Based on priorities identified in this AAA, the Investing in Children and Youth Project is supporting two flagship programs of the Government’s Social Protection and Integrated Community Development Strategy: (i) the Bono Juana Azurduy, which is under the umbrella of the Zero Malnutrition Program and addresses chronic malnutrition through a conditional cash transfer aimed at 46 benefiting pregnant women and children under two-years-old in the most vulnerable municipalities; and (ii) the Mi Primer Empleo Digno (My First Dignified Employment), a skill-development program for low income youth living in poor urban areas to enhance their ability to find and maintain a good quality job. The Project has developed the information system, including beneficiary registries through which financing of cash transfers of the Bono Juana Azurduy will be made, and a pilot phase of Mi Primer Empleo has been successfully completed in four cities, and incorporating adjustments based on the pilot, has been expanded to six additional ones. 23. Governance and Support to the Public Sector. While an important priority for Bolivia, this was the most challenging area of Bank assistance, which required both flexibility on the Bank’s part in terms of engaging with the various Governments through a mix of lending and non-lending services, and adjustment to redefined priorities for both reforms and their corresponding implementation strategies. Based on findings of the 2004 Country Financial Accountability Assessment (CFAA), the Government in 2005 presented the “Strategic Framework for Strengthening Public Finances� that was endorsed by the Donor Community. Although progress was uneven, key actions were implemented, including: the expansion of the system for budget control and monitoring (SIGMA) both at the central, and sub-national levels and the implementation of a functional classification of expenditures and the implementation of the Single Treasury Account. Under the Institutional Reform I Project (IRP I), limited progress was made toward the achievement of its objectives, including the vertical reforms introduced in three pilot agencies (tax, customs and road agencies). However, the development of a modern, result oriented management system failed. Also, in view of the Government’s redefined institutional reform strategy coupled with repeated staffing changes, a follow-up to this Project did not advance as planned. Some progress was achieved in the preparation of planned operations to support the governance pillar, although these have yet to show results. A Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability (PEFA) Report assessed the pubic financial management system, and identified and prioritized reforms. In January 2011 a Strengthening Statistical Capacity and Informational Base for Evidence-Based Planning Project was approved. The planned Strengthening State Efficiency and Transparency Project has been converted into non-lending technical assistance to improve the public investment process and the coordination among different government levels. The Bank has also supported governance through institutional strengthening components in its projects, paying particular attention to improvements in monitoring and evaluation systems. Following Bolivia’s participation in the Bank’s 2007 global consultation on “Strengthening World Bank Engagement on Governance and Anticorruption� the Government reiterated its strong commitment to fighting corruption and increasing transparency in the use of public resources; a mandate that has been assigned to the Ministry of Institutional Transparency, and Fight against Corruption. V. Brief Review of the Bank’s Performance in designing and managing the implementation of the program Design of the Strategy Relevance and Alignment with Country Development Priorities 24. The Bank’s program was relevant and, as it was short-term by design allowed the flexibility needed to ensure alignment with the Bank’s comparative advantage, and country priorities in areas where there was agreement throughout the period. The short term nature of the CAS, and the timing of the two ISNs ensured that the Bank’s assistance responded in the first instance, to the country’s short-term macroeconomic needs, and later, to the Morales Administration’s priorities. The timing of ISN I, for example, allowed for dropping a Second Bank and Corporate Sector Restructuring Program and the Institutional Reform II Project that were not in line with the Government’s priorities, and intensifying lending and non-lending assistance in support of the new Government’s focus on poverty, productive development and support to production, and human development. Some of the projects in the portfolio 47 (e.g., Institutional Reform) were completed, but lost their relevance due to new priorities; consequently their outcome was not satisfactory. Selection of Areas of Engagement and Instruments 25. The selection of areas of engagement was appropriate. In 2004-2005, the Bank correctly focused on helping maintain macroeconomic stability through policy-based loans, aimed mostly at protecting social programs. Starting in 2006, and, with little knowledge of the plans of the new Administration, and some concern for future policy directions, the shift on investment lending focusing on productive development and support to production and human development was also appropriate. While the Bank’s focus on governance and anticorruption was justified---Bolivia’s Corruption Perception Index released by Transparency International gave Bolivia a score of 2.5 ranking the country at 114 out of 158 countries— the Bank may have been ambitious in planning two operations under ISN I that would address difficult issues before having established a solid relationship with the Government based on mutual trust. It also may have underestimated the intense restructuring that the country would face in implementing a new Constitution. In the end, the Bank worked intensively and jointly through non-lending services in order to build this trust and a program of lending that responds to the Government’s priorities. Realism of the Expected Outcomes and Quality of Results Framework 26. ISN II had a Results Framework including Milestones and ISN Outcomes that together with the text of the CAS and earlier ISN have been used to retrofit a Framework for the CASCR period (Annex 2.1). The Results Framework in ISN II mentioned explicitly that eight of the then active projects would only start their implementation in FY2010, several projects identified under the ISN would only be submitted to the Board for approval shortly before the completion of the ISN, and that as a result, the outcomes were expected to materialize much later than the FY2010-2011 timeframe. In that context, the outcomes identified referred to results expected upon or beyond the closing of projects, while the milestones were expected to show some progress during implementation of the ISN. Identification of Critical Risks 27. There is no question that Bank assistance throughout this period was faced with considerable risks. The short duration of the CAS and ISNs was in response to the risky and totally uncertain environment. The CAS and the ISNs each highlighted these risks very explicitly and extensively. The three main risks identified in the CAS all materialized: (i) Congress was still controlled by traditional political parties, (ii) President Mesa did not serve his full constitutional term, (iii) strong demands were being placed on the government from different sectors while the government had limited capacity to respond, and (iv) there were several groups that wanted to see the government fail. As a result, the first phase of President Mesa’s agenda was never fully completed. Perhaps the risk that had not been contemplated was that the Bank would not be able to continue to deliver assistance in Bolivia through the Country Office and visiting missions due to the increasing violence in the last months of President Mesa’s administration. Of the risks identified in the ISNs the main one that materialized related to institutional and fiduciary aspects, and the portfolio, that together resulted in delays in new lending, and issues with portfolio management. The mitigation strategies identified and implemented to address those risks were helpful in reducing their impact. Public sector wage reductions made it difficult to attract and retain highly skilled public servants and frequent turnover of project staff, including those working with financial management. The recently approved Constitution is having some impact on the institutional and other arrangements for Bank-financed projects, including in the definition of responsibilities across three levels of government, but so far these have been address through project restructurings. 48 Adjusting the Program to Changing Country Circumstances and Priorities 28. The very short-term nature of the CAS and ISNs, and their timing, in part contained the need to make major adjustments in planned assistance. Yet, when appropriate, the Bank adjusted the planned program to changing circumstances and priorities, by proving finance for unexpected emergencies, scaling up the impact and results of successful projects through additional financing, and demonstrating flexibility in the choice of instruments while still focusing on expected outcomes by converting planned lending assistance non-lending technical assistance to accomplish similar assistance objectives. Implementation of the CAS/ISN Program. Performance in Supporting the Implementation of Projects/Programs in the Portfolio. 29. Portfolio Level. The portfolio shrunk from 14 projects at the inception of the CAS to five projects in FY2007. A strong lending program in FY2008, together with subsequent approvals and closures resulted in a portfolio of 11 projects by end-FY2011. The Table below summarizes the main portfolio indicators. Portfolio Performance FY2004-2011 Fiscal Year 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 Number of Projects 14 11 6 5 11 11 11 11 Net Commitments 537.7 462.7 265.6 190.4 272.8 302.8 302.8 365.3 % at Risk 28.6 36.4 33.3 40.0 9.1 45.5 45.5 27.2 % IPDO Actual Problem 28.6 27.3 33.3 40.0 9.1 18.2 18.2 27.3 % Proactivity 66.7 100.0 100.0 50.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 50 % Realism 100.0 75.0 100.0 100.0 100.0 40.0 40.0 100 Disbursements FY 81.9 67.5 30.5 14.9 15.4 27.5 36.3 34.7 Disbursements FY Invest 81.9 57.3 30.5 14.9 15.4 27.5 36.3 34.7 Undisbursed 303.4 233.4 138.7 105.8 125.2 220.2 219.1 151.6 Disbursement Ratio 27.0 28.3 22.0 14.1 12.3 12.5 16.6 22.9 CPPR (Yes/No) Y Y Y Y Y (2) Y (2) 30. Portfolio Management. The Bank provided strong portfolio support throughout the period to ensure both continued relevance and timely attention to implementation issues. Proactivity was high, and the number of problem projects has declined. Effectiveness delays still account for the high number of projects at risk. Country Financing Parameters were introduced early to help alleviate the fiscal impact of the Bank’s assistance by allowing the financing of recurrent costs, local currency costs, taxes and duties and other eligible expenditures. Country Portfolio Performance Reviews (CPPRs) were held yearly, and served as a forum for the Government and project implementing agencies to work with the Bank’s Country Team to identify and agree upon steps to address bottlenecks and issues. Detailed Aide- Memoires recorded the CPPRs’ findings and agreed follow-up actions. Under this umbrella framework, and with follow up under routine implementation support for individual operations, some projects were restructured to adjust project objectives and/or descriptions and address implementation issues (e.g., increasing financing percentages, modifying institutional arrangements). Despite proactive supervision, project implementation in a volatile and changing environment was not easy. Of the twenty projects that exited the portfolio, nine were evaluated as either MU or U in the Implementation Completion Reports. Several issues affected projects’ implementation, including, frequent changes in implementing agencies’ staff, weak procurement, financial management and operational capacity to support implementation, hiring difficulties, lack of clarity of the new institutional structure, delays in issuing no-objections, and counterpart funding constraints. The Bank intensified the number of seminars and workshops it delivered to relevant staff of executing agencies on the subjects of procurement, disbursement, financial 49 management and safeguards. The identification of implementation issues, such as effectiveness delays, has led to advancing several tasks during preparation to avoid implementation delays. 31. Individual Project Level. Individual project progress is presented in Annex 2.1. 