Adjustment in Africa : Update on Reversing Economic Decline in Sub-Saharan Africa
This study reviews the Bank's experience with adjustment lending to Sub-Saharan Africa (SSA), from FY80 to FY96. During this period, a total of 163 adjustment operations, for $15 billion have been approved to 37 countries. Of these, a total of...
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Format: | Brief |
Language: | English |
Published: |
World Bank, Washington, DC
2012
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/1995/02/1615058/adjustment-africa-update-reversing-economic-decline-sub-saharan-africa http://hdl.handle.net/10986/10002 |
Summary: | This study reviews the Bank's
experience with adjustment lending to Sub-Saharan Africa
(SSA), from FY80 to FY96. During this period, a total of 163
adjustment operations, for $15 billion have been approved to
37 countries. Of these, a total of 121 have already been
evaluated at completion. The study is based on information
from all the operations, both completed and ongoing. It
focuses on the performance, outcomes, and impact at the
country level. Performance is measured first in terms of
compliance with conditionality in adjustment lending, and
then an overall compliance rating is constructed for each
country. The compliance rating is used to classify the
countries into three groups: those with good, weak and poor
compliance records. Design issues, most notably insufficient
attention to borrower ownership, were already identified in
the 1993 OED report on adjustment in SSA. The present study
revisited and quantified the design issues identified in all
of the 121 evaluations at completion. The detailed analysis
of compliance with conditionality allows us to look at which
types of policy reforms are more frequently included in
adjustment operations, and which ones are more often
complied with. The main recommendations emerging from the
findings of this report are the need for: (i) increased
selectivity in adjustment lending; (ii) improved design; and
(iii) improved benchmarks and indicators of progress towards
the goals of poverty alleviation and fiscal sustainability. |
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