International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) Progress since Accra Judith Randel & Tony German, Co-Directors, Development Initiatives Presentation to.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) Implementing IATI – Practical proposals By the aidinfo team at Development Initiatives January
Advertisements

1 John Rwangombwa Permanent Secretary and Secretary to Treasury Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning Republic of Rwanda 1 Challenges and opportunities.
Mutual accountability and aid transparency Mutual accountability and aid transparency Republic of Moldova 1IATI meeting, OECD Conference center.
CSO/NGO Consultations Report to IATI Signatories, Partner Countries and Steering Committee Paris, 4 July 2011.
Experiences in sharing information What can be done? Key findings from the IATI pilots.
Tracking Aid Flows in Malawi: Experiences, Challenges and the Way Forward 21 st October 2009 Hague, Netherlands.
International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) TAG Overview October 2010.
The IATI Code of Conduct The Hague, 21 October 2009.
International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) First Annual Conference 20 / 21 October 2009 Session 5 The work of the Technical Advisory Group and Proposal.
IATI Registry Demonstration and Country Pilot Overview Simon Parrish IATI Technical Advisory Group, DIPR July 2010.
Report on Draft Definitions TAG meeting 22 March 2010.
IATI Technical Advisory Group Overview TAG plan, country pilots, donor assessments & technical proposals Simon Parrish IATI Technical Advisory Group, DIPR.
International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) Overview Romilly Greenhill Aid Transparency Leader, DFID October 2010.
Key challenges in mutual accountability - citizens and csos imperative in accountability Antonio Tujan Jr.
CIVICUS World Alliance for Citizen Participation Transparency Key messages to increase the transparency and the predictability of aid.
REPORTING ON STATISTICAL DEVELOPMENT Reporting on partners activities in country: CRESS or C-PRESS June 4, 2010 PARIS21 Seminar - OECD Conference Center.
Budget Alignment IATI Tag Meeting Session 4 4 October 2010.
Intensified action on seven behaviours by all development partners Session objectives 1.To review status of intensified action: progress, issues and challenges.
Member Learning Winter 2011, Wk 8 Agenda [3 minutes] Pre-survey on the IATI [5 minutes] ACT, the “Not” Scandal, and CIDA [15 minutes] What is the IATI.
Linn OHLSSON, IATI Secretariat Rudolphe PETRAS, Development Co-operation Directorate, OECD IATI Steering Committee, 3 October 2013 The Common Standard.
BUILDING BLOCK FOR HLF-4 PUSHING THE BOUNDARIES ON TRANSPARENCY FOR BETTER PREDICTABILITY, ENGAGEMENT AND ACCOUNTABILITY Alma Kanani, World Bank, IATI.
Open Forum on CSO Development Effectiveness as a Response to Paris Declaration IDEAS Global Assembly 2009 Getting to Results: Evaluation Capacity Building.
Review of different stakeholders needs in relation to Joint Assessment of National Strategies and Plans (JANS) Preliminary Findings IHP+ Country Teams.
Welcome to the IATI TAG meeting Moor Hall, Cookham 14—15 May 2012 Overview of IATI Brian Hammond Chair of the TAG.
Capacity Development for Cooperation Effectiveness in Latin America and the Caribbean OAS Subregional Workshop for Cooperation Effectiveness: Caribbean.
Results Reporting by Donor Agencies (DAC/WP EFF – Cluster MfDR) Presented by Adrian Maître, SDC, and Daniel Low-Beer, GFATM EU Expert Group on Results,
CSO’s on the Road to Busan: Key Messages and Proposals.
1 Development Cooperation Policies Trade Union Development Cooperation Network February 2009.
THE NATIONAL FOREST PROGRAMME FACILITY
International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) Workshop – Tracking of Data of DRR and Recovery Danila Boneva IATI Secretariat, UNDP 14 April 2011, Helsinki.