32. Financial Management. Starting with a joint Bank and IADB Country Financial Accountability Assessment (CFAA) in 2004, the Bank has continuously supported initiatives to strengthen government systems to increasingly rely on these for Bank-financed projects. A Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability Assessment (PEFA) carried out in 2009 has provided useful information on the strengths and weakness of public financial management systems, and the Government is using this to develop an action plan that addresses identified issues with the support of the donor community. Supporting the Design of New Projects/Programs 33. There were considerable delays in delivering planned lending, in part due to the need to redefine projects to the new Administration’s priorities, and in part due to constraints of working in a changing institutional environment with weak staffing capacity (Table 2, Annex 2.2). Following the strong program of fast-disbursing assistance in FY2004, progress towards preparation of investment lending fell short of expectations. Of the US$597.0 planned lending during the period (of which US$125.0 million was to be IBRD and US$472.0 million IDA), only US$448.9 million was approved, of which only US$15.0 million was IBRD. Additional financing was delivered for the well-performing projects. There was no lending in 2006, lending in 2007 was mostly delayed, and there was a near doubling of lending in 2008 against what had been planned in ISN I, mostly due to delays in preparation caused by the change in administration in 2005 and the subsequent bunching of new lending. Most of the new investment lending supported the CAS outcomes of Productive Development and Support to Production (69 percent), and Human Development (31 percent). Several operations were dropped in view of the new Administration’s priorities. Relevance of Knowledge-Based Activities 34. The Bank’s program of analytical and advisory services (AAA) (Table 3, Annex 2.3) was extensive, well designed to provide support in areas where lending services were neither desired, nor justified (e.g., technical assistance for the Hydrocarbons Law), and effective in identifying key issues and topics for a policy dialogue. Recommendations of the Bank’s AAA have been used as input to the Government’s National Development Plan. Just-in-time Policy Option Notes prepared at the beginning of President Morales’ administration served to initiate a dialogue with a somewhat skeptical government, and then provided a road map for Bank assistance in areas that responded to the Government’s priorities. AAA was designed and used effectively to feed into the development of new programs and projects and used a variety of instruments tailored to the particular need, including formal sector work, non-lending technical assistance, policy notes, etc. AAA also proved to be an important instrument in sustaining a dialogue in areas where the project support lagged. Especially important were the programmatic AAAs that provided an overall instrument to adjust to priorities and requests while providing just in time support. Finally, Bolivia’s participation in Bank-sponsored global consultations (e.g., Governance and Anticorruption) with representatives from Congress, the Administration, the Judiciary, Civil Society, and others, resulted in the Government reiterating its strong commitment to fighting corruption and increasing transparency, for which the Bank will provide non-lending technical assistance. 35. The WBI also provided important support; throughout most of the period Bolivia was one of the WBI’s focus countries in LAC. The WBI’s priority was to address learning and capacity development needs in the sectors where the Bank was engaged in lending activities and/or analytical work by providing access to international knowledge and experience, both through structured training programs 50 and by facilitating “just-in-time� exchange with practitioners from other countries. Sectors/themes of focus included: governance/anticorruption, decentralization, education, and rural development. Consultations, outreach and dissemination through the Country Office were an integral part of the Bank’s assistance. Broader dissemination of the analytical work and greater openness in Bolivia have helped to position the Bank as an important independent source of information and to improve the Bank’s image in the country, and has served to promote wide and transparent debate among civil society groups on issues of importance to development. Notes on project and studies were translated and disseminated widely, including on the Bank’s Bolivia web page. The Bank’s Country Office also worked to involve civil society in the design and implementation of projects financed by the Bank, and promoted conferences to exchange experiences and views, often with participation of other countries. Bank’s efforts for Enhancing the Effectiveness of Overall Assistance Provided by all Donors 36. Although decreasing as a percentage of GDP, official development aid remains important for Bolivia. The Bank participated actively in donor coordination fora to maintain the alignment of its assistance with the NDP and the donors’ assistance. The Bank participated directly in the five Mesas de Coordinación organized by the Government in late 2006 to discuss sector plans and the NDP implementation, co-leading the Mesa Bolivia Digna together with the Netherlands. In addition to the Mesas, a Partners Group for the Development of Bolivia (GruS) was created in late 2006 to serve as a platform to better support the Government and its NDP. The chair of the GruS is elected on a semi- annual basis; the Bank chaired in during the second half of 2009. On a more operational level, the Bank participates in many of the 16 sector sub-groups that report to the GruS on a regular basis, and is co-chair of the Disaster Management and Emergency sub-group and the Water and Sanitation sub-group. The Bank is also an active member of the United Nations Country Team--and strengthened its participation in 2008--in order to promote harmonization and seek synergies to improve the work of the entire system in the field. The Bank has also provided valuable technical assistance under the South-South Experience Exchange Trust Fund. The Effectiveness of the Dialogue and Business Relations with the Authorities 37. The Bank’s dialogue with the Mesa Administration was by design short-term in nature. Dialogue with the Rodriguez administration was limited by the short term of his administration and by the increasing tensions and violence that resulted in the withdrawal of the Bank’s Country Office Staff and the restriction in travel. The Bank was the first major donor to engage with the President Morales’ Administration. This rapid engagement helped clear up negative perceptions of the Bank and other multilaterals, and contributed to the development of a trusting environment that helped build a positive relationship. Starting with technical briefings between the Bank’s Country Team and President Morales’ policy team during the campaign period and then after elections, the Bank immediately prepared a series of Policy Notes that were discussed at a high-level event in March 2006. The Government and the Bank identified assistance priorities in areas where there was agreement, and these discussions provided a sound basis for the development of an assistance strategy to the new Government. How the Bank mitigated risks and managed the Program when some of the Risks Materialized. 38. Successive strategies had identified extensive risks, many of which materialized. The short-term nature of each of the strategies was designed to mitigate these risks. Towards the last months of the CAS, the Bank’s involvement was curtailed due to the violence in the country. When President Rodriguez assumed power, assistance resumed on a limited scale. During this period, however, the Bank began engaging with presidential candidates, including President Morales through targeted workshops, aimed at explaining the Bank’s mandate, assistance program and possibilities for future engagement. A strong program of AAA in FY2004-FY2006 enabled the Bank to engage productively in discussions with the 51 new administration. While the situation was uncertain, the alternative of not engaging could have been worse, with the Bank losing a historic opportunity for working pragmatically to help assess alternatives with the benefit of international best practices and lessons learned and, thereby, enhancing the prospects for positive outcomes. Implementation and program risks were mitigated by demonstrating responsiveness to new priorities and emergencies, flexibility in the choice of instrument, willingness to provide strong technical and advisory services, including in increased portfolio and program monitoring and the project restructuring to address new institutional realities. VI. Key Lessons and Suggestions for the New CAS 39. There are important lessons of experience for the Bank from its assistance during the CASCR period that are relevant to the Bank in general, and to the design of its future strategy for Bolivia. First, the Bank’s Performance in Bolivia offers a positive experience of Bank engagement with a Government that may not share the same views in all areas. Progress in private sector development and attracting private investment may be limited, but by showing flexibility, openness, listening to country priorities and strategies and selectively supporting those areas where there is a convergence of views and approaches, the Bank has developed a positive engagement with the Government in support of a program that is yielding promising results in terms of improving the prospects for its population. Second, although the political risk has diminished, at least until when the next pre-electoral period begins, there still exists a high degree of social and institutional risk in view of the process to implement the various legal aspects of the new Constitution. This risk could come to affect not only new lending, but especially projects in the portfolio as their implementing arrangements may need to adjust to a new institutional framework. While the provision of both intensive analytical and advisory services and implementation support may mitigate this risk, its impact on the program should not be underestimated. Third, the new Country Partnership Strategy (CPS) should coincide with the end of the Presidential term. The implementation of several projects and a productive program of analytical and advisory services have shown that it is possible to make a marked impact on economic and social issues that have affected Bolivia’s development, especially of its large rural population. Over the next CPS period, several ongoing projects will likely produce important results. The Bank should prepare succinct, informative project “notes� highlighting projects’ successful experiences, accomplishments and future challenges to provide continuity. Irrespective of a future election’s outcome, Bolivia’s continued progress and social stability depends fundamentally on improving the livelihood of its population, especially the rural poor. Many of these projects will provide important lessons for future programs and assistance efforts. Finally, results monitoring, and showing results, should be an important focus, for both the Government and the Bank. Promising ongoing initiatives and programs could offer important knowledge that could be applied in countries facing similar challenges. The next CPS should include a carefully articulated Results Matrix that will allow the Bank and the Government to review progress at the end of the CPS period. Perhaps, given that this will be the first full assistance strategy in several years, the Bank might want to adopt a programmatic approach to its CPS. Following the model of programmatic lending and non-lending services, the CPS could formulate a broad, framework strategy for FY2012-2015, with a very defined assistance program for FY2012 and broader objectives and assistance plans and amounts for the subsequent years, flexibility with respect to instruments with a provision for yearly discussions and agreement in the context of yearly CPPRs, to adjust and reorient priorities to progress, results achieved and emerging priorities, against the Results Matrix. 