| Main
Documents:
Main
Report (Volume I) (May
2001) 65 pages - 0.3 MB (approx.)
Precis (March
2002) 6 pages - 0.2 MB (approx)
Overview
of Sectoral Assistance Evaluations
(Volume II) (March 2002) (109
pages - 0.5 MB (approx.)
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Background
Papers:
India's
Development in the Near Term: Constraints
and Prospects (July 13,
2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Poverty
Reduction in the 1990s (January
12, 2001)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Public
Sector Management in the 1990s
(December 19, 2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Financial
Sector Development in the 1990s
(October 30, 2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Private
Sector Development in the 1990s
(October 30, 2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Urban
Development in the 1990s
(October 23, 2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Agricultural
and Rural Development in the 1990s
(January 12, 2001)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Transport
Sector Development in the 1990s
(November 2, 2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Environmental
Sustainability in the 1990s
(October 30, 2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Education
Sector Development in the 1990s
(January 7, 2001)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Social
Development in the 1990s
(November 29, 2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance to India for Gender
Equality in the 1990s
(October 31, 2000)
Evaluating
Bank Assistance for Public Financial
Accountability in India in the 1990s
(January 7, 2001)
World
Bank's Image and Outreach Effectiveness
in the 1990s (November
2, 2000)
India:
World Bank Assistance for Water
Resource Management (May
6, 2002)
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Parallel IEG Sector Evaluations:
Reforming
India's Energy Sector (1978-99)
(Spring 2001)
India:
Alleviating Poverty through Forest
Development (July 2000)
Case
Study of the World Bank Activities
in the Health Sector in India
(June 1999)
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This evaluation assesses the development
effectiveness of Bank assistance to India
during the 1990s. India was one of the
Bank's founding members and remains one
of its largest and most influential borrowers.
The Bank has been India's largest source
of external long-term capital and has
financed a sizable share of its public
investment. Its lending and nonlending
services have been thinly spread over
many central and state agencies and have
addressed many different objectives.
India entered the decade
with substantial economic and social achievements
but also with closed trade and investment
regimes, fiscal imbalances, and a large
and unwieldy public sector. After a balance
of payments crisis in 1991 it deregulated
the trade and investment regimes. Economic
growth rebounded quickly and proved resilient
even during the 1997 East Asian crisis.
Social indicators also improved. India,
however, failed to sustain the reform
process in the fiscal area and to broaden
it to other structural areas. Moreover,
there was little progress in reducing
rural poverty, largely due to the absence
of an effective agricultural and rural
development strategy and low growth in
the poorer northern and eastern states.
In the second half of the 1990s, a few
states initiated substantial policy and
institutional changes, but there remains
a large outstanding reform agenda at both
the state and federal levels.
The Bank provided strong
support for the reforms of the early 1990s,
beginning with three adjustment loans.
It expanded assistance to the social sectors;
devoted more attention to improving participation;
and, where development results had been
unsatisfactory, reduced lending (to virtually
zero in power) and embarked on comprehensive
sector work-for example, in rural development
and irrigation. After the mid1990s the
Bank focused assistance on reforming states,
with a notable measure of success. Still,
more emphasis on fiscal management, on
public sector and judicial reforms, on
improvement in agricultural policies and
rural development, and on gender equity
may have led to greater impact.
Overall, the strategic goals
of the Bank were relevant and the design
of the assistance strategy improved as
the decade unfolded. Efficacy was modest,
mainly on account of the Bank's limited
impact on fiscal and other structural
reforms, the failure to develop an effective
assistance strategy for rural poverty
reduction, and the mediocre quality at
exit of projects. Institutional development
impact has also been modest and sustainability
uncertain given the remaining serious
fiscal imbalances, high environmental
costs, and governance weaknesses. Thus,
the overall outcome of the assistance
for the decade is rated as moderately
satisfactory.
The relevance of the assistance
strategy, however, has improved substantially
over the past two years through a more
sharpened focus on poverty reduction,
a more selective approach to state assistance,
and greater attention to governance and
institutions. But it is too early to gauge
the efficacy of these recent initiatives.
India has built strong foundations
for development. The Bank's main challenge
is to support far-reaching reforms, at
both the state and central government
levels, with high quality and widely disseminated
policy studies and policy based sector
and program loans. The five pillars and
the fiscal and structural reform triggers
of the 1997 Country Assistance Strategy
remain valid. Thus, only adjustments to
accelerate and assure the full application
of those pillars and triggers appear necessary.
The Bank should link the
overall lending volumes to fiscal discipline
at the central government level and to
progress in structural reforms in agriculture
and the implementation of an effective
rural development strategy, as progress
in these areas is crucial for rural poverty
reduction. New lending should be concentrated
in reforming states, where an assistance
strategy has been agreed with the state
government, while maintaining a strong
policy dialogue with the center and supporting
analyses of state finances, policies,
and institutions in nonreforming states.
Similarly, sectoral lending volumes should
be linked to agreements on sector specific
policies and institutional frameworks.
While in recent years Bank
assistance has become more pro-poor, the
Bank should make greater efforts to monitor
systematically the poverty and gender
impacts of Bank assisted projects and
programs, as well as to mainstream gender
beyond the social sectors. It should also
assist government agencies to do the same
for overall public expenditure programs.
Finally, it should strengthen aid coordination
on country assistance strategies and on
critical sector strategies (for example,
agriculture and rural development) to
enhance the effectiveness of external
assistance and enable greater selectivity
in the Bank's own programs.
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