PARIS21 CONSORTIUM MEETING Paris, October 2002 Progress Report of the Task Team on Food, Agriculture and Rural Statistics  Objectives  Past activities.
July 2011: OECD-DAC Working Party on Aid Effectiveness, Paris June 2011: Joint Global Assembly of Open Forum and Better Aid Platform to prepare for HLF4.
Partnership in the fight against poverty: Good practices and recommendations Elodie Fazi, EAPN 8 December 2008.
International Aid Transparency Initiative – key recommendations from partner countries consultations & update DAD Community of Practice, 5 October 2009.
Composition and Mandate BetterAid is the successor to the CSO Parallel Forum of the Accra High Level Forum organized since January It is designed.
IATI and UNDP – working together to strengthen country systems.
13 January 2011 Country Launch – 2011 Survey on Monitoring the Paris Declaration Role of Donors.
Roma Education Fund Presentation by Rumyan Russinov Deputy Director.
SECTOR POLICY SUPPORT PROGRAMMES A new methodology for delivery of EC development assistance. 1.
Making budget support work for development European parliament hearing Lucy Hayes, Policy and Advocacy Officer, European Network on Debt and Development.
Global aid transparency standard: progress, challenges and benefits prepared by Bill Anderson and Danila Boneva, IATI Secretariat 21st of June 2011.
The International Aid Transparency Initiative Why is it relevant to private aid organisations? Partos Plaza, Netherlands, 14 th October 2010.
International Development on Aid Effectiveness Presenter Said Muhammed Jama Aid Coordination Expert Ministry of National Planning and Development.
Indicators Workshop South Africa PARIS21 Consortium April 2002.
Country Results and Accountability Agreements EU experts meeting on results Brussels 16 November 2011.
1 Joint Donor Staff Training Activity Tanzania, June 2002 Partnership for Poverty Reduction Module 4 - Links between PRSP, Sector Programmes and.
Aid Transparency: Better Data, Better Aid Simon Parrish, Development Initiatives & IATI Yerevan, 4 October 2009.
Monitoring the Paris Declaration in 2011 Preliminary Findings Working Party on Aid Effectiveness Paris, 5-8 July 2011.
Aid Coordination Roundtable Meeting 09 July 2009 Accra Agenda of Action and The Paris Declaration.
MULTILATERAL ORGANISATION PERFORMANCE ASSESSMENT NETWORK The MOPAN Common Approach 2009 Presentation to DAC Network on Development Evaluation 15 June 2009.
What is CSO Development Effectiveness? Presentation at the European Seminar on CSO Development Effectiveness, Vienna, 10 and 11 March 2010.
Launch of the 2008 Survey on Monitoring the Paris Declaration. Christian SHINGIRO External Finance Unit.
Global Partnership for Enhanced Social Accountability (GPESA) December 19, 2011 World Bank.
Paris, Accra, Busan. Paris Declaration of 2005 Provides foundation for aid effectiveness agenda. Introduces aid effectiveness principles which remain.
Elaine Ireland Global Health Advocacy Officer, International HIV/AIDS Alliance Rome, 9 th February Delivering Effective Aid for Health: International Health.
Slide 1 Civil Society Policy and Practice in Donor Agencies GSDRC study commissioned by DFID, February 2010 Size and position for cover image Lone Sorensen,
OWN, SCALE-UP & SUSTAIN The 16 th International Conference on AIDS & STIs in Africa 4 to 8 December 2011, Addis Ababa
Country-led Joint Evaluation Dutch ORET/MILIEV Programme in China NCSTE Country-led Joint Evaluation Dutch ORET/MILIEV Programme in China Chen Zhaoying.
Aid Information Management System (AIMS)
Session 3 The monitoring framework
CABRI response to Accra Action Agenda
Africa Region Accra High Level Forum Preparatory Consultation Workshop Summary of Group 3 Discussions on Harmonisation and Alignment April,
Session 6 – Communications & Outreach
IATI – An Introduction 1.
Overview of working draft v. 29 January 2018
Outreach and Engagement
Strategy
IATI – Planned evaluation of IATI
Conceptual framework of the Aid on Budget Study CABRI
Martyn Pennington Head of Unit, EuropeAid
Presentation transcript:

