64440 b f new novate ubled the supply of new and renovated h using between 2002 and 2007, and in novated hous s tween we n u ng loans betwee 2002 and 2007, d increased housing lo s by ds in urban multi-apartment bu ngs now use safe clean, and affordable gas-base heating solutions, up s t building fe, e safe, nd afford d or -based tin solu ting ol THE WORLD BANK ed from microfinance pro rams durin the last 12 years. | In B E L A R U S , almost 700 schools and health d o crofinanc programs ur crofinance r and the inter ational airport cut vehicl a rp cut vehicle e ern e intern rport uring ast 2 e lmo 7 0 schoo an m mo o do b ehicle-operating costs by 62 percent and almost doubled road usage oo a ools ge road u ge ANNUAL REPORT 2011 y scho girls in rem e village easte choo ool heir e u ary scho l girls in a remote village of ea ern Bhutan to continue their education within days of the 2009 ith day of he 200 th thin y h 00 during 1997–2005. | In B OT S WA N A , HIV/AIDS pr ention moved forward with alm st 43 percent of g 1997–2005 7 2005 W V/A V/ / prev ntio m ed forwa d wi alm st 43 percen lmo to wa w lmo n cent YEAR IN REVIEW literacy rate a ng 8-year olds to 76 percent in 2009, an increase of 11 percent over 2007. | In B U R K I N A F A S O , 94 percent of Ouagadougo ’s population—1,480,000 people—now have access to safe wate i ld t 2009, n increase f 1 perce literacy rate amon 8-year-olds to 76 percent in 20 increa e ve 007. In ve Ouagadougou opulation— 480, 0 p 94 e cen f Ouag doug la n ul 80 480,0 —now ve minors. | In C A M B O D I A , the primary completion rate reach d 85.6 per ent in 2008–09, up from less than 50 perce t only five years ago. | In CAMER ON, 1.6 million people benefited directly from improve in minors. primar m on ion n eache 6 perce 008–0 00 –09, u o –09 y than p rcen only ve e c o CAMEROON 6 mi lion peopl ene R d im inte a financia emen m , an int grated financi l management system impleme mented in 159 central govern ent agencies facilitated timely budget execution; 178 government agencies were supported by a pe ormance-base monitorin me a vernment gen e t c ra governm nt agenc s f c ta ed t m n ated ta g exe dget ex u on; 17878 men gencie n cie ci ted supporte perfo anc b sed amage in December 200 | In CO L O M B I A , 1.7 million families benefited from the Familias en Acción conditio l cash transfer program in 2 0 , up fro 340,000 fa ilies in 2004. | In CÔT E D ’ I V O I R E d dam ecember 2008. er LO .7 mi m amil benefit from he Famil s en Acció c n tional enefited l ón h transfer pr g tr sf pr f n 2008 rom 0,0 fam ro 0 a am n 20 I CÔ and 225,000 tourists in 20 0. | In D J I B O U T I , 71 percent of students now com lete primary scho l without repeating a grade, up sharply from 52 pe ent in 2003–04. | In the D O M I N I C A N R E P U B L I C rists 2 nd 2 ,000 touris s n 201 nt n o c nt of students o comp m school th ut repeat hoo thout peatin ho de e grade ply rom percent py 03–0 8. | In the A R A B R E P U B L I C O F E G Y P T , the volume of mortgage lending increased from 300 million Egyptian pounds to 4.2 billion Eg tian pounds in jus five years as a resu t of mortgage sector reform 8. the um ume f m rtgage lending c a m ndin o 0 n gyp from 00 million Egypti pou ou o l io to 4.2 illion Egypt pound u ust e sult ortg g t ortga ol feed ng pro am, and student enrollment increased by almost 11,000 students. Conditional cash transf r progra s helped 100,000 families as of 2010. | In E R I T R E A , 31,556 orphans w d di ol feedi progra nd stude udent n ollmen increas d b mo t 1,0 ment nc ea e e d 00 tudents o di ional cash transfe ogram elped nsfe ogra sfer ga d , mi milies f 2010 ha lac aced 1,556 orphan were place with familie AC G O S L AV R E P U B L I C O F M A C E D O N I A , real estate cadastre coverage more than doubled from 43 percent in 2005 to 99 percent in 2009, and the annual number of registered transactions i l t d e h n doubl bled om real estat ad r o age more than double from 3 e en in 200 to 99 percent m nt 09, and th mber l mbe of i d i ions increased b common childhood diseases in 2009, up from 78 percent in 2004 | In G H A N A , the improved pro i n of maternal and child health care reduced und five mortality rates to 80 per 1,000 live births in 200 mmo mon omm dhood dho , from a s in 2009, up fr c i 200 004. 04 ei ov d provision o n child health e reduced under y ity r h birth were assessed for structural damage in the wake of the earthquake. | In H O N D U R A S , the nu ber of children enrolled in the grade corresponding to their age increased by 19 percent, and school assis nc ere l al damag in the w ke g h thquak h eart ua n the nu h num um o hildren n o sponding sp the grade corresp c s si sista o assi wat treatment capacity of utiliti s during 2000–07. | In I N D I A , over 98 percent of India’s chi dren now have acce s to a primary school within 1 kilometer of their homes; 5 million children remain out of schoo a water treat ties tie i 0–0 tilitie duri 2000–07. over 8 perce s chil v ccess m n school within kilo es; m c n g hene ed estab ta on was significantly strengthened by the estab tablishment of the Anti Corruption Commission, the Anti-Corruption Court, the Judicial Commission, th Police Commission, and the Prosecutorial Commission in 200 t nti ti-Cor ption om he Ant r on Court h udicial Commission, the o ice d e roved when the first o aw awyers associat ssocia te e as impro d when the first pro bono law s ass ciation was created by the Jorda Center for Legal Aid in coordination with the Jordan Bar Association; it provides citizens with a system of ‘one-stop-shops’ for leg the rdan d r d tion with the Jo n to t y ys rl aganda was redu e by more than 20 percent from 1999 to 2007. | In K E N Y A , 32,000 poor orphans and vulnerable children have better living conditions because of cash transfers to their households. | In th a ag daa educed more tf m 7 In 0p n phans and lnerable hildren eb o t on h sf ry’s road trans ort network impro ed since 1996, with travel speeds rising from 35 kilom ers/hour to 80/kilometers/ ur. | In L AT V I A , 90 percent of 5-ye r-olds and 98 percent of 6-year-olds have been enrol y d ransp rt network improv e 9 ds ising / omete s/ lometers/ho t t f 5-yea r o v nrolle was improved, along wit 28 kilomet of th potable water network and 36 kilometers of the sewerage network, from 2000 to 200 . | In L E S OT H O , there was a 10 percentage point increase in the mode wa improve along with o eters f the etwork and 3 w k omet s om ge o from 2 o 2008 T he r g ag oder tated or repa red during the last several years. | In L I T H UA N I A , the rehab lita on and extension of more than 2 kilomet s of breakwaters, from 1999 to 2007, has improved the competitiveness, safety, an ate at at epaired during last a ra ehabilitati ha tensio than meters om 1 2 r d ty , there was a 12 percentage point decline in the poverty headcount, from 52 percent in 2005 to 40 per ent in 2008 | In M A L AYS I A , 33 primary schools, 26 seco dary schools, 447 teacher’s quarters, and abou h was 12 perc ge n un cent 0 percent erc r 0 008. y ry s, c econ h ols, abou ay 2010 | In M AU R I T I U S , unemployment declined from 9.5 percent in 2005 to 7.2 p y 10. e p nt i 0 o 7.2 percent in 2008 as a result of the governme sul o the government’s reform program, and the unemployment rate for women decreased significant u t program, a t e nt 9,0 0 in poor and ver poor communitie from 2006 to 2009. | In M O L D O V A , m 9 000 very ities o ommu it e om ld ans sio d mother-to-child transmission of HIV infection decreased by almost 90 percent—from 20 percent in 2002 to 1.7 percent in 200 ion HIV infe o ecreased almo f erc 0 er n 0 s in 2002. | In M O R O CCO , the mobile phone market grew to 7.3 million users in 2003, up fr m less than 117,000 in 1998, when competition and regulatory reform were introduc . | In N A M I B I A , access t n 200 the le p e o ers 2 from an 1 0 8 p ompe tion and gu o nt t r introduced ccess cc ural roads we constructed or rehabilitated during the last two years, through a c m unity-drive operation. | In N I C A R A G UA , 35 micro enterprises e r o oa were d or ated h comm nity- ven o icro in pproxox oximately 0 p were ab ed ablishe r s employing approximately 400 people we establ shed t r ultural sector were able to increase th income by approximately 63 percent between 2004 and 2009 through access to better equi ment. | In the O R G A N I S AT I O N A , 3.4 million beneficiaries from the agri ult m li iaries r ricult ric b se their m ely el r wee wee 2004 and r quipme tw etw 2002 8, a iti t econdary education for underserved are | In PA K I S T A N , local hydropo tween 20 and 2008, and a 10 percent increase in the transition rate to seco tion s rse rse rser reas. A eration in incr t percen to 46 cent c lo l hydropower generati n increased from about 35 percent to 46 percen health services package in 2010. | In PA P UA N E W G U I N E A , rehabilitation of the Port of Rabaul, following th erupt v kage kag 0 ehabil t o aul, fo win the n n 9 go e shipped again t f o ption in 1994, allowed international cargo to be shipped aga directly to and from the po supply schemes and the provision of 23,000 latrines betwe 1997 and 2007. | In P E R U , more than 15,000 kilometers of rural roads were rehabilitated betwe 1995 a 2006. | In the P H I L I P P I N E S , abou su es e provi ween 9 and 20 we h s o oa ween 9 and d be we e infected with HIV received anti-retroviral treatment in 20 up fr m 25 percent in 2006. | In R WA N D A , 750,000 people now have access to a reliable ele trical supply, with electricity loa shedding reduce n d with ved an 2008, p from ow h l lec abl elle lectricity oad he en lment rate was 84 percent in 2008, up from 67 percent in 2002. | In S E R B I A , public fin cial management was strengthened b the introdu ion of by 2008. | In S E N E G A L , the gross primary school enrollment r by 200 a 08, 2 nancia m ss thened by he roduct n S I E R R A L E O N E , 700,000 people gained access to im r ved health and sanitation facilities, and 148 health facilitie were renovated and equipped between 2004 and 2009. | In t S LO VA K R E P U B L I C 700 ss o impro ac a ilitie ies d 4 an 09. the t vation of 35,000 hecta s of irrigated land and the rehabilitation of seven major irrigation schemes between 20 and 2009. | In S O U T H A F R I C A , reform to budgeting and financial managemen system ltiva ectare d th reh rri n 2004 forms eform udgetin nd finan ement system rough the construction or rehabilitation of school facilities in underserved area in 2007. | In S T. V I N C E N T and the G R E N A D I N E S , the ext o h choo re reas g s d the purchase of emergency an e extensive training of staff and the pur gency ood-insecure households benefited from wheat seed and fertilizer distributio in 2008. | In TA N Z A N I A , 88 percent of trunk and regional roa s are now in good condition compared wit 51 percent in 200 | I o e m hea s ution ut ent nal g na road d condition, ared with 2000. 2 con e or reco co cyclon | In T U R K E Y , 4. million households received electric through improvements to the tra smission capaci and efficiency over the la 42 community halls were repaired or reconstructed following the cyclo lon one. I 4.6 io o lio useh useho h cei d ectric ce ed electricity c i m s t h ran m ssi c i city over the hem submitted final accounts on time to the Uganda Office of th Auditor Gener l. | In U K R A I N E , measures to stabilize the banking sector aft the crisis resulted in 6 millio depositors regaining access t the he submitted ounts l accoun on m t ndan ffice of the Audit Gener era s res asure to tabil after the lte n illion deposi access to UAY 0 nd between 2009 and 2010. | In U R U G UA , 1,000 schools had acc to the Internet by 2008, co d betw e ccess a acc cc ternet y 2008, compared with none in 2001. | In U Z B E K I S TA N , 86 percent of wo en re he Inter 200 with a 2008, compare t o women received antenatal care in 2008, co goods in 2008 and 2009 | In W E S T B A N K and G A Z A , some 85 unco trolled dumpsites in Jenin and Tubas were closed and rehabilitated, freeing up 1,200 du ums o land for development and increasing th o 09. an uncon cont n ,20 dunums of n nd nal cash transfer schemes introduced in 20 and 2009. | In Z A M B I A , 1.2 million people in nin towns across the country were provided access to improved water an sanitation facilities between 199 and 200 ransfe chemes introduced 200 l cash transfer sche troduc 2008 nine pro d water and een 1996 ThE BOArD Of ExECUTIvE DIrECTOrs d The Executive Directors are responsible for the conduct of the Bank’s Security, which examines the Bank’s responses to food price increases and general operations. They perform their duties under powers delegated by climate change risks. the Board of Governors. As provided in the Articles of Agreement, 5 of Executive Directors also discussed progress on the Millennium Develop- the 25 Executive Directors are appointed by single countries having the ment Goals (set forth in the 2011 Global Monitoring Report) and governance , largest number of shares. The rest are elected by the other member coun- reform efforts (described in the “World Bank Group Modernization� paper tries, which form constituencies in an election process conducted every and the “Strengthening Governance and Accountability: Shareholder two years. The resident Board of Executive Directors represents the evolv- Stewardship and Oversight� report). The Board approved a proposal for an ing perspectives of member countries on the global role of the Bank as open, merit-based, and transparent process of selecting the World Bank well as clients’ experiences with the Bank’s operations on the ground. Group President, as well as a proposal on a dual process for evaluating the The Board considers and decides on IBRD loan and guarantee propos- performance of the World Bank President and the Board. The Board also , als and IDA credit, grant, and guarantee proposals made by the President. gave its attention to the ongoing ministerial-level dialogue on climate Executive Directors fulfill an important role in guiding the general opera- change initiated during the Spring Development Committee Meetings tions of the Bank and its strategic direction. They are also responsible for and began to evaluate a new energy strategy for the World Bank Group. presenting to the Board of Governors an audit of accounts; an administra- As part of its voice and governance reform efforts, the Board continued tive budget; The World Bank Annual Report on the fiscal year results, opera- pursuing several initiatives. The third African Executive Director, represent- tions, and policies of the Bank; and any other matters that, in their judg- ing Angola, Nigeria, and South Africa, officially joined the Board in ment, require submission. The Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) reports November 2010. The voting power of developing countries and transition d directly to the Board of Executive Directors, providing independent advice economies increased to 47.19 percent as part of a Phase II of reforms. on the relevance, sustainability, efficiency, and effectiveness of operations. Executive Directors discussed proposals on a prototype corporate score- The Board also monitors the compliance of projects with operational poli- card, on greater delegated authority, and on the role of oversight units cies and procedures through the independent Inspection Panel, which within the World Bank. reports to the Board. (See http://ieg.worldbankgroup.org and http:// The 2010 Annual Meetings saw changes that made the meetings more worldbank.org/inspection panel.) efficient. They included a shorter, more focused plenary session and an o Executive Directors serve on one or more standing committees: online Open Forum, which strengthened communication between the the Audit Committee, Budget Committee, Committee on Development World Bank and civil society, academia, the private sector, and the general Effectiveness, Ethics Committee, Committee on Governance and Adminis- public. In addition, Board of Governor statements were made available t trative Matters, and Human Resources Committee. With the committees’ online for viewing by the public. These changes were in keeping with the help, the Board discharges its oversight responsibilities through in-depth Access to Information Policy that came into effect at the beginning of fiscal examinations of policies and practices. The Executive Directors’ Steering 2011. Committee, an informal advisory body, also meets regularly. The Board also supported preparations for the 16th replenishment Directors periodically visit member countries to review Bank assistance of IDA, which resulted in donor pledges of $49.3 billion—an increase of in progress. They meet a wide range of people, including resident mission 18 percent over the last IDA replenishment of three years ago. New and Bank staff, project managers, beneficiaries, and government officials, as emerging donors played an important role in the 16th replenishment. well as representatives of nongovernmental organizations, the business As part of the replenishment, Executive Directors approved a special d community, other development partners, and financial institutions. In allocation for Haiti and established a dedicated Crisis Response Window to April and May of 2011, Directors visited Brazil and El Salvador. help client countries respond rapidly to emergencies. They also affirmed their commitment to achieving the MDGs by 2015, especially in lagging t Board Achievements of 2011 regions and fragile states and for vulnerable and excluded populations. r Executive Directors continued to play an important role as the World The Board approved more than $42 billion in financial assistance in Bank faced many challenges in a global postcrisis economy. The Board con- fiscal 2011, comprising about $26 billion in IBRD lending and $16 billion in e sidered a number of key documents in preparation for the Committee on IDA support. Executive Directors also reviewed 39 country assistance Development Effectiveness meetings. These included the World Develop- strategy products, 28 of which were prepared jointly with the IFC. The 0 ment Report 2011, which focuses on conflict, security, and development, Board approved an administrative budget for the World Bank of $1.8 billion and Responding to Global Food Price Volatility and Its Impact on Food for fiscal 2012. (See http://worldbank.org/boards.) From left to right: (standing) Susanna Moorehead, Konstantin Huber, Piero Cipollone, Felix Alberto Camarasa, Abdulrahman Almofadhi, Merza Hasan, Shaolin Yang, Pulok Chatterji, Jorg Frieden, Ian Solomon, James Hagan, Dyg Sadiah Bohan, Nobumitsu Hayashi, Ruud Treffers, Ingrid Hoven, Rogerio Studart, Ambroise Fayolle; (seated) Eugene Miagkov, Anna Brandt, Hassan Ahmed Taha, Agapito Mendes Dias, Marie-Lucie Morin, Javed Talat, Marta Garcia, Renosi Mokate Photo: Frank Vincent MESSAGE FROM THE PRESIDENT OF THE WORLD BANK GROUP AND CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF EXECUTIVE DIRECTORS The challenges we face today offer risks and opportunities: historic changes about $50 billion in total climate �- in the Middle East and North Africa; high and volatile food and fuel prices; nance. The Bank Group has also in- rising inflation in emerging markets with some danger of overheating; the creased �nancing of ecosystem and ravages caused by natural disasters—as well as better prospects for inclu- biodiversity services. At the Nagoya sive, sustainable development, leading to the creation of multiple poles of Biodiversity Summit in September, we global growth; rising private and public investment in infrastructure, creat- launched an innovation to “green� na- ing jobs today and higher productivity tomorrow; the recoveries of fragile tional accounts by putting the value states, often coming out of conflict; and the bene�ts of greater transpar- of natural resources into how a coun- ency and openness. try measures its economy. As The World Bank Annual Report 2011 portrays, helping developing Our most recent World Develop- countries meet these challenges, manage the risks, and seize the opportu- ment Report (2011) is helping to focus nities has been central to our work over the past year. Our support goes further attention on efforts to promote beyond �nancial support and development advice. Increasingly, the Bank stability, and then growth and oppor- Group is linking developing countries so they can share knowledge gained tunity, in those fragile, often postcon- from their experiences. flict states that are home to the world’s This year, we have been urging the world to “put food �rst.