52 Table 1: Summary of CAS Program Self-evaluation CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) I. SUPPORT TO KEY ECONOMIC AND POLITICAL PROCESSES (CAS) Government prioritya: Status: Partially Achieved WB Support: Lessons learned: First Phase:  TA on Hydrocarbons financed Non-Lending:  The Bank is not well positioned to make  Hydrocarbons law revised raising the hydrocarbons experts that provided  Technical Assistance on Hydrocarbons a noticeable impact on high visibility effective tax contribution of the oil and advice on technical aspects, but Law political issues, and its involvement in gas companies decision-making taken over by  Policy Note, Manejo Fiscal de la Renta such processes can bring substantial  The decision to export natural gas political events Petrolera: Diagnóstico y Opciones de reputational risks submitted to a public referendum  Policy Note delivered presenting Pólitica  The Bank’s involvement, if any, should  Constitutional Assembly modifying policy options for better management  IDF Grant (US$300,000) to support the be limited to providing options through Constitution called of fiscal resources, but these were not Unidad de Coordinación para la TA, but even so, there is no guarantee Second Phase: included in new Law Asamblea Constituyente in the that advice will influence outcomes,  PRSP revised, based on consultations  Hydrocarbons Law enacted in 2005 dissemination of the proposals in especially when the outcome is with civil society, an fiscal pact carried  New Constitution enacted in February preparation for the Assembly influenced by the social and political out in coordination with the National 2009 environment Dialogue and a restructured portfolio of  Government increased control of international assistance hydrocarbons industry, and the state oil company, YPFB, will hold at least 50 percent plus one of the total shares of companies, and YPFB will handle all hydrocarbon commercialization  The PRSP was not revised II. MACROECONOMIC STABILITY AND GROWTH (CASb) Government priority: Status: Achieved WB Support: Lessons learned:  Macroeconomic stability restored  New tax regime for hydrocarbons sector Lending  ERC. It was clear from the outset that  through an economically, socially and increased revenues significantly Project name: Emergency Recovery use  of  the  Emergency  Recovery  Loan  politically feasible fiscal path consistent  Spending was constrained, mostly due to Credit (ERC) instrument  as  defined  in  OP/BP  8.50  with external financing slow public investment Project ID: P087661 was  to  pose  challenges  both   Public expenditure reoriented toward Approval date: 12/16/03 internally (at the Board) and with the   2005 fiscal stance improved high-visibility programs that respond to Completion date: 03/31/04 client  (in  terms  of  providing  fast  significantly bringing the budget deficit underlying factors that led to social Objective: To provide assistance to the disbursement)  given  that  the  down to 1.5% of GDP from *% in 2003. conflict, especially in sensitive Government in financing its domestic instrument  was  not  designed  to  geographical areas  External financing from the Bank and public service obligations. It also helped IDB provided liquidity to contain the finance ongoing reforms and programs in provide fast liquidity transfers.   Institutional reform program and  Programmatic  Bank  Corporate  2004 gap that resulted from postponing the social sectors to support the poor and anticorruption efforts re-launched Restructuring Program. The existence  the PRSC and IMF PRGF due to vulnerable, thus mitigating the possibility difficulties in producing a PRSP of  a  well�funded  Bank  Capitalization  of further civil unrest, which given the a The CAS did not include specific CAS Outcomes for Bank assistance; it only included the Government’s goals and corresponding Bank instruments to support them b Although the CAS included transport under this Priority, for this CASCR Matrix, transport is included in Priority III, Productive Development and Support to Production 53 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets)  An 80% reduction in “reserved circumstances could have spiraled into an Fund  to  support  Bank  restructuring  expenditures� enforced, and a uncontrollable disruption of Bolivia’s can  be  an  effective  stabilizing  factor  Presidential Delegate for Anticorruption social stability and democracy for the financial system.  appointed, but little progress was made  Borrower  ownership  is  difficult  to   Fast disbursing assistance from the Bank ICR Completion ratings: maintain  under  changing  political  succeeded in providing some protection Outcome Satisfactory circumstances,  but  it  is  important  to  for social programs (see Human Sustainability Likely keep all necessary elements as part of  Development below). Institutional Negligible the  technical  discussions  in  case  the   Some progress was achieved in better Development situation  improves  and  unforeseen  capitalization of banks, and strengthened Impact actions do materialize.  prudential regulations (2005). Bank Satisfactory  It  is  probably  not  wise  to  prepare  a  Performance medium term policy�based package of  Borrower Satisfactory assistance,  in  the  form  of  Performance programmatic  adjustment  loans/credits  in  a  difficult  political  Project name: First Programmatic Bank environment  since  the  chances  of  and Corporate Restructuring Program program  continuity  are  slim.  (The  Adjustment Loan/Credit second phase of this program was not  Project ID: P082781 pursued  due  to  the  Government’s  Approval date: 02/10/04 changed priorities.)  Completion date: 12/31/04 Objective: To strengthen the financial and corporate sectors by consolidating and expanding institutional and regulatory reforms, and encouraging restructuring and reorganization of banks and enterprises. ICR Completion ratings: Outcome Moderately Satisfactory Risk to Substantial Development Outcome Bank Highly Performance Satisfactory Borrower Moderately Performance Satisfactory Non-Lending  PER (FY04)  CEM/Trade (FY06) 54 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets)  Economic Integration (FY08)  Economic Integration Multi-sector Study (FY08)  Rising Food Prices (FY11)  South-South Experience Exchange (FY11)  FSAP (FY11)  Financial Sector Notes (FY11) III. PRODUCTIVE DEVELOPMENT AND SUPPORT TO PRODUCTION Government priority: Status: Partially Achieved WB Support: Lessons learned: From CAS: (By lending instrument) Lending:  Productive infrastructure developed  Producer groups managed 40 pilot Project name: Indigenous Peoples  Community groups can manage funds  Improved access to land, water and investments in the areas of community Development Project successfully natural resources tourism, handicraft production and Project ID: P057416  Indigenous peoples can improve their marketing and basic processing of Approval date: 02/14/2001  Increased promotion of productive incomes by accessing markets through natural resources Completion date: 12/31/2004 the provision of products and services chain exports Objective: To learn how culturally based that are not necessarily “indigenous�.  Increased promotion of local productive initiative of indigenous economic development  Productive initiatives are best undertaken communities could contribute to income by producer groups and support to local generation and poverty reduction. From ISN I: development plan by politicians. ICR Completion ratings:  Productive sectors promoted, Outcome Unsatisfactory  Indigenous political organizations’ particularly in rural areas, through interfered in subproject selection and Sustainability Unlikely mainly a state-led approach execution. Institutional Negligible  Productive areas with increasing Development value-added and high demand for Impact employment prioritized, including: (i) Bank Satisfactory hydrocarbons; (ii) mining; (iii) rural Performance development; (iv) natural resources, Borrower Unsatisfactory including protecting biodiversity and Performance environmental quality); (v) manufacturing industry; (vi) tourism;  Sustained increase (7.68% p.a.) in  Restricting the municipal planning Project name: Participatory Rural (vii) housing; and (viii) transport. standard quality productive investments process to the municipal territory may Investment Project  Rural development promoted through implemented and maintained in 200 not be necessarily be conducive to Project ID: P040085 land titling, food security, productive poor municipalities optimal decision-making Approval date: 05/12/98 chains, commercialization of coca for  Implementation rate of the municipal Completion date: 06/30/04  Participatory demand identification legal uses, markets and technology, investment program increased in 200 Objective: To assist the borrower to needs o be complemented with solid non-agriculture income generating municipalities (76%) promote economic development of rural technical inputs in order to ensure activities, technical assistance and communities and eligible municipalities adequate ranking of development  91% of subprojects in 200 priorities for communities. access to financial services municipalities had positive economic through sustainable productive  Emphasis placed on micro and small investments based on local demand that is  Municipalities not always allocate 55 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) enterprises and on attempts to and financial impacts generated through participatory planning sufficient resources for the cost of facilitate linkages with larger processes. operation and maintenance of rural companies ICR Completion ratings: infrastructure built or rehabilitated. From ISN II: Outcome Moderately  Improved economic inclusion of the Satisfactory rural population in a framework of Risk to Moderate social and cultural equity Development  Increased standards of living in poor Outcome urban areas through better access to Bank Satisfactory basic services Performance  Increased standards of living in areas Borrower Moderately previously affected by disasters Performance Unsatisfactory  Increased Government capacity to respond to future natural disasters  Four laws and regulations on land Project name: National Land  Land regularization process has not led tenure policy and administration Administration Project to any significant progress on land  Increased climate resilience of including a decentralized out-of-court Project ID: P006197 distribution. There is a need for a more investments in a number of territories land dispute resolution system enacted directly proactive land distribution Approval date: 06/13/95 ISN II Indicators: in 1996 and updated in 2003. policy less driven by the process of Completion date: 06/30/05  Increased number of hectares of  The National Agrarian Tribunal, a Objective: To achieve a more efficient land regularization. agricultural land under cultivation and transparent land administration  An overall framework for prioritizing special part of the judicial branch for with irrigation system, clarify the land tenure situation, and targeting is needed. resolving land conflicts established in  Improved access to land for organized 1999, opened 50 tribunals through identify public land suitable for small  Issues of territorial administration must landless or poor farmers which it resolved 1,684 cases of farmer settlements and promote a more be resolved prior to establishing  Growth (%) in income of rural agrarian land rights disputes. sustainable use of the country’s land property rights in highland areas. The productive units resources. project encountered a very different set  Land registries in nine departmental  Increased property values, urban capitals and three regional centers of issues in the highland indigenous mobility, improved roads and areas than were found in lowlands transferred to the Instituto Nacional de sewerage networks in target areas ICR Completion ratings:  Local ownership of the process and Reforma Agraria (INRA).  Increased investments by the local Outcome Satisfactory community participation facilitated the governments in basic services  Land regularization process completed in six provinces, totaling about 2.9 Sustainability Likely field work, improved the quality of (infrastructure, water and sanitation, Institutional Substantial information and improved the million regularized. education, etc.) Development involvement of women in the process.  Disaster Risk Management Units  INRA Law of 1996 explicitly recognized the right of women to own Impact implemented (and working) in target Bank Satisfactory areas land. Performance  Restored infrastructure facilities in Borrower Satisfactory areas affected by natural disasters Performance  Pilot projects aimed at increasing resilience of investments and Project name: Abapo-Camiri Highway  A sound institutional framework that integrating management concepts  Construction of the 152 km, fully paved Project ID: P055230 provides for adequate procurement completed two-lane Abapo-Camiri Highway Approval date: 06/03/99 mechanisms to ensure the selection of completed 56 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets)  Transport costs are estimated to have Completion date: 06/30/04 good contractors and consultants is able reduced between 5 and 10 percent, Objective: To improve transport to overcome an adverse environment, vehicle operating costs to have reduced conditions along a strategic north-south and is conducive to obtain reasonable by 35 percent, travel time from Santa corridor linking the Bolivian Departments costs for high quality outputs Cruz to Yacuiba from 18 to 6 hours, and of Beni, Santa Cruz, Chuquisaca and  In the design of large road infrastructure traffic volumes on the all-weather road Tarija and continuing to Argentina and investment projects, substantial social have increased by 138 percent Paraguay. impacts and a more inclusive  Access for rural communities provided ICR Completion ratings: development approach can be achieved by the rehabilitation and maintenance of Outcome Satisfactory by incorporating strategic elements some adjacent roads. Sustainability Likely targeting access for the poor. Institutional Modest  Well-conceived and implemented Development Resettlement Action Plan, Community Impact Relations Program, and Indigenous Bank Satisfactory Peoples Development Plan as part of Performance any major infrastructure project are Borrower Satisfactory effective means for enhancing Performance community participation and ensuring that the project’s interventions reach the  The drafting of the Protected Areas Project name: Sustainability of the most vulnerable. (PA) Law has been completed but not National System of Protected Areas  It is important to keep the vision of a approved. Project long-term strategic framework provided  Ten Protected Areas supported and Project ID: P060474 by the Master Plan. strengthened by financing their Approval date: 01/30/2001  Financial sustainability is still an recurrent costs as well as their Completion date: 06/30/2006 important bottleneck for protected areas investment costs. Objective: To conserve and provide in- management.  