Document of The World Bank FOR OFFICIAL USE ONLY Report No. 134105-BW INTERNATIONAL BANK FOR RECONSTRUCTION AND DEVELOPMENT INTERNATIONAL FINANCE CORPORATION MULTILATERAL INVESTMENT GUARANTEE AGENCY PERFORMANCE AND LEARNING REVIEW OF THE COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK FOR THE REPUBLIC OF BOTSWANA FOR THE PERIOD FY16-FY20 February 27, 2019 Southern Africa Country Management Unit, Africa Region International Finance Corporation Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency This document has a restricted distribution and may be used by recipients only in the performance of their official duties. Its contents may not otherwise be disclosed without World Bank Group authorization. The date of the last Country Partnership Framework (FY16-FY20) was 21/04/2016 FISCAL YEAR [April 1 – March 31] CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (Exchange rate as of December 31, 2018) Unit of Currency = Pula (P) US$1 = P 10.71 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS AIDS Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndrome ASA Advisory Services and Analytics BoB Bank of Botswana BCL (formerly) Bamangwato Concessions Ltd. CPF Country Partnership Framework FY Fiscal Year GDP Gross Domestic Product GNI Gross National Income GoB Government of Botswana GP Global Practice HIV Human Immuno-Deficiency Virus IBRD International Bank for Reconstruction and Development IFC International Finance Corporation IIAG Ibrahim Index of African Governance IPFM&E Monitoring and Evaluation MFD Maximizing Finance for Development MTHS Multi-Topic Household Survey NDP National Development Plan PER Public Expenditure Review PLR Performance and Learning Review PPP Public-Private Partnership RAS Reimbursable Advisory Services RSR Rapid Social Response SCD Systematic Country Diagnostic SME Small and Medium-sized Enterprise P Pula, Currency Unit in Botswana Q Quarter TA Technical Assistance WBG World Bank Group WAVES Wealth Accounting and Valuation of Eco-Systems ii IBRD IFC MIGA Regional Vice President: Hafez Ghanem Sergio Pimenta Keiko Honda (CEO) Country Director: Paul Noumba Um Kevin Njiraini Merli Baroudi Task Team Leader: Xavier Furtado Rajeev Gopal Moritz Nebe iii TABLE OF CONTENTS I. INTRODUCTION................................................................................................. 1 II. MAIN CHANGES IN COUNTRY CONTEXT ................................................. 3 Political and Policy Developments ......................................................................... 3 Macroeconomic Developments .............................................................................. 4 Poverty and Inequality: Botswana’s Persistent Challenge...................................... 5 III. SUMMARY OF PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION ....................................... 7 IV. EMERGING LESSONS ....................................................................................... 9 V. ADJUSTMENTS TO COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK .......... 12 Adjustments to the Results Matrix........................................................................ 13 VI. RISKS................................................................................................................... 13 Annex 1: CPF FY16 - FY21 Results Matrix Framework Revised ............................. 14 Annex 2: Summary of Changes to CPF Results Framework ..................................... 21 Annex 3: Original CPF Results Framework Updated................................................. 26 List of Tables Table 1: Status of Original CPF Activities, by CPF Engagement Area ................................ 11 Table 2: Risk Assessment for CPF Outcomes ....................................................................... 13 List of Boxes Box 1: Botswana and the Human Capital Index ...................................................................... 6 List of Maps Map of Botswana ................................................................................................................... 34 iv PERFORMANCE AND LEARNING REVIEW REPUBLIC OF BOTSWANA-WORLD BANK GROUP COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK (FY16-20) I. INTRODUCTION 1. The proposed Performance and Learning Review (PLR) assesses progress under the current Country Partnership Framework (CPF) (FY16-20) and proposes adjustments to its substance and implementation. PLR consultations confirmed the continued relevance of the CPF to Botswana’s National Development Plan (NDP 11). However, challenges facing the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) portfolio caused the World Bank Group (WBG) and the Government of Botswana (GoB) to candidly assess the realism of the existing CPF. The proposed changes are summarized as follows: • Extend the CPF by one year (to FY21) to allow for dynamics leading up to the October 2019 elections and then gauge the new cabinet’s priorities. • Intensify World Bank implementation support given client capacity constraints. In designing new projects, explore a broader mix of instruments to build institutional capacity. • Rebalance the scope and size of the WBG portfolio to ensure better strategic coverage of the agreed CPF pillars in line with the focus on human capital. • Build on the growing collaboration between the World Bank, International Finance Corporation (IFC) and Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA) in Botswana to leverage private sector resources for development outcomes. 2. Botswana is considered a success story in Sub-Saharan Africa. Following its independence in 1966, Botswana became one of the world’s fastest growing economies and has averaged 5 percent annual gross domestic product (GDP) growth over the last decade. Successive governments have used the country’s considerable diamond and mineral wealth to drive significant investments in infrastructure, education, health, and social protection. With a relatively small population of approximately 2.3 million, Botswana has experienced notable improvements in its human development indicators. Batswana children have a 96 percent chance of surviving to age 5 while 79 percent of 15-year-olds will now survive to age 60. Accompanied by prudent fiscal and monetary policies, Botswana’s economic model has successfully maintained a long track-record of macroeconomic stability underpinned by strong institutions. 3. Yet Botswana still struggles with longstanding development challenges while facing new difficulties. While the economic model has delivered important results, the 2015/16 Multi-Topic Household Survey (MTHS) indicates that poverty and high levels of income inequality persist. Poverty 1 has come down to approximately 16 percent, but some 30 percent of the population remains just above the poverty line and thus vulnerable to a range of shocks. Botswana’s level of income inequality, while declining, remains one of the world’s highest. With a Gini coefficient of 0.52, greater focus must be given to the inclusiveness of Botswana’s economic model while 1 Defined as the share of the population living below US$1.90/day. 1 improving how public institutions manage the fiscal space. Because the model has generated strong state-dependence and limited private sector job creation, unemployment remains high (approximately 18 percent) with youth unemployment posing a critical challenge. Addressing these challenges will require improving the quality of infrastructure (water and electricity), essential basic services (education, health, and social safety nets), as well as accelerating reforms to the business environment and effective support for entrepreneurship. 4. Although an upper middle-income country 2, several government entities face acute capacity constraints. These limitations have hindered the implementation of the current IBRD portfolio as well as government own-financed projects. Botswana’s capacity constraints have persisted for some time and were noted in the Completion and Learning Report (CLR) 3 from the previous CPS (FY09-13) 4 as well as the Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD) 5. Nonetheless, the country’s relatively high per-capita income vs. its public sector’s incapacity to effectively implement a range of programs have created a mismatch in expectations between the WBG and the GoB which must be overcome to achieve effective long-term collaboration. These factors, combined with a fiscal rule limiting foreign borrowing to 20 percent of GDP and a policy preference to access local debt, prevent the WBG from building a credible project pipeline. 5. Progress under the CPF has been mixed. The World Bank’s Reimbursable Advisory Services (RAS), non-reimbursable technical assistance (TA), and knowledge products have had important impacts in a range of areas. These include developing the framework document that set the foundation for Botswana’s Vision 2036, establishing the Botswana Trade Information Portal (now an authoritative source of trade information), and the establishment of the National Monitoring and Evaluation System for NDP 11. Trust-funded TA also supported Botswana’s negotiations with Lesotho and South Africa concerning water transfer options, the completion of Botswana’s first Multi-Topic Household Survey (released in December 2018), and helped commence key social safety net reforms. Botswana has also begun to benefit from growing World Bank-IFC collaboration with the IFC’s issuance of a US$25 million local currency bond, the proceeds of which will support financial inclusion. However, implementation of the World Bank’s lending portfolio suffers from serious delays with only 23 percent of committed IBRD lending (US$331.5 million) disbursed to date. 6. Nonetheless, the Client continues to see value in WBG support. During FY18 and FY19, the Client has taken steps to accelerate the implementation of both IBRD loans. 6 This has included establishing dedicated management units for both projects as well as obtaining key exceptions to 2 Botswana’s nominal per-capita income in 2017 was approximately US$7595, just above the IBRD Graduation Discussion Income threshold of US$6795. 3 Botswana - Completion and Learning Review for the Period FY09-13: IEG review. Document number: 100886. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/502051467995101356/Botswana-Completion-and-learning-review-for- the-period-FY2009-13-IEG-review 4 Botswana – Country partnership strategy for the period FY09-13. Document number: 47520 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/907441468200944826/Botswana-Country-partnership-strategy-for-the- period-FY09-FY13 5 Botswana – Systematic county diagnostic. Document number: 95304. http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/489431468012950282/Botswana-Systematic-country-diagnostic 6 The two active IBRD loans are: The Botswana Integrated Transport Project (P102368, US$186 million); and The Botswana Emergency Water Security and Efficiency Project (P160911, US$145.5 million). 2 facilitate procurement. In addition, the Government continues to express strong interest in the World Bank’s knowledge and TA products in areas of highest priority. The RAS portfolio continues to grow with the World Bank now supporting the development of Botswana’s first collateral registry to facilitate financial inclusion. In parallel, the Government requested the World Bank to undertake a national jobs diagnostic as a core input to developing its first National Employment Policy, noted by Botswana’s President as a matter of national priority. The Ministry of Finance and Economic Development and the Ministry of Basic Education also requested World Bank to undertake an education sector Public Expenditure Review (PER) to assess the effectiveness and efficiency of sector spending and inform the design of the education operation. 7 In the area of social protection, the Government, using World Bank TA, has developed the basic elements of a single social registry as well as piloted a proxy means test in selected districts. During consultations associated with this PLR, the authorities insisted on retaining both the education and social protection projects envisaged in the CPF. As noted earlier, IFC made an important breakthrough in FY18 becoming the first non-resident entity to publicly issue a Pula-denominated bond in Botswana. FY19 then saw Botswana’s Water Utilities Corporation contract IFC to provide public-private partnership (PPP) advisory services to a major waste water treatment plant. II. MAIN CHANGES IN COUNTRY CONTEXT Political and Policy Developments 7. Botswana is a multi-party democracy, characterized by regular elections and peaceful transitions of power. Having reached the final year of his second presidential term, President Ian Khama stepped down from office allowing Vice President Mokgweetsi Eric Masisi to step in as President on April 1, 2018. General elections are set for October 2019. 