International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) Progress since Accra Judith Randel & Tony German, Co-Directors, Development Initiatives Presentation to the DCF, November 2009

Why improve aid transparency? Information is power and transparency is fundamental to all 5 aid effectiveness principles: –Ownership: everyone needs good information to plan, budget and to involve citizens –Alignment: better information is critical for getting aid on budget and aligned behind country plans –Harmonisation: donors need better information about each others plans to harmonise –Mutual accountability: better information will increase accountability between donors & partners, and to citizens –Results: we need better information on inputs to be able to effectively monitor outputs and outcomes

What is the International Aid Transparency Initiative (IATI) ? A multi-stakeholder initiative which aims to bring about a quantum leap in access to info on resource flows in order to increase the effectiveness of aid in reducing poverty IATI is a way of delivering on Accra commitments on transparency and making aid work better. The AAA says: Donors will publicly disclose regular, detailed and timely information on volume, allocation and, when available, results of development expenditure to enable more accurate budget, accounting and audit by developing countries. IATI can play a keyrole in contributing the work of WP-EFF Cluster C task team on transparency and predictability and adds value to what we already have in the DAC/CRS. IATI is open to any country that wants to join and sign up to Accra IATI statement

Who is involved ? Full IATI membership: 18 donor signatories and 10 partner countries who have endorsed IATI so far Multi-stakeholder Steering Committee comprises: Australia, Betteraid, Burkina Faso, Civicus, Colombia, Development Gateway, Development Initiatives, Dominican Republic, EC, Germany, Ghana (tbc), Indonesia, Malawi, Nepal, Netherlands, PNG, PWYF, Rwanda, TI, UNDP, UK, Vietnam (tbc), World Bank. Multi-stakeholder Technical Advisory Group (TAG) to advise on IT and systems issues. Partner country consultation led by UNDP CSO consultation led by Reality of Aid Network Secretariat: DFID, UNDP, DIPR Funding: Netherlands, Ireland, Finland, Switzerland, UK, Germany (tbc), plus indirect support from Gates and Hewlett

What aid information do people want? Partner countries want timely, up-to-date and reliable information on current and future aid flows; More detailed info on where money is spent (geographical coding), when it is spent, by whom, on what. All info already known and on somebodys computer. Better coverage of all aid flows from all providers: all governmental donors, multilateral agencies, global funds, foundations and NGOs; Information on conditions, and information to help monitor Paris targets, results and impact; Strategy, policy and evaluation documents. The priorities for CSOs were: info on conditionality, aid commitments and actual disbursements, project impact and complete project documentation

What aid information is accessible? Although a good deal of the information users want is already available, especially from the DAC & CRS databases, but also from OCHAs FTS and country level databases, for many users especially in developing countries, data is hard to access, there are inconsistencies between multiple systems, there are big gaps and information is not up to date. Additional information is held in donors internal systems but is not publicly available; Donors are involved in parallel reporting (eg to DAC and to country-level Aid Management Systems), and face multiple ad hoc requests for information at HQ and country-level; None of the current systems meet the needs of all users, and a one-size-fits-all solution is not the answer.

IATI: a common standard for aid information IATI will support and and value to existing systems like the DAC and AIMS, not undermine or duplicate them; IATI will NOT create a new mega-database – instead, it will develop a four-part standard for publishing aid information, consisting of: 1) agreement on what will be published; 2) common definitions for sharing information ; 3) a common electronic data format; 4) a code of conduct. If the information is standardised (items 2 and 3 above) it can be published in any document and on any website and still be accessible and useable. The underlying principle is publish once, use many times

Benefits of this approach Donors will publish their aid information once – in a form which enables it to be accessed and applied by many different users, rather than responding individually to multiple requests; Partner countries will have access to more up-to-date information on current and future aid allocations which can be adapted to individual needs (budget categories, FYs) and access to raw information – this strengthens aid management, budgeting and planning; Parliamentarians and CSOs will benefit from increased access to more detailed and timely data to demand accountability and they can track aid through to beneficiaries Automated data exchange has the potential to reduce transaction costs on both sides Information intermediaries will be able to collect data automatically and offer a wider range of tailor-made services.

How does IATI relate to the DAC/CRS? DAC/CRS does an excellent job in meeting its mandate – to share information amongst donors and to help them hold each other accountable. But it was not designed to meet the needs of partner country stakeholders. –CRS is focused on high quality, verified statistics. But these take time to produce and partner countries need more up to date information –CRS is focused on past aid flows, not current or future flows –CRS doesnt include qualitative information e.g. conditions, –Information not reported at the project level –Its only DAC donors and its only ODA Both CRS and IATI are needed: –CRS provides statistics for a specific purpose –IATI will enable publication of information to a wider range of users, including aid managers and implementers and those seeking to demand accountability –IATI standards have the potential to be used by all aid providers –IATI includes qualitative information –IATI will build on CRS standards to meet a wider set of needs

IATI Process to date – consultation still open Accra – Sept 09 –6 regional partner country consultations covering 74 partner countries –5 regional CSO consultations covering 160 CSOs –Technical analysis on scope of IATI standards (what will be published) and code of conduct –Preliminary technical work on how information might be published October 09 –IATI Conference in The Hague – 170 participants from stakeholder organisations – strong support from partner countries, caution from some donors on level of ambition –Incremental progress is still progress

Next Steps Consultation deadline on part 1 of the standard - what is published - 16 th November Steering Committee meeting 30 th November to discuss comments on proposals TBC – physical meeting of Steering Committee plus all IATI signatories in late January to agree final list of what is to be published Code of conduct now postponed until later in process Scaling up in 2010: –Formats and definitions (parts 2 and 3 of standard) –Accessibility and capacity building –Donor outreach