Local and indigenous communities situ protection of biodiversity in the  The implementation of the Master Plan were integrated as active participants mountain ecosystems of the Andean in a next phase should give priority to: and beneficiaries in protected areas Region, and the forest ecosystems of the i) support institutional development at management and conservation, through Andean slopes, the Bolivian Amazon, and various levels; ii) support the establishment and operation of the the Chaco region. administrative decentralization without PA management committees ICR Completion ratings: hindering the development of the established in 17 PAs Outcome Moderately central government; iii) respect  The Protected Areas Trust Fund Satisfactory Bolivia's particular cultural and ethnic administered through FUNDESNAP Risk to Substantial diversity; iv) ensure that conservation has been successfully established and is Development and sustainable use initiatives result in currently operating with a capital Outcome local benefits, and v) relate natural endowment of US$ 15 million; the Bank Satisfactory resource management to rural capitalization goal has been met. Performance development.  Management Plans for three additional Borrower Moderately  Future efforts should articulate, measure PAs have been developed and are under Performance Satisfactory and inform the Management implementation. Office and field Committees and other stakeholders 57 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) equipment has been provided to the 10 regarding the indicators of biodiversity selected PAs. and of the current and projected future  Models for biodiversity management resource use patterns by communities in developed and piloted at 5 PAs. each PA.  Second largest renewable energy-based Project name: Decentralized  Competitively awarded subsidies to the electrification project financed by Bank Infrastructure for Rural Transformation private sector offer a viable option for in LAC. Project expanding the delivery of needed  Innovative project that competitively Project ID: P073367 services awards subsidies to the private sector to Approval date: 06/17/03 expand both electricity and telecom Completion date: 05/27/2011 services Objective: To expand and improve the delivery of infrastructure services through  Has provided expansion through the private-sector led mechanisms as a installation of more than 9,200 solar catalyst for the development of rural home systems in some of the poorest, areas. most isolated rural areas benefitting Latest ISR Ratings: 45,000 people. Development Moderately  Another 87 solar home systems have Objectives Satisfactory been installed in schools and clinics, Implementation Moderately benefiting an additional 30,000 people. Performance Satisfactory  Public lighting provided benefiting about 20,000 people in poor, urban areas.  Developed a conceptual shift in Project name: Rural Alliancesc  A conceptual shift in approach can be supporting market opportunities of Project ID: P083051 successful, especially if it takes into producer organizations, as demonstrated Approval date: 05/26/05 account the needs of the people it in alliances with buyers who express Completion date: Ongoing intends to support. specific demands, as opposed to needs Objective: To test a model to improve  Producer organizations are capable of of producers and their organizations. accessibility to markets for poor rural managing grants that are subjected to  Financing provided to producer producers in selected sub-regions of the financial, social and environmental organizations, subjected to financial, country. The additional credit will help assessments. social and environmental assessments, finance scaling-up of project activities to allow them to deliver products within enhance development impact by the specified parameters for quality, expanding the project into two new sub- quantity and timing. regions of the country and by co-financing  Has supported the organization of 384 a greater number of rural alliances in the c An Additional Financing in the amount of US$ equivalent 30.0 million was approved in FY09. 58 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) alliances and provided training to 2065 original project area. alliance members Latest ISR Ratings:  Over 13,000 families have received Development Satisfactory direct benefits from about 300 producer Objectives subprojects. Implementation Satisfactory  83% of alliances have positive financial Performance results.  Established a process to help national Project name: Participatory Rural  The model adopted by this project has government, prefectures and Investment II acquired increased relevance within the municipalities develop practical Project ID: P101298 Constitutional Reform that intends to instruments to ensure coordination in Approval date: 12/20/07 clarify inter-Governmental relations. public investment and reduce Completion date: Ongoing duplication of efforts. Objective: To pilot the consolidation of institutional arrangements between the  Financed about 450 subprojects in national, prefecture and municipal nearly 175 rural municipalities governments and civil society for identified and prioritized through a sustainable management of sub-national participatory process by communities. public investment in selected productive  Trained over 6,500 people from 134 sectors with an emphasis on territorial civil society organizations and development. municipal governments in the Latest ISR Ratings: formulation, management and Development Satisfactory evaluation of development plans, Objectives programs and projects. Implementation Satisfactory  Rural municipalities have conducted Performance participatory transport planning covering their entire territories that have allowed them to know their complete road networks, categorizing each road according to population served, condition, and maintenance or upgrading need.  Mayors and communities have defined their priorities taking budgetary capacity into account.  The cost of road improvements has fallen by about half, allowing the project to finance 900 km of all weather roads, benefiting about 220,000 people 59 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) in remote areas with just $4 million.  The shift to spot improvements is expected to reduce maintenance costs by 50%.  Helped create 52 Productive Project name: Land for Agricultural Associations that have engaged in Development productive activities benefiting almost Project ID: P087925 460 poor rural families, or over 2,000 Approval date: 10/30/07 mainly indigenous people. Completion date: Ongoing Objective: To establish a decentralized  The Associations have accessed 28,000 beneficiary-driven land distribution hectares of land in the Department of mechanism that allows organized landless Santa Cruz or poor farmers to acquire suitable agricultural lands and implement investment subprojects that put them on a sustainable, higher-income, livelihood path. Latest ISR Ratings: Development Moderately Objectives Unsatisfactory Implementation Moderately Performance Unsatisfactory  Has provided 35,000 persons in Santa Project name: Urban Infrastructure Cruz with access to sewage connections Project ID: P083979 (against a target of 25,000) Approval date: 11/21/06  Property values as measured by the cost Completion date: 12/31/11 of rent in participating poor Objective: To improve access to basic neighborhoods in La Paz have increased services to the urban poor in Bolivia's over four times what had been expected major cities through targeted due to improved access to basic urban infrastructure investments and the services provision of technical assistance to municipalities in the planning, expansion and sustainability of urban service delivery. Latest ISR Ratings: Development Satisfactory Objectives Implementation Satisfactory Performance 60 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) Project name: Lake Titicaca Local Sustainable Development Project ID: P0101426 Approval date: 12/20/07 Completion date: 06/30/13 Objective: To contribute to local sustainable development in the Bolivian part of the Lake Titicaca watershed by: (i) facilitating local activities that support tourism development and cultural protection in the communities surrounding the Lake, and (ii) improving basic water and sanitation services. Latest ISR Ratings: Development Moderately Objectives Unsatisfactory Implementation Moderately Performance Unsatisfactory  140 infrastructure subproject restoring Project name: Emergency Recovery and facilities have been completed, Disaster Management benefitting almost 240,000 people Project ID: P106449  Over 100 km of rural roads have been Approval date: 12/20/07 rehabilitated Completion date: 06/30/12  Three sectors have established Disaster Objective: To restore access to basic Management Units infrastructure for a portion of the affected population in five target regions, and to strengthen the Government's ability at the national, sectoral, and municipal levels throughout the country to respond to future disasters, in support of the implementation of the National Plan for Sustainable Rehabilitation and Reconstruction (PRRES). Latest ISR Ratings: Development Satisfactory Objectives Implementation Moderately Performance Satisfactory 61 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) Project name: National Roads and Airport Infrastructure Project Project ID: P122007 Approval date: 05/05/11 Completion date: Ongoing Objective: The objective of the National Roads and Airport Infrastructure Project is to improve the year-round transitability of the San Buenaventura - Ixiamas national road and improve the safety, security and operational reliability of the Rurrenabaque airport. Latest ISR Ratings: Development -- Objectives Implementation -- Performance Non-Lending:  Informality (FY07)  Institutional and Governance Review (FY07)  Water Quality Surveillance in Vulnerable Areas (NLTA, FY08)  Productivity and Job Creation Adv. Services (FY08)  Municipal Services (FY11)  Strengthening Access to Employment for Low Income Families (NLTA, FY10)  Strengthening Small Scale Offgrid Energy Suppliers (FY10)  Strengthening Environment and Nat. Res. Mgt. (underway)  Integrating Gender into Sustainable Development (underway)  Financial Sector Notes (FY11)  Private Sector NLTA (FY10)  Cooperative Sector Study (FY11)  Urban Methane Gas Capture Project 62 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) (Carbon Fund)  Decentralized Electricity for Universal Access Grant IV. HUMAN DEVELOPMENTd Government priority: Status: WB Support: Lessons learned: From CAS: (By lending instrument) Lending:  Accelerated accomplishments in  Coverage of births attended by trained Project name: Health Sector Reform APL  The use of a project implementing unit primary and technical education health personnel increased from 54% to II not fully integrated in the ministry’s  Accelerated achievements in maternal 57% Project ID: P074212 organization configuration can and child care as well as in controlling  Complete prenatal care attendance Approval date: 06/28/01 undermine its active involvement in communicable diseases improved from 33% to 40% Completion date: 06/30/06 project implementation Objective: To (i) increase coverage and  The use of Performance Agreements can  Expanded coverage of drinking water  Early neonatal hospital mortality quality of health services and related be a useful tool to consolidate a results- and basic sanitation remained at eight per 1000 liver births programs that would improve the health oriented culture. The use of revolving  Improved social protection  The number of pneumonia cases of the population, and to empower From ISN II: attended in health services increased funds to manage the transfer of communities to improve their health resources can also be a useful tool  Increased promotion rate in secondary from 112,000 to 174,000 status; and (ii) strengthen local capacity to education of the target population  The percentage of children with iron  It is important to address cultural respond to health needs. barriers created by ethnic diversity in  Reduced chronic malnutrition among supplement (third iron dose) increased ICR Completion ratings: from 8 to 20. order to further improve health children younger than 2 years of age Outcome Moderately indicators. and of the critical maternal health risk  Eighty five percent of SUMI (health Satisfactory factors in the targeted rural areas insurance) beneficiaries belong to the Risk to Moderate  Increased percentage of low-income two lowest wealth quintiles of the Development youth aged 18-24 living in urban and population, indicating high pro-poor Outcome peri-urban areas with regular targeting. Bank Satisfactory employment and improved labor Performance incomes four months after the end of Borrower Moderately the internship phase (as a share of all Performance Satisfactory beneficiaries who completed the internship every year in the target  Maternal mortality reduced from 235 Project name: Social Sectors population). per 10,000 live births in 1998 to 190 in  The programmatic approach provided a Programmatic SAC suitable instrument to help anchor social ISN II Indicators: 2007 Project ID: P087841 development policy in a period of  Increased access to secondary  Infant mortality reduced from 67 per Approval date: 06/29/04 growing uncertainty and instability. education of improved quality of the 1,000 live births in 1998 to less than 50 Completion date: 12/31/04 target population in 2006 Objective: To (i) protect the positive  It is useful to use progress in a few  Increased percentage of pregnant selected MDGs as a theme to provide a  The % of population receiving results reached in the last decade in well-focused overall objective. women (mothers) receiving pre-natal sustainable potable water supply increasing access to and quality of health care (post-natal care) within the first services increased from 72 in 2003 to 77 and nutrition, education and water and  Multi-sector programs need a strong d The CASCR Matrix includes the following under this Priority: Improving Service Coverage and Quality in the Social Sectors (CAS); Providing Better Services to the Poor (ISN I); and Human Development (ISN II). 