8. In his acceptance speech, President Masisi indicated his top priorities as poverty reduction, social inclusion, youth unemployment, and accelerating reforms for private sector- led growth. These priorities were reiterated in his 2018 State of the Nation Address. While these priorities are consistent with those of previous governments, the current administration is asserting a renewed sense of urgency as well as stronger attention to anti-corruption measures. PLR consultations with media, civil society, and the business community reflected their support for these priorities. 9. Botswana’s governance indicators are strong but show signs of deterioration. According to the 2018 Ibrahim Index of African Governance (IIAG), Botswana continues to enjoy strong ratings, scoring 68.5 out of 100 and ranking 5th among 54 African countries. However, the IIAG also notes an “increasing deterioration” in Botswana’s annual trend. Botswana ranks best in some important areas, such as orderly mechanisms for the transfer of power. However, the IIAG also notes deterioration in some key areas, such as transparency and accountability (-10.5) and the business environment (-11.7). The World Bank’s 2018 World-Wide Governance Indicators also show a decline in government effectiveness between 2007-2017. These findings are consistent with the World Bank’s in-country experience with government capacity. 7 UNICEF is co-financing the PER and serving as a technical partner. 3 Macroeconomic Developments 10. The 2015 economic slowdown reflected Botswana’s continued dependence on mining. Botswana entered a period of slower GDP growth with the end of the global commodity super- cycle in 2015. Reduced demand for Botswana’s minerals (diamonds, copper, nickel and zinc) resulted in lower revenues and contributed to the closure of the flagship BCL copper-nickel mine in 2016. By 2017, the overall volume of mining production was roughly half of peak levels in 2008. The contraction in mining affected non-mining sectors, such as retail trade, transport, and financial intermediation services. 11. Nevertheless, prudent management allowed Botswana to maintain growth without compromising macroeconomic stability. Using its considerable fiscal buffers, Botswana has been able to run counter-cyclical fiscal policies since 2015/2016. Accelerated capital expenditures in transport, tourism and agricultural have counteracted the economic slowdown, complemented by accommodative monetary policy. Though the combination of lower revenues and higher spending led to a widening fiscal deficit (4.8 percent of GDP in 2015/2016), the fiscal balance was rapidly restored thanks to higher dividends from the Bank of Botswana (BoB) and improved tax administration. 8 Sound fiscal and debt management has kept public debt stable and low at approximately 17 percent of GDP (2018). The debt maturity structure indicates that most is medium- and long-term with low rollover financing risks. Though approximately 70 percent (2018) of the total public debt is denominated in foreign currency, exchange rate risks are mitigated by significant foreign reserves (equivalent to 13 months of imports). Inflation has also been kept within the policy range of 3 to 6 percent per annum. 12. Stable growth is expected over the medium-term. Going forward, GDP growth is projected to accelerate from 3 percent in 2018 to 4.1 percent in 2021, driven by services, construction, government consumption, and mining. The latter is expected to increase gradually over time, as global demand for minerals recovers. Services will remain the fastest-growing segment of the economy and will significantly expand domestic value addition, albeit in sectors related to mining. Government consumption is also expected to support GDP growth through a higher wage bill, subsidies to the parastatals, and public investments. Higher GDP growth and stronger domestic demand will place upward pressure on imports leading to a gradual reduction of the current account surplus. Domestic demand and rising oil prices will also contribute to rising inflation that could near 4 percent by 2020. The main risk facing Botswana concerns the possibility of slower-than- expected recovery in global demand for commodities, including diamonds. In addition, further delays in upgrading electricity and water infrastructure could slow non-mining economic activity, especially manufacturing. But even if these risks prove manageable, the relatively slow pace of GDP growth, and its modest impact on job creation, will not be sufficient to have a major impact on unemployment and inequality. 8 Better collection of non-mineral income tax and value added tax (VAT) as well as establishing a risk management unit at the Botswana Unified Revenue Service played important roles in offsetting declining revenues. 4 Table 1: Select Economic Indicators, 2015-2021 2015 2016 2017e 2018f 2019f 2020f 2021f Income and Economic Growth GDP growth (annual %) -1.7 4.3 1.8 3 3.3 3.8 4.1 Real GDP per capita growth (annual %) -3.5 2.4 0 1.2 1.5 2.1 2.2 GDP per capita- nominal (US$) 7137 7310 7307 7394 7504 7658 7826 Private consumption (% of GDP) 50.5 49.5 49.5 49.3 49.1 48.8 48.5 Gross fixed investment (% of GDP) 35.5 35.3 34.1 33.9 34.1 34.6 35.2 Money and Prices Inflation, consumer prices (annual %,) 3.1 2.8 3.3 3.6 3.8 4 4.2 Nominal exchange rate (period average) 10.13 10.89 10.34 10.6 10.8 10.8 11.1 Real exchange rate Index (2010 = 100) 111 116 107 107 105 102 103.5 Fiscal Fiscal Balance - including Grants (% of GDP) -4.8 0.6 -1.3 -1.6 1.3 1.5 1.6 Primary Fiscal Balance (% of GDP) -4.2 1.2 -0.6 -0.9 2.1 2.4 2.5 Total Public Debt (% of GDP) 17 17.2 17.8 18.6 18.7 18.4 18.1 External Accounts Export Growth (%, yoy) -22.5 1.9 12.3 5.2 7.3 9.7 6.2 Import Growth (%, yoy) -10.4 -14 10.3 3.5 5 7.6 7.1 Current account balance (US$ millions) 1190 1825 1789 1694 1718 1779 1757 Current account balance (% of GDP) 8.3 11.7 10.2 9.1 8.6 8.1 7.5 Memo GDP (current LCU, billions) 146 170.1 182 196.5 215.2 237.6 262.2 GDP (current US$, billions) 14.4 15.6 17.6 18.5 19.9 21.9 23.6 Source: Statistics Botswana, World Bank, 2018 Poverty and Inequality: Botswana’s Persistent Challenge 13. Despite Botswana’s macroeconomic stability and strong GDP growth, poverty is still relatively high while inequality is very high. The share of Botswana’s population living below the international poverty line (US1.90/day) has declined to 16.1 percent. Poverty is the highest in rural areas, among female-headed households and those with low levels of education. 50 percent of Botswana’s poor are aged 16 years and below, with significant implications for the inter- generational transmission of poverty. 14. Botswana’s income inequality is among the highest in the world, creating obstacles to rapid poverty reduction and inclusive growth. Based on the 2015/2016 MTHS, the national Gini coefficient has fallen from 0.61 in 2009 to 0.52 – a number that is still very high. These estimates reflect significant disparities within regions as well as differences in poverty rates by location – e.g., urban poverty is estimated at 9.4 percent while rural poverty rates rise to 24.2 percent. Similarly, poverty is extremely widespread in some districts, with three districts (Kweneng West, Ngwaketse West, and Kgalagadi South) experiencing head count poverty rates ranging from almost 40 to just over 50 percent. Poverty in Botswana also has a marked gender dimension. Given the limited economic opportunities for women, female-headed households are disproportionately represented among those living below the national poverty line: 55 percent of female-headed households are poor (46.6 percent of households in Botswana are headed by women). Botswana 5 is also marked by high levels of vulnerability, with approximately 30 percent of the population just above the poverty line. A broad range of adverse events, ranging from health epidemics to macroeconomic and climatic shocks, could push this group back into poverty. 15. Botswana social sector spending is generous, but results are disappointing. Education expenditure, for example, is among the highest in the world (7-9 percent of GDP) and includes the provision of nearly universal free primary education. But learning outcomes are in decline, trailing other middle-income countries. 9 In spite of significant spending in health, Botswana’s HIV/AIDS adult prevalence rate remains at 18.5 percent and childhood stunting hovers around 30 percent. Similarly, social protection spending (4-5 percent of GDP) shows limited impact on poverty and inequality. The recently launched Human Capital Index (HCI) brings this challenge into clear focus, highlighting the implications of Botswana’s declining human capital base (see Box 1). As reflected in the HCI, Botswana presently risks losing 58 percent of its potential productivity. This significant mismatch between spending and human development outcomes suggests debilitating shortcomings in sector budget management as well as the need for critical sector reforms. Box 1: Botswana and the Human Capital Index Underinvestment in health and education undermines productivity, competitiveness, and poverty reduction. In response to these risks, the WBG launched the Human Capital Project and its associated HCI in October 2018. But Botswana faces a more complex challenge. While social sector spending is generous, it is no longer creating a human capital base sufficient to the country’s current and future needs. In the HCI, Botswana ranks 119 out 157 countries; its score of 0.42 is only slightly higher than the average for Sub-Saharan Africa (0.40) and is well behind the average for other Middle-Income Countries (0.58). HCI Score. A child born in Botswana today will be 42 percent as productive in adulthood as she could be if she enjoyed complete education and full health in her early years. Probability of Survival to Age Five. Ninety-six out of 100 children born in Botswana survive to age five. Expected Years of School. In Botswana, a child who starts school at age four can expect to complete 8.4 years of school by her 18th birthday. Harmonized Test Scores. Students in Botswana score 391 on a scale where 625 represents advanced attainment and 300 represents minimum attainment. Learning-adjusted Years of School. Factoring in what children actually learn, effective years of schooling is only 5.3 years. Adult Survival Rate. Seventy-nine percent of 15-year olds will survive until age 60. This statistic is a proxy for the range of fatal and non-fatal health outcomes that children will experience as adults. Healthy Growth (Not Stunted Rate). Sixty-nine out of 100 children are not stunted. 31 out of 100 children are stunted, and so at risk of cognitive and physical limitations that can last a lifetime. Sources: The Human Capital Index 2018: Country Briefs and Data (October 2018) 9 Trends in International Math and Science Study (TIMSS), 2015. 6 16. Unemployment has remained stubbornly high at 17.8 percent in 2017, contributing to both poverty and inequality. Addressing unemployment calls for accelerated efforts to further shift Botswana's growth model away from extractive industries and the public sector. While Botswana’s economy has diversified in the last two decades, with services comprising almost 70 percent of GDP, GoB estimates suggest that non-diamond GDP will need to grow on average by 6.4 percent a year for 20 years to 2036 to reduce unemployment to 5 percent. While diamond production is expected to remain stable over the coming 2-3 decades, making inroads in Botswana’s sizable youth unemployment problem will require more aggressive efforts to diversify its sources of economic growth. 17. Botswana’s economic model will need significant adjustments to achieve the goals of shared prosperity and elimination of extreme poverty. The current economic model has delivered important results, but it has also generated strong state-dependence (as both investor and employer) with limited private sector-led manufacturing, services, and job creation. This in turn has exacerbated income inequality given the concentration of government investments in urban areas. Underpinning all of this is the urgent need for a more effective public sector that can efficiently expand the delivery of key services (e.g., water and electricity), improve the efficiency of social sector spending, ensure sustainable natural resource use as well as facilitate a stronger climate for private sector-led growth. Intensified attention to the three priority areas agreed in the current CPF is essential if Botswana’s future development is to be more inclusive and the country is to achieve its stated ambition to become a high-income country by 2036. 