� Higher poorest. Our research proposes strengthening national institutions and food prices have pushed 44 million more people into extreme poverty. improving governance through a focus on citizen security, justice, and To help alleviate soaring food prices and increase agricultural produc- jobs. We are now concentrating on how to adapt our operations to meet tivity, the Bank Group has boosted its spending on agriculture to about these needs, including increasing staffing and opening a practice hub in $6 billion–$8 billion a year, from $4.1 billion in 2008. The Global Food Crisis Nairobi. Response Program is helping some 40 million people in 44 countries The Bank Group has been focused on events in the Middle East and through $1.5 billion in support. We are strong supporters of the Consulta- North Africa this year, where we have seen the impact and challenges tive Group on International Agricultural Research (CGIAR), and serve as posed by citizens demanding change. The region’s people deserve a new Trustee for its new Fund. The Bank Group is also playing a leading advocacy social contract that gives them a bigger say in their future, justice, and jobs. role on food security, urging the Group of 20 (G-20) for global action. Our rapid response draws on learning, experience, and flexibility—while We continue to support the poor and vulnerable through efficient and recognizing the long-term challenges. Thus we are emphasizing short- effective safety nets and conditional cash transfer systems (CCTs). Our pro- term job creation connected to long-term job investment; boosting trade grams support over three dozen countries by strengthening CCTs and shar- to strengthen investment; and targeted safety nets to ensure the most ing knowledge around the globe of how to make these systems effective. vulnerable are not forgotten. To help the Arab Republic of Egypt and We are working across multiple sectors—health, nutrition, education, and Tunisia, the Bank Group announced up to $6 billion in new support over social protection—with a renewed focus on systems, access, and results. the next two years. Africa is back on a path of strong growth—above its precrisis growth As a Group, we continue to focus on infrastructure—our largest invest- rate. For the third successive year the Bank has been able to provide a re- ment sector—as well as efforts to connect investment to private sector cord level of support ($7 billion) to the region. The Bank also released its �nancing, which include supporting public private partnerships. This year, new Africa Strategy this year, crafted through extensive research and con- together with the Government of Singapore, we launched the Infrastruc- sultations, especially with the people in Africa. The strategy marks a shift in ture Finance Center of Excellence. The center combines global knowledge the way we approach the region, with a new focus on partnership, knowl- from developed and developing economies with the Bank Group’s opera- edge, and �nance. tional and technical expertise to provide customized services to govern- The G-20 had tasked the Bank Group to work with others on analyzing ments as they develop mechanisms to �nance infrastructure, including how best to mobilize sources of climate change �nancing. We are now with more private capital. helping 130 countries on adaptation and mitigation. We have raised about The Bank’s cooperation with IFC and MIGA is a key part of our overall $6.4 billion for our Climate Investment Funds, and they have catalyzed development work because the private sector can be a driver of change, growth, and opportunity in developing countries. We support private sec- During �scal 2011 the Bank Group committed $57.3 billion in loans, tor investment across the agricultural value chain, in telecom development, grants, equity investments, and guarantees to its members and to private and to broaden �nancial inclusion; and we are connecting the private sec- businesses. IBRD commitments totaled $26.7 billion compared with $44.2 tor to investments in health services, infrastructure, education, and train- billion in 2010, but still above precrisis levels. IDA, the Bank’s fund for the ing—all of which are making important contributions to job creation. poorest countries, made commitments of $16.3 billion, a 12 percent in- We see rapidly expanding South–South exchanges of �nancial re- crease over last year. Support from IFC increased by 3 percent to $12.2 bil- sources, development experience, and trade and investment opportuni- lion, and MIGA issued $2.1 billion in guarantees, a 43 percent increase over ties. The Bank Group is learning from these exchanges, and increasing our �scal 2010. efforts to expand new knowledge, �nancial innovation, and fresh ap- In addition, this year a broadened coalition of 51 donors pledged a proaches to all poor countries. Our strong Treasury team is keeping fund- record-breaking IDA16 replenishment of $49.3 billion for the next three ing costs low, and passing on the bene�ts to clients. �scal years—an increase of 18 percent over IDA15. Moreover, our share- Moreover, we have thrown open the doors to our knowledge. The Bank holders approved the �rst general capital increase for the Bank Group in Group’s groundbreaking Access to Information Policy has set a new stan- more than 20 years, along with a selective capital increase, boosting our dard for transparency among international institutions, and our Open Data capital by more than $86 billion. Initiative gives access, free of charge, to more than 7,000 data sets. This year None of the work we do would be possible without the dedication of the Bank Group scored the highest ratings on aid transparency among 30 the World Bank Group’s staff in Washington and in our country offices, with leading multilateral and bilateral aid agencies. whose commitment we are transforming into a more dynamic, flexible, We continue to integrate our governance and anticorruption agenda open, and innovative institution. Thank you. I am also grateful to our Board into all of the Bank Group’s work across countries, sectors, and projects. We of Executive Directors, the Governors, and our many contributors and part- have also strengthened our enforcement over the past year, with major ners for their ongoing support and counsel. debarments to hold �rms accountable for wrongdoing, and new coopera- tion agreements with international agencies to help counter corruption and ensure more effective prosecutions. In addition, we are strengthening our preventive measures, helping Bank staff identify “red flags� in procure- ment and better manage integrity risks in development projects. The World Bank Group continues to operate under a real flat budget, for the seventh consecutive year, even as we are dealing with larger vol- umes of business. We are using each available dollar to support poor and developing countries. Robert B. Zoellick THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 CONTENTS CDROM CONTENTS The Board of Executive Directors Financial Statements Message from the President of the World Bank Group and Chairman of the Board of Executive Directors New Operations Approved The Role of IBRD 2 Lending Data The Role of IDA 2 Income by Region World Bank Lending by Theme and Sector, Fiscal 2006–11 4 Organizational Information Operational Summary, Fiscal 2011 5 World Bank Lending 2011 (PowerPoint presentation) Chapter 1 Postcrisis Directions 6 Chapter 2 The Regions 14 Africa 14 East Asia and Paci�c 16 Europe and Central Asia 18 Latin America and the Caribbean 20 Middle East and North Africa 22 South Asia 24 Chapter 3 The World Bank 26 World Map World Bank Regions, Country Offices, and Borrower Eligibility See The World Bank at Work: Results from the Field, a special insert in the center of this report. This Annual Report, which covers the period from July 1, 2010, to June 30, 2011, has been prepared by the Executive Directors of both the International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) and the International Development Association (IDA)—collectively known as the World Bank—in accordance with the respective bylaws of the two institutions. Robert B. Zoellick, President of IBRD and IDA, and Chairman of the Board of Executive Directors, has submitted this report, together with the accompanying administrative budgets and audited �nancial statements, to the Board of Governors. Annual reports for the International Finance Corporation (IFC), the Multilateral Investment Guarantee Agency (MIGA), and the International Centre for Settlement of Investment Disputes (ICSID) are published separately. All dollar amounts used in this Annual Report are current U.S. dollars unless otherwise speci�ed. As a result of rounding, numbers in tables may not add to totals and percentages in �gures may not add to 100. Throughout this report, the terms “World Bank� and “Bank� refer to IBRD and IDA. “World Bank Group� refers collectively to IBRD, IDA, IFC, MIGA, and ICSID. 1 THE ROLE OF IBRD 6.8 billion to manage the risks of its balance sheet. In addition, Treasury The International Bank for Reconstruction and Development (IBRD) is a executed USDeq 2.5 billion in swaps on behalf of the International Finance global development cooperative owned by 187 countries. It works with its Facility for Immunisation and USDeq 7.2 billion in swaps for IDA. members to achieve equitable and sustainable economic growth in their national economies and to �nd solutions to pressing regional and global IBRD Resources problems in economic development and in other important areas such as IBRD obtains most of its funds by issuing bonds in international capital environmental sustainability. It pursues its overriding goal—to overcome markets. In �scal 2011 it raised USDeq 29 billion by issuing bonds in 26 poverty and improve standards of living—primarily by providing loans, currencies. Because of its standing in the capital markets and its �nancial risk management products, and expertise on development-related disci- strength, IBRD was able to borrow these large volumes on very favorable plines and by coordinating responses to regional and global challenges. terms despite volatile market conditions. The Bank’s strength is based on (See http://www.worldbank.org/ibrd.) IBRD’s prudent �nancial policies and practices, which help maintain its triple-A credit rating. As a cooperative institution, IBRD seeks not to maxi- IBRD Financial Commitments and Services mize pro�t but to earn enough income to ensure its �nancial strength and New lending commitments by IBRD reached $26.7 billion, including 132 sustain its development activities. IBRD’s allocable net income rose to operations, in �scal 2011—signi�cantly more than the historical average $996 million in �scal 2011, up from $764 million in �scal 2010. ($13.5 billion in �scal 2005–08). This follows the record $44.2 billion in �scal Consistent with IBRD’s development mandate, the principal risk it takes 2010 when the crisis peaked. Latin America and the Caribbean received is the country credit risk inherent in its portfolio of loans and guarantees. the largest share of IBRD’s new lending ($9.2 billion), followed by East Asia One summary measure of the Bank’s risk pro�le is the ratio of equity to and Paci�c ($6.4 billion), and Europe and Central Asia ($5.5 billion). Among loans and long-term investment assets, which is closely managed in line sectors, Public Administration, Law, and Justice received the highest share with the Bank’s �nancial and risk outlook. This ratio stood at 28.7 percent as of commitments (22 percent), followed by Transportation (19 percent), of June 30, 2011. To enhance IBRD’s �nancial capacity, the Development Energy and Mining (17 percent), and Health and Other Social Services (17 Committee endorsed a package of measures, including an $86.2 billion percent). The themes receiving the largest commitments were Financial general and selective capital increase, with $5.1 billion in paid-in capital, and Private Sector Development ($5.6 billion), Environment and Natural and the Board of Governors approved the capital increase resolutions in Resources Management ($5 billion), and Social Protection and Risk Man- March 2011. agement ($3.9 billion). IBRD also offers �nancial products that allow clients to efficiently fund THE ROLE OF IDA their development programs and manage risks related to currency, inter- The International Development Association (IDA), the World Bank’s fund est rates, commodity prices, and natural disasters. In �scal 2011 the Bank’s for the poorest countries, is the largest multilateral channel of concessional Treasury executed U.S. dollar equivalent (USDeq) 5.6 billion in hedging �nancing to the world. Its funding supports countries’ efforts to boost eco- transactions on behalf of member countries, including USDeq 5.5 billion in nomic growth, reduce poverty, and improve the living conditions of the interest rate hedges and USDeq 60 million in currency hedges (all local poor. This �scal year 79 countries were eligible to receive IDA assistance. currency conversions). It also executed swap transactions totaling USDeq (See http://www.worldbank.org/ida.) FIGURE 1 FIGURE 2 IBRD RATIO OF EQUITY TO LOANS IDA REPLENISHMENTS AND LONG-TERM INVESTMENT ASSETS | AS OF JUNE 30, 2011 BILLIONS OF DOLLARS PERCENT 26.4 40 37.6 25.2 35.0 34.3 29.4 28.7 17.9 14.6 12.7 6.3 6.3 5.3 3.9 3.0 1.6 n.a. IDA14 FY06–08 IDA15 FY09–11 IDA16 FY12–14 IDA internal resourcesa Donor compensation for MDRI debt forgiveness IBRD and IFC transfers Donor contributionsb 0 FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 Note: n.a. = not applicable. Data reflects �nal replenishment reports and exchange rates used during the replenishment discussions. a. IDA internal resources include principal repayments, charges, and investment income. b. Net of structural �nancing gap. 2 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 IDA Financial Commitments FIGURE 3 IDA commitments reached $16.3 billion in �scal 2011, including $13.45 TOTAL IBRD-IDA LENDING BY REGION | FISCAL 2011 billion in credits and $2.82 billion in grants. The largest share of resources SHARE OF TOTAL LENDING OF $43.0 BILLION was committed to Africa, which received $7.0 billion. South Asia ($6.4 bil- South Asia 24% 16% Africa lion) and East Asia and Paci�c ($1.6 billion) also received large shares of committed funding. Bangladesh ($2.1 billion) and India ($2.1 billion) were the largest country recipients. Commitments for infrastructure rose to $6.9 billion, a 28 percent in- Middle East and 19% East Asia and Paci�c crease over �scal 2010. Signi�cant support was also committed to the North Africa 5% Public Administration, Law, and Justice sector ($3.7 billion) and to Health and Other Social Services ($2.2 billion). The themes receiving the largest commitments were Rural Development ($3.0 billion), Financial and Private Sector Development ($2.4 billion), and Urban Development ($2.0 billion). Latin America and the Caribbean 22% 14% Europe and Central Asia IDA Resources IDA is �nanced largely by contributions from donor governments. Addi- tional �nancing comes from transfers from IBRD’s net income, grants from IFC, and borrowers’ repayment of earlier IDA credits. Every three years do- FIGURE 4 nor governments and representatives of borrower countries meet to dis- TOTAL IBRD-IDA LENDING BY THEME | FISCAL 2011 cuss IDA’s policies and priorities and to agree on the volume of new re- SHARE OF TOTAL LENDING OF $43.0 BILLION sources required to fund its lending program over the subsequent three Urban Development 10% 2% Economic Management �scal years. Under the 15th Replenishment (IDA15), which covered �scal 2009–11, total resources were $43.7 billion, including new donor contri- Environment and Natural butions of $25.7 billion and donor Multilateral Debt Relief Initiative com- 14% Resource Management Trade and Integration 6% pensation of $4.9 billion. Discussions for the IDA16 replenishment concluded in December Social Protection and Financial and 2010, resulting in a record-level envelope of 32.8 billion special drawing Risk Management 13% Private Sector rights (SDR) (equivalent to $49.3 billion using the IDA16 replenishment 19% Development Social Development, exchange rate). Funding sources for IDA16, which covers �scal 2012–14, Gender, and Inclusion 2% include donor resources of SDR 17.6 billion ($26.4 billion) from 52 coun- tries, including 7 new donors; donor compensation for debt forgiveness Rural Development 13% 10% Human Development of SDR 3.5 billion ($5.3 billion); credit reflows of SDR 9.7 billion ($14.6 bil- 11% Rule of Law < 1% Public Sector Governance lion), including funds from accelerated credit repayments and hardening of credit terms; and transfers from within the World Bank Group, including associated investment income, of SDR 2.0 billion ($3.0 billion). The overarching theme and main focus of IDA16 is the achievement, FIGURE 5 enhanced monitoring, and communication of development results, with TOTAL IBRD-IDA LENDING BY SECTOR | FISCAL 2011 stronger emphasis on the measurement of results. Special themes include SHARE OF TOTAL LENDING OF $43.0 BILLION crisis response, gender issues, climate change, and fragile and conflict- Water, Sanitation, and Agriculture, Fishing, affected countries. IDA16 includes funding for a dedicated crisis response Flood Protection 11% 5% and Forestry window to help low-income countries deal with the impact of natural 4% Education disasters and severe economic shocks. The new replenishment will also help recipient countries adapt to the negative impacts of climate change 14% Energy and Mining and strengthen the Bank’s engagement in postconflict states. Transportation 20% 2% Finance Health and Other 16% Social Services 5% Industry and Trade Public Administration, Law, and Justice 22% 1% Information and Communications THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 3 TABLE 1 WORLD BANK LENDING BY THEME AND SECTOR | FISCAL 2006–11 MILLIONS OF DOLLARS THEME FY06 FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 Economic management 214 248 397 2,305 3,950 655 Environment and natural resource management 1,387 2,017 2,662 5,085 4,337 6,102 Financial and private sector development 6,138 4,261 6,156 9,695 17,726 7,981 Human development 2,600 4,089 2,281 6,379 8,421 4,228 Public sector governance 3,821 3,390 4,347 6,108 5,750 4,518 Rule of law 758 424 304 16 207 169 Rural development 2,216 3,176 2,277 4,299 5,004 5,636 Social development, gender, and inclusion 1,094 1,250 1,003 813 952 908 Social protection and risk management 1,892 1,648 882 5,296 5,006 5,691 Trade and integration 1,611 1,570 1,393 3,444 1,818 2,604 Urban development 1,911 2,623 3,001 3,467 5,575 4,514 THEME TOTAL 23,641 24,696 24,702 46,906 58,747 43,006 SECTOR FY06 FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 Agriculture, �shing, and forestry 1,752 1,717 1,361 3,400 2,618 2,128 Education 1,991 2,022 1,927 3,445 4,945 1,733 Energy and mining 3,030 1,784 4,180 6,267 9,925 5,807 Finance 2,320 1,614 1,541 4,236 9,137 897 Health and other social services 2,132 2,752 1,608 6,305 6,792 6,707 Industry and trade 1,542 1,181 1,544 2,806 1,251 2,167 Information and communications 81 149 57 329 146 640 Public Administration, law, and justice 5,858 5,468 5,296 9,492 10,828 9,673 Transportation 3,215 4,949 4,830 6,261 9,002 8,638 Water, sanitation, and flood protection 1,721 3,059 2,360 4,365 4,103 4,617 SECTOR TOTAL 23,641 24,696 24,702 46,906 58,747 43,006 Of which IBRD 14,135 12,829 13,468 32,911 44,197 26,737 Of which IDA 9,506 11,867 11,235 13,995 14,550 16,269 Note: Effective �scal 2005, lending includes guarantees and guarantee facilities. Numbers may not add to totals because of rounding. Fiscal 2009 IDA lending excludes HIPC grants totaling $45.5 million. 4 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 TABLE 2 OPERATIONAL SUMMARY | FISCAL 2011 MILLIONS OF DOLLARS IBRD FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 Commitments 12,829 13,468 32,911 44,197 26,737 Of which development policy lending 3,635 3,967 15,532 20,588 9,524 Gross disbursements 11,055 10,490 18,565 28,855 21,879 Of which development policy lending 4,096 3,485 9,138 17,425 10,582 Principal repayments (including prepayments) 17,231 12,610 10,217 11,624 13,885 Net disbursements (6,176) (2,120) 8,347 17,231 7,994 Loans outstanding 97,805 99,050 105,698 120,103 132,459 Undisbursed loans 35,440 38,176 51,125 63,574 64,435 Operating incomea 1,659 2,271 572 800 1,023 Usable capital and reserves 33,754 36,888 36,328 36,106 38,689 Equity-to-loans ratio 35% 38% 34% 29% 29% a. Reported in IBRD’s �nancial statements as “Income before fair value adjustment on non-trading portfolios, net and Board of Governors-approved transfers.