1 / 13

Lessons from the Field - Impact Evaluation of SDN Projects: A Water and Sanitation Project in Paraguay

Lessons from the Field - Impact Evaluation of SDN Projects: A Water and Sanitation Project in Paraguay. Maria Angélica Sotomayor (LCSUW) and Luis A. Andrés (LCSSD) Tuesday February 26, 2008 Time: 12:15 to 5:30 PM Room: I2-220. Rural Water and Sanitation in Paraguay.

maxima
Download Presentation

Lessons from the Field - Impact Evaluation of SDN Projects: A Water and Sanitation Project in Paraguay

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. Lessons from the Field - Impact Evaluation of SDN Projects:A Water and Sanitation Project in Paraguay Maria Angélica Sotomayor (LCSUW) and Luis A. Andrés (LCSSD) Tuesday February 26, 2008 Time: 12:15 to 5:30 PM Room: I2-220

  2. Rural Water and Sanitation in Paraguay From the 4th Rural W&S Project to …a New 5th Intervention

  3. Rural Water and Sanitation Projects (I to IV) in PY

  4. A Successful Project? • 30 year sustainability test • No system collapsed • All targets met or exceeded • Innovative pilots: first OBA scheme in the water sector ever.. • Satisfied clients/beneficiaries… ….NO DATA TO PROVE IT!!

  5. How to move forward? Prepare a solid M&E system – IMPACT EVALUATION • Results framework • Indicators • Baseline • Design features: randomized intervention -

  6. The New Project PDO: Improve quality of life of rural population Indicator: • Reduce the morbidity rate (diarrhea,parasitosis) related to water and basic sanitation in rural population

  7. Goals / purpose • Sustainable access to potable water and sanitation services in the population of up to 10.000 inhabitants • # of people served with potable water. • # of people served with sanitation. • Strengthen the management capacity of the community based organizations responsible for rural W&S service delivery • Increase xx% of Water Boards that honor financial responsibilities • Increase xx% of Water Boards joining Associations of Water Boards • # of Water Boards that adopt measures to improve accountability

  8. Components • Investments • Rural water • PSP • Indigenous systems • Individual sanitation solutions • Simplified sewerage • Hand-washing • Institutional strengthening • Central Agency - SENASA • Water boards • Associations of water boards

  9. Outcomes Do improvements in water access (and sanitation) in rural (and urban) areas in Paraguay: • reduce the incidence of water related illness (diarrhea, etc)? For any specific group? • improve the nutritional level of the children? • decrease infant mortality? • change intra-household behavior such as time usage, access to education, and/or productivity?

  10. Identification strategy Random assignment? • Very hard to do this in INF’s interventions (mainly due to engineering constrains); • Unit of observation are the communities rather than the HHs; • Self selection: local communities have to be eligible, prepare a project, apply for funds, and commit 15% of the project value (in kind and cash); • But: ~200 communities (already selected) will be intervened in 4 years and the government has no capacity to start everywhere at the same time…

  11. Identification strategy (cont.) So? What we agreed to do… • We will randomize the entrance of these communities (50 each year): those that will enter last will be the control group for those that will enter first [“internal control group”]; Other (external) control groups? • Pipeline of projects for the (potential) 6th loan. In principle, these communities have similar characteristics => some of them may be an external CG; • Projects intervened in the 4th loan (assumption: trend for those intervened in the 4th loan is similar to the counterfactual); • Matching with those communities that did not apply (not self selected) to study the selection bias…

  12. Where we are… Building local capacities: • Team members and staff from the government attended the regional workshop on IE a year ago => they know (and accept) the commitments for this IE; • Working with Fundición Desarrollo(a local think tank); • This was discussed with different stake holders. Proper project preparation: • A project already has a (draft) design; • This design will be included in the PAD; • We are working together with a professor from Northwestern University; • Fundraising: for doing the data collection (it is very likely to get TF to complement the project’s budget).

  13. …Thanks!

More Related