18. NDP 11 provides a good basis for continued cooperation between Botswana and the WBG in the medium-term. The central role of a vibrant private sector in economic diversification, as well as a stronger focus on productivity and learning and sustainable natural resource use, are common themes of both the Vision 2036 document and NDP 11. Building on the themes of NDP 10, NDP 11 identifies poverty, unemployment and income inequality as the overarching challenges confronting Botswana today and thus suggests the following four pillars: • Inclusive, diversified growth and employment creation; • Good governance, safety and security; • Social upliftment, including education/skills, health care and social protection; and • Sustainable environment and natural resource use. 19. Because of the continuity between NDPs 10 and 11 (2017-2023), the FY16-FY20 CPF remains well-aligned to country priorities. As noted at the outset of this document, the consultative PLR process confirmed that the three focus areas of the CPF respond to national priorities and are fully consistent with the NDP 11 framework. They will therefore continue to provide the structure for WBG interventions over the proposed extended CPF period until FY21. III. SUMMARY OF PROGRAM IMPLEMENTATION 20. The CPF was aligned with NDP 10 but designed to flexibly respond to emerging priorities identified through Botswana’s Vision 2036 and NDP 11. Considering SCD findings and the expected emphases of Vision 2036 and NDP 11, the CPF laid out three main Engagement Areas: (i) promoting private sector-led, job-intensive growth; (ii) strengthening human and 7 physical assets; and (iii) supporting effective resource management (both natural and financial resources). Each Engagement Area encompassed 2-4 Objectives involving specific activities/products identified through Client demand, the World Bank’s previous engagement, and potential for spillover and scale-up. At the outset of the CPF for FY16-FY20, there were two ongoing operations – the Northern Botswana Human Wildlife Coexistence Project, P095617 (US$0.5 million)10 and the Integrated Transport Project, P102368 (US$186 million) --- while the Botswana Emergency Water Security and Efficiency Project, P160911 (US$145.5 million) was under preparation. The CPF foresaw additional lending of US$94.5 million in education (Secondary Education and Skills Development, P151047) and health (Botswana Health Systems Support Project, P156009) as well as additional US$30 million in social protection (Botswana Social Protection and Modernization Project, P151830); unfortunately, none of these projects have materialized. Financial support for Engagement Area 1 was provided principally through IFC investments which were projected to be around US$30 million for the first two years of the CPF. The CPF also included innovative cooperation modalities, such as RAS programs, as well as traditional advisory services and analytics (ASA). 21. Implementation of the IBRD portfolio has been slow. Table 2 provides a summary of the status of CPF interventions by the three Engagement Areas and each of the nine Objectives. As the table shows, decisions were taken not to advance the preparation of two projects planned for FY16-FY20 – in secondary education and health systems support. The HIV/AIDS fiscal space analysis was also discontinued when the World Bank decided to instead undertake a more comprehensive Public Expenditure Review (PER) of health sector and HIV/AIDS spending. In the case of education, the decision to stop preparation was related to both institutional restructuring of the sector and the need to establish a tighter linkage to the jobs agenda. The decision not to advance the health project was due to the availability of significant grant funds from The Global Fund for HIV, TB and Malaria to undertake similar activities anticipated under the World Bank project (P156009). The World Bank health team was instrumental in positioning Botswana to access these grant funds. The remaining lending operations planned for the CPF period encountered delays. Originally planned for FY16, the Botswana Emergency Water Security and Efficiency Project (P160911) was presented to the WBG Board of Executive Directors in the third quarter of FY17 and not made effective until FY18. Preparation of the agreed operations in education and social protection has not commenced despite the Government’s stated continued interest. 22. The IBRD portfolio has suffered from a range of institutional weaknesses. Public sector implementation capacity in Botswana is weak, characterized by a skills deficit and poor accountability in key sectors. While Botswana’s early post-colonial governments actively recruited foreign talent to key positions, subsequent efforts to nationalize positions and limit foreign work permits resulted in the departure of essential skills that could not be readily replaced. Incentives have played an important role. While certain ministries retained key skills given their mandates over macroeconomic stability and key economic sectors, others saw their capacity deteriorate which has affected the implementation of the IBRD portfolio and GoB own-financed projects alike. The situation has been exacerbated by declining public sector compensation and poor accountability for non-performance. Botswana’s capacity constraints and poor cross- government coordination have become more apparent as the country faces a range of increasingly 10 This project closed in January 2016. As such, it did not contribute to the agreed Results Matrix for the CPF and is not included in Annexes 1 or 3. 8 complex challenges, such as: more acute pressures around economic diversification, doing business reforms, and youth unemployment; the quality of public spending in social and infrastructure sectors; the country’s poor/declining human capital outcomes; and the need to build a more dynamic and self-reliant entrepreneurial culture. 23. However, most advisory, TA, and knowledge products have had strong results. Several activities undertaken within the Public Service Performance and Economic Diversification and Competitiveness RAS programs have had discernable impacts. Examples include: (i) RAS products formed the basis for Vision 2036; (ii) Botswana’s Trade Information Portal now serves as a single authoritative point of information; (iii) assessments of Botswana’s Labour Market Observatory and manufacturing skills formed the main inputs to the National Human Resource Strategy; (iv) developing a National Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) Framework for NDP 11 11; and (v) Botswana’s first Multi-Topic Household Survey which used poverty estimation methods made possible through World Bank TA. Though they require careful attention, both RAS programs have opened new opportunities for WBG engagement and now include several new elements, including support for Botswana’s first collateral registry and rapid evaluations of the health, education, and tourism sectors. Trust-funded activities have also had strong impacts. A water transfer study helped inform negotiations between Lesotho, Botswana and South Africa while Rapid Social Response (RSR) grants have helped maintain reform momentum in social protection. TA on Wealth Accounting and Valuation of Ecosystem Services (WAVES) has led to the creation and publication of water and tourism satellite accounts, though sustaining the impact of these reforms is challenging. Other knowledge products are having positive impacts (see Annex 3). 24. Botswana has begun to benefit from growing World Bank-IFC collaboration. After several years without any transactions, IFC - through its Pan-African Domestic Medium-Term Note Programme - issued a Pula-denominated bond (the Kgalagadi Bond) for approximately US$25 million in late 2017. IFC is now the first non-resident entity to publicly issue a local currency bond in Botswana; it is also the country’s first amortizing bond. Leveraging IFC’s AAA credit rating, the Kgalagadi Bond proved an attractive asset to local banks. 12 Bond proceeds will support the Botswana Building Society (BBS) – a domestic financial institution – in extending financial services to low-income and other underserved market segments, including small and medium-sized enterprises (SME). Another result of growing World Bank-IFC collaboration is the Water Utilities Corporation’s FY19 decision to contract IFC for PPP transaction advisory services. IV. EMERGING LESSONS 25. CPF implementation has yielded some important lessons that will inform the World Bank’s strategic engagement and portfolio implementation through FY21. These are as follows: • Given government capacity constraints, the CPF program should be more selective and designed with greater attention to ground-level realities. These include the skills deficit in several ministries and poor cross-ministerial coordination which hinders timely decisions, effective implementation, and utilization of loan proceeds. The World Bank will therefore design projects with more careful attention to Government readiness 11 The M&E Framework for NDP 11, and related implementation tools, were completed ahead of schedule. 12 Government of Botswana debt is rated A2. 9 and helping ministries develop the right skills during the course of implementation. Consideration will also be given to using/combining other instruments (beyond IPFs) that could create stronger incentives for implementation. • WBG experience shows that its knowledge and advisory products are especially relevant for Botswana, where the effective management of its substantial per-capita resource base is compromised by knowledge gaps and capacity limitations. World Bank knowledge and TA products have had significant impacts in areas such as procurement, trade, transboundary water management, statistical capacity, strategy development, and social protection. RAS interventions have also effectively supported policy/program changes given their tight alignment to national priorities and strong government ownership. The impact of current and future RAS programs could be strengthened by exposing Botswana to WBG clients with more mature RAS portfolios. The World Bank can also provide RAS-funded services to improve the design and implementation of Government-funded development projects. • The WBG should continue its efforts to crowd in additional private sector financing applying Maximizing Finance for Development (MFD) principles. As noted earlier, growing World Bank-IFC collaboration in Botswana has yielded important results. Drawing on the local networks and facilitation of the Country Office, IFC is scaling up its attention to Botswana; in addition to planning a stakeholder mapping of the agribusiness sector, it is exploring new transactions in finance/banking and agribusiness. MIGA is also looking to support a leading financial service provider in Botswana to help accelerate credit to the economy and support greater economic dynamism. To further the Client’s understanding of MFD principles and possible opportunities, the WBG will work to familiarize the Government with the MFD approach. Not only is MFD a clear WBG corporate priority, it is also aligned with the Government’s renewed emphasis on private sector-led growth and job creation. • In addition to MFD, the WBG’s current and future ASA and lending portfolio in Botswana is well-positioned to support commitments on gender and climate change. The decided strategic emphasis on human capital, and the planned operations in basic education and social protection, provide several entry points to strengthen attention to the WBG corporate priority on gender equality. With respect to climate change, the existing WBG portfolio is already well-placed. The completed ASA related to Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Strategies (P155059) is opening new avenues of dialogue concerning greater energy efficiency, as well as the expanded use of renewable energy. The follow-up ASA on Energy Efficiency Opportunities in Africa (P166317) includes Botswana as one of the focus countries where pilot investments in energy efficiency are planned; in addition, the Client plans to construct a 100 MW solar-photovoltaic plant, which is substantial renewable energy capacity that would replace some of the current fossil fuel-based capacity. Moreover, the Botswana Emergency Water Security and Efficiency Project (P160911), which enjoys 100 percent climate co-benefits, will help the country adapt to the impacts of climate change through enhanced water security and efficiency as well as a specific component focused on drought preparedness. 