� IDA FY07 FY08 FY09 FY10 FY11 a Commitments 11,867 11,235 14,041 14,550 16,269 Of which development policy lending 2,645 2,672 2,820 2,370 2,032 Gross disbursements 8,579 9,160 9,219 11,460 10,282 Of which development policy lending 2,399 2,813 1,872 3,228 1,944 Principal repayments (including prepayments) 1,753 2,182 2,209 2,349 2,501 Net disbursements 6,826 6,978 7,010 9,111 7,781 Credits outstanding 102,457 113,542 112,894 113,474 125,287 Undisbursed credits 24,517 27,539 29,903 30,696 38,059 Undisbursed grants 4,642 5,522 5,652 5,837 6,830 Development grant expenses 2,195 3,151 2,575 2,583 2,793 a. Includes a HIPC grant of $45.5 million for Côte d’Ivoire. THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 5 POSTCRISIS DIRECTIONS REALTIME RESPONSE TO RENEWED CHALLENGES The impact of the worst �nancial and economic crisis since the Great Depression ebbed in 2010, as world output increased by an estimated 3.9 percent, led by strong domestic demand in developing countries. The bounce-back is projected to slow to 3.3 percent in 2011 before pick- ing up to 3.6 percent in 2012. In contrast to many high-income countries and countries in Europe and Central Asia where growth remains sluggish, most developing countries have recovered—or are in the process of recovering—to precrisis levels. Rising South-South investments, particularly investments originating in Asia, have played an important role in the rebound. The economies of Brazil, China, India, Indonesia, the Republic of Korea, and the Russian Federation are poised to account for more than half of all global growth by 2025. They will help drive growth in lower-income countries through cross-border commercial and �nancial transactions, according to a new World Bank re- port, Global Development Horizons. An Independent Evaluation Group (IEG) assessment of the World Bank’s An elderly Croatian woman shops for vegetables in a Zagreb market. High and response to the crisis showed that the principal recipients of Bank lending volatile food prices, nearing 2008 records, now represent the key development were middle-income countries. With these countries leading the global challenge for many countries. recovery, this engagement shows the part that the Bank now plays in sta- Photo: Peter Thompson bilizing world economic growth. In its evaluation IEG concluded that tak- ing a strategic approach, balancing capital adequacy, and effectively de- ploying resources have had clear bene�ts in the crisis recovery. The Bank also administers the Global Agriculture and Food Security The waning of the crisis, which affected developed countries even Program, which focuses on mid- to long-term initiatives. Created in April more than developing countries, did not usher in a new era of stability. The 2010 at the request of the Group of 20 (G-20), this program funds country- world is facing tremendous new risks and challenges, including high food led agriculture and food security plans and helps promote investments in prices; rising fuel prices, which increase the price of food and threaten so- smallholder agriculture in low-income countries. Since its launch, the pro- cial stability; political upheaval in the Middle East and North Africa; natural gram has awarded $481 million in grants to 12 countries. disasters; climate change; slowed growth in the developed world; acceler- A range of measures is also helping to sustain nutrition among vul- ating inflation in emerging markets; and sovereign debt issues in Europe. nerable groups. The Bank is working with the World Food Programme to For the poor, by far the greatest peril is high and volatile food prices. help feed 22 million children in about 60 countries, as well as coordinating efforts with United Nations agencies through the High-Level Task Force Facing Higher Food Prices on the Global Food Security Crisis and with nongovernmental organiza- New pressures on the poor in developing countries emerged as food tions (NGOs). prices rose by double digits, almost reaching the record levels of 2008. Food price increases from June to December 2010 resulted in an estimated Meeting the MDGs overall net increase in the number of poor by 44 million people in devel- Before the crisis many countries and regions had made substantial progress oping countries. Globally, the prices of wheat, maize, sugar, and food oil toward the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Globally, deaths of rose sharply, and in many developing countries, food prices are now the children under age �ve have declined in developing countries, falling from key challenge. All major agricultural outlooks forecast that at least until 101 per 1,000 live births in 1990 to 73 in 2008. Primary education enroll- 2019, international food prices will remain above the prices of the previ- ment has increased, although poor children and children in rural areas have ous decade. bene�ted less than children elsewhere. Rapid growth has occurred in East The Global Food Price Crisis Response Program, established by the Bank Asia and Paci�c, and poverty rates have been dropping in South Asia. in May 2008, provided immediate relief to countries hard hit by high food Bank support has made a signi�cant difference in results. To improve prices. Through June 2011 the program had approved $1,500.1 million; 77 education, the Bank has committed nearly $25.3 billion, including more percent had been disbursed. Total Bank-funded, Board-approved projects than $13.3 billion for IDA countries, since 2000. IDA support for education under the program amounted to more than $1.2 billion, including $202.4 was $1.1 billion in new commitments in �scal 2011. million from the Food Price Crisis Response Trust Fund (for 27 countries, 17 World Development Indicators 2010 found that the target to reduce by of them in Africa); $835.8 million from IDA (for 13 countries); and $200 mil- half the number of people living in extreme poverty is within reach, thanks lion from IBRD (for a project in the Philippines). The program was recently in part to rapid economic growth in Asia. However, at the country level, extended for one more year, until June 2012, to allow for a swift response only 49 of 87 countries are on track to achieve the poverty target. High, to calls for assistance from countries heavily impacted by the rising food unstable food prices are hampering progress toward the MDGs, primarily prices. those related to health but also those MDGs that food prices affect indi- 6 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 rectly, such as education. High food prices are increasing hunger and mal- for young people. This work has involved piloting job-creating programs, nutrition, leaving millions of children too weak to attend school. collecting data, and developing new instruments, such as a tool for mea- suring youth participation in the labor market and community life. Improving Risk Management and Disaster Recovery Response Under the umbrella of its Arab World Initiative, the Bank is also working Exchange rates, interest rates, and commodity prices have been volatile in with the League of Arab States to jump-start youth programs, including recent years, and natural disasters have had particularly severe effects on voluntary service, in the region. A proposed grant would help the league growing urban areas (see below). In addition to supporting safety net pro- and several countries implement the programs. grams, the Bank is providing client countries with risk management strate- In October 2010, 18 Arab states signed the Doha Declaration on gies and �nancial products that help reduce their vulnerabilities. Education Quality, committing them to implement a system for evaluating This �scal year the Bank provided 40 countries with �nancial prod- schools, teachers, and students and to make results publicly available. ucts and advisory services on public debt management. The volume of Countries are also seeking ways to bring disaffected youth back into the risk management transactions the Bank executed on behalf of client educational system and to increase their involvement in communities and countries to manage the volatility of currencies and interest rates was society. Morocco’s National Human Development Initiative, for instance, USDeq 5.6 billion. provides funding to programs that shelter orphans, street children, and other vulnerable populations. The Bank is backing many of these national Addressing Youth Unemployment efforts with �nancing, policy advice, and analytical work. Youth unemployment is a serious problem in many developing regions. It is The problem of unemployment is not limited to the Middle East and most severe in the Middle East and North Africa, where more than 40 per- North Africa or to the young. The base unemployment rate is high in cent of young people in some countries are jobless. Young urban men are many African countries, and youth in Africa are three times more likely to at a particular disadvantage in the labor market, with many underemployed, be unemployed than adults age 25 and older. In Indonesia more than 20 employed in off-the-books informal work, or not employed at all. Youth percent of workers ages 15–24 are unemployed—�ve times the rate for unemployment not only increases poverty, it also leads to political turmoil older workers. and causes undesirable social consequences, such as low marriage rates. The long-standing problem of youth unemployment has been exacer- EDUCATION, HEALTH, AND SOCIAL PROTECTION AND LABOR bated by the region’s recent revolutions. In the face of continuing challenges, including high food prices and unem- The Bank is conducting research in the Arab Republic of Egypt, Jordan, ployment, in �scal 2011 the Human Development Network assisted client and Morocco on the main trends in employment and social outcomes countries and their development partners to help them work toward the REDUCING THE HUMAN AND PHYSICAL COSTS OF NATURAL DISASTERS Storms, floods, earthquakes, and droughts perts in 17 sectors in the various institutions Immediately after the March 2011 earth- caused more than 3.3 million deaths and $2.3 involved in the damage and needs assessment, quake and tsunami in Japan that killed more trillion (in 2008 dollars) in damage between 1970 the Bank established a web-based virtual data than 15,000 people, the Bank expressed its and 2008—and projections indicate that the hu- center. Created through Lotus Quickr, the readiness to provide support, noting its exten- man and material costs will rise signi�cantly. “Teamroom� can be accessed not only by Bank sive experience in disaster risk management and Even without climate change, damage from staff but also by people outside the Bank who ability to mobilize and deploy specialists to sup- weather-related hazards may triple to $185 bil- register through the Bank’s administrator. By port recovery and reconstruction efforts. It also lion a year by 2100, according to Natural Hazards, maintaining communication with data teams in monitored the potential economic impacts. UnNatural Disasters: The Economics of Effective the �eld, coordinating across sector teams, en- The �nancial protection of the state in the Prevention, a World Bank–United Nations report suring the quality and consistency of the data by event of natural disasters is gaining increasing released this �scal year. Factoring in losses from developing a comprehensive data-posting pro- attention among developing countries, the do- climate change could add another $28 billion– tocol, and keeping stakeholders apprised of all nor community, and international �nancial in- $68 billion from tropical cyclones alone. These data uploaded, the Bank played a critical role in stitutions. This �scal year clients continued to projections mean that prevention is more impor- identifying what needed to be done following take advantage of the Bank’s disaster risk �nanc- tant than ever, a �nding echoed by IEG in several the disaster. ing services. Colombia responded quickly to real-time evaluations it made public following Following the January 2011 mudslides in the emergency needs with the help of funds avail- the floods in Pakistan in July and August 2010. state of Rio de Janeiro that killed more than able through a Catastrophe Deferred Draw- The Bank is actively helping client countries 800 people and left thousands more without down Option (Cat DDO) after the country’s prevent, mitigate, and recover from natural di- homes, the Bank approved a $485 million hous- worst rainy season in decades caused massive sasters. After flooding devastated Pakistan, the ing project to bene�t 2 million people who lived floods and landslides. Two other countries (El national government requested the assistance in informal low-income settlements there. The Salvador and Peru) also signed Cat DDOs this of the World Bank, the Asian Development Bank, project will also help the government better �scal year. and other donors in assessing the damage. To manage disaster risks and improve planning and facilitate access to and disseminate data to ex- territorial growth management. POSTCRISIS DIRECTIONS 7 transformational human and economic promises of the MDGs within the next four years. Education As one of the largest external funders of education in the developing world, the Bank is a key player in global efforts to reach the education MDGs— universal primary completion and gender parity—and to achieve quality learning for all. The Bank invested more than $1.7 billion in education this �scal year and currently manages a portfolio of $11.2 billion. At the UN Summit on the MDGs in September 2010, the Bank pledged to increase its IDA resources for basic education by $750 million over the following �ve years to assist countries not on track to reach the goals by 2015, particularly in Africa and South Asia. (See http://worldbank.org/education.) Thanks in part to Bank support, three-quarters of the countries in East Asia and Paci�c, Europe and Central Asia, and Latin America and the Caribbean have met or are on track to meet the education MDGs. During At a village school in rural Mali, students gather to immerse themselves in their studies. the past decade the total number of out-of-school children worldwide declined from 106 million to 69 million, and net primary enrollment in Photo: Ray Witlin Africa rose from 58 percent to 76 percent. Since 2000 IDA �nancing for the world’s poorest has helped recruit or train 3 million additional teachers and build more than 2 million new classrooms—bene�ting more than 100 IDA commitments during the past decade have provided more than million children every year. 47 million people with access to the basic package of health, nutrition, In April 2011 the Bank launched its Education Strategy 2020, Learning and population services; helped deliver antiretroviral therapies to almost for All: Investing in People’s Knowledge and Skills to Promote Development, 2 million adults and children with HIV; provided 2.5 million pregnant a road map for the next 10 years that emphasizes the need to invest early, women with antenatal care; immunized 310 million children; provided 98 invest smartly, and invest for all. The Bank will focus on working in strategic million children with targeted interventions to improve nutrition; pur- partnerships to help developing countries strengthen education systems chased or distributed 813 million condoms and almost 33 million mos- beyond inputs and to build a global knowledge base for reform. New tools quito nets; constructed, renovated, or equipped 23,000 health facilities; for assessing education systems will benchmark education policies ac- and trained 1.8 million health personnel. cording to evidence-based global standards and best practice, from early The Bank has positioned itself as a global leader in several priority childhood development to higher education and beyond. areas. Through its Reproductive Health Action Plan for 2010–15, it is work- Collaboration with a host of development partners, including the ing with 57 high-priority countries to improve reproductive health by strengthening health systems and demand, focusing on youth and the Education for All–Fast Track Initiative, United Nations Education, Scienti�c, poor. The Bank is a key player in implementing the Scaling-Up Nutrition and Cultural Organization (UNESCO), and United Nations Children’s Fund Framework, which it developed with the support of the Bill & Melinda (UNICEF), advances the global commitment to achieve the goals of Gates Foundation and the government of Japan, and which has been en- the Education for All Initiative and the education MDGs. The Bank also dorsed by more than 100 partner agencies, institutions, and civil society partners with the U.K. Department for International Development (DFID) groups. More than a dozen countries have declared themselves “early to strengthen the evidence base for what works in education policy, and risers� in their commitment to implementing the framework. through the Russia Education Aid for Development (READ) trust fund, to The World Bank’s multidonor Health Results Innovations Trust Fund build capacity for learning assessment. (HRITF) supports Results-Based Financing (RBF) approaches in the health sector for achievement of the health-related MDGs. The governments Health, Nutrition, and Population of Norway and the United Kingdom have committed $575 million to New investments in health, nutrition, and population programs totaled the HRITF through 2022. The fund supports the design, implementation, almost $3 billion in �scal 2011. The portfolio is at a historic high of $10.8 monitoring, and evaluation of RBF approaches; develops and disseminates billion, more than half of which goes to the world’s poorest countries. evidence for implementing successful approaches; builds country institu- Investments in these programs help strengthen health systems; boost the tional capacity to scale up and sustain these approaches within the na- prevention and treatment of communicable diseases; improve child and tional health strategy and system; and attracts additional �nancing to the maternal health, nutrition, hygiene, and sanitation; and protect the poor health sector. (See http://worldbank.org/hnp.) from the impoverishing effects of high and unpredictable out-of-pocket Since 2006 the Bank has assisted developing countries in preparing spending. for and controlling avian influenza outbreaks in animals and in prepar- 8 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 ing for an influenza pandemic. The $1.3 billion Global Program for Avian Influenza Control and Human Pandemic Preparedness and Response has supported the prevention of pandemic influenza and similar diseases through projects in 60 countries. (See http://worldbank.org/flu.) HIV/AIDS The Bank is actively engaged in helping countries halt and then begin to reverse the spread of HIV/AIDS by 2015. A total of $108 million of new lending has been designated for operations that support HIV/AIDS- related prevention, treatment, and mitigation in Argentina, Burkina Faso, Kenya, Kyrgyz Republic, Lesotho, Mozambique, Niger, and Swaziland. The Bank developed �ve analytical products that strengthened national pro- grams by improving efficiency, effectiveness, and sustainability through evidence-informed responses, and it worked with 40 countries to develop evidence-based national strategies and action plans. To build evidence on the impact of activities and programs, the Bank partnered with DFID to evaluate community responses to HIV/AIDS in A Colombian woman raises poultry as part of the Bank-supported producers’ alliance in La Eugenia, Valle de Cauca. She now has her own money to pay for Burkina Faso, India, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, South Africa, and Zimbabwe. extra food and school items for her two children. This work revealed the power of community efforts, which increased con- dom use in Kenya, led to higher rates of HIV testing in Senegal, and im- Photo: Charlotte Kesl proved treatment adherence in South Africa. Together with the United Nations Development Programme and the The global economic crisis and continuing volatility underscored the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, the Bank in 2011 com- need for more effective social protection and labor institutions in develop- pleted a study, “The Global HIV Epidemics among Men Who Have Sex ing countries. In response the Bank began to develop a new strategy for with Men: Epidemiology, Prevention, Access to Care, and Human Rights,� the next 10 years, from 2012 to 2022. The strategy will address four major which found that better HIV/AIDS programs for this group of men global gaps in social protection: integration across programs; coverage, could signi�cantly slow the global epidemic. The study provides the particularly for low-income countries; promoting jobs and human capital �rst comprehensive analysis of evidence that this group is at a signi�- accumulation; and knowledge about the most effective approaches for cantly higher risk for HIV infection than other groups in many low- and strengthening social protection. Global consultations with stakeholders middle-income countries; worldwide, fewer than one in ten in this group are being conducted. (See http://worldbank.org/spstrategy.) of men has access to even basic HIV/AIDS prevention, care, and treat- This �scal year a joint policy inventory was launched with the ment services. International Labour Organization (ILO), with which the Bank has a long- In the past two decades IDA has �nanced 1,500 counseling and HIV standing partnership. This initiative involves collecting and analyzing testing sites, ultimately testing nearly 7 million people. It has funded more 1,750 policies, including Core Labor Standards, implemented by 52 devel- than 65,000 civil society HIV initiatives in Africa aimed at mitigating the oping and 22 high-income countries. The analysis will document those impact of the epidemic among men and women ages 15–24. IDA has policies that were adopted or reinforced to mitigate the effects of the also educated 173 million people about HIV/AIDS and has mitigated the �nancial crisis. In addition, the Bank joined forces with the ILO, the Youth impact of AIDS for 1.8 million children and half a million adults through Employment Network, the German government, and the Inter-American 38,000 grassroots initiatives. (See http://worldbank.org/aids.) Development Bank to build a live database on youth employment programs. Social Protection and Labor The Rapid Social Response Program, created in 2009 in response to the The Bank allocated $4 billion to social protection and labor operations this food, fuel, and �nancial crises, went into its second year of operation