63 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) 20 weeks of pregnancy (10 days of in 2006 sanitation, and social protection; (ii) coordination effort and continuous delivery) in the areas of intervention  The % of population receiving implement the sector policy frameworks monitoring.  Increased percentage of families, with sustainable sanitation services increased designed under the first phase of this  The Bolivian context requires support children under 2 years old who receive from 41 in 2003 to 49 in 2006 programmatic series to continue progress for broad-based consensus building. It adequate child growth monitoring and  The % of population without access to in social outcomes and move closer to would be useful to include a higher nutritional counseling/support in the water supply decreased from 42 in 1992 achieving a number of specific MDGs by level of participation of civil society in areas of intervention to 36 in 2006 2015; and (iii) strengthen the capacity of evaluating the quality of basic services  Increased percentage of low-income both the Government and civil society to and higher accountability in the use of  Chronic malnutrition in children under youth aged 18-24 living in urban and monitor and evaluate policies, increasing resources. three years of age decreased from 29% peri-urban areas with training and accountability and effectiveness. in 2000 to 25% in 2006 linked to employment opportunities ICR Completion ratings:  Increased percentage of urban poor Outcome Moderately covered by social protection programs Unsatisfactory in the areas of intervention Risk to Significant Development Outcome Bank Moderately Performance Satisfactory Borrower Moderately Performance Satisfactory (See above Social Sectors Programmatic Project name: Social Sector (See above Social Sectors Programmatic for achievements) Programmatic DPC II for lessons) Project ID: P091365 Approval date: 05/26/05 Completion date: 05/31/06 Objective: To support Bolivia’s efforts to achieve selected MDGs through the implementation of a number of key social sector policies that were designed during the first phase of this program, including: (i) protecting the positive results reached in the last decade in increasing access to and quality of health and nutrition, education, water and sanitation and social protection; (ii) implementing the sector policy frameworks designed under the first phase of this programmatic series to continue progress in social outcomes and mover closer to achieving a number of specific MDGs by 2015; and (iii) 64 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) strengthening the capacity of both the Government an civil society to monitor and evaluate policies, increasing accountability and effectiveness. ICR Completion ratings: Outcome Moderately Unsatisfactory Risk to Significant Development Outcome Bank Satisfactory Performance Borrower Moderately Performance Satisfactory  Created about 6,500 new places in Project name: Secondary Education secondary schools (through new Transformation infrastructure) Project ID: P083965  Enrolled 4,500 students in an incentive Approval date: 10/09/07 program to reduce the risk of drop-out Completion date: Ongoing  Supported 178 schools in the Objective: To support the Municipal preparation of School Improvement Government's education strategy, by: (i) Plans aimed at improving education increasing access to secondary education quality. for adolescents and young people and improving their permanence in the education system; (ii) improving quality and relevance of primary and secondary education; and (iii) strengthening the decentralized education management capacity of the Municipality of La Paz. Latest ISR Ratings: Development Satisfactory Objectives Implementation Moderately Performance Unsatisfactory Project name: Expanding Access to Reduce Health Inequities APL III (former Health Sector Reform APL III) Project ID: P074212 65 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) Approval date: 01/24/08 Completion date: Ongoing Objective: To: (i) reduce occurrence of critical risk factors affecting maternal and infant health in the targeted areas so that current gaps between regions are reduced; (ii) reduce chronic malnutrition among children under two years of age in the targeted areas; (iii) increase health insurance coverage in the targeted areas; and (iv) upgrade the National Health Information System (Sistema Nacional de Informacion en Salud-SNIS) so that it will be integrated with Bolivia's new health insurance program. Latest ISR Ratings: Development Moderately Objectives Unsatisfactory Implementation Moderately Performance Unsatisfactory  Developed the information system, Project name: Investing in Children and including beneficiary registries through Youth which financing of cash transfers will Project ID: P101084 be made Approval date: 03/11/08  A pilot phase of Mi Primer Empleo has Completion date: Ongoing been successfully completed in four Objective: To: (1) contribute to a cities reduction in the prevalence of chronic malnutrition in children ages 0-2 years old living in the most vulnerable rural areas of the country; (2) improve the management and operation of a skills development program for low income youth to enhance its effectiveness in increasing their ability to find and maintain a good quality job; and (3) improve government capacity to design and manage a coherent, measurable, and effective social protection network in the medium term. Latest ISR Ratings: Development Moderately 66 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) Objectives Unsatisfactory Implementation Moderately Performance Unsatisfactory Non-Lending:  Poverty Assessment (City Poverty Strategy) (FY06)  Social Protection Framework (FY05)  Informality (FY07)  Country Social Analysis (FY07)  Education Sector Report (FY07)  Social Safety Nets (FY08)  Gender Informality (FY08)  Social Safety Nets 2 (FY08)  Social Safety Nets 3 (FY09)  Education NLTA (underway)  TA to Ministry of Education (FY11)  Multi-dimensional Poverty (NLTA, FY11)  GAIN Global Food Fortification Grant V. GOVERNANCE AND SUPPORT TO THE PUBLIC SECTORe Government priority: Status: Partially Achieved WB Support: Lessons learned: From ISN I: (By lending instrument) Lending:  Decentralization to the municipal level  Vertical reforms introduced in three Project name: Institutional Reform  The project strategy relied squarely on of government increased pilot agencies (tax, customs and roads Project ID: P062790 the strong leadership role of  Greater participation of civil society agencies), as well in the nascent Approval date: 06/15/99 personalities, rather than placing the organizations employed to increase process of civil service reform and Completion date: 06/30/05 project within an institutionally strong public oversight and help enforce human resource management. Objective: To help modernize Bolivia’s agency. tranparency  The results-based monitoring system public administration to improve its  Neither the project nor its specific From ISN II: (SISER) and its normative framework effectiveness, efficiency and transparency, reform elements were “marketed� (in were formally achieved. and in particular to strengthen its capacity spite of some budget for this) to those  Improved performance information on  SISER was mainly used during the first to implement economic and social who might have been prepared to public programs to allow tracking years of the project for higher-level development programs, and provide support it. progress of key programs monitoring (for instance by ministers) services in support of poverty reduction  The ambitious project agenda made the  Sector plans are aligned to the and for the pilot agencies to produce implementation of some reforms National Development Plan their annual reports dependant on other ones being carried  Increased coordination among sector  Establishment of Sworn Statements of out elsewhere, causing important e The CASCR Matrix includes the following under this Priority: Public Sector Modernization, Governance and Transparency (CAS); Enhancing Good Governance and Transparency (ISN I); and Governance and Support to the Public Sector (ISN II). 67 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) ministries and levels of government in Assets and Incomes System for public shortfalls in project progress. planning, funding and execution of servants. ICR Completion ratings:  Strong analytical work could have public spending in the targeted areas  Creation of an Integral Anti-Corruption Outcome Moderately provided information about alternatives and agencies Plan currently co-lead by the judicial Unsatisfactory for reform and reduced the expectations  Improved PFM and procurements authorities and the offices of the Risk to High generated by the project’s ambitious systems to simplify and expedite the Attorney General, Comptroller Office Development design. preparation and implementation of and the Ombudsperson. Outcome  It is extraordinarily difficult to compare projects at the national and  Provision of new rules for public Bank Moderately the achievements (and failures) of the subnational levels contracting of goods and services Performance Satisfactory Institutional Reform Program to  Updated regulatory framework for (SICOES) and the implementation of a Borrower Moderately national reform efforts elsewhere, PFM in accordance with the new training program of forensic audits in Performance Unsatisfactory because public sector reforms are “soft� decentralized structure the Comptroller General’s Office. reforms specific to different national ISN II Indicators:  The legal and regulatory framework environments and difficult to categorize  Improved systems for design, that laid the foundation for a merit- and quantify. monitoring and evaluation of public based civil service protected from  The strength of Bolivia’s approach has programs are in place political interference was approved in been to anchor its vertical reforms in a  Public officials are trained in design, its entirety (Law 2027 approved, common set of rules to control political monitoring and evaluation of public October 27, 1999). interference in the appointments of top programs  27 percent of central government public managers and of civil servants.  