10 Table 1: Status of Original CPF Activities, by CPF Engagement Area (bold = completed; plain = ongoing, italics = discontinued) ENGAGEMENT AREA 1: ENGAGEMENT AREA 2: ENGAGEMENT AREA 3: Promoting private sector-led, Strengthening human and physical Supporting effective resource jobs-intensive growth assets management Addressing key constraints to Improving management and quality of Improving the efficiency and private sector-led growth and basic education: effectiveness of social diversification: • Transforming Senior Secondary protection system: • Botswana Trade Facilitation Education and Skills Development, • Botswana Social Protection TA, P154931 (completed) (IPF), P151047 (discontinued) Modernisation Project (IPF) • RAS on Economic • ASA Education Sector PER, P151830 (discontinued) P168022 (ongoing) Diversification and • ASA P158950 - Competitiveness, P132426 Improving health system spending Strengthening the SP (2nd Assignment) (completed) and management: TA for HIV System to Contribute to • RAS3 on Economic Investment Analysis and Allocative Eradication of Food Diversification and Efficiency Analysis (ongoing). Poverty (completed) Competitiveness, P159532 • Botswana Health Systems Support • ASA P166742 - Support to a (ongoing) (IPF), P156009 (discontinued) Coordinated and Scalable • ASA on Accelerating • ASA-Health and HIV/AIDS Fiscal Social Protection System in Entrepreneurship in Botswana, Space Analysis (discontinued) Botswana (ongoing) P168702 (ongoing) • ASA - PER Botswana Health and HIV/AIDS, P151189 (completed) Creating national performance Promoting private sector: • ASA -Health Systems Technical management framework: • IFC Kgalagadi Bond (issuance Support, P162006 (completed) • RAS2 Economic completed; impact ongoing) Diversification and • IFC exploring transactions in Improving efficiency and Competitiveness, P154953 agriculture and financial sustainability of water supply and (completed) sectors. (ongoing) sanitation services: • RAS3 on Strengthening • IFC to provide PPP advisory • TA -Lesotho Highlands Botswana Public Sector Performance, services in the water sector Water Transfer Study, TF016233 P159841 (ongoing) (ongoing) (completed) • MIGA exploring opportunities • Regional TA CIWA Okavango Strengthening natural in financial/energy sectors Multi-Sector Investment resources management: (ongoing) Opportunity, P150383 • ASA Wealth Accounting (completed) and Valuation of • Emergency Water Security and Ecosystem Services Efficiency Project (IPF), P160911 (WAVES), P143847 (ongoing) (Phases 1 and 2 completed) • Innovative mechanisms to support • TA Botswana Renewable water supply resilience for Energy and Energy Botswana utilities in drought Efficiency Strategy, vulnerable areas, TF072584 (to P155059 (completed) support the P160911, ongoing) Emergency Water Security and Efficiency Project (IPF), Upgrading roads and connectivity: P160911 (ongoing) • Integrated Transport Project (IPF), • ASA - Energy Efficiency P102368 (ongoing) Investment Opportunities in Africa, P166317 (regional) (ongoing) 11 V. ADJUSTMENTS TO COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP FRAMEWORK 26. The PLR proposes extending the CPF timeframe by one year to FY21. Given the lessons discussed above, including a more realistic understanding of Government capacity, the WBG and GoB agreed that more time is necessary to account for key inputs and events over 2019 and 2020 as well as incorporate the agreed results. The proposed extension would allow the CPF to be informed by the anticipated mid-term review of NDP 11 (to be completed in 2020), take full advantage of the Government’s renewed interest in human capital, as well as allow for dynamics leading up and following the October 2019 general elections. Ongoing and future ASA products could then be positioned to more effectively inform the World Bank’s dialogue in Botswana. 27. This PLR also proposes rebalancing the scope and size of the World Bank’s portfolio to ensure better strategic coverage of agreed CPF pillars while also reflecting a more realistic agenda. Given the absence of perceived GoB demand in the health sector, the agreed project will no longer be part of the CPF. The focus for the remainder of the CPF period will be to accelerate the effective implementation of the two ongoing lending operations (transport and water) and move forward the planned operations in education and social protection in keeping with the originally- envisaged CPF lending envelope. The World Bank will endeavor to provide stronger implementation support, perhaps by recruiting World Bank Global Practice (GP) Staff into the Botswana Country Office and/or by drawing on staff in neighboring country offices. Efforts will also be taken to explore/combine a broader range of instruments to ensure sufficient TA for backstopping and capacity building. As appropriate, the WBG will leverage new financing through trust funds and other instruments. 28. Following IFC’s successful issuance of the Pula-denominated Kgalagadi Bond, the WBG will work to identify new opportunities in line with CPF objectives and MFD principles. IFC will leverage its experience with the Botswana Building Society and the Botswana Stock Exchange to continue its focus on SMEs and financial inclusion through support to the banking sector. Efforts will also be taken to support agribusiness. IBRD and IFC will continue to promote private sector participation through advisory services for PPPs. IBRD/IFC will also promote South-South exchange to facilitate learning from successful PPP approaches elsewhere. 29. Going forward, the CPF will pursue a more focused ASA, TA, and advisory service agenda in response to Government’s demand. New ASA activities will include a PER in the education sector, an assessment of how to accelerate youth entrepreneurship in Botswana, continued TA for social protection, statistical capacity building (the forthcoming Continuous Multi-Topic Household Survey), transaction advisory support for PPPs, and expansion of the Economic Diversification and Competitiveness RAS to include support for developing a collateral registry. Other activities may emerge based on ongoing dialogue with the Client. 30. MIGA continues to actively pursue opportunities in Botswana. MIGA, supported by the strong involvement of its Africa Hub, is exploring projects in the finance and energy sectors through both its credit enhancement instrument (non-honoring) as well as traditional political risk insurance. In the energy sector, MIGA is looking at the potential to support the country’s grid expansion as well as expansion into solar. 12 Adjustments to the Results Matrix 31. The PLR proposes adjustments to the results matrix to reflect the proposed adjustments to the CPF noted in Section V. These adjustments are summarized in Annex 2. The results matrix now accurately reflects CPF activities and Government’s priorities. It also includes greater detail on what has been and will be achieved, including through the expanding RAS portfolio as well as IFC’s recent breakthroughs. It also eliminates milestones pertaining to the health operation and, in general, includes clearer baselines and targets. VI. RISKS 32. Risks are being adjusted to reflect recent experience. As previously discussed, macroeconomic and fiscal risks remain relatively low but will require careful monitoring given Botswana’s continued dependence on volatile sources of revenue. Similarly, fiduciary, environmental and social, and stakeholder risks continue to be low. However, risks associated with sector strategies are rated moderate, reflecting the skills deficit and inadequate coordination across ministries. As noted earlier, future projects will give greater attention Government readiness as well as building the necessary skills for implementation and coordination. The risk rating for Political and Governance is downgraded from low to moderate given Botswana’s notable (and in some cases accelerating) decline in international governance indicators. Institutional capacity risks remain substantial as organizational and capacity issues have delayed the CPF program and could challenge efforts to monitor and comply with the World Bank’s environmental and social safeguards. In addition to more frequent implementation support and TA, the World Bank will seek to mitigate this risk through specialized training and workshops. Careful attention to the staffing and management of World Bank operations/initiatives will also help. The country office will also continue its pro-active approach to safeguards. Table 2: Risk Assessment for CPF Outcomes Risk Categories Rating Political and governance Moderate Macroeconomic Low Sector strategies and policies Moderate Technical design of project or program Low Institutional capacity for implementation and sustainability Substantial Fiduciary Low Environment and social Low Stakeholders Low Overall Moderate 13 Annex 1: CPF FY16 - FY21 Results Matrix Framework Revised ENGAGEMENT AREA 1: Promoting private sector-led, jobs-intensive growth Changing the growth model and developing a more diverse economic base is critical for Botswana’s sustained economic growth, employment creation, and reducing poverty and inequality. This change requires a strong private sector, entrepreneurship, and a competitive business climate to expand to export markets beyond diamonds and other minerals. Attracting domestic entrepreneurs and FDI to invest in tradeables in Botswana requires (i) a policy environment that enables private firms to be competitive and provide them with the export focus incentive; and (ii) higher levels of private sector investment. CPF Objective 1.1: Addressing key constraints to private sector-led growth and diversification. Intervention Logic Botswana’s domestic policy environment has been slow to adjust to the pressures of international competition and, thus, have not contributed to raising firm competitiveness. While macroeconomic and political stability secured Botswana’s position for some years in global business rankings/indexes vs. its Sub-Saharan competitors, several countries have undertaken more aggressive reforms; while Botswana continues to make very modest absolute progress, its relative ranking is in decline. WBG interventions aim to assist the GoB in addressing the policy constraints and successfully implementing strategies and policies in economic diversification and competitiveness. The World Bank will provide (i) advisory services to support accelerated implementation of reforms in five priority areas: business environment, trade and industrial policies, infrastructure, access to finance (in particular for MSMEs), skills and innovation; (ii) TA to the PPADB to support procurement reforms; (iii) TA to improve trade facilitation and transparency (Botswana Trade Portal). CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Programs Indicators Improvement in the Distance to Frontier i. Decrease in time, number of Completed FY16 score (on DBI) steps and cost required to start RAS 2 (P132426) Economic Diversification and Baseline (2015): 64.87 a business Competitiveness (2nd Assignment) Current (2019): 65.40 ii. Decrease in time, number of Target (2021): 2-point DTF/Doing Business steps and cost required for a Ongoing score increase new electricity connection Botswana Economic Diversification and iii. Decrease in time and Competitiveness (RAS3) Reimbursable Advisory Improved ease of access to information on number of payments to comply Services Project – (P159532) trade for domestic and foreign businesses with tax and entrepreneurs as measured by use of requirements Completed GoB’s one-stop trade portal ASA P154931 - Trade Information Portal Baseline (2016): No Trade Portal (iv)Design and implementation Target (2020): Botswana Trade Portal of an online “one-stop” trade Ongoing-New operational portal P168702-Accelerating Entrepreneurship in Botswana CPF Objective 1.2: Promoting private sector growth CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Programs Investment Mobilized – FIs (US$ million) Impacts related to “Investment New Baseline (2016): 0 Mobilized–FIs” shall be IFC Kgalagadi Bond (issuance