Opinion and Analysis
By MIKE ELDON, mike.eldon@depotkenya.org
In a recent article, I wrote about how the World Bank
is trying to accelerate development through participating in what it
calls “collaborative leadership” (as opposed to the haughtier kind of
all too common, but not always justified common perception).
Later, I reported on the “Rapid Results Approach” that is
being promoted by the World Bank and others as a way of pushing the big
development rock up the steep hill of poverty.
Today, I am going to describe the efforts of the
World Bank to reduce poverty in countries that are the most difficult to
operate in.
In common with the development community, it uses
the term “conflict and fragile States” to describe such places, and
recently it and others have added “violent” to the list. Many— but by no
means all— are in Africa.
I travelled to Bangkok with a World Bank team that
works exclusively in these challenging “CFV” environments, specialists
in public financial management and procurement; governance and
accountability (donor speak for anti-corruption); monitoring and
evaluation; social and environmental safeguards; and private sector
promotion.
We were there to run a course for World Bank staff
based in conflict and post-conflict countries where poverty and
insecurity are rife, where weak institutions and flimsy infrastructure
are the norm, and where it is hard to deliver even basic services.
I spent several days with these tough people of
fine minds and character, helping them share their experiences of what
has worked and what has not.
During our time together they told their stories of
unexpected breakthroughs and devastating setbacks, as they learned
valuable lessons and drew support from one other.
Perhaps the biggest challenge these folk face is
that while what they are trying to do is so hard and so risky, they
operate in a large and tightly structured global institution which is
only slowly becoming accustomed to what is and isn’t possible in these
least robust societies.
But with some countries having pulled themselves
out of deep poverty, the focus of development organisations such as the
World Bank has increasingly turned to these most difficult ones.
Fragility keeps countries poor, and prevents them
from making progress with the millennium development goals. 30 per cent
of the world’s poor live in the 33 States defined as FCVs and the trend
is increasing fast, as a result of which there is no choice, but to take
the subject very seriously.
The experts distinguish between fragile States and
institutions, ones that fall short on capacity, accountability and
legitimacy.
And fragility, they note, exists not only in
fragile states, and not only in poor countries, as evidenced, for
instance, by the violence in countries like South Africa and DRC, Mexico
and Brazil, with their high rates of homicides and criminality
generally, that significantly impact their gross domestic product.
The causes of fragility are many, including
trafficking of drugs, arms and people, illegal financial movements, land
disputes, ideology, terrorism, piracy, contested elections and civil
war.
Some countries are caught in fragility traps. They
exist in a low level equilibrium that keeps the society somehow
functioning, but with increasing poverty and degrading institutions.
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