The quality of statistical information employees were incorporated into the  The indicators faced methodological to monitor and evaluate development civil service regime following the problems: a lack of baseline outcomes is improved requirements stated in the legal measurements; mistakes in baseline  Public investment reform strategy framework. definitions; and a lack of proper designed and discussed with sector  Implementation of 18 IRAs. Six IRAs measurements. ministries and sub-national included comprehensive reforms in all governments the areas, while twelve were focused on  New public investment strategy more modest reforms. gradually implemented in target areas and agencies  PEFA assessment report completed  OECD-DAC Assessment on Procurement completed Project name: Strengthening Statistical Capacity and Informational Base for Evidence-Based Planning Project ID: P101336 Approval date: 01/13/11 Completion date: Ongoing Objective: To strengthen the statistical capacity and improve the informational base of the Recipient, in order to provide quality information, as defined by its 68 CAS Outcome/Cluster of Outcomes and Lending and Non-lending Activities that Outcome Indicators (baselines and Status and Evaluation Summary Lessons and Suggestions for the new CAS contributed to the outcome targets) reliability, timeliness, accuracy and representativeness with the level of disaggregation necessary to support systems for planning, designing, monitoring and evaluating public programs and policies. Latest ISR Ratings: Development Moderately Objectives Satisfactory Implementation Substantial Performance Non-Lending:  ICR ROSC (04)  Achieving Results through Performance-Based Mgt. (FY04)  PER (FY05)  CFAA (FY06)  PER (FY05)  Towards Inclusive Decentralization (FY07)  Operational Review of FPS (FY06)  PEFA (FY09)  OECD/DAC Procurement (ongoing)  PS Governance (NLTA)  Civil Service (FY10) 69 Table 2: Planned Lending Program and Actual Deliveries FY2004-FY2011 Fiscal Project US$M US$M Year IBRD IDA IBRD IDA CAS Plans (01/08/2004)f Status 2004 Social Sector Programmatic DPL I 20.0 Actual 25.0 Emergency Economic Recovery ERL 14.0 Actual 14.0 1st Prog Bank & Corp Restruct Pgm SAC 15.0 15.0 Actual 15.0 15.0 New IDA Projects in FY2004 49.0 Dropped New IBRD Project in FY2004 15.0 Dropped Subtotal 30.0 98.0 Subtotal 15.0 54.0 2005g 2nd Prog Bank & Corp Restruct Pgm SAC 25.0 Dropped Spatial Sustainable Development 21.0 Rural Alliances 28.0 Land Reform 15.0 Forwarded to FY08 Institutional Reform II (IBRD) 20.0 Dropped Secondary Education (IBRD) 15.0 Forwarded to FY08 (as IDA) New IDA Projects in FY2004 36.0 Dropped New IBRD Project in FY2004 60.0 Dropped Additional Project Social Sector Prog DPL II 15.0 Subtotal 95.0 97.0 Subtotal 43.0 Subtotal FY2004-2005 125.0 195.0 15.0 97.0 Interim Strategy Note (10/24/2006) 2007 Job Creation & Competitiveness 15.0 Dropped Participatory Rural Investment II 15.0 Forwarded to 2008 Community-Based Land Administration 15.0 Forwarded to 2008 Building Government M&E Systems 5.0 Forwarded to 2011 Urban Infrastructure for the Poor 30.0 Actual 30.0 Subtotal 80.0 Subtotal 30.0 2008 Social Protection Assistance 10.0 Actualh 17.0 Education 10.0 Actual 10.0 Health APL III 15.0 Actual 18.5 Lake Titicaca 15.0 Actual 20.0 f Proposed IDA/IBRD Base-Case Lending Program in 2004 CAS, Annex B3 g There was no lending in FY2006, and the period was covered neither under the January 2004 CAS, nor under the October 2006 ISN h Renamed as Investing in Children and Youth 70 Fiscal Project US$M US$M Year IBRD IDA IBRD IDA Strengthen. State Efficiency & Transpare 10.0 Dropped Additional Project Land for Agricultural Devt 15.0 Emergency Reconstruct. ERL 16.9 Participatory Rural Invest 20.0 Subtotal 60.0 Subtotal 117.4 Subtotal FY2007-2008 140.0 147.4 Interim Strategy Note (April 9, 2009) 2009i Additional Project Rural Alliances (AF) 30.0 Subtotal 30.0 2010 Agricultural Services 15.0 Delayed Strengthening National Planning Syst 20.0 Actualj 50.0 Rural Roads 35.0 Forwarded to FY2012 Subtotal 70.0 Subtotal 50.0 2011 Social Protection II 10.0 Delayed CDD 10.0 Delayed Additional Project National Roads and Airport Infrastructure 109.5 Subtotal 20.0 Subtotal 109.5 Subtotal FY2009-2011 137.0k 189.5 TOTAL FY2004-2011 125.0 472.0 15.0 433.9 i The October 2006 ISN covered the period FY07-FY08. Fiscal Year 2009 is included in this table to reflect lending during the year that was covered neither under the October 2006 ISN, nor under the subsequent April 2009 ISN. j Renamed as Strengthening Statistical Capacity and Informational Base for Evidence-Based Planning k The April 2009 ISN also provided that approximately US$47 million of the IDA 15 allocation had not been allocated into any specific operation, to provide the required flexibility to respond to changing demands due to the evolving global crisis, and the uncertain political and economic environment. 71 Table 3: Planned Non-Lending Services and Actual Deliveries FY2004-FY2011 CAS Plans (01/08/2004) Status 2004 Country Financial Accountability Assessment Completed in FY2006 Public Expenditure Review (PER) Completed in FY2005 Natural Gas Completed in FY2004 Additional Products: ICR ROSC Achieving Results through Performance-Based Management AML/CFT Training Workshop for the FIU 2005 Labor and Informal Markets Subnational Government Reform Completed in FY2007 (Towards Inclusive Decentralization) City Poverty Strategy Completed in FY2006 (Poverty Assessment) Country Economic Memorandum (CEM)/Trade Completed in FY2006 Social Protection Framework Completed in FY2005 Conflict Analysis and Resolution Additional Products: Operational Review of the FPS (completed in 2006) Interim Strategy Note (10/24/2006) 2007 Informality Completed in FY2007 Making Autonomies Work Dropped Public Expenditure and Financial Account Prog (PEFA) Completed in FY2009 Additional Products: Country Social Analysis Education Sector Report Policy Notes 2008 Economic Integration Completed in FY2008 Social Safety Nets Completed in FY2008 Natural Resources Use and Development Underway (to be completed in 2011) Additional Products: Economic Integration Multi-sector Study Water Quality Surveillance in Vulnerable Areas (NLTA) Productivity and Job Creation Adv. Services Gender Informality Social Safety Nets 2 72 Interim Strategy Note (April 9, 2009) 2009l Additional Products: Social Safety Nets 3 2010 Municipal Services Underway (to be completed in FY2011) PEFA Completed in FY2011 OECD-DAC Procurement Completed in FY11 Education (NLTA) Underway PER on Agriculture Underway (to be completed in FY2011) Economic & Social Impacts of Climate Change Underway (to be completed in FY2011)m Multi-dimensional Poverty (NLTA) Underway (to be completed in FY2011) Rising Food Prices in Bolivia Completed in FY2011 Social Protection IV (NLTA) Underway (to be completed in FY2011) Crisis Policy Notes PS Governance I (NLTA) Underway (to be completed in FY2012) Gas Study (NLTA) Strength Access to Emplmt for Low Income Families (NLTA) Additional Products: Civil Service Strengthening Small Scale Offgrid Energy Suppliers South South Experience Exchange Private Sector NLTA 2011 Financial Sector Review FSPA (FY11) CEM Poverty Assessment Underway PS Governance II (NLTA) Underway Education Review Underway Social Protection 5 Additional Products: Strengthening Environment and Nat. Res. Mgt (underway) Integrating Gender into Sustainable Devt. (underway) Multi-dimensional Poverty Phase II (underway) TA to Min. of Educ. on decent/teacher alloc. (underway) Cooperative Sector Study Financial Sector Notes l The October 2006 ISN covered the period FY07-FY08. Fiscal Year 2009 is included in this table to reflect lending during the year that was covered neither under the October 2006 ISN, nor under the subsequent April 2009 ISN. m Water-Related Adaptation to Climate Change and Variability 73 Table 4: CAS/IS Outcomes CAS FY2004-05 ISN FY2007-08 ISN FY2010-11 CASCR Evaluation Support to Key Economic Support to Key Economic and Political Processes and Political Processes Macroeconomic Stability Macroeconomic Stability and Growth (includes and Growth (excludes transport) transport) Promoting the Rural Fostering Jobs through Productive Development Productive Development Sector and the Growth and Support to Production and Support to Production Environment (includes transport) (includes transport) (includes transport) Sustainable Development Sustainable Development Improving Service Providing Better Services Human Development Human Development Coverage and Quality in to the Poor the Social Sectors Public Sector Enhancing Good Governance and Support Governance and Support Modernization, Governance and to the Public Sector to the Public Sector Governance and Transparency Transparency 74 Annex 3: Consultations with Civil Society, Women’s Organizations and the International Development Cooperation A consultative process was undertaken to inform the development of the CPS. Nine consultation workshops took place across Bolivia, three with civil society, three with women’s organizations and three with the Group of Partners for the Development of Bolivia (GruS). A total of 300 people participated. The workshops provided spaces to discuss themes linked to the results areas of the new CPS and facilitated an understanding of the challenges, priorities and obstacles to be considered. The participants included representatives from women’s indigenous and peasant organizations, the private sector, NGOs, productive organizations, municipal councils, departmental assemblies, youth groups, and women’s platforms and movements. I. Consultations with Civil Society: Debates and Recommendations A. Food crises, security and sovereignty in Boliviaa Food security and sovereignty. The participants regarded natural disasters as the root cause of lower food production and believed that they are compounded by other aspects ranging from a lack of incentives for production to road infrastructure problems. It was agreed that in order to secure viable and practical solutions, more reliable information is needed. Measures proposed include: food quality control; access to producer markets; supervision mechanisms; strengthened consumer protection; irrigation control to avoid contamination; quality services such as school breakfasts and subsidized prenatal care; bonds and financial support to microenterprises. It was also stressed that more support needs to be given to small producers, from land rights and input provision to training and loans for production and industrialization. The role of civil society. Participants detected problems with existing public policies, signaling that many initiatives are isolated and do not meet their mandates. To overcome this and assure that state food support measures reach the most vulnerable groups, they proposed effective social oversight. The participants also suggested that more information about food policies, projects and programs be made available to increase public awareness. B. Natural Resource Management and Social Inclusionb Need for clear policy. Worries exist over the legal reforms directed at the use of, access to and sustainable exploitation of forest resources. The participants argued that different laws contradict each other and that clear policies need to be developed to overcome these contradictions. Furthermore, while some participants believed that after the land rights and titling process changes started to appear in the consolidation of access rights to forests, others felt the changes merely exist on paper and have not been transferred into reality. They also identified the necessity of training in organizational strengthening as well as in adequate management of their resources to responsibly develop the region. They relayed that little information exists about the financing received from the international cooperation and the ways in which they invest their resources, and they called for more vigorous monitoring of investment projects. a Sucre/Potosí, June 14, 2011. b Cobija, June 16, 2011. 75 Coordination between different levels of government and civil society to address climate change and secure the sustainable management of natural resources. It was considered that there is a lack of coordination between government levels and civil society on these issues. Moreover, local governorates in the Amazon region have not implemented concrete policies to minimize the effects of climate change and do not promote sustainable natural resource management. In this regard, the principle proposals were: that all government levels allocate resources to the prevention and relief of disasters resulting from climate change; encourage different sectors to formulate agreements and clear regulations regarding the use and sustainable exploitation of forest resources; a regional platform to raise public awareness about climate change and; investigations to prevent and mitigate the effects of climate change. Promoting the sustainable management of natural resources at all government levels. According to the participants, the promotion of sustainable natural resource management does not exist. They also considered that the land rights and titling processes in the Northern Amazon have not managed to prevent conflicts over the use and exploitation of natural resources. C. Competitiveness and Productivityc This event took place in coordination with the Santa Cruz Chamber of Industries, Business, Services and Tourism (CAINCO) and discussed how to increase competitiveness in the country. External markets. Many participants signaled that the government should decide upon what activities they will promote, from small rural peasant enterprises, to medium or large size firms. They considered that the search for markets should be a joint effort between private firms and the public sector, but that the World Bank should also support. Legal security. The country’s lacking legal security and the need for a new investment law were discussed. Participants also signaled that they should be included in the discussion of new laws. Food sovereignty and security: Private firms in the agricultural sector signaled that the biotechnology and transgenic route must be taken to develop agriculture however there was a lack of understanding over how the government will handle this issue. They also raised that INRA does not adequately resolve land rights and title issues and identified contradictions with the Forest and Land Authority’s (ABT) policies, where at the same time ABT looks to reforest eroded zones and increase agricultural production, shrinking the area for reforestation programs. II. The Voices of Women in the Strategy A specific space was created to hear the voices of Bolivian women. The voice and active participation of more than a hundred women from various sectors in both urban and rural areas was crucial. These women’s workshops highlighted that the challenges of development cannot be confronted without the participation of women. Women and the new autonomy process. The participants discussed the absence of a gender focus in the Autonomy Statutes and Charters and argued that they do not include the agenda of c Santa Cruz 31, de mayo 2011. 