1 / 22

DPME: DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS 2011

The Presidency Department of Performance Monitoring and Evaluation. DPME: DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS 2011. Appropriation Committee 21 August 2012 Ronette Engela: DPME. Background - use. Annual publication - 5 th edition of standard ME product

Download Presentation

DPME: DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS 2011

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The Presidency Department of Performance Monitoring and Evaluation DPME: DEVELOPMENT INDICATORS 2011 Appropriation Committee 21 August 2012 Ronette Engela: DPME

  2. Background - use • Annual publication - 5th edition of standard ME product • Reflects the government’s own assessment of the country’s performance in quantitative measures. • Release of first tranche of the European Union General Budget Support Funds, are linked to the publication of the Development Indicators and government’s analysis of specific trends “Whatever the screaming headlines and heartfelt emotions, often driven by micro experiences that do not tell us about the bigger picture or context, these indicators give us an empirical base on which to base our judgements“ JP LANDMAN 2010

  3. Background - methodology • 84 standardised indicators in 10 categories - Economic growth and transformation - Education • Employment - Social cohesion • Poverty and Inequality - Safety and security • Household and Community Assets - International Relations • Health - Good Governance • Data sourced from government administrative datasets, official statistics, and research done by local and international institutions • Over the years, the quality of the data has improved • Extensive disaggregated data on trends in provinces, gender, sector, and other variables • For each indicator • Policy goal outlined • Written paragraph on trend analysis places the data in context and highlights some salient features. Pertinent qualitative issues noted in the analysis • Data sources • Short definitions of technical terms & methodological notes, in the back of the publication. • A table indicating indicator links to the Outcomes are also included in the back

  4. Background – target audience • This year print publication will focus on ‘readability’ • Two version of the same document • A print version with reduced data tables that provide focused content to promote national strategic discussion • A web version with more detailed datasets that include extensive time series and disaggregated data to sub-national levels - available on The Presidency’s website. • 10 000 print copies distributed widely • Cabinet • Parliament and all Provincial Legislatures • Senior government officials • Think tanks and major non-governmental organisations • Research institutions • Embassies represented in South Africa • South African Embassies abroad • Copies given to South African delegations visiting other countries (as per requests) • University and community libraries • Media houses • International bodies like the World Bank, United Nations agencies

  5. THE NEXT SLIDES WILL HIGHLIGHT SOME OF THE 2011 TRENDS

  6. Limited GDP growthEconomic Growth and transformation, Employment and Poverty and Inequality GDP :Year-on-Year

  7. Decline in gross fixed capital formation Economic Growth and transformation, Employment and Poverty and Inequality Gross fixed capital formation as a percentage of gdp

  8. Unemployment not reduced Economic Growth and transformation, Employment and Poverty and inequality Unemployment (Broad and Narrow)

  9. 86% households in formal housing & traditional dwellingHousehold and community assets Households: Statistics South Africa Housing Units: Department of Human Settlements

  10. 82% access to sanitationHousehold and community assets Household with access to sanitation

  11. Roll-out of electricity now to more inaccessible areasHousehold and community Household with access to electricity

  12. Increase in life expectancy to 57 yearsHealth and Education Life expectancy

  13. Slowdown in youth infection rate – increased infection older women Health and Education HIV prevalence

  14. Decline in child and infant mortalityHealth and Education Child Mortality Infant and Child mortality (deaths per 1000 live births)

  15. Management culture impacts on school resultsHealth and Education Change in Maths and Science Performance from TIMSS 1999 and 2003

  16. Negative view of social cohesion in countrySocial Cohesion Confident in happy future for all races

  17. Public negative about services – possibly linked to quality Public opinion on delivery of basic services

  18. Growing self description based on ethnic affiliationSocial Cohesion Identity based on self description

  19. Problems on quality of cases referred to courtSafety & security and international relations SAPS data on crime and charges referred to court NPA data on steps in court system

  20. 13.4 million registered tax payers – large increase linked to e-filingGood governance Tax register and revenue collection

  21. Slightly less qualified audits – especially provincial deptGood governance Percentage of qualified audits

  22. Ke ya leboga Ke a leboha Ke a leboga Ngiyabonga Ndiyabulela NgiyathokozaNgiyabonga Inkomu Ndi khou livhuhaThank you Dankie Go to http://www.thepresidency-dpme.gov.za for PME documentsincluding narrative guide to outcomes approach, outcomes documents and delivery agreements

More Related