Monitoring and Evaluation Capacities in Ghana : A Diagnosis and Proposed Action Plan
World Bank missions to Ghana were undertaken in June and October 1999 as part of a diagnosis of M&E capacities and related development options in Ghana. The government has an ambitious program of reform to improve public sector management -ref...
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Format: | Publication |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2000/01/2863062/monitoring-evaluation-capacities-ghana-diagnosis-proposed-action-plan http://hdl.handle.net/10986/15202 |
Summary: | World Bank missions to Ghana were
undertaken in June and October 1999 as part of a diagnosis
of M&E capacities and related development options in
Ghana. The government has an ambitious program of reform to
improve public sector management -reforms planned or
underway include a significant downsizing of the public
sector, an ongoing review of its functions and structures, a
medium-term expenditure framework (MTEF), performance plans
for ministries, departments and agencies, performance
agreements for senior civil servants, and extensive
beneficiary surveys. An important feature of Ghana is that
it is a pilot country for the Comprehensive Development
Framework (CDF). One of the pillars of the CDF is results
and accountability, pilot countries are strongly encouraged
to embrace a results based management framework and to fully
embrace dialogue with civil society. The building of M&E
capacities is a key vehicle to help ensure governments have
the ability to measure and report on development
effectiveness, to identify appropriate policy responses, and
to engage civil society and NGOs more fully in these
processes. Such national capacity-building also provides a
counterpart to the M&E capacities of donors, which have
been the focal point for results orientation in the past. |
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