in �scal year. Funding remained high, as in �scal 2010 and 2009, at almost December 2010. By May 2011 it had added 33 new activities to its portfolio four times the precrisis level of about $1 billion a year. The bulk of the to support crisis preparation in 33 IDA-eligible low-income countries. The spending ($3.5 billion) went to 37 social safety net projects in 31 countries. program also supports knowledge management and South-South trans- The largest recipient was Mexico, which received more than $1.2 billion in fers of knowledge necessary to operationalize effective social protection Bank funds in continuing support of the Oportunidades conditional cash systems against crises. (See http://worldbank.org/rsr.) transfer program, which bene�ts 5.8 million of the country’s most vulner- able families. The remaining lending went to improving labor markets and GENDER other social protection areas, such as pensions and disability assistance. Global progress on gender equality remains uneven. In some areas the (See http://worldbank.org/sp.) pace of improvement has been extraordinary. Globally more women than POSTCRISIS DIRECTIONS 9 the Lao People’s Democratic Republic, Liberia, Nepal, Rwanda, and South Sudan. During the year, the Adolescent Girls Initiative was also extended to Haiti and the Republic of Yemen, where operations are under preparation. The 2012 World Development Report—one of the Bank’s annual flagship reports—will focus for the �rst time on the relationship between gender equality and development. This Report, to be released in September 2011, will argue that gender equality matters for development outcomes and for development policy making. It will show how gender equality has evolved over time and across regions and countries—particularly in the past quar- ter century. WDR 2012 examines why some gender gaps, such as in educa- tion, have closed quickly, while others, such as access to economic op- portunities and societal voice, remain in most of the world, including in high-income countries. Finally, it will look at policies that can improve gender outcomes and highlight gaps in knowledge and data. (See http:// worldbank.org/wdr2012.) Children sit on top of a discarded military tank in rural Ethiopia. Even with FRAGILE AND CONFLICTAFFECTED SITUATIONS economic recovery, it can take a generation or more to return to prewar living Many of the world’s poorest and most vulnerable people live in fragile and standards. conflict-affected countries. People in these countries are more than twice as Photo: Arne Hoel likely to be undernourished and to lack clean water as people in other de- veloping countries; and they are more than three times as likely to be un- able to send their children to school. None of these countries has achieved men attend universities, and women now outlive men in every region of a single Millennium Development Goal, and only 20 percent are on track the world. At the same time, severe gender disparities remain, including to meet the 2015 targets. In an effort to strengthen their performance, the those in important economic indicators where large gaps have narrowed Bank will concentrate its poverty reduction efforts in these countries. only marginally over the past several decades. Access to physical capital, The World Development Report 2011: Conflict, Security, and Develop- including land, credit, and other �nancial services, remains starkly unequal. ment provides the analytical foundations for improving the Bank’s operat- In many countries women lack de facto equality before the law, limiting ing model in fragile and conflict-affected situations. It concludes that both their human rights and their opportunity to participate in the econ- building capable and legitimate institutions, ensuring citizen security and omy. (See http://worldbank.org/gender.) justice, and creating jobs are essential to reducing violence—and provid- Between 2007 and 2010 the World Bank Group’s Gender Equality as ing optimal support requires better coordination among external actors. Smart Economics Action Plan sought to promote women’s access to The Bank expects to build on the Report analysis in at least six ways: jobs, land rights, �nancial services, agricultural inputs, and infrastructure. • Make country assistance strategies for fragile and conflict-affected By December 2010 the plan had mobilized $70 million for 270 Bank opera- situations (FCS) more focused on fragility. The Bank will seek to identify tions in 80 countries. Monitoring now shows a signi�cant increase in the more clearly the stresses that lead to conflict; assess the capability of Bank’s attention to gender in these sectors. key national institutions to effectively deal with citizen security, jus- In 2011 the Bank launched Applying Gender Action Plan Lessons: tice, and development; and identify transition opportunities that may A Three-Year Road Map for Gender Mainstreaming (2011–13). Seeking to help break the cycles of violence and protracted fragility. replicate and scale up some of the innovative mechanisms used in the Gender Action Plan, the Road Map aims to direct more of the Bank’s tech- • Strengthen partnerships on development, security, and justice. The nical assistance, projects, and programs to improving economic opportu- Bank will work more closely with other partners, in the spirit of the nities for women. For the three-year period covered, donors agreed to Paris and Accra agendas, and particularly with international agencies make gender a special theme for IDA. This designation will help accelerate that possess expertise the Bank does not, or on areas that are outside the integration of gender into Bank operations and expand the coverage its mandate. The Bank will also partner with others to look at how to of gender issues in analytical work and policy dialogue. The IDA results �ll current gaps in the international effort and response to FCS, and framework will also be strengthened and expanded to include indicators build upon its partnerships to strengthen the links between security for gender priority areas, and IDA will implement an action plan to acceler- and development. ate progress on the gender-speci�c MDGs. • Increase attention to jobs and private sector development. The Bank will Fiscal 2011 saw the expansion of the Adolescent Girls Initiative, launched develop an approach to employment in FCS, in partnership with oth- in 2009 to promote the transition of adolescent girls from school to pro- ers, that develops a range of interventions to support jobs and liveli- ductive employment. The program launched a new operation in Jordan in hoods—both through public and community-based employment December 2010, adding to the projects already under way in Afghanistan, that can provide “quick wins� and through the necessary investments 10 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 countries. Supporting low-carbon and climate-resilient poverty reduction and development has, therefore, moved to the forefront of Bank thinking and operations. Ninety percent of new country assistance and partnership strategies emphasize climate action. Bank-funded low-carbon growth studies in Brazil, China, Colombia, India, Indonesia, Mexico, Poland, and South Africa are supporting efforts to implement national climate change action plans. The �rst Low-Carbon Development Policy Loan for Mexico ($401 million) was approved in November 2010. A development policy loan for Poland ($1.11 billion), ap- proved in June 2011, supports the energy efficiency and renewable energy components of the Energy Policy of Poland until 2030 program. The Bank is funding more than 180 country-led activities in Latin America and the Caribbean, which will provide climate change adaptation and mitigation cobene�ts estimated to be worth more than $7.3 billion. Working with Global Partners In Africa, a lone villager walks across a vast tract of scorched land. Climate In �scal 2011, in partnership with other multilateral development banks change is a threat to economic development worldwide and can cause (MDBs), the Bank ramped up operations and the implementation of widespread migration and displacement among the poor. projects under the allocated $6.5 billion Climate Investment Funds (CIF). Photo: Curt Carnemark This total consists of $4.5 billion dedicated to the Clean Technology Fund (CTF) and $2 billion to the Strategic Climate Fund (SCF). Trust Fund Committees have committed $1.7 billion to new projects that support developing country efforts to mitigate and adapt to the effects of climate and research that support private sector development and job cre- change. The CTF is leveraging its funding to achieve further investments ation over time. of $36 billion. Every $1 from the CTF leverages $8 of co�nancing from • Realign results and risk management for FCS, away from risk avoidance. other sources. The Bank will review its de�nitions of risk tolerance, risk management, With CTF support, 14 middle-income countries (Algeria, Egypt, Indo- and expected results and will examine how it can better balance �du- nesia, Jordan, Kazakhstan, Mexico, Morocco, the Philippines, South Africa, ciary and other risks in FCS against the risks of inaction or slow action, Thailand, Tunisia, Turkey, Ukraine, and Vietnam) plan to rebalance their na- which may lead to a resurgence of violence and conflict. tional energy portfolios by investing in renewables on a large scale. Under • Reduce �nancing volatility. Institutional development requires long- the SCF, the Pilot Program for Climate Resilience (PPCR) endorsed invest- term and sustained support. Going forward, the Bank will work to ment plans for Bangladesh, Cambodia, Grenada, Mozambique, Nepal, ensure that essential institutions in FCS receive sustained support Niger, St. Lucia, St. Vincent and the Grenadines, Samoa, Tajikistan, and over several years, and will explore options for maintaining minimum Zambia. Under these plans, approximately $700 million in PPCR funding is expected to be channeled through the MDBs so that work on adaptation levels of support to core institutions and basic services even in the to climate change is a more regular part of development action. context of governance or other setbacks. Also under the SCF in this �scal year, the Forest Investment Program • Strive for global excellence in FCS work. The Bank recognizes the need endorsed investment plans for Burkina Faso and the Democratic Republic for a different organizational approach—both in its internal organiza- of Congo with $90 million in grants. With support from the Scaling Up tion and in its work with regional and global partners—in fragile and Renewable Energy Program in Low Income Countries, Ethiopia, Honduras, conflict-affected situations. It has been working to put in place the Kenya, Maldives, Mali, and Nepal announced their intention to invest in processes, organizational structure, and staff skill mixes and incentives renewable energy services to expand energy access and leapfrog into to encourage innovation and informed risk taking. In an effort to bring climate-friendly development. resources closer to the �eld, it has created a Global Center for Conflict, At the UN climate change conference in Cancun in December 2010, Security, and Development. The center, in Nairobi, will conduct re- the Bank announced the creation of a Partnership for Market Readiness, search on economics and public policy matters, and provide substan- bringing developed and developing countries together to explore and tial support to country teams across all regions on issues related to pilot new market instruments to scale up mitigation efforts. By the end of security, justice, and development in crisis prevention and recovery. �scal 2011 donors had pledged $70 million to the partnership. In Cancun a decision was also made to establish a Green Climate Fund CLIMATE CHANGE to manage long-term �nance mobilized to enable developing countries to Climate change threatens to erode development gains around the address climate change. The World Bank has been invited to be its interim world—and its effect will be greatest on the poorest and most vulnerable trustee. POSTCRISIS DIRECTIONS 11 The Bank’s latest carbon initiative, the Umbrella Carbon Facility Tranche 2, reached its full capitalization of €105 million in February 2011. The funds will be used to purchase certi�ed emission reductions generated by car- bon projects in developing countries between 2013 and 2018. Mainstreaming Environmental and Natural Resource Management Activities By the end of �scal 2011 the active portfolio of World Bank projects that include environmental and natural resource management components amounted to approximately $18 billion—representing about 11 percent of the total Bank portfolio that year. The Bank is also developing new tools to account for and assess the value of the carbon footprint of projects. (See http://climatechange.worldbank.org.) DEMONSTRATING GREEN DEVELOPMENT INTERNALLY Green development is the overarching theme of the new World Bank Group environment strategy, which is under preparation. The Bank contin- ues to implement a corporate responsibility program to integrate sustain- ability considerations into its internal operations. This year two Bank- owned buildings in Washington, DC, received Leadership in Energy and Environmental Design (LEED) Gold certi�cation in recognition of the Bank’s continuous implementation of sustainability practices guided by this green building standard. The Bank’s priorities in corporate sustainability fall into �ve cate- In the northeastern state of Assam, India, paddy yields have doubled, making it gories: reducing its corporate carbon footprint, managing sustainable self-sufficient in rice production for the �rst time in decades. facilities, engaging in sustainable procurement, raising the awareness of its staff, and increasing transparency to its stakeholders. As part of its Photo: Michael Foley commitment to reduce its corporate carbon footprint and to maintain carbon neutrality, the Bank measures, reduces, offsets, and reports on the greenhouse gas emissions associated with its global facilities, major Promoting Innovative Financing meetings, and air travel. To manage sustainable facilities, it strives to The World Bank Treasury supports innovative �nancing flows for climate- maximize the efficiency with which it uses resources, such as water, smart investment through the funds it raises in capital markets. Since 2008 food, energy, and land�ll space. To ensure that its procurement is sus- the Bank has issued more than $2 billion through the issuance of “green tainable, the Bank proactively integrates sustainability principles into ma- bonds.� Proceeds from the sales are earmarked for adaptation and mitiga- jor corporate procurements such as paper and computers. To raise staff tion activities in client countries. awareness, the Bank holds outreach and learning events that encourage The Bank is also the trustee of 12 carbon funds and facilities that sup- changes in behavior. To increase transparency on its environmental and port the mitigation of climate change through carbon �nance, including social performance, it provides regular sustainability-related reports in two new facilities that focus on activities beyond the �rst commitment adherence with international standards such as the Global Reporting period of the Kyoto Protocol, which ends on December 31, 2012. The capi- Initiative and Carbon Disclosure Project. (See http://crinfo.worldbank tal of these funds and facilities amounts to just over $3 billion, of which .org/home.) $1.9 billion has been committed to purchasing emissions reductions. In the �eld, an increasing number of Bank country offices are leading Some 174 active projects are expected to reduce emissions by an esti- by example by adopting environmental initiatives. For example, the former mated 220 million metric tons of carbon dioxide or its equivalent in other Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia country office has showcased various greenhouse gases. carbon footprint reduction initiatives—aiming to be a model in support The Forest Carbon Partnership Facility, launched in 2008 to support of the country’s drive for accession to the European Union. developing countries in reducing emissions from deforestation and forest degradation, has received more than $447 million in committed and AGRICULTURE AND RURAL DEVELOPMENT pledged funds. The Carbon Partnership Facility, created in May 2010, so far Three of every four poor people in developing countries live in rural areas. has committed €143.5 million to scale up the use of carbon �nance to ac- Most depend on agriculture for their livelihoods, directly or indirectly. celerate mitigation activities after 2012. GDP growth originating in agriculture is about two to four times more 12 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 effective in raising the incomes of extremely poor people than economic growth originating outside the sector. Increasing investment—and in- vesting more wisely—is thus fundamental for economic growth, poverty reduction, and environmental sustainability. The recent crises have added momentum to the Bank’s emerging re- newal of �nancing for agriculture and agribusiness, as IEG reported in a 2010 evaluation of work in this sector. Noting that the crucial question concerns what steps would further strengthen effectiveness, IEG high- lighted three lessons for future work. First, an increase in productivity re- quires focused attention to the availability of improved crop production techniques, water supply, and market access, among other things. Second, agriculture-based economies warrant special attention. Third, the Bank is uniquely positioned to exploit synergies between public and private pro- grams. These lessons provide avenues for lasting impact. Indeed, investment in agriculture and rural development remained a high priority for the Bank this �scal year. The Bank’s Agriculture Action Plan projects the support from the Bank Group to agriculture and related The �rst of its kind in the world, the Ain Beni Mathar concentrated solar power sectors of $6.2 billion–$8.3 billion over �scal 2010–12, an increase from plant uses cutting-edge design and technology to supply electricity to the an average annual level of $4.1 billion over �scal 2006–08. Moroccan grid. As food prices in 2011 neared the record levels seen in 2008, the Bank Photo: Dana Smillie extended the Global Food Price Crisis Response Program through 2012. This program has provided support to almost 40 million people in more than 40 low-income countries since it was created in 2008. To help address high and volatile food prices, the World Bank is work- World Bank �nancing for infrastructure reached $19.7 billion in �scal ing within the G-20 process on a number of initiatives, including the 2011. At this level, infrastructure remained the core business of the Bank, Global Agriculture and Food Security Program (GAFSP). The program was accounting for 46 percent of total Bank assistance. Support included launched in 2010 to �ll the �nancing gaps in national and regional agri- $8.6 billion for transportation, $5.8 billion for energy, $4.6 billion for water, culture and food security strategies. The GAFSP Steering Committee is an and $640 million for information and communication technologies. South external decision-making body made up of an equal number of donor Asia was the largest recipient (30 percent), followed by East Asia and Paci�c and recipient representatives as voting members. To date, donors— (24 percent), Latin America and the Caribbean (15 percent), and Africa including the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and the governments of (14 percent). The Bank also produced more than 159 analytical and advi- Australia, Canada, Ireland, Korea, Spain, and the United States—have sory products, including an urban transport climate change strategy for pledged $975 million to the public sector window of GAFSP. Canada and China, an energy-efficiency strategy for Egypt, and an energy sector policy the United States also have pledged $75 million to the private sector win- analysis for Nigeria. dow. Since June 2010 GAFSP has awarded $481 million for projects in The Bank supports governments in advancing the “green� agenda by Bangladesh, Cambodia, Ethiopia, Haiti, Liberia, Mongolia, Nepal, Niger, leveraging �nancing from new facilities, such as the Carbon Partnership Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Tajikistan, and Togo. Facility, the Clean Technology Fund, and green bonds. This �scal year the Climate change disproportionately affects the rural poor. The World Bank set a “green� record of commitments to renewable energy or energy- Bank is supporting climate-smart land and water management to deliver efficiency projects. In transport, roads and highways remain the largest both adaptation and mitigation bene�ts. Other core areas of its agriculture subsector, and lending to railways increased signi�cantly. portfolio include sustainable �sheries, water for agriculture, innovation In response to evolving needs from client countries, the Bank launched systems, forestry, community-driven development, livestock development, the preparation of an update to the Sustainable Infrastructure Action Plan. land tenure, responsible agro-investment, rural �nance, and