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Implementation of CBMS in Vietnam’s localities Vu Van Toan (HEPR-MOLISA) Vu Tuan Anh (S

Implementation of CBMS in Vietnam’s localities Vu Van Toan (HEPR-MOLISA) Vu Tuan Anh (SEDEC). Poverty and Economic Policy Research Network Meeting June 2004 - Dakar, Senegal. Activities of Vietnam's CBMS-Project in localities.

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Implementation of CBMS in Vietnam’s localities Vu Van Toan (HEPR-MOLISA) Vu Tuan Anh (S

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  1. Implementation of CBMS in Vietnam’s localitiesVu Van Toan (HEPR-MOLISA) Vu Tuan Anh (SEDEC) Poverty and Economic Policy Research Network Meeting June 2004 - Dakar, Senegal

  2. Activities of Vietnam's CBMS-Project in localities • Piloting the national system of poverty observatories (20 communes in 12 provinces). • Providing technical support to Ha-Tay Province to improve the provincial CBMS (30 communes-observatories). • Providing technical support to Yen-Bai Province to establish the provincial CBMS (10 communes-observatories).

  3. (1) Piloting the national system of poverty observatories Purposes of poverty observatory system: • To follow-up poverty tendences in the whole country. • To analyse impacts of policy and measuses of poverty reduction to poor households and communes. • To evaluate of implementation of the National Programme of Poverty Reduction.

  4. The national system of poverty observatories • 12 provinces, 8 regions • 20 communes: + 17 rural - 3 urban + 7 mountainous - 6 plains - 4 suburban • 4,026 households (aprox. 200 households per commune) 19,700 individuals: + 82% ethnic majority + 18% ethnic minorities

  5. CBMS in national poverty observatories • 3 rounds: 2002, 2003, 2004 • Multi-dimensional indicators • Local people collected data • Data used by HEPR for: + poverty assessment + impact evaluation of poverty reduction policies and measures + evaluate community-based poor household identification system.

  6. Son La Province (Northern Mountains) Hanoi Dac Lac Province (Central Highlands) Tien-Giang Province (Mekong Delta)

  7. (2) Using CBMS for improving the poverty monitoring system of Ha Tay Province • Ha-Tay province: has 14 districts, 323 communes, 2.5 mill. persons. • CBMS: 30 communes, 3,721 households, more than 16,000 persons • Before 2003: CBMS, but with only income indicator. • Contribution of CBMS project: + multi-dimensional indicators, + survey design and techniques, + data processing.

  8. 30 poverty observatories in Ha-Tay Province

  9. Ha Tay Province

  10. (3) Establishing CBMS in Yen-Bai Province • Yen-Bai province: mountainous, has 9 districts, 180 communes, 730 thousands persons. • In 2004, a CBMS is established: 10 communes, 9,000 households, 40,000 persons. • Role of CBMS project: + sample selection + questionnaire design, + training and monitoring data collection, + data processing.

  11. 10 poverty observatories in Yen-Bai Province

  12. Yen Bai Province

  13. Indicators of CBMS in localities • Population (HH size, ethnicity, occupation) • Food production • Living conditions (electricity, safe water, housing, toilete, durables) • Education (illiterate, children not going to school) • Health • Income (source structure, quantity) • Expenditures for basic needs (food, cloths, education, health care) • Implementation of the National Program for Poverty Reduction.

  14. Lessons learned from work with localities • Promoting interest and initiatives of local partners: departing from existing PMS, adding CBMS components. • Partnership: + local partners are facilitators and surveyors. + project members are trainers and supervisors. •   Local ownership: local partners are owners and users of outputs. Project assistance is only for departing period.

  15. Short-term benefits of localities from CBMS • Getting more relevant data for poverty assessment. • Understanding multi-dimensional poverty. • Monitoring implementation of poverty reduction programs and measures. • Having a comprehensive data on living standards in locality.

  16. Long-term (expected) benefits of localities from CBMS • Enhanced poverty reduction capacity of local governmental and non-governmental leaders. • Wider participation of local people in decision-making and controlling of poverty reduction measures. • Better information system on living standards of locality.

  17. Thank you

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