Mobile Metropolises : Urban Transport Matters

The evaluation exercise focuses on three themes that cut across strategies and project designs during FY07–16: mobility for all (including the poor, women, and persons with disabilities), sustainable service delivery, and institutional development....

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Main Author: Independent Evaluation Group
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/309551506621356068/Mobile-metropolises-urban-transport-matters-an-IEG-evaluation-of-the-World-Bank-Group-s-support-for-urban-transport
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28476
id okr-10986-28476
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-284762021-06-14T10:14:06Z Mobile Metropolises : Urban Transport Matters Independent Evaluation Group TRANSPORT SPECIAL NEEDS DISABLED INSTITUTIONAL STRENGTHS INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY URBAN TRANSPORT MOBILITY SUSTAINABILITY The evaluation exercise focuses on three themes that cut across strategies and project designs during FY07–16: mobility for all (including the poor, women, and persons with disabilities), sustainable service delivery, and institutional development. In spite of the pressing need arising from rapid urbanization, Africa has a declining urban transport portfolio that in the second half of the review period (FY12–06) focused increasingly on urban roads. Upper-middle-income countries represent 43 percent of the evaluation portfolio commitments.Overall, the World Bank Group has been effective in supporting improved service quality and increased access, but approaches based on increasing infrastructure capacity are not balanced with approaches based on demand management. Among disadvantaged groups the poor received the most support. Much less attention was paid to the special needs of women and disabled persons.Affordability of urban transport services is rarely analyzed in the World Bank Group’s projects, with unknown impact on the mobility of the disadvantaged. Financial sustainability remains a challenge for the provision of public transport services. Financing gaps between revenues and operation and maintenance costs are common. The World Bank is often optimistic in appraising the costs, timing, and financial viability of mass transit projects.Efforts to engage the private sector to achieve operational efficiencies and improved financing seldom combine the policy and institutional strengths of the World Bank with transactional strengths of the International Finance Corporation and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency.The World Bank Group has achieved localized environmental mitigation benefits along key urban transit corridors or systems, but broader environmental benefits could be still be achieved by using a comprehensive approach that combines upstream (policy and sector framework) and downstream (operational) measures.Weak institutional capacity and coordination remains a critical challenge in the urban transport sector. Institutional development support is a part of 80 percent of World Bank Group projects, yet these often focus on a single local body during a one-time project. Longer-term and more ambitious institutional reform engagements occurred in only a few cities.The World Bank Group’s contribution to urban transport development goes beyond projects. Investments often provide a platform for the World Bank Group to offer guidance, training, technical assistance, and learning throughout the project cycle, South-South learning and exchange, and good practices for demonstration to sector stakeholders and further adoption. 2017-10-06T20:11:38Z 2017-10-06T20:11:38Z 2017-05-24 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/309551506621356068/Mobile-metropolises-urban-transport-matters-an-IEG-evaluation-of-the-World-Bank-Group-s-support-for-urban-transport http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28476 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper
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 TRANSPORT
SPECIAL NEEDS
DISABLED
INSTITUTIONAL STRENGTHS
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
URBAN TRANSPORT
MOBILITY
SUSTAINABILITY
spellingShingle TRANSPORT
SPECIAL NEEDS
DISABLED
INSTITUTIONAL STRENGTHS
INSTITUTIONAL CAPACITY
URBAN TRANSPORT
MOBILITY
SUSTAINABILITY
Independent Evaluation Group
Mobile Metropolises : Urban Transport Matters
description The evaluation exercise focuses on three themes that cut across strategies and project designs during FY07–16: mobility for all (including the poor, women, and persons with disabilities), sustainable service delivery, and institutional development. In spite of the pressing need arising from rapid urbanization, Africa has a declining urban transport portfolio that in the second half of the review period (FY12–06) focused increasingly on urban roads. Upper-middle-income countries represent 43 percent of the evaluation portfolio commitments.Overall, the World Bank Group has been effective in supporting improved service quality and increased access, but approaches based on increasing infrastructure capacity are not balanced with approaches based on demand management. Among disadvantaged groups the poor received the most support. Much less attention was paid to the special needs of women and disabled persons.Affordability of urban transport services is rarely analyzed in the World Bank Group’s projects, with unknown impact on the mobility of the disadvantaged. Financial sustainability remains a challenge for the provision of public transport services. Financing gaps between revenues and operation and maintenance costs are common. The World Bank is often optimistic in appraising the costs, timing, and financial viability of mass transit projects.Efforts to engage the private sector to achieve operational efficiencies and improved financing seldom combine the policy and institutional strengths of the World Bank with transactional strengths of the International Finance Corporation and the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency.The World Bank Group has achieved localized environmental mitigation benefits along key urban transit corridors or systems, but broader environmental benefits could be still be achieved by using a comprehensive approach that combines upstream (policy and sector framework) and downstream (operational) measures.Weak institutional capacity and coordination remains a critical challenge in the urban transport sector. Institutional development support is a part of 80 percent of World Bank Group projects, yet these often focus on a single local body during a one-time project. Longer-term and more ambitious institutional reform engagements occurred in only a few cities.The World Bank Group’s contribution to urban transport development goes beyond projects. Investments often provide a platform for the World Bank Group to offer guidance, training, technical assistance, and learning throughout the project cycle, South-South learning and exchange, and good practices for demonstration to sector stakeholders and further adoption.
format Report
author Independent Evaluation Group
author_facet Independent Evaluation Group
author_sort Independent Evaluation Group
title Mobile Metropolises : Urban Transport Matters
title_short Mobile Metropolises : Urban Transport Matters
title_full Mobile Metropolises : Urban Transport Matters
title_fullStr Mobile Metropolises : Urban Transport Matters
title_full_unstemmed Mobile Metropolises : Urban Transport Matters
title_sort mobile metropolises : urban transport matters
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/309551506621356068/Mobile-metropolises-urban-transport-matters-an-IEG-evaluation-of-the-World-Bank-Group-s-support-for-urban-transport
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28476
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