Capacity Building in Africa : An OED Evaluation of World Bank Support
This evaluation assesses the relevance and effectiveness of Bank support for public sector capacity building in Africa, over the past 10 years. It draws on studies of Benin, Ethiopia, Ghana, Malawi, Mali, and Mozambique; aggregate assessments of co...
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Format: | Publication |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC: World Bank
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/04/6431215/capacity-building-africa-oed-evaluation-world-bank-support http://hdl.handle.net/10986/7468 |
Summary: | This evaluation assesses the relevance
and effectiveness of Bank support for public sector capacity
building in Africa, over the past 10 years. It draws on
studies of Benin, Ethiopia, Ghana, Malawi, Mali, and
Mozambique; aggregate assessments of country strategies and
operations across the Bank's Africa Region; and,
reviews of three corporate and Regional programs dedicated
to capacity building-the World Bank Institute, the
Institutional Development Fund, and the Bank-supported
African Capacity Building Foundation. Main findings suggest
recent changes in approach have made Bank support more
relevant; most capacity support remains fragmented;
sector-specific capacity building approaches need
strengthening; tools and instruments could be more
effectively and fully utilized; and, quality assurance is
inadequate. These findings underscore the importance of
approaching capacity building in Africa as a core objective,
and ensuring that Bank capacity building support is
country-owned, results oriented, and evidence-based. The
evaluation recommends that: the Bank strengthen its
knowledge base, and amplify its framework for public sector
capacity building, to better help countries; sector and
thematic leadership should develop sector-specific guidance
on diagnosing public sector capacity needs, and ways of
monitoring and evaluating interventions; regional senior
management should ensure that Country Assistance Strategies
are used effectively to help countries identify, and
strengthen the capacities they need to plan, implement, and
measure the results of their poverty reduction strategies;
and, the Bank should reassess what role training should play
in its capacity building support, how it should be provided,
and what should be the respective roles of a central
training unit, and Regional programs in any future support
for this activity. |
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