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Building Effective M&E Systems Case of India

Building Effective M&E Systems Case of India. S.P.PAL Development Evaluation Society of India Former Adviser(Evaluation) Planning Commission, India. Plan. Quick review of past experience in ECD.

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Building Effective M&E Systems Case of India

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  1. Building Effective M&E Systems Case of India S.P.PALDevelopment Evaluation Society of India Former Adviser(Evaluation) Planning Commission, India SPP

  2. Plan • Quick review of past experience in ECD. • Propose a framework for a diagnostic analysis of the evolution of M&E systems in India. • An assessment of India’s current M&E capacity using the framework. • Suggest strategies for effective and sustainable ECD in India. SPP

  3. Overview • ECD in developing countries not a new idea. Many countries set up M&E capacity in the past. • India/Malaysia established government-wide M&E systems in the 1950s/60s. Initiatives came from planners/policy makers. India, in particular, had elaborate M&E set-up across States/ Ministries. By & for Public Sector. • Indonesia/Philippines/SL/Nepal/Thailand/China/S Korea /Bangladesh too established M&E institutions generally with ECD inputs from donor agencies[Khan,2000; WB; UNDP]. • Socio-political/development paradigm changes as also the inability of the M&E institutions to respond to new challenges rendered them less useful now. Hence, search for new systems. SPP

  4. Lessons from past experience • Available country reviews[WB, UNDP] point to weaknesses on both demand & supply side. Role of various demand/supply side factors varies across countries. Not enough. VOPEs/Marco. • Any fresh attempt to build national eval. capacity must:-make a diagnostic analysis of the evolution of the national evaluation system;-identify the factors that contributed to the decline of evaluation capacity;-lessons from such reviews and those already documented in literature must be fed into future efforts to build sustainable national evaluation architecture. SPP

  5. Analytical framework • What is required is an analytical frame to carry out this diagnostic analysis. The building blocks of this analysis may be different for each country. • In Indian context, this framework must take into account:1. Development fund-flow mechanism & Primary stakeholders;2. Info needs/role/characteristics/behavior of major stakeholders in the fund-flow chain;3. Capacity and characteristics of suppliers of evaluative info; SPP

  6. The framework(Contd.) 4. Systemic rigidities/weaknesses in governance and its impact on the behavior of seekers and suppliers of evaluative info; 5. Interaction between various factors and its effect on: • Stakeholders; • ECD; • policy impact of development evaluation research; • development effectiveness. SPP

  7. Development Fund Flow & Stakeholders-I SPP

  8. Info Needs & Suppliers of Evaluative Info-II SPP

  9. Characteristics of the Demand side of M&E information in India 1. General appreciation of need for M&E info at the policy/planning level to learn lessons, for mid-course corrections.2. Users dissatisfied with evaluation info supply: -quality, quantity & timeliness, uncomfortable findings;3. Some fund-using agencies initiate evaluation themselves due to (3). A larger part of evaluation fund is controlled by line ministries; self-praise. Not a healthy trend; SPP

  10. Demand Side 4.Examples of limited follow-up actions exist; more because of some favorable findings & enlightened policy makers/planners (champions?), not so much due to institutionalized mechanisms. 5.Not much appreciation of systemic reforms for development effectiveness. Attempt to introduce Outcome Budgeting from 2005-06 has been unsuccessful-lack of appreciation/implementation of the type of reforms required to make it operational.6. Low demand for evaluation for lessons/use. High for satisfying funding/watchdog agencies. SPP

  11. Major suppliers of evaluation information in India • PEO • State Evaluation Agencies • MOSPI/ MORD/ MOHFW and some other Ministries. • Research Institutions & NGOs. • C&AG of India. SPP

  12. Supply side of M&E information 1. In-house capacity for ‘M’ info in most ministries. Systems not oriented to performance management. Emphasis on too much data collection & not analysis/ problem solving.2. Public sector dominance in evaluation initially. PEO, SEOs-once strong; now weak-manpower, infrastructure, no investment in human capital. Quality, quantity & timeliness are major issues.3. RIs/Consultants/NGOs: Lack of quality & trained manpower, data quality issues. Inadequate knowledge of program operation. Quantity & timeliness ok-quality(?). SPP

  13. Why evaluation capacity not strong-some observations -I 1. A very large part of evaluation funds controlled by line ministries. Evaluation generally to satisfy funding/ watchdog agencies, less for self learning; 2. Inadequate linkage between allocation and performance;3. Accountability, transparency missing in development administration (RTI?);4. Public evaluation institutions are now manned by generalists and credible alternatives outside govt. yet to emerge; [Contd. To next slide] SPP

  14. Why evaluation capacity not strong -II 5.System of outsourcing studies by public agencies non-transparent, hinders quality & also capacity development of RI: - insufficient time/funds, insensitivity to methodological issues, interference in evaluation process/outcome.6. General lack of confidence in B-C ratio of evaluation. [Contd. To next slide] SPP

  15. Why evaluation capacity not strong -III 7. Most important factor responsible for decline/ ineffectiveness of M&E is the weakness in governance. Coordination in implementation is almost impossible. • Centre Vs. State development/fund use agenda; • Bureaucracy – coordination in implementation:- Centre Vs. State;- different cadres – accountable upwards within Cadres;- dependence of implementing agency on several line ministries over which it has no control. SPP

  16. Strategies for effective & sustainable evaluation architecture • Promote effective demand for evaluation in public sector. Emphasis on eval. culture, systemic reforms – not building elaborate systems. • CSOs, eval. associations, media need to raise voice on transparency & quality of public spending, evaluation processes/fund use, follow-up on evaluation findings through RTI, PIL, annual reports, research/publications. • Do a capacity audit of RI/NGOs/academic institutions to identify gaps on supply side and evolve strategies to fill the gaps. • Involve RIs, universities in capacity building of evaluation professionals/institutions; • Strengthen national associations for advocacy, setting eval. standards, monitoring and rating supply quality of NGOs/RIs. SPP

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