76 women. Furthermore, they posed a series of challenges to increasing the participation of women in these autonomy statutes and charters as well as in municipal development plans and budgets. The participation of women in sustainable development. The women argued that the country’s strategic resources should be used to ensure national food security, emphasizing that food products should be produced and bought nationally. They believed that the government should provide more support to productive sectors to bring production costs down and to enable Bolivia to compete with its neighbors. The need for rural producers, particularly rural women producers, to better organize themselves was also addressed, as was the need for producers to receive training and gain qualifications to secure sustainable change. The Amazonian women highlighted that women have to be active in decision making; they represent half of the population and need to participate in decisions that affect them. III. Consultations with the development cooperation Three consultations were held with the international development community. These consultations provided the opportunity for the Bank to see where others perceive its comparative advantage and how to better coordinate efforts amongst development donors. The international community highlighted that the Bank should continue support towards the full implementation, as appropriate, of the Paris Declaration. They showed general support for the strong focus on sustainable productive development and stressed the need to have a stronger focus on urban productivity due to Bolivia’s rapid migration trend. The participants expressed a desire to know more about Bank experiences in rural development and for better coordination. The importance of the Bank in terms of its capacity to be able to introduce new environmental instrument such as “Green Accounting� and payment for environmental and the important role it could play in promoting private sector investments were highlighted. Finally, the participants perceived the regional PEFAs as an important and strategic support to Bolivia. Several donors expressed an interest in coordinating and supporting this process. 77 Annex 4: Development Assistance in Bolivia Bolivia is one of the biggest beneficiaries of Figure 1: Public Investment development aid in Latin America. Aid from 1600 the international cooperation represents about 10 percent of Bolivia’s GDP and 28 per cent 1200 US$ Millions of its public investment budget (Figure 1). 800 Despite dependence on external resources having fallen since the 1990s, coordination 400 between donors and with the Bolivian authorities is still necessary. 0 2000 2003 2006 2009 The Vice-Ministry of Public Investment and International Resources National Resources External Financing (VIPFE), part of the Source: INE, Anuario Estadístico 2009 Ministry of Development Planning (MDP), handles the donor community in Bolivia. VIPFE is responsible for the identification and efficient and rational routing of donor resources, technical cooperation among developing countries, and promoting relations between the international cooperation and the Government. The Government has developed an action plan to improve the effectiveness of development cooperation, based on three axes: (i) effectiveness of aid, management and outcomes, (ii) capacity development on technical assistance, and (iii) regulatory framework. The CAF has the greatest presence in Bolivia, followed by the IADB and the World Bank (Figure 2), and transactions with these three agencies represent approximately 75 percent of total external public financing. Bilateral financing represents less than 25 percent of external assistance and the percentage of assistance from traditional bilateral partners has diminished. Venezuela and Brazil are now the major bilateral cooperation partners (Figure 3). Figure 2: Bolivia Multilateral External Figure 3: Bolivia Bilateral External Financing Financing 1800 350 1600 300 1400 250 1200 US$ Millions US$ Millions 1000 200 800 150 600 100 400 50 200 0 0 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 CAF IADB Venezuela Brasil China Germany World Bank Others Spain Frnace Japan Others Source: Banco Central de Bolivia, Gerencia de Operaciones Source: Banco Central de Bolivia, Gerencia de Operaciones Internacionales, Subgerencia de Operaciones Externas Internacionales, Subgerencia de Operaciones Externas 78 To strengthen harmonization between international donors, in December 2006 the Partners Group for the Development of Bolivia (GruS) was created. The GruS includes all traditional bilateral and multilateral agencies, and has a rotating chair and coordinating and facilitating team. The GruS has agreed on a work plan with the MDP and the majority of members have aligned their cooperation to the National Development Plan and are working towards the implementation of the Paris Declaration and the Accra Action Plan. In recent years development aid has been directed towards operations in the transport, water, agricultural, communications, education, energy and multisectoral sectors. Aid to the transport sector has increased considerably. The water and sanitation, agricultural and multisectorial sectors are strongly supported by multilateral donors with some assistance from bilateral partnersojects are carried out largely on concessional terms or donations. International cooperation in the education sector is mainly composed of donations. Table 1. External Financing by Sector 2000-2009 (Thousands of US$) SECTOR 2000-2005 2005-2009 % Transport 661,185 915,319 24.6 General Treasury 670,356 393,948 16.6 Multisectorial 393,062 271,242 10.4 Agriculture 319,596 244,815 8.8 Education 265,928 143,204 6.4 Health and social security 224,622 170,912 6.2 General Administration 258,927 113,543 5.8 Water and Sanitation 172,619 170,681 5.4 Environmental 99,338 95,070 3.0 Others 434,093 397,664 12.8 TOTAL 3499,726 2916,398 100.0 Source: National Evaluation of the Paris Declaration, Phase 2. Final Report 2009 79 Annex 5: Country at a Glance Bolivia at a glance 10/6/11 Latin Lo wer Ke y D e v e lo pm e nt Indic a t o rs A merica middle B o livia & Carib. inco me Age distribution, 2009 ( 2 0 0 9 - 10 ) Male Female P o pulatio n, mid-year (millio ns) 9.9 572 3,81 1 75-79 Surface area (tho usand sq. km) 1,099 20,394 31,898 60-64 P o pulatio n gro wth (%) 1.6 1.1 1.2 Urban po pulatio n (% o f to tal po pulatio n) 67 79 41 45-49 30-34 GNI (A tlas metho d, US$ billio ns) 17.9 4,011 8,846 15-19 GNI per capita (A tlas metho d, US$ ) ,81 1 0 7,007 2,321 GNI per capita (P P P , internatio nal $ ) 4,250 10,286 4,784 0-4 10 5 0 5 10 GDP gro wth (%) 4.1 -1.9 7.1 percent of total population GDP per capita gro wth (%) 2.5 -3.0 5.9 ( m o s t re c e nt e s t im a t e , 2 0 0 4 – 2 0 10 ) .25 P o verty headco unt ratio at $ 1 a day (P P P , %) 14 8 .. Under-5 mortality rate (per 1,000) P o verty headco unt ratio at $ 2.00 a day (P P P , %) 25 17 .. Life expectancy at birth (years) 66 74 68 140 Infant mo rtality (per 1,000 live births) 42 19 43 Child malnutritio n (% o f children under 5) 5 4 24 120 100 5 A dult literacy, male (% o f ages 1 and o lder) 95 92 87 80 5 A dult literacy, female (% o f ages 1 and o lder) 87 90 74 60 Gro ss primary enro llment, male (% o f age gro up) 108 1 18 109 40 Gro ss primary enro llment, female (% o f age gro up) 107 1 14 105 20 0 A ccess to an impro ved water so urce (% o f po pulatio n) 86 93 86 A ccess to impro ved sanitatio n facilities (% o f po pulatio n) 25 79 50 1990 1995 2000 2009 Bolivia Latin America & the Caribbean N e t A id F lo ws 19 8 0 19 9 0 2000 2 0 10 a (US$ millio ns) Net ODA and o fficial aid 169 545 482 726 Growth of GDP and GDP per capita (%) To p 3 do no rs (in 2008): United States 40 84 97 102 8 Spain 0 20 22 98 6 Euro pean Unio n Institutio ns 1 26 25 78 4 A id (% o f GNI) 3.7 1 .8 1 5.9 4.4 2 A id per capita (US$ ) 32 82 58 74 0 -2 Lo ng- T e rm E c o no m ic T re nds -4 95 05 Co nsumer prices (annual % change) 23.9 18.0 3.4 7.2 GDP implicit deflato r (annual % change) 25.0 16.3 5.2 8.8 GDP GDP per capita Exchange rate (annual average, lo cal per US$ ) 0.0 3.2 6.2 7.0 Terms o f trade index (2000 = 100) 401 160 100 122 19 8 0 – 9 0 19 9 0 – 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 – 10 (average annual gro wth %) P o pulatio n, mid-year (millio ns) 5.4 6.7 8.3 9.9 2.2 2.2 1.8 GDP (US$ millio ns) 4,537 4,868 8,398 19,650 -0.2 4.0 4.1 (% o f GDP ) A griculture 19.0 16.7 15.0 12.9 1.5 2.9 2.9 Industry 32.4 34.8 29.8 37.3 -2.2 4.1 5.4 M anufacturing 14.4 18.5 15.3 13.9 -1.1 3.8 4.4 Services 48.6 48.5 55.2 49.9 -0.4 4.3 3.1 Ho useho ld final co nsumptio n expenditure 67.3 76.9 76.4 62.3 1.2 3.6 3.4 General go v't final co nsumptio n expenditure 13.8 1 1 .8 14.5 13.8 -3.8 3.6 3.5 Gro ss capital fo rmatio n 16.6 12.5 18.1 17.0 0.8 8.5 4.8 Expo rts o f go o ds and services 24.5 22.8 18.3 41.2 1.0 4.5 6.9 Impo rts o f go o ds and services 22.3 23.9 27.3 34.3 4.4 6.0 5.4 Gro ss savings .. 10.0 1 1 .0 25.0 0 No te: Figures in italics are fo r years o ther than tho se specified. 201 data are preliminary. Gro up data are fo r 2009. .. indicates data are no t available. a. A id data are fo r 2009. Develo pment Eco no mics, Develo pment Data Gro up (DECDG). 80 Bolivia B a la nc e o f P a ym e nt s a nd T ra de 2000 2 0 10 Governance indicators, 2000 and 2009 (US$ millio ns) To tal merchandise expo rts (fo b) 1,246 6,290 To tal merchandise impo rts (cif) 1,830 5,384 Voice and accountability Net trade in go o ds and services -608 681 Political stability Current acco unt balance -446 903 as a % o f GDP -5.3 4.6 Regulatory quality Rule of law Wo rkers' remittances and co mpensatio n o f emplo yees (receipts) 127 1,069 Control of corruption Reserves, including go ld ,1 1 71 9,730 0 25 50 75 100 2009 Country's percentile rank (0-100) C e nt ra l G o v e rnm e nt F ina nc e higher values imply better ratings 2000 (% o f GDP ) Current revenue (including grants) 25.0 33.2 Source: Kaufmann-Kraay-Mastruzzi, World Bank Tax revenue 18.7 26.3 Current expenditure 22.2 20.8 T e c hno lo gy a nd Inf ra s t ruc t ure 2000 2009 Overall surplus/deficit -3.7 1.7 P aved ro ads (% o f to tal) 6.6 .. Highest marginal tax rate (%) Fixed line and mo bile pho ne Individual .. .. 00 subscribers (per 1 peo ple) 13 81 Co rpo rate 25 25 High techno lo gy expo rts (% o f manufactured expo rts) 40.0 4.9 E xt e rna l D e bt a nd R e s o urc e F lo ws E nv iro nm e nt (US$ millio ns) To tal debt o utstanding and disbursed 5,785 5,267 A gricultural land (% o f land area) 34 34 To tal debt service 634 647 Fo rest area (% o f land area) 55.5 52.8 Debt relief (HIP C, M DRI) 1,949 1,953 Terrestrial pro tected areas (% o f land area) .. .. To tal debt (% o f GDP ) 68.9 26.8 Freshwater reso urces per capita (cu. meters) 35,040 31,865 To tal debt service (% o f expo rts) 37.3 8.2 Freshwater withdrawal (billio n cubic meters) 2.0 .. Fo reign direct investment (net inflo ws) 736 423 CO2 emissio ns per capita (mt) 1.1 1.4 P o rtfo lio equity (net inflo ws) 0 0 GDP per unit o f energy use (2005 P P P $ per kg o f o il equivalent) 5.7 6.7 Composition of total external debt, 2010 Energy use per capita (kg o f o il equivalent) 594 587 IBRD, 0 IDA, 355 Short-term, 103 IMF, 0 Wo rld B a nk G ro up po rt f o lio 2000 2009 (US$ millio ns) Other multi- Private, 2,382 lateral, 1,904 IB RD To tal debt o utstanding and disbursed 0 0 Disbursements 0 0 P rincipal repayments 12 0 Interest payments 1 0 Bilateral, 523 US$ millions IDA To tal debt o utstanding and disbursed 1,096 316 Disbursements 61 34 P riv a t e S e c t o r D e v e lo pm e nt 2000 2 0 10 To tal debt service 1 4 Time required to start a business (days) – 50 IFC (fiscal year) Co st to start a business (% o f GNI per capita) – 100.8 To tal disbursed and o utstanding po rtfo lio 81 158 Time required to register pro perty (days) – 92 o f which IFC o wn acco unt 68 105 Disbursements fo r IFC o wn acco unt 15 0 Ranked as a majo r co nstraint to business 2000 2 0 10 P o rtfo lio sales, prepayments and (% o f managers surveyed who agreed) repayments fo r IFC o wn acco unt 11 11 Eco no mic and regulato ry po licy uncertainty .. 30.3 A ntico mpetitive o r info rmal practices .. 28.1 M IGA Gro ss expo sure 77 0 Sto ck market capitalizatio n (% o f GDP ) 20.7 17.2 New guarantees 0 0 B ank capital to asset ratio (%) 9.8 8.1 0 No te: Figures in italics are fo r years o ther than tho se specified. 201 data are preliminary. 10/6/11 .. indicates data are no t available. – indicates o bservatio n is no t applicable. Develo pment Eco no mics, Develo pment Data Gro up (DECDG). 81 Millennium Development Goals Bolivia With selected targets to achieve b etween 1990 and 2015 (estimate clo sest to date sho wn, +/- 2 years) B o liv ia G o a l 1: ha lv e t he ra t e s f o r e xt re m e po v e rt y a nd m a lnut rit io n 19 9 0 19 9 5 2000 2009 .25 P o verty headco unt ratio at $ 1 a day (P P P , % o f po pulatio n) 4.0 18.9 24.7 14.0 P o verty headco unt ratio at natio nal po verty line (% o f po pulatio n) .. 63.2 66.4 60.1 Share o f inco me o r co nsumptio n to the po o rest qunitile (%) 5.6 2.2 1.3 2.8 P revalence o f malnutritio n (% o f children under 5) 9.7 12.6 5.9 4.5 G o a l 2 : e ns ure t ha t c hildre n a re a ble t o c o m ple t e prim a ry s c ho o ling P rimary scho o l enro llment (net, %) .. .. 