Sierra Leone : Basic Agricultural Public Expenditure Diagnostic Review, 2003-2012
This agriculture public expenditure review (AgPER) provides key background information and guidance in this endeavor by presenting and analyzing historic data on public spending on agriculture, examining the efficiency of spending, and identifying...
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Format: | Report |
Language: | English en_US |
Published: |
Washington, DC
2015
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2015/06/24646525/sierra-leone-basic-agricultural-public-expenditure-diagnostic-review-2003-2012 http://hdl.handle.net/10986/22270 |
Summary: | This agriculture public expenditure
review (AgPER) provides key background information and
guidance in this endeavor by presenting and analyzing
historic data on public spending on agriculture, examining
the efficiency of spending, and identifying areas where
additional funds can be applied effectively to achieve
national agricultural policy and comprehensive Africa
agriculture development program (CAADP) objectives. The
goals of the AgPER in Sierra Leone are as follows: gain a
better understanding of the countrys performance in the
context of the 2003 Maputo declaration; draw lessons from
the past in terms of budget execution in the agricultural
sector and identify bottlenecks, inefficiencies, and
deviations from goals; seek and recommend corrective actions
for existing and future programs with a view to improving
their impact and making them more efficient and equitable;
initiate the implementation of the databases and methodology
required for conducting similar reviews regularly and thus
contribute to the institutionalization of the process; help
the government establish an environment and capabilities for
results-based management, with particular emphasis on
improving planning, execution, and monitoring and
evaluation; and increase visibility for the government and
the financial and technical partners over the sectors
absorptive capacity so that the decision may be made to
allocate more resources to agricultural development. This
report consists of five chapters: first chapter introduces
the strategic and institutional context; second chapter
studies the level of public agricultural expenditure in
Sierra Leone; third chapter analyzes the economic and
functional composition of public agricultural expenditure
(allocative efficiency); fourth chapter assesses the
technical efficiency of the processes of preparation,
execution, and monitoring and evaluation of agricultural
budgets; and fifth chapter contains our findings and recommendations. |
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