scispace - formally typeset
Open Access

World Development Report 2004 : making services work for poor people

Reads0
Chats0
TLDR
The World Development Report (WDR) 2004 warns that broad improvements in human welfare will not occur unless poor people receive wider access to affordable, better quality services in health, education, water, sanitation, and electricity as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract
The World Development Report (WDR) 2004 warns that broad improvements in human welfare will not occur unless poor people receive wider access to affordable, better quality services in health, education, water, sanitation, and electricity. Without such improvements, freedom from illness and from illiteracy, two of the most important ways poor people can escape poverty, will remain elusive to many. This report builds an analytical and practical framework for using resources, whether internal or external, more effectively by making services work for poor people. The focus is on those services that have the most direct link with human development, education, health, water, sanitation, and electricity. This presents an enormous challenge, because making services work for the poor involves changing, not only service delivery arrangements, but also public sector institutions, and how foreign aid is transferred. This WDR explores the many dimensions of poverty, through outcomes of service delivery for poor people, and stipulates affordable access to services is low especially for poor people in addition to a wide range of failures in quality. The public responsibility is highlighted, addressing the need for more public spending, and technical adjustments, based on incentives and understanding what, and why services need to be improved. Thus, through an analytical framework, it is suggested the complexity of accountability must be established, as well as instruments for reforming institutions to improve services, illustrated through various case studies, both in developing, and developed countries. The report further outlines that scaling up reforms means sectoral reforms must be linked to ongoing or nascent public sector reforms, in areas such as budget management, decentralization, and public administration reform, stimulated through information as a catalyst for change, and as an input to prod the success of other reforms.

read more

Citations
More filters

From Supply to Comply: Gauging the Effects of Social Accountability on Services, Governance, and Empowerment

TL;DR: In this article, acknowledgments and acknowledgments are given for the work presented in this article........................................................................................................................................................ vi Acknowledgments......................................................................................................................................................... vi
Journal ArticleDOI

Great Expectations: A Framework for Assessing and Understanding Key Factors Affecting Student Learning of Foundational Reading Skills.

TL;DR: The context for the articles that follow is presented, identifying the program design characteristics and types of interventions that increase the likelihood of successful expansion of the interventions commonly referred to as "scaling-up," the ability to sustain interventions, and the value of reading programs in low- and middle-income countries.
Book ChapterDOI

Private-Sector Participation in Water and Sanitation Services: The Answer to Public Sector Failures?

TL;DR: In this article, the authors explore the experience of private-sector participation in the provision of water and sanitation services since the late 1980s and examine the various justifications for PSP, including that PSP would be inherently more efficient than public water utilities, contribute to reduce the public sector deficit by providing fresh private investment, help to extend coverage of services to the poor, and improve social equity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Developing citizen report cards for primary health care in low and middle-income countries: Results from cognitive interviews in rural Tajikistan.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors conducted cognitive interviews to assess consumers' understanding, interpretation and preferences for displaying information for a health care report card in rural Tajikistan and found that most respondents understood the main idea of the report card and were not confused by the indicators or display.