95 94 P rimary co mpletio n rate (% o f relevant age gro up) 71 .. 99 99 Seco ndary scho o l enro llment (gro ss, %) .. .. 80 81 Yo uth literacy rate (% o f peo ple ages 15-24) .. .. .. .. G o a l 3 : e lim ina t e ge nde r dis pa rit y in e duc a t io n a nd e m po we r wo m e n Ratio o f girls to bo ys in primary and seco ndary educatio n (%) .. .. 98 99 Wo men emplo yed in the no nagricultural secto r (% o f no nagricultural emplo yment) 35 36 39 38 P ro po rtio n o f seats held by wo men in natio nal parliament (%) 9 7 12 25 G o a l 4 : re duc e unde r- 5 m o rt a lit y by t wo - t hirds Under-5 mo rtality rate (per 1 ,000) 121 101 82 54 Infant mo rtality rate (per 1,000 live births) 84 72 60 42 M easles immunizatio n (pro po rtio n o f o ne-year o lds immunized, %) 53 58 81 86 G o a l 5 : re duc e m a t e rna l m o rt a lit y by t hre e - f o urt hs M aternal mo rtality ratio (mo deled estimate, per 1 00,000 live births) 510 410 300 180 B irths attended by skilled health staff (% o f to tal) 43 47 69 71 Co ntraceptive prevalence (% o f wo men ages 1 5-49) 30 45 53 61 G o a l 6 : ha lt a nd be gin t o re v e rs e t he s pre a d o f H IV / A ID S a nd o t he r m a jo r dis e a s e s P revalence o f HIV (% o f po pulatio n ages 1 5-49) 0.1 0.2 0.2 0.2 Incidence o f tuberculo sis (per 100,000 peo ple) 251 215 184 140 Tuberculo sis case detectio n rate (%, all fo rms) 67 90 66 64 G o a l 7 : ha lv e t he pro po rt io n o f pe o ple wit ho ut s us t a ina ble a c c e s s t o ba s ic ne e ds A ccess to an impro ved water so urce (% o f po pulatio n) 70 75 79 86 A ccess to impro ved sanitatio n facilities (% o f po pulatio n) 19 21 23 25 Fo rest area (% o f land area) 58.0 .. 55.5 52.8 Terrestrial pro tected areas (% o f land area) .. .. .. .. CO2 emissio ns (metric to ns per capita) 0.8 1.3 1.1 1.4 GDP per unit o f energy use (co nstant 2005 P P P $ per kg o f o il equivalent) 7.0 6.0 5.7 6.7 G o a l 8 : de v e lo p a glo ba l pa rt ne rs hip f o r de v e lo pm e nt 00 Telepho ne mainlines (per 1 peo ple) 2.7 3.3 6.1 8.2 00 M o bile pho ne subscribers (per 1 peo ple) 0.0 0.1 7.0 72.5 00 Internet users (per 1 peo ple) 0.0 0.1 1.4 1 1 .2 00 P erso nal co mputers (per 1 peo ple) 0.2 0.3 1.7 2.4 Education indicators (%) Measles immunization (% of 1-year ICT indicators (per 100 people) olds) 125 100 90 80 100 70 75 75 60 50 50 50 40 25 30 25 20 0 10 2000 2005 2009 0 0 1990 1995 2000 2009 2000 2005 2009 Primary net enrollment ratio Ratio of girls to boys in primary & secondary Bolivia Latin America & the Caribbean Fixed + mobile subscribers Internet users education No te: Figures in italics are fo r years o ther than tho se specified. .. indicates data are no t available. 10/6/11 Develo pment Eco no mics, Develo pment Data Gro up (DECDG). 82 Annex 6: Social Indicators Latest single year Same region/income group Latin Low er- Am erica m iddle- 1980-85 1990-95 2004-10 & Carib. incom e POPULATION Total population, mid-year (millions) 6.0 7.5 9.9 572.5 3,810.8 Grow th rate (% annual average for period) 2.1 2.3 1.7 1.2 1.2 Urban population (% of population) 50.5 59.4 66.5 79.0 40.9 Total fertility rate (births per woman) 5.1 4.6 3.4 2.2 2.5 POVERTY (% of population) National headcount index .. .. 60.1 .. .. Urban headcount index .. .. 50.9 .. .. Rural headcount index .. .. 77.3 .. .. INCOME GNI per capita (US$) 860 870 1,810 7,007 2,321 Consumer price index (2005=100) 15 78 166 123 130 INCOME/CONSUMPTION DISTRIBUTION Gini index .. 42.0 57.3 .. .. Low est quintile (% of income or consumption) .. 5.6 2.8 .. .. Highest quintile (% of income or consumption) .. 48.2 61.0 .. .. SOCIAL INDICATORS Public expenditure Health (% of GDP) .. 2.9 3.1 3.9 2.1 Education (% of GNI) .. .. .. 4.0 4.1 Net prim ary school enrollm ent rate (% of age group) Total .. .. 94 94 87 Male .. .. 93 94 88 Female .. .. 94 93 86 Access to an im proved w ater source (% of population) Total .. 75 86 93 87 Urban .. 93 96 97 95 Rural .. 49 67 80 81 Im m unization rate (% of children ages 12-23 months) Measles 21 58 86 93 79 DPT 33 64 85 92 79 Child malnutrition (% under 5 years) 13 13 5 4 24 Life expectancy at birth (years) Total 56 61 66 74 68 Male 54 59 64 71 66 Female 58 63 68 77 70 Mortality Infant (per 1,000 live births) 97 72 42 19 43 Under 5 (per 1,000) 144 101 54 23 58 Adult (15-59) Male (per 1,000 population) 357 307 228 190 201 Female (per 1,000 population) 273 250 170 103 136 Maternal (per 100,000 live births) .. 410 180 86 230 Births attended by skilled health staff (%) .. 47 71 89 67 CAS Annex B5. This table w as produced from the CMU LDB system. 10/06/11 Note: 0 or 0.0 means zero or less than half the unit show n. Net enrollment rate: break in series betw een 1997 and 1998 due to change from ISCED76 to ISCED97. Immunization: refers to children ages 12-23 months w ho received vaccinations before one year of age or at any time before the survey. 83 Annex 7: Key Economic Indicators Actual Estimate Projected Indicator 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 National accounts (as % of GDP) a Gross domestic product 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 Agriculture 14 14 13 13 14 13 13 12 12 Industry 32 35 36 38 36 37 37 34 31 Services 54 51 51 48 50 50 50 54 57 Total Consumption 82 77 77 76 80 76 79 79 81 Gross domestic fixed investment 13 14 16 17 16 17 17 17 17 Government investment 7 8 9 10 10 9 10 10 10 Private investment 6 6 7 7 7 7 7 7 7 b Exports (GNFS) 36 42 42 45 36 41 38 33 29 Imports (GNFS) 32 33 34 38 33 34 34 30 27 Gross domestic savings 18 23 23 24 20 24 21 21 19 c Gross national savings 20 27 29 29 23 25 24 23 22 Memorandum items Gross domestic product 9549 11452 13120 16674 17340 19650 22900 25128 27100 (US$ million at current prices) GNI per capita (US$, Atlas method) 1030 1120 1240 1490 1640 1820 2050 2280 2500 Real annual growth rates (%, calculated from 90 prices) Gross domestic product at market prices 4.4 4.8 4.6 6.1 3.4 4.1 4.9 4.1 3.7 Gross Domestic Income 4.2 8.3 3.2 7.5 0.1 8.2 4.3 5.1 3.3 Real annual per capita growth rates (%, calculated from 90 prices) Gross domestic product at market prices 2.6 3.0 2.8 4.4 1.7 2.5 3.3 2.4 2.2 Total consumption 1.5 2.2 2.4 3.6 2.0 2.2 4.2 3.2 3.0 Private consumption 1.5 2.3 2.4 3.8 2.0 2.3 3.6 3.5 3.5 Balance of Payments (US$ millions) b Exports (GNFS) 3280 4351 4958 7026 5433 6840 8668 8327 7932 Merchandise FOB 2791 3875 4458 6527 4918 6290 8075 7743 7350 b Imports (GNFS) 2865 3459 4143 5781 5159 6159 7698 7446 7376 Merchandise FOB 2334 2814 3455 5081 4434 5384 6822 6518 6395 Resource balance 415 893 815 1245 274 681 970 882 557 Net current transfers 584 822 1266 1284 1213 1081 1068 1061 1056 Current account balance 622 1318 1591 1993 813 903 1561 1439 1162 Net private foreign direct investment -291 278 362 508 426 651 660 660 660 Long-term loans (net) 565 155 387 496 59 -16 443 476 385 Official 247 59 147 153 225 343 392 396 343 Private 318 96 240 343 -166 -359 52 80 43 Other capital (net, incl. errors & ommissions) -393 -235 -388 -623 -973 -615 -470 -406 -335 d Change in reserves -504 -1516 -1952 -2374 -325 -923 -2194 -2168 -1872 Memorandum items Resource balance (% of GDP) 4.3 7.8 6.2 7.5 1.6 3.5 4.2 3.5 2.1 Current account (% of GDP) 6.5 11.5 12.1 12.0 4.7 4.6 6.8 5.7 4.3 Real annual growth rates ( YR90 prices) Merchandise exports (FOB) 25.3 19.6 2.0 18.2 -10.9 11.1 4.5 0.3 0.5 Primary 26.9 11.5 0.1 26.3 -8.9 10.1 .. .. .. Manufactures 14.2 80.6 10.9 -15.6 -23.5 18.0 .. .. .. Merchandise imports (CIF) 5.0 2.2 21.2 25.3 -0.8 13.2 9.8 4.0 3.4 (Continued) 84 Key Economic Indicators (Continued) Actual Estimate Projected Indicator 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 2011 2012 2013 e Public finance (as % of GDP at market prices) Current revenues 30.7 34.2 34.4 38.9 36.1 33.2 34.3 32.1 30.6 Current expenditures 22.9 19.3 20.0 23.0 23.1 20.8 20.7 20.3 20.0 Current account surplus (+) or deficit (-) 7.8 14.9 14.4 15.9 12.9 12.4 13.6 11.8 10.6 Capital expenditure 10.2 10.4 12.7 12.6 12.8 10.7 11.0 11.2 11.3 Overal fiscal surplus (+) or deficit (-) -2.2 4.5 1.7 3.2 0.1 1.7 3.7 1.5 0.2 Foreign financing 2.2 0.4 1.0 1.3 1.0 1.0 1.7 1.6 1.3 Monetary indicators M2/GDP 44.5 44.2 50.7 51.9 61.6 61.2 69.0 71.4 72.5 Growth of M2 (%) 13.6 18.1 28.9 19.9 19.7 12.5 29.8 12.3 8.8 Private sector credit growth / .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. .. total credit growth (%) Price indices( YR90 =100) Merchandise export price index 99.4 115.4 130.1 161.1 136.3 157.0 192.8 184.3 174.0 Merchandise import price index 156.1 184.0 186.4 218.9 192.5 206.5 238.3 219.0 207.8 Merchandise terms of trade index 63.7 62.7 69.8 73.6 70.8 76.0 80.9 84.2 83.8 f Real exchange rate (US$/LCU) 100.0 99.5 101.5 115.7 127.5 122.2 131.2 136.5 141.9 Real interest rates Consumer price index (% change) 4.9 4.9 11.7 11.8 0.3 7.2 7.4 4.0 4.0 GDP deflator (% change) 5.9 13.7 7.4 10.4 -2.4 8.8 9.8 4.2 3.3 a. GDP at factor cost b. "GNFS" denotes "goods and nonfactor services." c. Includes net unrequited transfers excluding official capital grants. d. Includes use of IMF resources. e. Consolidated central government. f. "LCU" denotes "local currency units." An increase in US$/LCU denotes appreciation. 85 Annex 8: Selected Indicators of Bank Portfolio Performance and Management As of Date 8/24/2011 Indicator 2009 2010 2011 2012 Portfolio Assessment Number of Projects Under Implementation a 11 11 11 13 Average Implementation Period (years) b 2.8 3.8 3.3 2.9 Percent of Problem Projects by Number a, c 18.2 18.2 27.3 30.8 Percent of Problem Projects by Amount a, c 12.7 31.0 15.2 14.7 Percent of Projects at Risk by Number a, d 45.5 45.5 27.3 30.8 Percent of Projects at Risk by Amount a, d 47.0 49.2 15.2 14.7 Disbursement Ratio (%) e 12.5 16.6 26.0 2.3 Portfolio Management CPPR during the year (yes/no) Supervision Resources (total US$) Average Supervision (US$/project) Memorandum Item Since FY 80 Last Five FYs Proj Eval by OED by Number 77 1 Proj Eval by OED by Amt (US$ millions) 1,918.6 40.3 % of OED Projects Rated U or HU by Number 35.1 0.0 % of OED Projects Rated U or HU by Amt 28.4 0.0 a. As shown in the Annual Report on Portfolio Performance (except for current FY). b. Average age of projects in the Bank's country portfolio. c. Percent of projects rated U or HU on development objectives (DO) and/or implementation progress (IP). d. As defined under the Portfolio Improvement Program. e. Ratio of disbursements during the year to the undisbursed balance of the Bank's portfolio at the beginning of the year: Investment projects only. * All indicators are for projects active in the Portfolio, with the exception of Disbursement Ratio, which includes all active projects as well as projects which exited during the fiscal year. 86 Annex 9: Operations Portfolio (IDA) As of 8/24/2011 Closed Projects 88 IBRD/IDA * Total Disbursed (Active) 97.55 of w hich has been repaid 0.00 Total Disbursed (Closed) 501.99 of w hich has been repaid 83.55 Total Disbursed (Active + Closed) 599.54 of w hich has been repaid 83.55 Total Undisbursed (Active) 352.60 Total Undisbursed (Closed) 0.00 Total Undisbursed (Active + Closed) 352.60 Active Projects Difference Between Last PSR Expected and Actual Supervision Rating Original Amount in US$ Millions Disbursements a/ Development Implementation Project ID Project Name Fiscal Year IBRD IDA GRANT Cancel. Undisb. Orig. Frm Rev'd Objectives Progress P106700 BO Agricultural Innovation a# # 2012 39 39.27156 P101084 BO Investing in Children an MU MU 2008 17 15.34157 10.752443 P101426 BO Lake Titicaca Local SusMU MU 2008 20 18.04627 15.233123 P087925 BO Land for Agricultural DeMS MS 2008 15 10.05413 5.6352733 4.120023 P122007 BO Nat'l Roads & Airport InS S 2011 109.5 110.646 P107137 BO PICAR Comm. Investm # # 2012 40 40.23725 P101298 BO Participatory Rural Inve S S 2008 20 10.30535 10.092074 1.841258 P083051 BO Rural Alliances S S 2005 58.4 23.4254 -9.672599 0.910735 P101336 BO Streng. Stat Capacity &S S 2011 50 51.26043 P083979 BO Urban Infrastructure ProS S 2007 30 2.715929 1.1940394 1.198185 P106449 BO-Emergency Rec and Di S S 2008 16.9 10.57327 5.4098183 P101206 BO-Exp. Access to Reduc MU MU 2008 18.5 16.74271 15.228999 P083965 BO-Secondary Education TS MU 2008 10 3.984707 3.7902173 1.300217 Overall Result 444.3 352.6046 57.66339 9.370418 87 Annex 10: Statement of IFC’s Held and Disbursed Portfolio As of 8/31/2011 (In US Dollar Million) Committed Disbursed Outstanding **Quasi Partici **Quasi Partici FY Approval Company Loan Equity Equity *GT/RM pant Loan Equity Equity *GT/RM pant 1999/2003/2009 Banco los Andes 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 2010/2011 Banco Ganadero 0 0 0 4.54 0 0 0 0 4.54 0 1999 CBTI 0 0 0.85 0 0 0 0 0.85 0 0 1992/2002 Central Aguirre 0.37 0 0 0 0 0.37 0 0 0 0 1990/1994/1996/2000 COMSUR 0 0 1.3 0 0 0 0 1.3 0 0 1996/2006/2009/2010/2011/2012 Mercantil-BOL 0 0 0 4.78 0 0 0 0 4.78 0 2011 SLV 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2003 TDE S.A. 5.55 0 6.43 0 0 5.55 0 6.43 0 0 TRECO 0 0.62 0 0 0 0 0.62 0 0 0 1997/2001/2008 Telecel Bolivia 12.86 0 0 0 0 12.86 0 0 0 0 Total Portfolio: 19.78 0.62 14.58 9.32 0 19.78 0.62 8.58 9.32 0 * Denotes Guarantee and Risk Management Products. ** Quasi Equity includes both loan and equity types. 88 The original had problem with text extraction. pdftotext Unable to extract text.