Nepal Country Assistance Plan: Monitoring in a Fragile State
Author: Department for International Development
Date: 2005
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10 pages
(71.1 KB)
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The DFID Nepal Country Assistance Plan (CAP), published in February 2004, aims to reduce poverty and social exclusion and help establish the basis for lasting peace. To this end, CAP commits DFID Nepal to developing improved, locally accountable and transparent systems for monitoring progress. This DFID paper describes the main elements of the CAP Monitoring Framework (CAPMF), setting out how DFID Nepal (DFIDN) proposes to monitor the operating environment for development activities and measure progress towards outputs.
The new CAP Monitoring Framework (CAPMF) is designed to supplement the Nepalese government’s Poverty Monitoring and Analysis System (PMAS) launched in May 2004. PMAS - not yet fully operational - will use both input/output and outcome/well-being indicators, gathering data from management information systems in sector ministries, public expenditure tracking, and periodic surveys.
The MF will form a comprehensive picture of programme performance and viability of CAP objectives, addressing the specific monitoring needs for a country in conflict. Complementing conventional project cycle monitoring, CAPMF will strengthen the quality of decision-making at programme and strategic level, providing rigorous evidence of impact on poverty and social exclusion. The MF is also designed to rebalance DFIDN’s effort between programme design/monitoring and between activity/outcome reporting.
CAPMF findings will be reviewed both throughout each year, and annually. An annual report will be disseminated widely amongst Nepal’s development community. Strategic direction and priorities for the following year will be agreed and integrated into the programme. The MF comprises three main components:
There is a need for continuing and robust analysis of the Nepal context, both in relation to the conflict and also in relation to the wider politics of a state with weak institutions and currently without democratic government. Context analysis is not to become the basis for political conditionality, but to assist DFIDN in adapting aid instruments appropriately in order to achieve greatest impact. A small group has been established to monitor the following specific areas for contextual analysis:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Department for International Development, 2005, ‘Nepal Country Assistance Plan: Monitoring in a Fragile State’, Department for International Development, London
Author:
Department for International Development (DFID), http://www.dfid.gov.uk