Country Partnership Framework for the Republic of Cameroon for the Period FY17-FY21

This Country Partnership Framework (CPF) covers the period FY17-FY21. It sets outthe World Bank Group’s (WBG) proposals for supporting the Government of Cameroon’s (GoC) objectives for inclusive growth and poverty reduction, its commitment to the S...

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Main Author: World Bank Group
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/480711490925662402/Cameroon-Country-partnership-framework-for-the-period-FY17-FY21
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26374
id okr-10986-26374
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-263742021-05-25T08:59:06Z Country Partnership Framework for the Republic of Cameroon for the Period FY17-FY21 World Bank Group DEVELOPMENT AGENDA ECONOMIC OUTLOOK INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS POVERTY SHARED PROSPERITY PARTNERSHIP STRATEGY CONSULTATIONS WORLD BANK GROUP PROGRAM COUNTRY ASSISTANCE This Country Partnership Framework (CPF) covers the period FY17-FY21. It sets outthe World Bank Group’s (WBG) proposals for supporting the Government of Cameroon’s (GoC) objectives for inclusive growth and poverty reduction, its commitment to the SustainableDevelopment Goals (SDGs) and its responsibilities and priorities in the area of climate changemitigation and adaptation. The GoC’s long-term vision, ‘Cameroon Vision 2035’, is of ‘an emerging, democratic and united country in diversity’. To operationalize this Vision, the Government adopted a Growth and Employment Strategy (‘DSCE’, ‘Document de Stratégie pour la Croissance et l’Emploi’) in 2009 and defined specific objectives to be achieved by 2020. The GoC has further adopted the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. It also endorsed the Paris Agreement under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and published Cameroon’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) setting out its contribution to climate change mitigation and priorities for adaptation. The CPF draws on a comprehensive Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD, report 103098-CM), completed duringFY16, which identified constraints to achieving the World Bank’s Twin Goals of eliminatingpoverty and fostering shared prosperity in a socially and environmentally sustainable way. TheCPF also benefited from other pieces of analytical work, including a gender assessment and afragility assessment carried out in 2015. Cameroon’s vision of becoming an upper middle-income country, and of reducing poverty to less than 10 percent by 2035 (29 percent by 2020), is highly ambitious. It would simply an annual real GDP growth of 5.5 percent per capita during the period, which would represent a marked increase from historical patterns, and strong sector, social and spatial policies that can reverse the inequalities observed over the past two decades. The SCD points to three main areas of constraints - and opportunities - to achieving these objectives: (i) low rural productivity, particularly in northern regions; (ii) a non-conducive business environment for the formal and informal private sector; and (iii) fragility and poor governance of the private and public sectors. 2017-04-13T21:53:14Z 2017-04-13T21:53:14Z 2017-02-28 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/480711490925662402/Cameroon-Country-partnership-framework-for-the-period-FY17-FY21 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26374 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Country Assistance Strategy Document Africa Cameroon
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic DEVELOPMENT AGENDA
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
POVERTY
SHARED PROSPERITY
PARTNERSHIP STRATEGY
CONSULTATIONS
WORLD BANK GROUP PROGRAM
COUNTRY ASSISTANCE
spellingShingle DEVELOPMENT AGENDA
ECONOMIC OUTLOOK
INSTITUTIONAL FACTORS
POVERTY
SHARED PROSPERITY
PARTNERSHIP STRATEGY
CONSULTATIONS
WORLD BANK GROUP PROGRAM
COUNTRY ASSISTANCE
World Bank Group
Country Partnership Framework for the Republic of Cameroon for the Period FY17-FY21
geographic_facet Africa
Cameroon
description This Country Partnership Framework (CPF) covers the period FY17-FY21. It sets outthe World Bank Group’s (WBG) proposals for supporting the Government of Cameroon’s (GoC) objectives for inclusive growth and poverty reduction, its commitment to the SustainableDevelopment Goals (SDGs) and its responsibilities and priorities in the area of climate changemitigation and adaptation. The GoC’s long-term vision, ‘Cameroon Vision 2035’, is of ‘an emerging, democratic and united country in diversity’. To operationalize this Vision, the Government adopted a Growth and Employment Strategy (‘DSCE’, ‘Document de Stratégie pour la Croissance et l’Emploi’) in 2009 and defined specific objectives to be achieved by 2020. The GoC has further adopted the United Nations 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development. It also endorsed the Paris Agreement under the United Nations Framework Convention on Climate Change and published Cameroon’s Nationally Determined Contributions (NDC) setting out its contribution to climate change mitigation and priorities for adaptation. The CPF draws on a comprehensive Systematic Country Diagnostic (SCD, report 103098-CM), completed duringFY16, which identified constraints to achieving the World Bank’s Twin Goals of eliminatingpoverty and fostering shared prosperity in a socially and environmentally sustainable way. TheCPF also benefited from other pieces of analytical work, including a gender assessment and afragility assessment carried out in 2015. Cameroon’s vision of becoming an upper middle-income country, and of reducing poverty to less than 10 percent by 2035 (29 percent by 2020), is highly ambitious. It would simply an annual real GDP growth of 5.5 percent per capita during the period, which would represent a marked increase from historical patterns, and strong sector, social and spatial policies that can reverse the inequalities observed over the past two decades. The SCD points to three main areas of constraints - and opportunities - to achieving these objectives: (i) low rural productivity, particularly in northern regions; (ii) a non-conducive business environment for the formal and informal private sector; and (iii) fragility and poor governance of the private and public sectors.
format Report
author World Bank Group
author_facet World Bank Group
author_sort World Bank Group
title Country Partnership Framework for the Republic of Cameroon for the Period FY17-FY21
title_short Country Partnership Framework for the Republic of Cameroon for the Period FY17-FY21
title_full Country Partnership Framework for the Republic of Cameroon for the Period FY17-FY21
title_fullStr Country Partnership Framework for the Republic of Cameroon for the Period FY17-FY21
title_full_unstemmed Country Partnership Framework for the Republic of Cameroon for the Period FY17-FY21
title_sort country partnership framework for the republic of cameroon for the period fy17-fy21
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/480711490925662402/Cameroon-Country-partnership-framework-for-the-period-FY17-FY21
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/26374
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