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Report from Partner Countries Work Stream – Day 1

Report from Partner Countries Work Stream – Day 1. Room 2. SESSION 1 – PARTNER COUNTRIES, INFOMEDIARIES. Key points: Quality and frequency of data provided by DPs must be improved;

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Report from Partner Countries Work Stream – Day 1

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  1. Report from Partner Countries Work Stream – Day 1 Room 2

  2. SESSION 1 – PARTNER COUNTRIES, INFOMEDIARIES • Key points: • Quality and frequency of data provided by DPs must be improved; • Awareness among both IATI signatories and non-signatories at country-level of partner country information needs must be strengthened to help the data collection efforts by partner countries; • This hinges on improvements of information flows from capitals to country-offices of IATI signatories as well as awareness raising among non-signatories by partner countries; • The IATI Registry was created to provide best possible information for improving/enriching the national data collection process, not to replace it. • Recall of the 8 points PC main messages came out from the 23 April meeting • Overview of the 3 IATI country pilots: • Diversity in the context of countries: tools used, geography, LICs/MIC mix, financial systems…

  3. SESSION 2 – IMPLEMENTATION AT COUNTRY LEVEL: RWANDA PILOT • Context : • 40-50% of national budget is financed by ODA • All ODA through Government is on budget • A dynamic mechanism to monitor aid effectiveness is in place: Donor Performance Assessment Framework; solid achievements in reforming the PFM; using DAD as AIMS – DAD is public • Rwanda is piloting AIMS-PFIMS integration process • In Rwanda, a conscious effort is underway to move forward on fiscal transparency and aid transparency simultaneously • IATI Rwanda pilot on budget alignment and automatic data exchange is underway, and results expected by Q3/2012

  4. COLOMBIA PILOT • Using a locally developed bespoke AIMS • Presentation of Colombian systems specificities; • Presentation of the Architecture of their AIMS to fit into the actual IATI and budget alignment process • Colombia IATI pilot to look at South-South flows will begin in June 2012 Challenges faced by the 2 countries: • Quality and Comprehensiveness of data (timeliness, frequency…) • Getting DPs to report according to the PC fiscal year

  5. DRC PILOT • DRC is the most advanced of the three IATI pilots, and focuses on automatic exchange between IATI Registry and the DRC AIMS (PGAI) • The DRC pilot shows that we have now moved from DEVELOPING IATI to DOING IATI • Positive results from the tests done with DFID data • Extended the process to Sweden and Global Fund; now need to extend to other DPs • Consistent contribution of the automatic data exchange to data collection means that the country process remains in place, but has been enhanced • less time for data collection, more time for verification and data analysis • More detailed, accurate, forward-looking data and better frequency

  6. SESSION 3 – THE ISSUE OF FORWARD-LOOKING DATA • Request by DPs at the meeting that PCs indicate which are the most needed data fields in view of their upcoming processes for preparation of next fiscal years’ budgets • PCs would like to have forward-looking data for the lifetime of a project, or at least 3 years ahead: • However, the focus is next year’s (n+1) data • PCs require disaggregated forward-looking data at activity/project-level rather than data that is aggregated by country (as per OECD-DAC forward spending survey) or by Ministry allocations • Forward-looking data needs to be provided in a way that fits, or can be “translated to”, the PC fiscal year

  7. OPEN DATA – OPEN GOVERNMENT – PUBLIC ACCESS • World Bank approach • Beyond data, open to the public the process (budget…) • Social accountability: feed-back from citizens on budget allocation • DG/Synergy tools: • Value-added of GIS/geo-coding and other features • Addressing AIMS-PFM systems integration • The PCs might wish to consider giving public access to their AIMS and PFM systems

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