agriculture It will propose to continue supporting the core business of infrastruc- risk management. (See http://worldbank.org/rural.) ture for access, with an enhanced focus on transformational infrastructure, mobilization of private capital, and other sources of �nancing. This update INFRASTRUCTURE will serve as an umbrella document, tying together the range of sector Today an estimated 880 million people in the world live without safe water, strategies produced by the various sectors with connections to infrastruc- 1.4 billion lack electricity, 2.5 billion lack sanitation, and more than 1 billion ture. (See http://worldbank.org/infrastructure.) lack access to telephone services. Total demand for infrastructure invest- ment and maintenance from developing countries is estimated at more than $900 billion a year, with the greatest needs in Africa and Asia. POSTCRISIS DIRECTIONS 13 A student in a new preschool built under the Bank-supported State Education Sector Project in Kaduna State, northern Nigeria, learns numbers from a chalkboard. In Kaduna State alone, 187 schools have been built under the project to bene�t rural children. AFRICA African countries south of the Sahara weathered the recent global eco- the ease of doing business in 2010. The climate for market-oriented, pro- nomic crisis better than past crises, thanks in part to improved economic poor reforms is proving robust, and the voice of civil society is emerging policies. As a result, Africa is one of the fastest-growing developing regions as a bulwark against the blight of “quiet corruption,� in which public in the world. Output expanded by an estimated 4.7 percent in 2010, a servants fail to deliver services or inputs that have been paid for by the vigorous rebound from the 1.7 percent growth achieved in 2009. The re- government. covery was strongest among exporters of metals, minerals, and oil, which Africa’s long-term growth will increasingly reflect interrelated social bene�ted from higher commodity prices. At an estimated 5.3 percent, and demographic changes creating new domestic engines of growth. Key GDP grew even faster in �scal 2011 and is projected to reach 5.5 percent in among these will be urbanization, an expanding labor force, and the rise of 2012. As a result of this accelerated growth and progress on social indica- the middle-class African consumer. In 1980 just 28 percent of Africans lived tors, four countries—Cape Verde, Ethiopia, Ghana, and Malawi—will likely in cities. Today 40 percent of the continent’s 1 billion people do—a pro- achieve most of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), if not by portion roughly comparable to China’s and larger than India’s. By 2030 this 2015, then soon thereafter. share is projected to rise to 50 percent, and Africa’s top 18 cities will have a Serious development challenges remain in Africa, where about half combined annual spending power of $1.3 trillion. of the population lives on $1.25 a day, governance is weak, and 645 out of every 100,000 African women die in childbirth. Renewing the Push for the MDGs However, there are improvements. Maternal mortality declined by 26 Many countries in Africa have made progress toward the MDGs. Tanzania is percent between 1990 and 2009. Child mortality is also declining, the rate on track to meet the targets related to infant and child health. Senegal has of HIV infection is stabilizing, primary school completion rates are rising made great strides in improving nutrition. Data from Niger indicate that faster than anywhere else in the world, and the percentage of people liv- modern contraceptives are being used more widely than ever before. ing in extreme poverty is falling. Foreign direct investment in 2010 ex- Better results are a combination of many factors, including behavioral ceeded that in India, with international capital inflows rising to 4.6 percent changes, country ownership, education, equitable access to health ser- of GDP, and remittances reaching about $11.5 billion. The business climate vices, payoffs from health system reforms, and improved donor coordina- has improved, with three countries in the region—Cape Verde, Rwanda, tion. Were these changes to be adopted more widely, Africa could reach and Zambia—among the 10 economies worldwide that most improved the maternal and child health MDGs within a few years of the 2015 target. FIGURE 2.1 FIGURE 2.2 AFRICA AFRICA IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY THEME | FISCAL 2011 IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY SECTOR | FISCAL 2011 SHARE OF TOTAL OF $7.1 BILLION SHARE OF TOTAL OF $7.1 BILLION Environmental and Natural Water, Sanitation, and Agriculture, Fishing, Economic Management 2% 6% Resource Management Flood Protection 9% 12% and Forestry Urban Development 16% Financial and Private 7% Education 21% Sector Development Transportation 13% Trade and Integration 11% Social Protection and 13% Energy and Mining Risk Management 4% Public Administration, 2% Finance Social Development, 11% Human Development Law, and Justice 26% Gender, and Inclusion 2% Health and Other 8% Social Services Rural Development 14% 4% Rule of Law < 1% 15% Public Sector Governance Information and Communications 4% 6% Industry and Trade 14 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR WORLD BANK BORROWING Angola Cape Verde Republic of Gabon Liberia Namibia Senegal Togo Benin Central African Congo The Gambia Madagascar Niger Seychelles Uganda Botswana Republic Côte d’Ivoire Ghana Malawi Nigeria Sierra Leone Zambia Burkina Faso Chad Equatorial Guinea Mali Rwanda South Africa Comoros Guinea Burundi Guinea-Bissau Mauritania São Tomé and Swaziland Democratic Eritrea Principe Cameroon Kenya Mauritius Tanzania Republic of Congo Ethiopia Lesotho Mozambique World Bank Assistance The Bank delivered $7.1 billion to Africa in �scal 2011. Support included $7 billion from IDA and $56 million from IBRD. In response to the opportunity for Africa to transform itself and improve the lives of its people, the Bank has developed an ambitious 10-year strat- egy, Africa’s Future and the World Bank’s Support to It, which could help the region’s economies take off the way the economies of Asia did 30 years ago. The new approach has two pillars—competitiveness and employ- ment, and vulnerability and resilience—which rest on a foundation of strengthened governance and public sector capacity. The strategy reverses the order of importance of the Bank’s instruments to support Africa, giving prominence to partnerships, then knowledge, and �nally �nance. The goal ing the poor to take charge of their own development. Actions funded to is to ensure that the Bank’s interventions complement the interventions of date include building classrooms and health centers, connecting agri- others, including African governments, the private sector, and civil society. cultural villages to commercial centers, providing resources for income- generating activities, and improving food security. Focusing on Agriculture In response to the global rise in food prices, the Bank scaled up targeted Partnering for Regional Integration lending for agriculture programs across the continent, providing $0.8 Regional integration is critical to accelerating progress in Africa, where billion in support in �scal 2011. The Bank’s work is closely aligned with the most economies and markets are relatively small and isolated, and many Comprehensive Africa Agriculture Development Programme, the Africa- countries are landlocked. Regional lending in Africa reached $1.0 billion owned and -led initiative for increasing productivity in agriculture. in �scal 2011, an increase of 66 percent since 2010. Interventions in- cluded support to the $300 million West Africa Regional Communica- Building Human Capital in Africa tions Infrastructure Program, which complements the Regional Infra- African countries have made massive improvements in increasing primary structure Connectivity and the Central African Backbone programs. (See school enrollment, enrolling millions of additional children over the past http://worldbank.org/afr.) decade. In line with its new education strategy, the Bank’s focus is now on achieving “learning for all.� The Bank is also working with countries on higher education and skills development to improve sustainability and AFRICA REGIONAL SNAPSHOT align education and training with the needs of the job market. Progress has also been signi�cant in health. Ethiopia, The Gambia, Total population 0.9 billion Malawi, and Rwanda reduced child mortality by at least 25 percent Population growth 2.6% over the past decade, with the rate in Rwanda falling 47 percent. Many Life expectancy at birth 53 years African countries have reduced maternal mortality by 20–50 percent. Infant mortality per 1,000 live births 81 With 22.5 million people in Africa living with HIV/AIDS and with malaria Female youth literacy 67% and tuberculosis remaining major challenges, combating communicable diseases is a priority. The Bank-supported East Africa Public Health Labora- Number of people living with HIV/AIDS 22.5 million tory Networking Project is helping four countries coordinate their disease 2011 GNI per capita $1,165 surveillance. Bank �nancing of $1.4 billion to date for the �ght against HIV/ GDP per capita index (2000 = 100) 123 AIDS in Africa has helped to catalyze global funding for HIV/AIDS, which Note: Life expectancy at birth, infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births, female youth literacy, and rose from $1.6 billion in 2001 to more than $16 billion in 2010. The Bank has number of people living with HIV/AIDS are for 2009; other indicators are for 2010 from the World also been an active partner in Africa’s efforts to control malaria. The Malaria Development Indicators database. HIV/AIDS 2009 data are from UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic 2010. Booster Program has �nanced 51.7 million mosquito nets across the booster portfolio, with an additional 21 million planned. Strong examples of social protection are evident in the work performed across the continent. In Ethiopia, for example, the World Bank committed TOTAL FISCAL 2011 TOTAL FISCAL 2011 additional cash and food transfers for 10 million people during the global New commitments Disbursements economic crisis. IBRD $56 million IBRD $665 million Thousands of Togolese have bene�ted from a World Bank–funded IDA $7,004 million IDA $4,925 million Community Development Project. Launched in February 2009, the project Portfolio of projects under implementation as of June 30, 2011: $38.7 billion operates mainly in rural areas, and it supports the implementation of de- velopment priorities identi�ed by grassroots communications, empower- THE REGIONS 15 Photo: Stanislas Fradelizi Women in Vientiane Province, Lao PDR, participate in a Bank-funded project that creates jobs and improves income for bamboo handicraft producers. As part of the Gender Action Plan, the Mekong Results-Based Initiative bene�ts women from 2,000 households in three provinces of Lao PDR and Cambodia. EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC Recovery from the global economic crisis is �rmly on track in developing engagement on global issues (including preparations for crises such as East Asia, with real GDP growth, industrial production, and exports all sur- natural disasters and rising food and commodity prices). Resources were passing precrisis levels. Output rose 9.6 percent in 2010 and is projected to leveraged through partnerships with the Asian Development Bank; re- grow by about 8 percent in 2011 and 2012. gional organizations, such as the Association of Southeast Asian Nations The region has the potential to secure its recovery and continue on its and Asia-Paci�c Economic Cooperation; and donors, including Australia, path of rapid and sustained growth—if it is able to harness opportunities the European Union, and Japan. and meet various challenges. Managing inflation was the key short-term challenge in the region this year, which was complicated by a surge in Sharing Knowledge portfolio capital inflows and large increases in food and commodity prices. As the region’s development needs have become more sophisticated, the Looking forward, East Asia and Paci�c countries need to increase regional knowledge agenda has grown in signi�cance. Among the Bank’s knowl- integration to take advantage of a rapidly growing China. Reducing in- edge products, the March edition of the twice yearly “East Asia and Paci�c equality and social exclusion, making cities in the region resilient to natural Economic Update� provided analysis of the impact of the earthquake disasters, and addressing the effects of climate change are also important in Japan on the regional economy just days after the disaster. Regular for continuous growth. country economic reports were produced for China, Indonesia, Malaysia, Mongolia, the Philippines, and Thailand. The Bank worked with partners World Bank Assistance to publish Climate Risks and Adaptation in Asian Coastal Megacities this The Bank approved $8.0 billion for East Asia and Paci�c for 58 projects this �scal year. A flagship study on higher education in East Asia to support �scal year. Support included $6.4 billion in IBRD loans and $1.6 billion in productivity and growth has been conducted. The Bank also hosted the IDA commitments. The regional strategy for this year is aligned with Bank Conference on East Asian Development, bringing together senior policy priorities, which focus on sustaining growth, effective poverty reduction, makers and development experts to discuss regional development chal- country-based governance and anticorruption strategies, and regional lenges and opportunities to prepare for a more prosperous future. FIGURE 2.3 FIGURE 2.4 EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY THEME | FISCAL 2011 IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY SECTOR | FISCAL 2011 SHARE OF TOTAL OF $8.0 BILLION SHARE OF TOTAL OF $8.0 BILLION Urban Development 16% 2% Economic Management Water, Sanitation, and Agriculture, Fishing, Flood Protection 13% 4% and Forestry Environmental and Natural 2% Education 19% Resource Management Trade and Integration 7% 21% Energy and Mining Social Protection and < 1% Finance Risk Management 3% Financial and Private 13% Sector Development Transportation 24% Health and Other Social Development, 4% Social Services Gender, and Inclusion 2% 4% Human Development 3% Industry and Trade Rural Development 14% Public Administration, Information and Rule of Law < 1% 20% Public Sector Governance Law, and Justice 28% < 1% Communications 16 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR WORLD BANK BORROWING Cambodia Republic of Federated Papua New Thailand China Korea States of Guinea Timor-Leste Lao People’s Micronesia Philippines Fiji Tonga Democratic Mongolia Samoa Indonesia Vanuatu Republic Myanmar Solomon Kiribati Vietnam Malaysia Palau Islands Marshall Islands Building Resilience to Natural Hazards and Climate Change Increasing resilience to extreme climate events, rising sea levels, and other natural hazards is a major medium-term challenge for the region, which has experienced more than 70 percent of the world’s natural disasters and sustained 82 percent of total disaster fatalities since 1997. The Bank’s work encompasses analytical and advisory services in disaster and climate change risk assessments, the development of risk �nancing options, and risk-mitigation policies. This year the tragedies of the floods and cyclone in Australia, and the earthquake and tsunami in Japan, required mutual learn- ing and understanding between the Bank and its donors. Regarding risk mitigation, a policy note on “Preparing for Asia’s Next Big Vietnam has made substantial progress in adopting market-oriented Earthquake� was released in October 2010, leading to seismic retro�tting reforms, positioning it to achieve middle-income status after transitioning in schools in Indonesia. from an IDA to an IBRD blend country in 2009. This year the Bank began In postdisaster reconstruction an $11.8 million project in Samoa will developing the next country partnership strategy with the Vietnamese support the relocation and rehabilitation of communities on the island of government covering 2011–16. The Bank approved a $330 million loan to Upolu, affected by the 2009 earthquake, by providing new access roads support the Trung Son Hydropower Project, which will help meet the and rebuilding damaged roads and sea walls. A $3.5 million grant through country’s rapidly increasing demand for electricity. the Java Reconstruction Fund was mobilized to �nance the reconstruction The Bank also enhanced its analytical and �nancial support to the of housing and community infrastructure destroyed by the 2010 eruption Paci�c Islands. The �rst country assistance strategy for Kiribati places cli- of Mount Merapi through an existing community-driven development mate change adaptation at the center of a three-year plan that supports program. the government’s efforts to manage groundwater reserves, improve rain- water collection, and develop new sources of water. In Tonga the country Supporting a Maturing Economy in China assistance strategy for 2011–14 focuses on economic reform as a way China became the world’s second-largest economy in 2010, representing to build resilience to food and fuel price shocks. (See http://worldbank about 9.5 percent of global GDP at market exchange rates. At these rates, .org/eap.) per capita GDP nonetheless remains below the world average. The Bank committed to China around $1.7 billion for 14 projects this �scal year, of which three were carried over from the previous year. About 76 percent EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC REGIONAL SNAPSHOT of ongoing Bank-�nanced projects in China show a strong focus on the environment. Total population 2.0 billion The Bank’s partnership with China now emphasizes economic analysis, Population growth 0.7% policy advice, technical assistance, and training. For example, the Bank is Life expectancy at birth 72 years working with China’s Development Research Center of the State Council, together with the Ministry of Finance, to prepare a joint report that devel- Infant mortality per 1,000 live births 21 ops a policy agenda for rapid and sustainable growth in order for the coun- Female youth literacy 99% try to transition to a high-income economy. Number of people living with HIV/AIDS 2.3 million 2011 GNI per capita $3,692 Working with Middle- and Low-Income Countries in the Region In the Lao People’s Democratic Republic the 1,070 megawatt Nam Theun GDP per capita index (2000 = 100) 220 2 Hydroelectric Project was inaugurated in December 2010. The project Note: Life expectancy at birth, infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births, female youth literacy, and number of people living with HIV/AIDS are for 2009; other indicators are for 2010 from the World was supported by $1.3 billion in �nancing from 27 parties, including the Development Indicators database. HIV/AIDS 2009 data are from UNAIDS Report on the Global Bank. Revenue generated from the sale of electricity to Thailand has been AIDS Epidemic 2010. channeled into spending on education in poor districts ($2 million), rural roads ($1.7 million), and public health ($1 million). The Bank is also working with the government on a broader program to strengthen public �nancial TOTAL FISCAL 2011 TOTAL FISCAL 2011 management. New commitments Disbursements In the Philippines a Bank-�nanced conditional cash transfer program IBRD $6,370 million IBRD $3,964 million is serving as the backbone of a modern and consolidated social protec- IDA $1,627 million IDA $1,238 million tion system. More than 1.6 million households are bene�ting from the Portfolio of projects under implementation as of June 30, 2011: $29.9 billion program. THE REGIONS 17 Photo: Kurmangazy Omarov These farmers in rural Kazakhstan are participating in the Bank-funded Agricultural Competitiveness Project, which conducts agricultural research to apply innovative techniques to apple cultivation. The Bank’s mission in Kazakhstan is to support long-term economic growth that translates into more jobs and better social services for all citizens. europe and central asia Growth resumed in Europe and Central Asia in 2010 and reached 4.5 per- Croatia and Poland; helped stabilize the financial sector in Serbia; and in- cent, following sharp declines during the global economic crisis. Projections creased access to finance for small and medium enterprises in Armenia for 2011–13 are for a slightly stronger performance, but remain below those and Turkey. It supported road improvements in Belarus, Kazakhstan, the for other regions. Kyrgyz Republic, and the South Caucasus, and public sector reforms to Growth has been more tepid in Central and Southeastern Europe than improve governance and transport and energy delivery in Romania. The in the Commonwealth of Independent States, where high commodity Bank continues to work with client countries to identify their policy priori- prices have raised net exports, increased remittance flows from migrants, ties, develop plans for recovery, improve the investment climate, and di- and boosted private consumption. For net importers, higher food and en- versify exports, all with a view to creating jobs. ergy prices threaten to