completed; impact Target (2021): 30 monitored through data on the ongoing) proxies: i. Number of SMEs reached IFC providing PPP advisory services in the water ii. Loans disbursed (# & US$) sector/Glenn Valley Waste Water Treatment Plant iii. No. of jobs created or saved iv. Sales revenue growth IFC exploring transactions in agriculture and financial sectors. (ongoing) MIGA exploring opportunities in financial/energy sectors (ongoing) 14 ENGAGEMENT AREA 2: Strengthening human and physical assets A step change in Botswana’s economic competitiveness will require sustained improvements to its human capital as well as the quality of infrastructure in key sectors. Improvements in human capital will focus on foundational skills acquired through basic education as well as contributing to improvements in health sector management and HIV/AIDS spending. Strengthened physical assets will focus on improved infrastructure for water and sanitation. CPF Objective 2.1: Improving management and quality of basic education. Intervention Logic The effort to shift towards a new, private sector-led export-oriented growth model and to address widespread unemployment will require better human capital leading to greater collective productivity. At present, a child born in Botswana will only be 42 percent as productive as s/he should be, with declining education outcomes proving an important contributing factor. Notwithstanding significant public spending, Botswana’s education sector is in crisis with the growing public dissatisfaction due to little real improvement over the past decade; student learning outcomes have dropped more than a half, measured by the Junior Certificate Examination (JCE) pass rate (from 75 percent to 33.4 percent), accompanied by 34 percent youth unemployment. This puts the country’s ambitious development agenda in jeopardy and presents an urgent need for system reform in access, quality and relevance of education. While all levels of education need reform, Botswana’s development partners have withdrawn from the basic education sector leaving it need of urgent support. To help the Government identify effective interventions to address system reform priority needs, the World Bank will provide TA first with a sector- wide assessment through PER; resources permitting, this could be followed by a public expenditure tracking survey (PETS) as well as quantitative service delivery survey (QSDS) in collaboration with other development partners. This will be followed by a possible lending operation drawing on the findings from the assessments for project design. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Program Indicators Priority areas of intervention for education PER, PETS-QSDS completed Ongoing system reform and improvement identified Baseline: No PER exists ASA P168023 - Education Sector PER Baseline: No priority areas for reform Target: FY20 identified RAS3 P159532 - Economic Diversification and Target (2021): Reform priorities drawn from Competitiveness PER evidence identified in national strategies. Jobs Diagnostics/Strategy (and other products) to inform GoB National Employment Policy. 15 CPF Objective 2.2: Improving health system spending and management. Intervention Logic Health is a major factor hindering individual capacity and contributing to Botswana’s human development outcomes that are among the lowest in the world for a middle-income country. The impact of the HIV/AIDS pandemic – one of the principal factors behind the poor outcomes – remains widespread. Analytical work will inform evidence-based strategy development, policy making and operational design. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Program Indicators Improved health sector analysis and strategy i. Health management Completed development. information ASA P162006-Botswana Health Systems Technical system (HMIS) improved, with Support Health Financing Strategy respect to standardization and Baseline (2015): None in existence timely data collection Completed Target (2021): HFS developed ii. Health financing strategy ASA P151189 - Botswana Health and HIV/AIDS PER developed, based on on-going HIV Investment Analysis and Ongoing Baseline (2015): None in existence planned analytic work HIV Investment Analysis in 2018/Allocative Efficiency Target (2021): Done iii. Efficiency of HIV/AIDS Study in 2019 spending tracked regularly. Ongoing RAS3 P159841 - Strengthening Public Sector Performance Ongoing In-country consultant appointed and engaging with the National AIDS Coordinating Agency (NACA). Report to be ready in FY19. CPF Objective 2.3: Improving efficiency and sustainability of water supply and sanitation services Intervention Logic Botswana has succeeded in ensuring wide access to clean water, with more than 95 percent access to improved drinking water sources. However, access to piped water supply remains uneven, ranging from 80 percent (Gaborone) to 20–30 percent in some urban centers. Only 42 percent of rural households have access to proper sanitation. System losses amount to 33 percent. The WBG will support the Government through a package of financial and knowledge services to improve the provision of water and sanitation while addressing affordability concerns, and will specifically (i) support the WUC investment program in underserved localities; (ii) strengthen water sector institutions, including the MMEWR, DWA, WUC and the sector regulator, to further pursue water sector reform; and (iii) provide TA for improving the prioritization of new investments and the selection process. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Program Indicators Additional water produced (per day) i. Preparation of WUC District Completed Baseline: 0 (2015) Center Investment Plans TA P144228 - Lesotho Highlands-Botswana Water Current: No change (2019) ii. Preparation of Feasibility Transfer Study Target: 14,500 m3 (2021) Studies, Designs and Bidding Documents Completed Number of households benefiting from iii. Preparation of Utility TA P150383 - Okavango Multi-Sector Investment improved water service delivery. Performance Improvement Plans Opportunity Baseline (2015): 0 iv. Implementation of Priority Current (2019): No change Works Ongoing Target (2021): 75,000 households Contracts (water distribution, IPF P160911 - Emergency Water Security and wastewater treatment facilities) Efficiency Project v. Implementation of key activities Ongoing from Utility Performance TF 072584-Innovative mechanisms to support water Improvement Plans supply resilience for Botswana utilities in drought vi. Implementation of Second vulnerable areas (to support the P160911). Phase Works Contracts 16 CPF Objective 2.4: Upgrading roads and increasing connectivity Intervention Logic Roads are the predominant mode of transport for Botswana carrying over 90 percent of freight and passenger traffic. While Botswana’s internal infrastructure is generally well developed, significant gaps remain in connecting to regional and global markets. The country’s landlocked position and distance from ports is a structural barrier that raises costs for exporters and importers and hinders the country’s ability to exploit regional and global trade opportunities. Some of the major challenges include increased traffic growth, deterioration of the road network, higher operation and management (O&M) costs; and effective traffic management. With its ongoing IPF operation from the current portfolio engagement, the WBG will continue to invest in critical transport infrastructure that enhances the efficiency of the transport system by building modern strategic planning and management capacity in the sector. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Program Indicators Improved road connectivity i. Rehabilitation and Ongoing Baseline (2015): 0 km improved to required maintenance of IPF P102368 - Integrated Transport Project standards project roads carried out Current (2018): 201 km completed successfully under OPRCs Target (2021): 335 km improved to methodology required standards ii. Capacity and knowledge enhancement of Road Department staff improved iii. Satisfactory financial management and reporting 17 ENGAGEMENT AREA 3: Supporting effective resource management The priority interventions outlined in the engagement areas above will not deliver rapid and sustainable progress on the twin goals without addressing fundamental enablers, including improving public resource management and service delivery by strengthening performance M&E, including linkages for enhanced planning, budgeting, civil service and public investment management. Botswana’s natural resources will remain at the heart of the country’s success. But they are highly constrained, fragile, and face many competing demands. Therefore, putting in place effective systems for natural resource management that take clear account of the implications on important resources will be critical to ensure sustainability over the medium term. CPF Objective 3.1: Improving the efficiency and effectiveness of social protection system Intervention Logic Despite considerable government investment in the social protection sector, delivery of social protection in Botswana is fragmented while, at the same time, programs have overlapping eligibility criteria. Botswana currently has an amalgam of social protection programs that operate with little or no coordination and with multiple cash and food distribution programs. Each program requires completion of a separate application, investigation by staff, and documentation although information collected is generally the same for all programs. Separate applications for each program are administratively costly and increase time and out-of-pocket costs for applicants. Botswana lacks the administrative systems and tools that underpin efficient service delivery including objective targeting mechanisms, a social registry, and modern information systems. The WBG will support improvements in the efficiency and effectiveness of Botswana’s social protection system through the interventions by (i) supporting the operationalization of a single social register through implementation of a pilot and (ii) providing technical support to lay the foundation for implementing an objective targeting mechanism (i.e., Proxy Means Test) in select districts. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Program Indicators Operationalize Single Social Register Number of beneficiaries Completed included in the Single Social ASA P158950 -Strengthening the SP System to Contribute Baseline (2016): No Single Social Register Register to Eradication of Food Poverty exists Target (2021): Single Social Register Ongoing operationalized in 4 districts ASA P166742 - Support to a Coordinated and Scalable Social Protection System in Botswana 18 CPF Objective 3.2: Creating national performance management framework Intervention Logic Weak planning and M&E of policies, programs and projects reduced public sector efficiency, effectiveness, transparency and accountability, resulting in weak service-delivery. Low frequency data collection and delays in dissemination impede evidence-based policymaking, and the implementation of programs designed to address employment, poverty, and growth. Through the ongoing engagement under the RAS second assignment, the World Bank will: (i) support the NSO efforts to put in place a government-wide performance M&E system, including linkages to planning, budgeting, public service and public investment management; and (ii) provide TA to Statistics Botswana with the implementation of a multi-topic household survey as a core instrument for data collection. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Program Indicators M&E policy approved by Cabinet, and M&E Completed tools are used to enhance service-delivery i. M&E Policy Framework RAS2 P154545 - Economic Diversification and Baseline: no M&E policy (2015) developed Competitiveness Target: M&E policy operationalized (2020) ii. Monitoring tools developed Timeliness and quality of statistics iii. Rapid evaluations carried Ongoing improved out RAS3 P15981 - Strengthening Public Sector Performance Baseline (2015): no Multi-Topic Household iv. Multi-Topic Household Survey (MTHS) implemented Survey (MTHS) published Target (2020): Multi-Topic Household Survey implemented 19 CPF Objective 3.3: Strengthening natural resources management Intervention Logic Botswana is one of the most water-stressed countries in the world, with general scarcity and high dependency on internationally shared and trans-boundary waters. As water scarcity is growing, Botswana must be able to make careful and informed allocation strategies that prioritize the most beneficial sectors, balancing economic, strategic, and livelihood benefits, including employment. The World Bank will support the Government in addressing this challenge through knowledge, advice, and lending for (i) building capacity and strengthening sector institutions to plan and execute sector investments, and to enhance sector policy and regulation; and (ii) financing the design and development of a monitoring system for the assessment and control of water resources, sector policy support, and crisis response mechanisms. TA will be provided to the MMEWR for staff training, strategic assessments, feasibility studies, and assessing water security tradeoffs. Given the scale of Botswana’s coal and solar resources and comparative advantage, the World Bank will be supporting the Government in developing a strategy for exploring long-term investment opportunities in the sector. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary Progress WBG Program Indicators Per capita wealth including natural capital Publication of satellite water Completed (pula per person in accounts ASA P143847 - Wealth Accounting and Valuation of constant 2006 prices) Department of Water Affairs Ecosystem Services (WAVES) Phase 1 and Phase 2 Baseline (2014): BWP139,992 ii. Adjusted National Savings Target (2021): BWP 200,000 indicator Ongoing developed using national IPF P160911 - dataset, and Emergency Water Security and Efficiency Project reported as part of national accounts Completed ASA P155059 - Renewable Energy and Energy Efficiency Strategy Share of renewable energy in total electricity production capacity Renewable energy and energy New Baseline (2015): less than 0.2 percent efficiency strategies and ASA P166317 - Energy Efficiency Investment Target (2021): 2 percent implementation plans adopted Opportunities in Africa (regional) 20 Annex 2: Summary of Changes to CPF Results Framework Original CPF Outcomes and Revision Rationale for change Indicators CPF Objective 1.1: Addressing Reformulated. Revised Revised intervention logic more key constraints to the Intervention Logic now reads: accurately reflects the nature of development of non-diamond Botswana’s domestic policy Botswana’s challenge and sectors. environment has been slow to corresponding relevance of adjust to the pressures of WBG support. Intervention Logic. The domestic international competition and, environment and government thus, has not contributed to policies, have not been effective in raising firm competitiveness. significantly raising the bar for While macroeconomic and firm competitiveness. Protection political stability secured incentives for focusing on the Botswana’s position for some domestic market undermine the years in various global rankings potential for a competitive private vs. its Sub-Saharan competitors, sector to emerge. There is a need several countries have for integration into the global undertaken more aggressive markets. The WBG interventions reforms; while Botswana aim at assisting the GoB in continues to make very modest addressing the policy constraints absolute progress, its relative and successfully implementing rankings are in decline. WBG strategies and policies in interventions aim to assist the economic diversification and GoB in addressing the policy competitiveness. The World Bank constraints and successfully will provide (i) advisory services implementing strategies and to support accelerated policies in economic implementation of reforms in five diversification and priority areas: business competitiveness. The World environment, trade and industrial Bank will provide (i) advisory policies, infrastructure, access to services to support accelerated finance, (in particular of the implementation of reforms in MSMEs), skills and innovation; five priority areas: business (ii) development of non-diamond environment, trade and priority clusters including tourism, industrial policies, beef, ICT and financial services; infrastructure, access to finance (iii) TA to the PPADB for (in particular of the MSMEs), implementation of government skills and innovation; (ii) devolution and a capacity building support to the development of strategy; (iv) trade facilitation TA non-diamond priority clusters for improved trade facilitation and including tourism, beef, ICT and transparency by supporting the financial services; (iii) TA to the establishment of a Trade PPADB to support procurement Information Portal. reforms; (iv) trade facilitation TA for improved trade facilitation and transparency (Trade Information Portal). 21 ENGAGEMENT AREA 2: Reformulated. Revised Reference to health is refined Strengthening human and Engagement Area 2 now given PLR’s recommendation physical assets. reads: A step change in to drop health IPF project from Botswana’s economic CPF but still recognizing Developing a new growth model competitiveness will require ongoing ASA on HIV/AIDS will require a step change in the sustained improvements to its spending and RAS on Medical productivity of Botswana’s firms. human capital as well as the Supply Chain management. The latter depends on substantial quality of infrastructure in key Stronger reference also given to improvements in sectors. Improvements in human water infrastructure. human capital, including capital will focus on education and health: (i) foundational skills acquired Improving the quality of through basic education as well education, developing skill sets as contributing to improvements demanded by the labor market, in health sector management and and increasing access to HIV/AIDS spending. appropriate job training programs Strengthened physical assets will be necessary for reducing will focus on improved unemployment and poverty and infrastructure for water and achieving the country’s much- sanitation. needed economic diversification, sustainable growth, and job creation. (ii) Addressing health barriers to skills acquisition and labor market participation would be essential for ensuring that all individuals have the capacity to contribute to productivity and are in the position to enjoy human development outcomes. Such sustainable livelihoods will require focus on strengthening physical assets, including infrastructure for water and sanitation. CPF Objective 2.1: Improving Reformulated. Revised CPF Revised to account for revised equitable access and relevance Objective 2.1 now reads: focus on basic education in light of secondary education and Improving management and of donor withdrawal from basic TVET quality of basic education. education sector as well as HCP/HCI focus. Intervention Logic. The effort to Reformulated. Revised Revised to account for revised shift towards a new, private Intervention Logic now reads: focus on basic education and sector-led export-oriented growth The effort to shift towards a new, HCP/HCI logic. model and to address widespread private sector-led export- unemployment will require better oriented growth model and to human capital leading to greater address widespread collective productivity. At present, unemployment will require a child born in Botswana will only better human capital leading to be 42 percent as productive as s/he greater collective productivity. should be, with declining At present, a child born in education outcomes proving an Botswana will only be 42 important contributing factor. percent as productive as s/he 22 Notwithstanding should be, with declining significant public spending, Botswana’s education outcomes proving an important contributing factor. education sector is in crisis with Notwithstanding the growing public dissatisfaction significant due to little real improvement over public spending, Botswana’s education sector is in crisis with the past decade; student learning the outcomes have dropped more than growing public dissatisfaction due to little real a half, measured by the Junior Certificate Examination (JCE)improvement over the past decade; pass rate (from 75 percent to 33.4 student learning percent), accompanied by 34 outcomes have dropped more percent youth unemployment. than a half, measured by the Junior Certificate Examination This puts the country’s ambitious (JCE) pass rate (from 75 percent development agenda in jeopardy to 33.4 percent), accompanied and presents an urgent need for by system reform in access, quality 34 percent youth unemployment. This puts the and relevance of education. While all levels of education need country’s ambitious development agenda in jeopardy reform, Botswana’s development and presents an urgent need for partners have withdrawn from the system reform in access, quality basic education sector leaving it and need of urgent support. To help the relevance of Government identify effectiveeducation. While all levels of education interventions to address system need reform, Botswana’s reform priority needs, the World development partners have withdrawn from Bank will provide TA first with a sector-wide assessment through the basic education sector leaving it need of urgent support. PER; resources permitting, this could be followed by a publicTo help the Government identify expenditure tracking effective survey interventions to address system reform priority (PETS) as well as quantitative needs, the World Bank will service delivery survey (QSDS) in collaboration with provide TA first with a sector- other wide assessment through PER; development partners. This will be resources permitting, this could followed by a possible lending be followed by a public operation drawing on the findings from the assessments for project expenditure tracking survey design. (PETS) as well as quantitative service delivery survey (QSDS) in collaboration with other development partners. This will be followed by a possible lending operation drawing on the findings from the assessments for project design. CPF Objective 2.2: Improving Reformulated. Revised CPF Revised given decision to drop health outcomes. Objective 2.2 now reads: health IPF from CPF as well as Improving health system more closely reflect ongoing spending and management. ASA/RAS. 23 Intervention Logic. Health is a Reformulated. Revised Revised given decision to drop major factor hindering individual Intervention Logic now reads: health IPF and more capacity and contributing to Health is a major factor realistically reflect prospective Botswana’s human development hindering individual capacity impact of ASA/RAS support. outcomes that are among the and contributing to Botswana’s lowest in the world for a MIC human development outcomes country. The impact of HIV/AIDS that are among the lowest in the pandemic – one of the principal world for a MIC country. The factors behind the poor outcomes impact of HIV/AIDS pandemic – remains widespread. Through – one of the principal factors investment lending the World behind the poor outcomes – Bank will support interventions remains widespread. Analytical for: (i) training health work will inform evidence- professionals, (ii) improving based strategy development, health information system, and(iii) policy making and operational improving prevention, diagnosis design. and treatment of NCDs and communicable diseases. More specifically, proposed World Bank lending will support the Ministry of Health in strengthening implementation of its service delivery integration agenda (with respect to more efficiently addressing the national communicable and non- communicable disease double burden along a health care continuum from disease prevention, treatment and care, and rehabilitation); in addressing persistent maternal and child health challenges; and supporting organizational changes at the MOH and related decentralization arrangements by helping build and strengthen institutional capacity, technical, managerial, and operational to improve access to quality health services. Analytical work will inform evidence-based policy making and operational design by examining overall sector expenditures and, to improve (a) the value for money in the sector, and (b) produce better health outcomes. 