increase poverty, particularly in Armenia, the Kyrgyz For the eighth year in a row, Europe and Central Asia led the world in Republic, and Tajikistan. The region as a whole continues to be dependent improving business regulation for domestic firms, according to Doing on Western Europe, which is struggling with a sovereign debt crisis. Business 2011. Twenty-one countries in the region improved their rankings. This fiscal year the Bank produced economic reports on the Russian World Bank Assistance Federation, the European Union (EU)10, Kazakhstan, and Moldova. It also Bank support reached $6.1 billion this fiscal year, including $5.5 billion from produced studies of the informal economy in Turkey and growth and com- IBRD and $655 million from IDA. Turkey ($1.4 billion), Poland ($1.1 billion), petitiveness in Poland. Its study of governance and the regulatory burden and Romania ($1.1 billion) were the largest borrowers. Sectors receiving in Eastern Europe and Central Asia was based on the fourth round of the the most funding were Energy and Mining ($1.9 billion); Public Adminis- Business Environment and Enterprise Performance Surveys, which cover tration, Law, and Justice ($1.7 billion); and Health and Other Social Services more than 11,000 firms in 29 countries in the region. ($1.2 billion). Supporting Social Sector Reforms and Fiscal Adjustment Increasing Competitiveness Social spending in certain Europe and Central Asia countries is inefficient. Countries in the region need to increase competitiveness, improve pro- Governments need to protect the poor by improving cash transfers, social ductivity, and strengthen regional integration. To help them do so, the pensions, and targeted antipoverty programs. Bank financing to support Bank supported regulatory reforms and public finance management in social sector reforms and strengthen safety nets included results-based FIGURE 2.5 FIGURE 2.6 EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY THEME | FISCAL 2011 IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY SECTOR | FISCAL 2011 SHARE OF TOTAL OF $6.1 BILLION SHARE OF TOTAL OF $6.1 BILLION Urban Development 3% 6% Economic Management Water, Sanitation, and Agriculture, Fishing, Trade and Integration Flood Protection 2% 2% and Forestry 6% Environment and Transportation 4% 4% Education Social Protection and Natural Resource Risk Management 21% 23% Management Social Development, Public Administration, Gender, and Inclusion 1% Law, and Justice 27% 31% Energy and Mining Rural Development 3% Rule of Law 1% Information and Public Sector Goverance 4% Communications < 1% 6% Finance Financial and Private Human Development 10% 22% Sector Development Industry and Trade 4% 20% Health and Other Social Services 18 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR WORLD BANK BORROWING Albania Bulgaria Latvia Poland Turkey Armenia Croatia Former Yugoslav Romania Turkmenistan Azerbaijan Georgia Republic of Russian Ukraine Macedonia Federation Belarus Kazakhstan Uzbekistan Moldova Serbia Bosnia and Kyrgyz Republic Herzegovina Montenegro Tajikistan Kosovo investment loans to Moldova and Romania, Rapid Social Response and IDA grants to Tajikistan, additional �nancing for health and social protec- tion in the Kyrgyz Republic, a health system improvement project in Uzbekistan, and pension reforms in Romania and other countries in the region. The Bank is supporting improvements in government �nances in more than a dozen countries. This helped protect spending on social assistance programs in Albania, Latvia, and Romania, as well as vital public services, including education quality in Kazakhstan and Russia, and health care in Armenia, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan. The Bank prepared several regional reports including a study of the performance of pension systems and a study of household and govern- Strengthening Regional Integration and Cooperation ment responses to the recession. It also released reports on social assis- Given the high level of economic integration in the region, greater coop- tance programs in the western Balkans, female participation in the labor eration—on water and energy, transport, trade, corporate �nance, and market in Turkey, and long-term care policies for older populations in new social inclusion—is essential. The Bank supported the Southeastern EU member states and Croatia. Europe Energy Community in establishing a common regulatory frame- work for energy markets and helped craft regional transport solutions to Mitigating and Adapting to Climate Change meet EU transport requirements. The lingering legacy of environmental mismanagement and energy- The Bank initiated a comprehensive Central Asia Energy–Water intensive production in Europe and Central Asia has left the region ill Development Program to support Central Asian countries in managing prepared to adapt to the negative impact of climate change. Many coun- their water and energy resources, strengthening regional institutions, and tries are suffering from unusually severe floods and droughts, and the stimulating investments. A multidonor trust fund was established with number of extreme events—droughts, floods, heat waves, windstorms, support from the U.K.’s Department for International Development and and forest �res—is likely to increase in the coming decades. the government of Switzerland, and discussions with other donors are The Bank is supporting efforts to mitigate carbon emissions, build under way. countries’ climate change knowledge base, and assess consequences and The Bank also worked with the European Commission on Roma inclu- adaptation approaches. It is �nancing energy efficiency projects in Belarus, sion and provided support through the Roma Education Fund and the Poland, Turkey, and Ukraine, and development policy lending in Poland. Decade of Roma Inclusion. The Bank is working with the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Poland, Russia, and Ukraine on national energy efficiency strategies. The Bank is strengthening the climate resilience aspect of its investment EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA REGIONAL SNAPSHOT portfolio. It continued its pilot projects on the vulnerability of energy sys- Total population 0.4 billion tems, agriculture, and water. It also initiated projects on sustainable cities Population growth 0.4% and social development, and it expanded its knowledge and learning pro- grams to a wider group of Bank staff and selected clients in the region. Life expectancy at birth 70 years Infant mortality per 1,000 live births 19 Working with Partners Female youth literacy 99% The Bank strengthened its partnership with the EU this �scal year by co�- Number of people living with HIV/AIDS 1.5 million nancing international reform packages, providing advisory services to member states on EU issues and to potential candidate countries on ac- 2011 GNI per capita $7,214 cession issues, and expanding its work on regional energy issues. To en- GDP per capita index (2000 = 100) 156 hance its engagement, the Bank produced a strategy for the region’s part- Note: Life expectancy at birth, infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births, female youth literacy, and nership with the EU and other key Europe-based institutions (STEP-EU). number of people living with HIV/AIDS are for 2009; other indicators are for 2010 from the World Development Indicators database. HIV/AIDS 2009 data are from UNAIDS Report on the Global The Bank partnered with the European Bank for Reconstruction and AIDS Epidemic 2010. Development and the European Investment Bank for the Joint Interna- tional Financial Institution Action Plan to support banking systems and economies of Central and Eastern Europe in response to the economic TOTAL FISCAL 2011 TOTAL FISCAL 2011 crisis. It worked with Russia as an emerging donor, partnering on the food crisis response in the Kyrgyz Republic and Tajikistan, a Rapid Social New commitments Disbursements Response to the food crisis in Tajikistan, and public �nance manage- IBRD $5,470 million IBRD $6,873 million ment in the region. The Bank also partnered with the EurAsEc Anti-Crisis IDA $655 million IDA $585 million fund to provide parallel �nancing for low-income countries in Europe and Portfolio of projects under implementation as of June 30, 2011: $22.6 billion Central Asia. THE REGIONS 19 Photo: James Martone In Haiti Jeanne Bousiko is happy to know that she and her family can move back into her house. The Bank-funded housing evaluation process has conducted 400,000 building safety inspections since the January 12, 2010, earthquake. LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Latin America and the Caribbean experienced one of the strongest periods ($2.5 billion) were among the largest borrowers. Health and Other Social of growth in a century between 2002 and 2010, fueled by the longest and Services ($3.1 billion), Public Administration, Law, and Justice ($2.0 billion), most comprehensive commodity price boom in history and huge in- and Transportation ($1.1 billion) received the most funding. creases in exports to China. Growth quickly rebounded from the global recession and reached 6 percent in 2010. As a result, more than 50 million Creating Opportunities for the Poor people were lifted out of moderate poverty between 2002 and 2008, and The World Bank supports efforts to sustain the region’s economic recovery for the �rst time, inroads were made to alter persistent economic inequal- while generating opportunities for all through programs that increase ity. Solid growth of 4–5 percent is projected for 2011. productivity, create new good-quality jobs, and assist those most in need, The economic health of the region is a tribute to the reforms under- particularly through conditional cash transfers, which were pioneered in taken over the past two decades to achieve macroeconomic and �nan- the region. The Bank also maintains a focus on early childhood develop- cial stability while developing efficient social programs. Until 2002 Latin ment. Since February 2010, when it helped launch the Early Childhood America was a large global debtor. Today it is a signi�cant creditor to the Initiative: An Investment for Life, the Bank has provided half a million rest of the world, and foreign capital flows into the region take the young children in the region with adequate nutrition, health care, and form of equity rather than debt. By December 2010 annual gross capital other support. inflows for the largest countries in the region reached almost $330 billion, an increase of almost $80 billion over the previous record, achieved in Mitigating and Adapting to Climate Change March 2008. Latin America and the Caribbean account for just 6 percent of global greenhouse emissions. As a result of the dominance of hydroelectricity World Bank Assistance over coal-�red plants, the region’s power sector generates 40 percent less Bank support reached $9.6 billion this �scal year, including $9.2 billion carbon dioxide emissions per unit of energy than the world average. from IBRD and $460 million from IDA. Support represented more than Despite its own relatively low emissions, the region is a leader in efforts 20 percent of total Bank new commitments. Mexico ($2.8 billion) and Brazil to develop a comprehensive approach for mitigating and adapting to climate change. FIGURE 2.7 FIGURE 2.8 LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY THEME | FISCAL 2011 IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY SECTOR | FISCAL 2011 SHARE OF TOTAL OF $9.6 BILLION SHARE OF TOTAL OF $9.6 BILLION Environment and Natural Economic Management < 1% 13% Resource Management Agriculture, Fishing, and Forestry 2% 4% Education Urban Development 13% Water, Sanitation, and 6% Energy and Mining Flood Protection 11% 3% Finance Trade and Integration 2% Financial and Private 12% Sector Development Transportation 12% Health and Other 32% Social Services Social Protection and Risk Management 25% Public Administration, 16% Human Development Law, and Justice 21% Social Development, Gender, and Inclusion 2% 8% Public Sector Governance Rural Development 8% 1% Rule of Law 1% Information and Communications 8% Industry and Trade 20 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR WORLD BANK BORROWING Antigua and Chile Ecuador Honduras Peru Trinidad and Barbuda Colombia El Salvador Jamaica St. Kitts and Tobago Argentina Costa Rica Grenada Mexico Nevis Uruguay Belize Dominica Guatemala Nicaragua St. Lucia República Plurinational State St. Vincent and Bolivariana de Dominican Guyana Panama Venezuela of Bolivia Republic the Grenadines Haiti Paraguay Brazil Suriname The Bank is providing increasing support to green programs in the re- gion. In July 2010 it expanded its strategic partnership with Mexico, deep- ening its support of the country’s already extensive green programs. Analytical work on low-carbon growth in Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and Uruguay has focused on the impacts of climate change on water resources and agricultural productivity. Responding to Natural Disasters The Bank continued to assist Haiti in reconstruction activities in the after- math of the massive earthquake in January 2010 that killed 230,000 people and destroyed large parts of Port-au-Prince. Among other initiatives, the Bank supported safety inspections of 400,000 buildings; provided grant �- Improving Citizen Security nancing for repair and reconstruction; and helped stabilize government Crime and violence are key development challenges throughout Latin operations, �ght the cholera epidemic, and get thousands of children back America and the Caribbean. As a percentage of GDP, the material costs to school. of crime are estimated to be nearly twice those of the United States. So In �scal 2011, the Bank disbursed $116.1 million ($25 million from the severe is the problem that in several Central American countries, the Haiti Reconstruction Fund), and provided Haiti with $78 million in new annual number of violent deaths exceeds the number during the civil wars grants. The Bank is also serving as the trustee for the multidonor Haiti of the 1980s. Since 1999 homicide rates have skyrocketed in El Salvador, Reconstruction Fund, a partnership between the country’s government Guatemala, and Honduras, as criminal networks linked to drug trafficking and members of the international community. Debt forgiveness, remit- have become more active. tances, and large aid inflows have allowed Haiti’s central bank to build up The Bank produced a comprehensive report, “Crime and Violence in international reserves and stabilize its currency. As a result of national and Central America: A Development Challenge,� examining links in the sub- international efforts, the country’s economic contraction in 2010 was less region between crime, violence, and development. Launched in April severe than expected, with GDP declining by 5.5 percent rather than the 2011, the report presents a set of policy options for confronting the chal- 8.5 percent that had been anticipated. lenges of crime and violence, drawing lessons from country and regional In response to the January 2011 mudslides in and around Rio de Janeiro experiences. (See http://worldbank.org/lac.) that left thousands of people homeless, the Bank approved a $485 million housing project that will bene�t 2 million poor people who lived in infor- mal low-income settlements, or favelas, in the area (see page 7). LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN REGIONAL SNAPSHOT Promoting Inclusive Growth by Total population 0.6 billion Going Local with Global Knowledge Population growth 1.0% At the request of central governments and direct bene�ciaries, the Bank is Life expectancy at birth 74 years increasingly working with subnational governments. Through this innova- Infant mortality per 1,000 live births 19 tive approach, the Bank refocuses assistance on providing customized Female youth literacy 97% responses to the development needs of individual provinces. In Argentina the Bank approved water and infrastructure projects that Number of people living with HIV/AIDS 1.8 million promote sustainable economic development in the northern provinces, 2011 GNI per capita $7,802 Argentina’s poorest region, where 72 percent of the 7.5 million residents GDP per capita index (2000 = 100) 123 live in poverty. These projects will promote integration and foster the re- Note: Life expectancy at birth, infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births, female youth literacy, and gion’s competitiveness by increasing access to water and sanitation ser- number of people living with HIV/AIDS are for 2009; other indicators are for 2010 from the World vices and improving road infrastructure. Development Indicators database. HIV/AIDS 2009 data are from UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic 2010. In July 2010 the Rio de Janeiro municipality received a $1 billion loan for growth, education, and health—the largest Bank loan ever made to a municipality. Approximately 70 percent of the loans made as part of the TOTAL FISCAL 2011 TOTAL FISCAL 2011 last country partnership strategy are concentrated in Brazil’s states and municipalities. The Bank is also providing Rio de Janeiro with knowledge New commitments Disbursements and best practices in preparation for the 2016 summer Olympic Games. IBRD $9,169 million IBRD $8,376 million IDA $460 million IDA $322 million Portfolio of projects under implementation as of June 30, 2011: $32.5 billion THE REGIONS 21 Photo: Dale Lautenbach Young men learn the intricacies of plaster art, a technique that adds charm to traditional Moroccan buildings, at a Taroudant school supported by the Bank’s National Initiative for Human Development. Under the program, 4.6 million people in Morocco receive services that include health care, job training, and social reintegration. MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA The recent events in many countries in the Middle East and North Africa World Bank Assistance offer an opportunity for the people to carry out reforms to overhaul the Recent developments in some of the larger borrowing countries have led development paradigm. The Bank and its partners are developing a sup- to delays in program delivery in the last half of �scal 2011. In Egypt, Tunisia, portive framework based on the following pillars: and other countries, new programs and projects were initiated. IBRD and IDA lending increased from $1.7 billion in �scal 2009 to $3.7 • Governance—focusing on transparency of government, support to civil society for social accountability, monitoring of service delivery, billion in �scal 2010 and fell to $2.1 billion in �scal 2011. IDA support to the improving corporate governance, and supporting the move from Republic of Yemen in 2011, at $117 million, was signi�cantly lower than the market privilege to competition $205 million provided in 2010. IDA support to Djibouti was $5.8 million in • Economic and social inclusion—evaluating social protection and sub- 2011 versus $8.9 million in �scal 2010. sidies, addressing lagging areas, and increasing economic and social High-value, fee-based knowledge services increased from $12.2 mil- participation by women lion in �scal 2010 to $14 million in �scal 2011. The number of economic, • Job creation—concentrating on short-term employment measures analytical, and advisory products independent of lending decreased from and on educational quality and skills matching, labor market reforms, 120 in �scal 2010 to 108 in �scal 2011. The Bank also prepared a regional and migration management poverty study; reports on regional development of the private sector and • Economic growth acceleration—addressing growth, competition, and on migration and integration; short notes on the impact and long-term the private sector, as well as regional and global integration, focusing challenges stemming from the �nancial crisis, as well as current political on new markets, infrastructure gaps, and environmental sustainabil- developments, especially as related to employment. ity and climate change These priorities are reflected in the new operation prepared in Tunisia, Exchanging ISearching for Solutions and also in the programs and projects in development for other countries In March 2011 the Bank organized the Arab Voices and Views conference— in the region, foremost in the Arab Republic of Egypt. The events since live and webcast in Arabic and English, and accompanied by a simultane- December 2010 have had an impact on growth—regional GDP growth fell ous virtual chat and the launch of a new Middle East and North Africa to 1.9 percent in �scal 2009, rose to 4.4 percent in �scal 2010, and, because blog. The purpose was to open up an in-depth conversation about the the situation remains in flux, fell further in �scal 2011. historic events in the region. Non-Bank panelists, widely recognized for FIGURE 2.9 FIGURE 2.10 MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY THEME | FISCAL 2011 IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY SECTOR | FISCAL 2011 SHARE OF TOTAL OF $2.1 BILLION SHARE OF TOTAL OF $2.1 BILLION Environment and Natural Water, Sanitation, and Agriculture, Fishing, Urban Development 12% 14% Resource Management Flood Protection 25% 12% and Forestry 2% Education Trade and Integration 5% 2% Finance Social Protection and Risk Management 8% Financial and Private Health and Other 18% Sector Development 11% Social Services Social Development, Gender, and Inclusion 4% 5% Industry and Trade 9% Human Development Information and 2% Communications Public Administration, Rural Development 20% 10% Public Sector Governance Transportation 23% 16% Law, and Justice 22 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR WORLD BANK BORROWING Algeria Islamic Republic Jordan Morocco Republic of Djibouti of Iran Lebanon Syrian Arab Yemen Arab Republic Iraq Libya Republic of Egypt Tunisia This section also reports on the West Bank and Gaza. their innovative ideas, explored topics such as “The Use of New Media for Social Accountability� and “Equity in Access to Jobs.