24 WBG Program Revised to add: Revised to reflect ongoing ASA - HIV Investment Analysis in on HIV/AIDS spending as well 2018/Allocative Efficiency as rapid evaluation of Medical Study in 2019 Supply Chain (ASA/RAS). - ASA/RAS – (P154953) Rapid evaluation of Medical Supply Chain. CPF Objective Indicators Reformulated. Revised Revised to more closely reflect indicators now read: Improved ASA/RAS support. health sector analysis and strategy development. Health Financing Strategy Baseline (2015): None Target (2021): HFS developed HIV Investment Analysis Baseline (2015): None Target (2021): Done 25 Annex 3: Original CPF Results Framework Updated ENGAGEMENT AREA 1: Promoting private sector-led, jobs-intensive growth Changing the growth model and developing an export-oriented, diversified economic base in Botswana is critical for sustained economic growth, employment creation, and poverty reduction. This change requires a strong private sector, entrepreneurship, and competitiveness to expand to export markets. Attracting domestic entrepreneurs and FDI to invest in tradeables in Botswana requires (i) a policy environment that enables private firms to be competitive and provide them with the export focus incentive; and (ii) higher levels of private sector investment. CPF Objective 1.1: Addressing key constraints to the development of non-diamond sectors Intervention Logic The domestic environment and government policies have not been effective in significantly raising the bar for firm competitiveness. Protection incentives for focusing on the domestic market undermine the potential for a competitive private sector to emerge. There is a need for integration into the global markets. The WBG interventions aim at assisting the GoB in addressing the policy constraints and successfully implementing strategies and policies in economic diversification and competitiveness. The Bank will provide (i) advisory services to support accelerated implementation of reforms in five priority areas: business environment, trade and industrial policies, infrastructure, access to finance, (in particular of the MSMEs), skills and innovation; (ii) development of non-diamond priority clusters including tourism, beef, ICT and financial services; (iii) technical assistance to the PPADB for implementation of government devolution and a capacity building strategy; (iv) trade facilitation TA for improved trade facilitation and transparency by supporting the establishment of a Trade Information Portal. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Indicators Export diversification, defined i. Decrease in Ongoing Completed FY16 as the percent of non-diamond time, number of Economic RAS 2 (P132426) Economic Diversification export in real GDP steps Diversification and and Competitiveness Baseline: 15 percent (2014) and cost required Competitiveness (RAS) Target: 20 percent (2020) to start a business Ongoing ii. Decrease in New Botswana Economic Diversification and Improvement in the Distance to time, number of Botswana Trade Competitiveness (RAS3) Reimbursable Frontier score (on DBI) steps Facilitation TA (FY16) Advisory Services Project – (P159532) Baseline: 64.87 (2015) and cost required i. Doing Business Reform agenda making Target: at least 2 points increase for a new Follow up Economic slow progress. This is due to a range of (2020) electricity Diversification factors, including poor internal connection and Competitiveness communication and slow legislative iii. Decrease in (RAS3) change. time and number ii. Development of Botswana’s first of collateral registry is underway. payments to comply with tax Completed requirements Botswana Trade Facilitation TA (P154931) iv. Decrease in i. Trade Portal has been designed and being time, number of implemented steps -The portal is live and running and cost required https://www.botswanatradeportal.org.bw/ to transfer a property v. Decrease in New time, number of ASA P168702 - Accelerating steps Entrepreneurship in Botswana and cost required to obtain a construction permit 26 CPF Objective 1.2: Promoting private sector growth Intervention Logic The growth of the working age population in Botswana increases the expectations for job creation. However, the private sector is struggling to create enough employment, and non-farm self-employment levels remain low. The household and microenterprise sectors do not appear to be dynamic enough to absorb the increasingly large inactive labor force. Taking into account the limited potential of the domestic market size, the WBG, especially IFC, will be assisting the government to promote private sector growth by (i) supporting financial institutions, focusing on financial inclusion/access to finance for MSMEs; (ii) supporting investment opportunities in state-owned or -controlled financial institutions that are being commercialized or privatized; (iii) exploring, through PPP advisory, areas where private sector expertise and capital could be brought in to support the public sector, including in renewable energy (e.g. solar, water and sanitation, transport, health, education). CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Impacts related to At the request of GoB, New Investment Mobilized – FIs ($M) “Investment IFC will explore PPP Kgalagadi Bond issued to leverage US$25 Baseline: 0 (FY16) Mobilized–FIs” advisory services million in local currency to support Target: 30 (FY20) shall be monitored Botswana Building Society lending to through data on individuals and SMEs. the proxies: i. Number of SMEs New reached WUC finalized contract for IFC to provide ii. Loans disbursed PPP advisory services to the Glen Valley (# & $) Wastewater Treatment Plan. iii. No. of jobs created or saved iv. Sales revenue growth ENGAGEMENT AREA 2: Strengthening human and physical assets Developing a new growth model will require a step change in the productivity of Botswana’s firms. The latter depends on substantial improvements in human capital, including education and health: (i) Improving the quality of education, developing skill sets demanded by the labor market, and increasing access to appropriate job training programs will be necessary for reducing unemployment and poverty and achieving the country’s much-needed economic diversification, sustainable growth, and job creation. (ii) Addressing health barriers to skills acquisition and labor market participation would be essential for ensuring that all individuals have the capacity to contribute to productivity and are in the position to enjoy human development outcomes. Such sustainable livelihoods will require focus on strengthening physical assets, including infrastructure for water and sanitation. CPF Objective 2.1: Improving equitable access and relevance of senior secondary education Intervention Logic The education sector, and secondary education in particular, faces challenges that present important opportunities for reforms. These include (i) unequal access to senior secondary school; (ii) low and declining learning achievements; (iii) outdated and unconnected vocational streams of secondary education; and (iv) high levels but inefficient use of investment in education and training. To help the government improve the labor market relevance and address the inequities in the system, the World Bank will provide investment lending assistance that focuses on the secondary school, and senior secondary school system. The interventions will aim to (i) expand the general senior secondary education in underserved areas; (ii) establish labor market-relevant, professional education streams for senior secondary education; and (iii) strengthen the capacity and accountability of managing and sustaining system expansion at the senior secondary and post-secondary levels. 27 CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Indicators Improved transition rate from i. School mapping New Dropped junior secondary to senior completed with Transforming Senior IPF (P151047) - Secondary Education and secondary education, including forecasted Secondary Education, Skills Development enrollment in the demand for Investment Project vocational/professional secondary Finance New training stream; girls transition education per (IPF) ASA (P168023) - Education Sector PER rate; district currently in early implementation. Baseline: 62 percent (2015) ii. Identification of Target: TBD (2020) locations for Completed Increased intake into senior conversion of Reports on Job-ready Graduates of secondary school in under-utilized Secondary Education and Youth underserved school Employment under RAS3 (P159532) districts (to be defined as per infrastructure or school mapping and cost new Completed analysis during project construction Strengthening Botswana Human Resource preparation); intake rate for completed Development Council under RAS3 girls; iii. Curricula for a (P159532) Baseline: # of districts and professional intake in thousands; TBD (2015) stream of New Target: TBD (2020) secondary Jobs Diagnostics/Strategy (and other education products) to inform GoB National developed Employment Policy. CPF Objective 2.2: Improving health outcomes Intervention Logic Health is a major factor hindering individual capacity and contributing to Botswana’s human development outcomes that are among the lowest in the world for a MIC country. The impact of HIV/AIDS pandemic – one of the principal factors behind the poor outcomes – remains widespread. Through investment lending the World Bank will support interventions for: (i) training health professionals, (ii) improving health information system, and (iii) improving prevention, diagnosis and treatment of NCDs and communicable diseases. More specifically, proposed World Bank lending will support the Ministry of Health in strengthening implementation of its service delivery integration agenda (with respect to more efficiently addressing the national communicable and non-communicable disease double burden along a health care continuum from disease prevention, treatment and care, and rehabilitation); in addressing persistent maternal and child health challenges; and supporting organizational changes at the MOH and related decentralization arrangements by helping build and strengthen institutional capacity, technical, managerial, and operational to improve access to quality health services. Analytical work will inform evidence-based policy making and operational design by examining overall sector expenditures and, to improve (a) the value for money in the sector, and (b) produce better health outcomes. 28 CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Indicators Quality and efficiency in health i. Health Ongoing Completed service delivery improved, information Health and HIV/AIDS Botswana Health Systems Technical measured by: management Fiscal Space Analysis Support (P162006) was completed and Percent children (under five system (HMIS) recommendations are being implemented years) with suspected improved, with New via an ongoing grant from the Global Fund. pneumonia taken to respect to Health Systems appropriate health provider; standardization Support (IPF) Dropped boys/girls ratio per age group; and Botswana Health Systems Support Project Baseline: 14.1 percent (2014)b timely data Health PER (TA) (P156009). Plans for a World Bank lending Target: 30 percent (2020) collection operation in health dropped from the CPF. Percent children (under five ii. Hospital years) with diarrhea treated electronic HMIS Dropped with oral rehydration solution expanded beyond Health and HIV/AIDS Fiscal Space Analysis. (ORS); boys/girls ratio per age the 27 largest Replaced by the Health and HIV/AIDS PER group; public hospitals (P151189) Baseline: 48.9 percent (2014)c currently utilizing Target: 70 percent (2020) the Integrated Completed Patient Botswana Health and HIV/AIDS PER Management (P151189) System (IPMS) iii. Health New financing strategy HIV Investment Analysis in 2018/Allocative developed, based Efficiency Study in 2019 on on-going and planned analytic New work. ASA/RAS - Rapid evaluation of Medical Supply Chain (P154953) CPF Objective 2.3: Improving efficiency and sustainability of water supply and sanitation services Intervention Logic Botswana has succeeded in ensuring wide access to clean water, with more than 95 percent access to improved drinking water sources. However, access to piped water supply remains uneven, ranging from 80 percent (Gaborone) to 20–30 percent in some urban centers. Only 42 percent of rural households have access to proper sanitation. System losses amount to 33 percent. The World Bank will support the government through a package of financial and knowledge services to improve the provision of water and sanitation while addressing affordability concerns, and will specifically (i) support the WUC investment program in underserved localities; (ii) strengthen water sector institutions, including the MMEWR, DWA, WUC and the sector regulator, to further pursue water sector reform; (iii) provide technical assistance for improving the prioritization of new investments and the selection process. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Indicators Expansion of water service i. Preparation of Ongoing Ongoing coverage in selected systems WUC District Lesotho Highlands- P160911 Baseline: 60 percent (2015) Center Investment Botswana Water Emergency Water Security and Efficiency Target: 80 percent (2020) Plans Transfer Study (TA) Project became effective in August 2017. A ii. Preparation of project launch workshop was held in Improved operating Feasibility Studies, Okavango Multi- December 2017 with key counterparts. efficiencies— reduction in non- Designs and Sector Investment Project implementation is progressing revenue water Bidding Opportunity (TA) slowly. Baseline: 33 percent (2015) Documents Target: 23 percent (2020) iii. Preparation of New Completed Utility Water Security and TA P144228 Efficiency Project Lesotho Highlands-Botswana Water (TA) 29 *Qualitative Indicators are also Performance (IPF) Transfer Study Botswana water transfer acceptable Improvement study was completed and is informing GOB Plans discussions on water imports from Lesotho. iv. Implementation of Priority Works Completed Contracts (water TA P150383 distribution, Okavango Multi-Sector Investment wastewater Opportunity (TA) has completed a 1st phase treatment and the 2nd phase is ongoing. facilities) v. Implementation Ongoing of key activities WUC finalized contract for IFC to provide from Utility PPP advisory services to the Glen Valley Performance Wastewater Treatment Plan. Improvement Plans TF 072584-Innovative mechanisms to vi. Implementation support water supply resilience for of Second Phase Botswana utilities in drought vulnerable Works Contracts areas (to support the P160911). CPF Objective 2.4: Upgrading roads and increasing connectivity Intervention Logic Roads are the predominant mode of transport for Botswana carrying over 90 percent of freight and passenger traffic. While Botswana’s internal infrastructure is generally well developed, significant gaps remain in connecting to regional and global markets. The country’s landlocked position and distance from ports is a structural barrier that raises costs for exporters and importers and hinders the country’s ability to exploit regional and global trade opportunities. Some of the major challenges include increased traffic growth, deterioration of the road network, higher operation and management (O&M) costs; effective traffic management. With its ongoing IPF operation from the current portfolio engagement, the World Bank will continue to invest in critical transport infrastructure that enhances the efficiency of the transport system by building modern strategic planning and management capacity in the sector. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Indicators Improved road safety i. Rehabilitation Ongoing Ongoing Baseline: Number of annual and maintenance IPF P102368 IPF P102368 accidents on project roads of Integrated Transport Integrated Transport Project Currently the (2015) project roads Project project is due for closure in FY20. Target: Number of annual carried out accidents on project roads down successfully under Improved road connectivity by 20 percent (2020) OPRCs i. All 335 km of roads under rehabilitation methodology with 201 km completed (as of November ii. Capacity and 2018). knowledge enhancement of ii. Most studies and activities have been Road Department completed with the remainder currently staff improved under implementation. Three-year Training iii. Satisfactory Program (2016/17 to 2018/19) cleared and financial under satisfactory implementation. management and reporting iii. Ongoing use of financial management iv. Traffic situation arrangements adequately supporting improved by project. traffic management solutions. 30 ENGAGEMENT AREA 3: Supporting effective resource management The priority interventions outlined in the engagement areas above will not deliver rapid and sustainable progress on the twin goals without addressing fundamental enablers, including improving public resource management and service delivery by strengthening performance monitoring and evaluation, including linkages for enhanced planning, budgeting, civil service and public investment management. Botswana’s natural resources will remain at the heart of the country’s success. But they are highly constrained, fragile, and face many competing demands. Therefore, putting in place effective systems for natural resource management that take clear account of the implications on important resources will be critical to ensure sustainability over the medium term. CPF Objective 3.1: Improving the efficiency and effectiveness of social protection system Intervention Logic Despite considerable government investment in the social protection sector, the targeting of this social protection spending is relatively regressive, and significant ground needs to be covered to support eradication of extreme poverty and address the high inequality in Botswana. The current set of transfers lacks coherence and is prone to duplication. In absence of proper targeting of the beneficiaries, significant resources are being allocated to the non-poor, and program coverage is often too small to have a real impact on the recipient. The World Bank will support improvements in the efficiency and effectiveness of Botswana’s social protection system through the interventions aiming to (i) promote efficiency by improving targeting of the poorest, and by implementing a social registry of beneficiaries and a monitoring of information system; (ii) improve effectiveness of the social protection system by expanding coverage and delivering rationalized packages of benefits; and (iii) ensure the availability of relevant and updated data for implementation, monitoring, and decision making. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Indicators Percent reduction of households i. Number of New Dropped in Q4 and Q5 receiving benefits beneficiaries of Social Protection IPF P151830 - Botswana Social Protection from more than one program; selected Modernisation (IPF) Modernisation Project female beneficiaries social protection Baseline: Q4 = 17.4 percent; Q5 programs enrolled Completed = 7.9 percent based on new ASA P158950 -Strengthening the SP System Target: Q4 = 11.6 percent; Q5 targeting to Contribute to Eradication of Food =5.3 percent methodology Poverty Note: target is reduction of 1/3 ii. Number of poor (i) design of social registry; (ii) design of in each quintile households improved targeting mechanism; (iii) social Percent of poor beneficiaries receiving a intermediation strategy document; and (Q1 and Q2) supported by social consolidated (iv) support the drafting of the nutrition- protection programs; female package of sensitive National Social Protection beneficiaries; benefits Framework. Baseline: Q1 = 91.6 percent; Q2 iii. Number of poor = 87.3 percent households Target: Q1 = 96.6 percent; Q2 = receiving 93.3 percent social Ongoing-New Note: target represents an intermediation ASA P166742 - Support to a Coordinated increase of 5 percentage points services and Scalable Social Protection System in in each quintile, equivalent to Botswana roughly 20,000 additional i. Conduct pilot of a single social registry people (SSR) in four districts. *Qualitative Indicators are also acceptable 31 CPF Objective 3.2: Creating national performance management framework Intervention Logic Weak planning and monitoring and evaluation of policies, programs and projects reduced public sector efficiency, effectiveness, transparency and accountability, resulting in weak service-delivery. Low frequency data collection and delays in dissemination impede evidence-based policymaking, and the implementation of programs designed to address employment, poverty, and growth. Through the ongoing engagement under the RAS second assignment, the Bank will: (i) support the NSO efforts to put in place a government-wide performance M&E system, including linkages to planning, budgeting, public service and public investment management; and (ii) provide technical assistance to Statistics Botswana with the implementation of a multi-topic household survey as a core instrument for data collection. CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Indicators Monitoring and evaluation i. M&E Policy Ongoing Completed policy approved by Cabinet, and Framework Economic P154545 - Economic Diversification and M&E tools are used to enhance developed Diversification and Competitiveness RAS2 service-delivery ii. Monitoring tools Competitiveness i. Continuous completed in FY19 Baseline: no M&E policy (2015) developed (RAS2) Target: M&E policy iii. Rapid Ongoing operationalized (2020) evaluations carried RAS Strengthening Public Sector Timeliness and quality of out Performance (P159841) statistics improved iv. Multi-topic i. Support to the Client to strengthen the Baseline: no Multi-topic survey published coordination and implementation of the household survey implemented national performance M&E system (2015) (Establishing a National M&E Framework, Target: Multi-topic household P154953, completed) survey implemented (2020) --The PM&E policy has already been adopted (well before target) -Several data tools have been developed ii. Strengthening Public Procurement -Value for Money Audit Report drafted. -4 Training modules -Certification Scheme drafted -Text Book procurement report, global practice and guidance note developed iv. TA on a Continues MTHS to commence in January 2019. CPF Objective 3.3: Strengthening natural resources management Intervention Logic Botswana is one of the most water-stressed countries in the world, with general scarcity and high dependency on internationally shared and trans-boundary waters. As water scarcity is growing, Botswana will have to be in a position to make careful and informed allocation strategies that prioritize the most beneficial sectors, balancing economic, strategic, and livelihood benefits, including employment. The World Bank will support the government in addressing this challenge through knowledge, advice, and lending for (i) building capacity and strengthening sector institutions to plan and execute sector investments, and to enhance sector policy and regulation; and (ii) financing the design and development of a monitoring system for the assessment and control of water resources, sector policy support, and crisis response mechanisms. Technical assistance will be provided to the MMEWR for staff training, strategic assessments, feasibility studies, and assessing water security tradeoffs. Given the scale of Botswana’s coal and solar resources and comparative advantage, the Bank will be supporting the government in developing a strategy for exploring long-term investment opportunities in the sector. 32 CPF Objective Indicators Supplementary WBG Program Progress/Status Progress Indicators Per capita wealth including i. Publication of Ongoing Ongoing natural capital (pula per person satellite water P143847 Wealth P160911 - Emergency Water Security and in constant 2006 prices) accounts Accounting and Efficiency Project Baseline: BWP139,992 (2014) Department of Valuation of Target: to be set in the new Water Affairs Ecosystem Services Completed Vision document (2020) ii. Adjusted WAVES (TA) WAVES (TA) National Savings ASA P143847 - Wealth Accounting and Share of renewable energy in indicator ASA P155059 Valuation of Ecosystem Services (WAVES) total electricity production developed using Botswana Renewable i. Phase 1 and Phase 2 Water accounts capacity national dataset, Energy and Energy published and adjusted national savings Baseline: less than 0.2 percent and Efficiency Strategy indicator incorporated (2015) reported as part of (TA) Target: 5 percent (2020) national accounts Completed iii. Renewable New ASA P155059 Botswana Renewable Energy energy and energy Water Security and and Energy Efficiency Strategy efficiency Efficiency Project i. National Renewable Energy and Energy strategies and (IPF) Efficiency strategies adopted. Off-grid implementation Solar PV action plan was also completed to plans adopted ensure energy access for areas where grid extensions are impracticable in the medium-term Ongoing-New ASA P166317 - Energy Efficiency Investment Opportunities in Africa (regional) a Note: expected results are outlined below; however concrete baseline and target indicators are not identified yet, given the early stage of new project preparations. These indicators will be updated during the PLR b Data source: UNICEF (2015) State of the World’s Children Country Statistical Tables-Botswana (Note: this baseline figure derives from national MICS survey data) c Ibid. 33 Map of Botswana 34