� Building Partnerships Collaboration with neighboring and national partners will help the region realize results on a number of fronts. The Islamic Development Bank par- ticipated in the World Bank’s Arab Financing Facility for Infrastructure, and the African Development Bank supported the regional Concentrated Solar Power initiative. The World Bank also worked in cooperation with the Arab Monetary Fund in preparing the region’s flagship report on the �nancial sector. European nations are consulting on a range of issues focused Bank lending in Morocco included the urban transport development on creating economic opportunities. Japanese partners are helping to ad- policy loan (DPL) ($137 million), the agriculture (Maroc Vert) DPL ($205 mil- dress youth issues in Egypt, Tunisia, and other countries. lion), and the solid waste DPL ($139 million). In May 2011 the Bank worked with Morocco to commission 2,000 megawatts of solar power generation Supporting Countries of the Gulf Cooperation Council capacity by 2020. Increases in hydrocarbon prices boosted revenues of Gulf Cooperation World Bank support for Tunisia in �scal 2011 included a $500 million Council (GCC) countries. However, most GCC countries have sharply in- multisectoral DPL with strong components on transparency and account- creased spending on subsidies and public sector wages in response to the ability. Also approved were a $50 million employment DPL and a $42 mil- regional turmoil. Projections are that the �scal impact of increased expen- lion Northwest Mountainous and Forested Areas investment loan. ditures should be manageable as hydrocarbon prices rise. The Bank’s Reimbursable Technical Assistance program expanded in Supporting the West Bank and Gaza �scal 2011 as programs in Kuwait and Saudi Arabia grew and new pro- Strong economic management and signi�cant donor support allowed the grams began in Bahrain and Qatar. The Bank is working on macroeconomic West Bank economy to grow 7.6 percent in 2011, up from 7.0 percent in and �scal capacity and labor markets in the United Arab Emirates, and its 2010. In Gaza the focus is on humanitarian support and the provision of program in Oman reflects a growing emphasis on education. In Qatar the fundamental social services, as well as basic infrastructure services. (See Bank is working on a portfolio to enhance macroeconomic and �scal man- http://worldbank.org/mna.) agement capacity and on business and trade facilitation. Supporting Other Oil Exporters MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA REGIONAL SNAPSHOT Algeria’s non-oil-and-gas sectors and related revenues grew in �scal 2011. Total population 0.3 billion Largely fee based, World Bank support focused on economic diversi�ca- Population growth 1.8% tion, assessment of public expenditures, social and economic policies, and Life expectancy at birth 71 years the narrowing of regional disparities. Infant mortality per 1,000 live births 27 The Bank’s technical assistance program in the Syrian Arab Republic, now suspended, had focused on economic growth and social protection. Female youth literacy 87% Though the Republic of Yemen was granted $117 million in IDA funds, po- Number of people living with HIV/AIDS 0.5 million litical upheaval has placed projects on hold, and disbursements face severe 2011 GNI per capita $3,839 delays. GDP per capita index (2000 = 100) 127 Note: Life expectancy at birth, infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births, female youth literacy, and Assisting Oil Importers number of people living with HIV/AIDS are for 2009; other indicators are for 2010 from the World The Bank conducted signi�cant analytical work on Egypt, Jordan, Lebanon, Development Indicators database. HIV/AIDS 2009 data are from UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic 2010. Morocco, and Tunisia in �scal 2011, particularly on economic governance and social safety net issues. Bank technical assistance and �nancial support to Egypt during the transition period are ongoing; projects in �scal 2011 TOTAL FISCAL 2011 TOTAL FISCAL 2011 included a $200 million Second Integrated Sanitation and Irrigation Project, $330 million in additional �nancing for the national railways restructuring New commitments Disbursements project, and a $100 million farm irrigation project. IBRD $1,942 million IBRD $768 million IDA $123 million IDA $185 million In Lebanon two projects were approved in �scal 2011: the $200 million Greater Beirut Water Supply Project and the $40 million Second Education Portfolio of projects under implementation as of June 30, 2011: $9.4 billion Development Project. THE REGIONS 23 Photo: Dipankar Ghosh India’s Sarva Shiksha Abhiyan—the Education for All program—is one of the largest efforts of its kind in the world. The Bank-supported, government-launched scheme seeks to meet the primary education needs of nearly 200 million poor children living in more than 1 million rural towns and villages across the country. SOUTH ASIA Real GDP growth in South Asia accelerated to an estimated 8.7 percent in on leveraging resources through partnerships with other institutions, in- 2010, buoyed by strong growth in India, which accounts for 80 percent of cluding the Asian Development Bank and bilateral donors. Gender equality, regional GDP. Growth was driven by vigorous domestic demand, macro- climate change, regional integration, and governance will be emphasized. economic policy stimulus measures, and a revival in investor and consumer con�dence. Robust increases in output of at least 6 percent a year over the Meeting Challenges in India past 20 years have improved human development indicators in the re- India is the Bank’s largest borrower, with total commitments of $5.5 gion—but two-thirds of its 1.5 billion people still live on less than $2 a day. billion in �scal 2011. One of the main challenges for India is the lack of As a result, increases in world food and fuel prices will disproportionately adequate infrastructure. To combat the problem, the government has affect South Asia, where about half of the average household’s expendi- undertaken several large-scale programs covering various infrastructure- tures goes to food. related sectors. These include the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana— the Prime Minister’s Rural Roads Program—for which the Bank approved World Bank Assistance a $1.5 billion loan in �scal 2011. The project plans to increase connec- The Bank is a key development partner in South Asia, with a portfolio of tivity in seven states (Himachal Pradesh, Jharkhand, Meghalaya, Punjab, 210 projects and commitments of $38.1 billion. In �scal 2011 it approved Rajasthan, Uttarakhand, and Uttar Pradesh) over the next �ve years by 46 projects in the region, $3.7 billion in IBRD loans, and $6.4 billion in IDA constructing 24,200 kilometers of all-weather roads. The project will ben- commitments, including $397.3 million in grants. e�t more than 6 million people. In addition a $350 million loan for the Second Karnataka State Highway Improvement Project was approved this Honing a New Regional Strategy �scal year and will be used to expand 1,231 kilometers of roads to two The Board approved an updated strategy for South Asia in �scal 2011. This lanes. The project has already improved and maintained 2,385 kilometers strategy will consolidate stand-alone projects into sector projects and of roads, reducing travel time by more than 35 percent. focus on projects with the potential to transform the region. It will rely In May the World Bank approved a $1 billion credit and loan as part of on public-private partnerships for infrastructure; emphasize innovative, its long-term support for the government’s Mission Clean Ganga, which results-based projects focused on the MDGs; and place greater emphasis seeks to rejuvenate India’s iconic river, along which more than 400 million FIGURE 2.11 FIGURE 2.12 SOUTH ASIA SOUTH ASIA IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY THEME | FISCAL 2011 IBRD AND IDA LENDING BY SECTOR | FISCAL 2011 SHARE OF TOTAL OF $10.1 BILLION SHARE OF TOTAL OF $10.1 BILLION Environment and Natural Water, Sanitation, and Agriculture, Fishing, Urban Development 4% 12% Resource Management Flood Protection 11% 4% and Forestry Trade and Integration 6% 5% Education 8% Energy and Mining Social Protection and Risk Management 12% < 1% Finance Financial and Private 26% Sector Development Health and Other Social Development, Gender, and Inclusion 2% 13% Social Services 4% Industry and Trade Rural Development 22% Information and 2% Communications 8% Human Development Publication Administration, Rule of Law < 1% 7% Public Sector Governance Transportation 39% 15% Law, and Justice 24 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 COUNTRIES ELIGIBLE FOR WORLD BANK BORROWING Afghanistan India Nepal Bangladesh Maldives Pakistan Bhutan Sri Lanka Indians live. The project will help set up dedicated institutions and �nance priority infrastructure for �ghting pollution in the river. The Bank also approved a $975 million loan to help Indian Railways establish the Eastern Dedicated Freight Corridor (a freight-only rail line), which will provide faster and more efficient movement of raw materials and �nished goods between the densely populated northern and eastern parts of India. The project is also expected to emit 2.25 times less carbon emissions compared to an alternate scenario where freight is not carried on a dedicated line. Investing in Infrastructure Infrastructure investment was also a top priority elsewhere in the region. In Operating in Crisis and Postcrisis Areas Afghanistan the Bank added $40 million to the original $112 million grant The 2009 military crisis in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa and the Federally Adminis- for the National Emergency Rural Access Project (NERAP). Launched in trated Tribal Areas led to one of the worst security crises in Pakistan’s history, 2002 and supported through NERAP and its predecessor projects, the displacing millions of people and severely disrupting lives, livelihoods, and government’s Emergency Rural Access Program has rehabilitated some the provision of public services. In January 2010 the Bank’s Board approved 10,370 kilometers of rural roads that connect 8,726 villages in 358 districts the creation of a multidonor trust fund designed to restore infrastructure, of Afghanistan’s 34 provinces, thereby reducing travel times and increasing services, and livelihoods in the conflict-affected areas. The trust fund be- rural Afghans’ access to key services. The project has also rehabilitated came operational in �scal 2011, with 10 donors contributing $140 million. 15,000 hectares of land by improving irrigation and drainage while provid- Following the end of the armed conflict in 2010, Sri Lanka became a ing employment opportunities to impoverished rural men, creating about middle-income country and is now eligible for IBRD lending. Access to the 700,000 temporary jobs over a month while facilitating the reintegration commercial lending mechanism of the Bank allows Sri Lanka to more than of ex-combatants into society. The additional grant to NERAP will provide double the resources available to it every year. The government’s develop- continued support of the government’s ongoing efforts to provide year- ment plan, Mahinda Chintana, aims to transform Sri Lanka into the “wonder round access to basic services and facilities in rural areas. of Asia� by raising per capita incomes to more than $4,000 over the next six To improve connectivity and boost opportunities for people in south- years. To make this plan a reality, Sri Lanka is trying to position itself as a western Bangladesh, the World Bank approved a $1.2 billion IDA credit for strategically important economic center of the world, serving as a key link the Padma Multipurpose Bridge Project in 2011. Spanning the Padma between the East and the West. (See http://worldbank.org/sar.) River, the world’s third largest, the 6.1 kilometer bridge will connect nearly 30 million people in the southwest to the rest of the country, enhancing their access to markets and services while accelerating growth in the SOUTH ASIA REGIONAL SNAPSHOT country as a whole. Total population 1.6 billion Helping Pakistan Recover from Natural Disasters Population growth 1.5% Massive flooding in Pakistan in July and August 2010 killed 2,000 people Life expectancy at birth 64 years and left about one-�fth of the country under water, affecting more than Infant mortality per 1,000 live births 55 20 million people—more than one-tenth of the population. About 1.6 Female youth literacy 72% million homes were destroyed and thousands of acres of crops and agricultural lands damaged, with major soil erosion occurring in some Number of people living with HIV/AIDS 2.6 million areas. The Bank responded with an initial $300 million to �nance the 2011 GNI per capita $1,213 purchase of critical imports, such as food, medicine, tents, construction GDP per capita index (2000 = 100) 171 materials, machinery, and fuel, and an added $20 million was included Note: Life expectancy at birth, infant mortality rate per 1,000 live births, female youth literacy, and in the Third Additional Credit for the Highways Rehabilitation Project, number of people living with HIV/AIDS are for 2009; other indicators are for 2010 from the World speci�cally for use in areas damaged by the floods. An additional $125 Development Indicators database. HIV/AIDS 2009 data are from UNAIDS Report on the Global AIDS Epidemic 2010. million in unconditional cash transfers to victims of the flood was also approved this �scal year. At the request of the government, the Asian Development Bank and the World Bank jointly conducted a damage and needs assessment, which estimates that $8.7 billion–$10.9 billion is needed TOTAL FISCAL 2011 TOTAL FISCAL 2011 for recovery from and reconstruction associated with the floods. New commitments Disbursements IBRD $3,730 million IBRD $1,233 million IDA $6,400 million IDA $3,028 million Portfolio of projects under implementation as of June 30, 2011: $38.1 billion THE REGIONS 25 THE WORLD BANK DRIVEN BY RESULTS The World Bank Group’s mission is to lift and keep people out of poverty. Through �nancial assistance, policy and institutional support, and techni- cal knowledge, it helps people across the world build a better future for themselves, their families, and their countries. At the heart of the Bank’s approach to delivering programs and policy advice is a strong focus on results. A Dynamic Framework for Capturing Results The Bank has made signi�cant advances in recent years in the ways it mea- sures, monitors, and reports on results. Its commitment to results-based assistance takes the following forms: • All Bank country assistance strategies are now results based, with re- sults frameworks aligned with country priorities, allowing govern- ments, donors, and stakeholders to collaborate more effectively to identify and achieve common goals for development. In addition all new sector strategies and regional development strategies now have YEMEN results frameworks with measurable indicators. Photo: Curt Carnemark • All Bank projects include results frameworks with measurable indica- tors, agreed upon with the country to guide implementation, allow midcourse corrections to be made as needed, measure impact, and roads; water supply; micro, small, and medium enterprises; urban develop- cull lessons learned. Progress on results is disclosed at least once a ment; and information and communication technology. This newly aggre- year—enabling all stakeholders to view each project’s progress to- gated information supplements the more detailed project, country, and ward objectives and results in real time. sector results data previously available. Core sector indicators for additional • When a project is completed, staff and country counterparts prepare sectors and themes are under discussion and will include the IBRD port- an Implementation Completion and Results report to assess and folio as well. document the achievements and results supported by the operation. Quantitative data (enhanced by the core sector indicators) are comple- Similarly, when Country Assistance/Partnership Strategies are com- mented by qualitative reviews at the country, sector, thematic, and project pleted, staff prepare a Completion Report. levels. The reviews illustrate how IDA and IBRD are supporting government • All Bank-supported operations and strategies, when completed, are development programs that make a difference—whether the effort is bol- also evaluated by the Independent Evaluation Group (IEG). This com- stering governance to reduce poverty in Bangladesh, boosting agricultural bination of self- and independent review provides an opportunity for competitiveness in Burkina Faso, equipping the judicial system to promote learning from the successes and failures of Bank operations. To ensure justice in Ethiopia, or bringing clean water to communities in Rwanda. that the lessons from evaluation inform new activities, the Bank requires all new operations to highlight lessons learned, including A GLOBAL WORKFORCE those from IEG evaluations. To promote learning, IEG and Bank Group A true global community, the World Bank’s staff comprises more than management together track implementation of IEG’s recommenda- 10,000 people from 168 countries (beginning in �scal 2011 World Bank tions. In addition, the Bank has been expanding the use of impact evaluations to broaden and deepen evidence on the effectiveness of speci�c interventions and approaches in achieving results. Central and South America Core Sector Indicators 20% 15% Europe IDA is the �rst of the Bank Group’s institutions to adopt a measurement system to identify and track development results. The system combines 4% Middle East and North Africa performance and results indicators using a four-tier approach: IDA Coun- 14% North America tries’ Progress, IDA-Supported Development Results, IDA Operational Effec- tiveness, and IDA Organizational Effectiveness. 21% Africa The Bank has strengthened the way in which it measures results by in- 16% East Asia and Oceania troducing the collection and aggregation of standardized data from proj- ects supported by IDA. Initially data were collected on four sectors. In �scal 10% Central and South Asia 2011 the number of sectors was increased to seven: education; health; 26 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 staffing �gures include full-time staff on conditional appointments). More than 38 percent of the Bank’s total staff work in the Bank’s 124 country offices. The increased presence in the �eld helps the Bank better understand, work more closely with, and provide faster service to its part- ners in client countries. The institution’s diverse workforce brings a wide range of perspectives to bear on poverty reduction issues and emerging development chal- lenges and is critical to the effectiveness of the Bank’s core operational and knowledge services. In its efforts to increase its responsiveness to clients and to better integrate global and country knowledge, the Bank has con- tinued to adapt its human resource policies and practices to facilitate the global mobility of its staff. At the end of �scal 2011, 91 percent of country directors and country managers were based in the �eld. As the Bank continues to focus on the world’s recovery from the �nan- cial crisis and on the achievement of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), it is also evolving to meet the emerging challenges of conflict- affected states. The Bank has established its on-the-ground presence in 26 COLOMBIA of the 33 fragile and conflict-affected states that are transitioning to sus- Photo: Scott Wallace tainable peace and economic growth, and more than 11 percent of the Bank’s operational staff have experience living and working in these chal- lenging environments. The World Bank continues to make progress on its �ve-year Diversity build social protection systems, enhance the gender focus of its pro- and Inclusion Strategy, adopted in 2007. Nationals of developing countries grams and operations, and address the special needs of fragile and now account for 61 percent of all staff and hold 42 percent of managerial conflict-affected situations. positions. Women account for 51 percent of all staff and hold 36 percent of • Create opportunities for growth. Broad-based, sustainable growth of- managerial positions. Sub-Saharan African and Caribbean nationals repre- fers the most robust and durable path out of poverty. The Bank gives sent 16 percent of all staff and hold 11 percent of managerial positions. priority to creating opportunities for growth, focusing on improving Among the Bank’s 33 senior managers, 13 are women and 2 are Sub- the business climate, increasing competitiveness, addressing the in- Saharan African nationals. frastructure gap, promoting regional integration, and scaling up ef- forts to increase women’s participation in economic opportunities. It MODERNIZING THE WORLD BANK has made substantial investments in infrastructure and agriculture, Since 2010 the World Bank has been engaged in a comprehensive mod- which are important components of its support for growth. ernization agenda based on four pillars: • Promote global collective action. The Bank is building the capacity to • Renewing and re�ning its strategic directions help provide and manage global public goods in order to build on, • Adopting 21st-century governance to give greater voice to members reinforce, and coordinate national actions; channel funds to national from developing countries programs; and monitor and report on progress. The Bank is working • Ensuring the institution’s continued �nancial strength with a wide range of partners across a broad spectrum of global • Modernizing products and services, the organization, and processes issues, including �nancial inclusion, education, health, and climate and systems. change, one of the special themes in the IDA16 replenishment. These pillars will help make the Bank more efficient, results focused, re- • Strengthen governance. The Bank continues to give high priority sponsive, and effective. to the governance and anticorruption agenda. An assessment of the lessons of recent work includes: the importance of using country Strategic Priorities systems; the need to identify and measure the effect of governance As the global �nancial crisis began to ease, the Bank reexamined its role in on development results at the sector, country, and global levels; a rapidly changing world, balancing client demands against global and the need for a more informed approach to risk management; and the regional priorities. It established �ve strategic priorities: need for a more rigorous and systematic learning of lessons and • Target the poor and vulnerable. The Bank is focusing on countries that the management of knowledge. It is preparing for a second phase of are off track to reach the MDGs by 2015, particularly countries in its governance and anticorruption work, which will include an analy- Africa. To help ensure access to basic health care, quality schooling, sis of how speci�c thematic areas (procurement, judicial reform, the clean water, energy, food, and jobs, it is working with countries to private sector, and public sector management) can more effectively THE WORLD BANK 27 a total of 47.2 percent. Under the new reforms, the Bank is required to review its shareholding every �ve years, starting in 2015. Financial Capacity Following changes to IBRD loan maturity terms in June 2010, the Bank took several additional steps to ensure its continued �nancial strength. The Board of Governors approved resolutions on IBRD general and selective capital increases, and IBRD shareholders continued to work toward agree- ments on the release of national currency paid-in capital. IDA16 negotiations were completed in 2010, with an agreement on a historic high replenishment of $49.3 billion. This 18 percent increase over the previous replenishment represents the efforts of a global coalition. The increase will substantially enhance IDA’s ability to support low-income countries and activities in gender, climate change, fragility and conflict, and crisis response. Business Modernization An ambitious program of internal reforms aims to modernize business processes to help the World Bank work more closely with clients, enhance their �nancial services, and better gather and disseminate knowledge and NEPAL expertise. Reform priorities and actions fall into three main areas: Photo: Simone McCourtie • Modernize products and services, with a sharper focus on results. The Bank is adopting a more risk-based approach to projects, shifting its focus toward implementation support. It is designing a new lend- ing instrument that disburses directly against results—the Program- contribute to overall objectives and how the Bank can serve as a for-Results—and is reviewing its knowledge services to better achieve catalyst for strengthening good governance globally. and measure impact. • Manage risk and prepare for crises. To assist developing countries— • Modernize the organization for increased integration, openness, and ac- especially low-income countries—in better managing the risks of countability. The Bank is experimenting with ways to make decentral- closer integration in a global environment, the Bank is developing ization even more effective, and connecting knowledge services new and innovative risk management mechanisms and instruments. globally to enhance technical excellence. It responded to food price volatility by extending the Global Food Price Crisis Response Program through June 2012. Since 2008 the • Modernize processes and systems for greater efficiency and flexibility. The Bank and other institutions have fast-tracked $1.5 billion through this Bank is working to update its environmental and social safeguards program to bene�t an estimated 38 million people in 44 countries, policies, and will conduct a complete review of its procurement poli- most of them in Africa. Because low-income countries are especially cies. It is implementing information management technology solu- vulnerable to both �nancial crises and natural disasters, crisis re- tions to better support lending operations, knowledge, global public sponse was made a special theme of IDA16. To enhance IDA’s capac- goods, and human resource processes and systems. ity to respond to crises, the Bank agreed to establish a dedicated crisis response window in IDA in the amount of special drawing rights The Open Bank (SDR) 1.3 billion, including an exceptional allocation of SDR 329 mil- These reforms are anchored in a new era of openness, which in the past lion for Haiti. year saw the World Bank launch a revamped disclosure policy and open its vast storehouse of data and visualization tools to the public. During this Governance period the Bank became an acknowledged transparency leader—as The Development Committee endorsed a package of voice and participa- ranked by the U.K.-based organization Publish What You Fund—as data tion reforms in April 2010. In accordance with the �rst phase, countries in usage tripled and a new Mapping for Results application was launched Africa are now represented by three Executive Directors, elected last fall (see http://maps.worldbank.org), along with four iPhone “apps� and a when a third chair was added. The second phase of voice reforms, ap- new tool for tracking aid flows (see http://worldbank.org/aidflows). proved by the Board of Governors in March 2011, increased the voting These changes go hand in hand with a new multilingual, multimedia power of developing countries and transition economies in IBRD by 3.1 approach that actively engages audiences in live events and discussions, percentage points (a total shift of 4.6 percentage points since 2008) to seeking their questions and crowd-sourcing ideas and observations 28 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 through a range of interactive social media platforms: World Bank Live (see http://live.worldbank.org), the Bank’s Facebook channel (see http:// worldbank.org/facebook), blogs (see http://blogs.worldbank.org), and Twitter (see http://twitter.com/worldbank). World Bank Live is a window into key Bank events and offers webcasts of panel discussions that are fully integrated with audience inputs via the Bank’s website, Facebook, and Twitter. The channel encourages a two-way dialogue with Bank experts on key development topics, and conversations with real-time translation are available in 14 languages. PROGRAMFORRESULTS FINANCING To respond to changing development needs and the demand from client countries, and building on experience to date, the Bank proposed a new lending instrument in �scal 2011—Program-for-Results Financing. Under Program-for-Results, Bank support would help member countries improve the design and implementation of their own development programs. While results are at the center of all that the Bank does, Program-for- BENIN Results would place more direct emphasis on development results by link- Photo: Arne Hoel ing disbursements to results or performance indicators. Program-for- Results would work directly with the program’s institutions and systems and, when appropriate, seek to strengthen those institutions’ governance, capacities, and systems over time. Program-for-Results would also be an The proposed Program-for-Results lending instrument is expected to instrument for strengthening partnerships with governments as well as be submitted for approval by the Bank’s Board of Directors in �scal 2012. relevant development partners and other stakeholders by allowing the Bank to effectively support larger programs and co�nance in pooled fund- SHARING KNOWLEDGE ing arrangements. One of the Bank’s core strategic assets is its knowledge output, as the Program-for-Results would provide member countries with a wider strategy endorsed by the Board in March 2009 recognized. To fully har- range of instruments from which to choose. Development policy lending ness this asset, the Bank seeks to improve its ability to produce, customize, will remain the primary Bank instrument to support policy actions to and share knowledge to its clients through global technical practices; achieve a country’s overall development objectives, with rapidly disburs- make the vast amount of knowledge it produces more impact driven; and ing general budget support. Investment lending will remain the Bank’s strengthen its role as a global connector, linking country practitioners and main instrument to support projects, with disbursement against speci�c policy makers to sources and centers of knowledge and innovation dis- transactions. Program-for-Results would be the instrument of choice when persed across the world. the objective is to support the performance of a government program us- To make the knowledge strategy operational, the Bank created the ing the government’s own systems; when the results require expenditures; Knowledge and Learning Council, which is leading and overseeing the and when the risks to achieving the program’s objectives relate to the gov- new knowledge and learning strategies, and the Matrix Leadership Team, ernance and capacity of the systems to achieve better results. which will make the Bank’s organizational structure of regional and net- The key features of Program-for-Results would be: work departments more effective. It formed Global Expert Teams; estab- • to �nance and help strengthen development programs with clearly lished a social networking platform; created a top-level technical stream; de�ned results. These programs could be new or ongoing, sectoral or launched a Bank Fellows program; funded six Knowledge Platforms; subsectoral, national or subnational, community development pro- and piloted initiatives to support embedded knowledge, South-South grams, and so on. exchanges, and innovation. • to disburse upon achievement of results and performance indicators, The Knowledge and Learning Council began preparing the Knowledge not inputs. Disbursements would be determined by reference to Report, an annual publication that will support the development of a Bank- progress on monitorable and veri�able performance indicators rather wide consensus on modernizing the Bank’s knowledge services, with the than by whether an expenditure had been incurred. aim of strengthening quality, relevance, results, and accountability. The • to focus on strengthening the institutional governance, capacity, and new report reflects the widespread recognition that the Bank needs to systems needed to achieve and sustain a program’s results. become better at responding to demands by clients for timely knowledge • to provide assurance that Bank �nancing is used appropriately and and needs to regularly measure how well it does. To meet client demand that the environmental and social impacts of the program are ade- for world-class knowledge, the Bank must bring to its knowledge products quately addressed. the same rigor and clarity in the formulation of objectives and the identi�- THE WORLD BANK 29 Results, that helps visualize World Bank–funded projects and plot them on maps against various human development indicators (such as infant mor- tality and school enrollment). The World Bank’s portfolios in all 79 IDA countries have been mapped. South–South Knowledge Exchange WBI has substantially stepped up its efforts to connect development prac- titioners with peers who have successfully tackled similar problems. These efforts included a series of dialogues on dealing with the economic crisis, as well as nurturing communities of practice around public–private part- nerships, inclusive cities, governance in extractive industries, and other areas. In addition, the WBI launched a South–South Knowledge Exchange online platform that allows the World Bank to broker practitioner ex- changes on a broad scale and in a systematic manner. Investing in the “How To� of Reform CHINA WBI has invested in a series of nontechnical approaches that complement technical solutions to development problems. The institute’s programs on Photo: Curt Carnemark leadership and coalition building, for instance, help clients to become effective change agents and to navigate the political economy of reforms. In East Africa WBI is working to modernize the procurement system of phar- cation of results that it requires of its lending products. It also needs to maceuticals, often a black hole into which scarce health sector funds disap- develop options for �nancing knowledge services that allow the Bank to pear because of mismanagement and corruption. WBI is bringing together serve all of its clients, including low- and middle-income countries, bor- key counterparts in government, civil society, and the pharmaceutical rowers, and nonborrowers. companies and supporting them to advance this sensitive reform. By �scal 2013 implementation of frameworks for the Bank’s analytical and advisory services, research, and external training services will be Scaling Up the Delivery of Learning Programs in full swing, with baseline and postdelivery data collected to measure WBI has joined forces with leading learning institutions around the world results using established intermediate outcome indicators. Building on to signi�cantly increase the number of thematic learning programs it of- the “K-notes� database (developed by the Middle East and North Africa fers to government counterparts and other development practitioners. region), which aggregates the various series of knowledge notes from In addition, the e-Institute, a platform for the provision of online training, around the institution, data and analysis of knowledge services will be is being established as the main mechanism to scale up the delivery of channeled into a searchable Bank-wide database that staff can use to learning programs. inform policy dialogue and improve outcomes. DEMOCRATIZING DEVELOPMENT WORLD BANK INSTITUTE The Development Economics Vice Presidency (DEC) conducts world-class During the past year, the World Bank Institute (WBI) focused on the imple- research, assesses development prospects (through global monitoring mentation of an ambitious renewal strategy that directly supports the and projections), and collects development data, including international World Bank Group’s knowledge agenda. Through several high-pro�le ini- statistics and data on results monitoring. It seeks to accelerate poverty re- tiatives, WBI was able to start playing the role of connector of knowledge duction and contribute to progress toward achieving the MDGs by provid- at the global level. At the same time, it leveraged its programs to pilot new ing countries with the knowledge they need to make more-informed capacity development approaches and to provide tools to clients to en- policy choices. Its knowledge is also used to inform the Bank’s public advo- hance development initiatives at the local level. cacy initiatives at the global level. DEC’s vision and strategy are consistent with the Bank’s “Post-Crisis Directions� paper and the new institution-wide Innovative Solutions in Support of Open Data knowledge strategy, which focuses on modernizing knowledge services. WBI organized an Apps for Development competition to tap into the cre- (See http://econ.worldbank.org.) ativity of software engineers and encourage them to address development In April 2010 the Bank brought even more global economic and devel- problems using the Bank’s publicly available data sets. As a result, more opment data to the Web for the world to use. Visitors to http://data than 100 apps—half of them from developing countries—were designed, .worldbank.org can easily �nd, download, manipulate, and use the data generating new tools for the research community and the general public. compiled by the Bank—free of charge and without restrictions. Com- In parallel WBI and partners introduced an exciting initiative, Mapping for plementing its Open Data Initiative, the Bank in �scal 2011 extended its 30 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 The Development Impact Evaluation (DIME) initiative, which evaluates projects and programs in client countries, greatly expanded its work this year. It collaborated with 300 agencies in 72 countries to improve the ef- fectiveness of policies and programs and to strengthen country capacity for real-time, evidence-based policy making. The initiative will play a key role in implementing the Bank’s commitment under IDA16 to increase the num- ber of project impact evaluations. (See http://worldbank.org/dime.) As part of its knowledge outreach and generation, DEC continued to oversee a research support program. Its Annual Bank Conference on Development Economics, held in Paris in April 2011, examined the theme of broadening opportunities for development. (See http://worldbank .org/abcde2011.) INTEGRITY As a public institution, the World Bank needs to ensure that development resources reach their intended bene�ciaries. Working with governments, BULGARIA the private sector, civil society, and other international institutions, the Photo: Scott Wallace Integrity Vice Presidency (INT) contributes to the Bank’s governance and anticorruption efforts, helping to ensure that funds are not lost. Established in 2001, INT is the independent arm of the Bank responsible for investigating allegations of fraud and corruption in Bank-�nanced proj- efforts to make its knowledge available globally by launching an initiative ects, as well as allegations of serious fraud and corruption involving staff. called Open Data, Open Knowledge, Open Solutions. The new initiative By combining investigation with an enhanced focus on prevention and the provides information on more than 2,000 �nancial, business, health, eco- early detection of red flags in projects, INT promotes a proactive approach nomic, and human development indicators. to managing fraud and corruption risks across the Bank’s operations. DEC is also developing software tools for data analysis and economic INT has highly specialized international investigators assigned to each forecasts. One is the e-Atlas of Global Development (see http://data of the six Bank regions. In addition INT has set up a preventive services unit .worldbank.org/atlas-global)—a free interactive tool that maps and and a forensic accounting unit to support investigations and to offer ad- graphs more than 175 indicators from the Bank’s development database. vice on how to mitigate a project’s vulnerability to fraud and corruption. Other tools include ADePT, a software platform for automated economic The units also provide training to project teams, implementing entities, analysis (see http://worldbank.org/adept); iSimulate, a platform for and other national institutions, and to representatives of the private sector, running economic simulations online; PovcalNet (see http://iresearch including contractors and consultants. .worldbank.org/PovcalNet); PovMap; and Living Standards Measure- This �scal year INT completed 83 investigations and debarred 35 ment Studies (see http://worldbank.org/lsms). individuals and companies from doing business in any of its projects. DEC responded to the global �nancial crisis through its research, data, The Bank also cross-debarred entities under the terms of the Cross- and analyses. Work on disaster prevention and mitigation proved timely in Debarment Agreement signed with other multilateral development banks the wake of the earthquake and tsunami in Japan. Analysts also conducted and launched by the World Bank in July 2010. research relevant to food and fuel price spikes and to the rush of investors In September 2010 as part of its sanctions reform, the Bank adopted into farmland. Outputs included quick updates on the global economy debarment with conditional release as its default sanction, and INT estab- and commodity prices; original research on the impacts of shocks and cri- lished the Office of Integrity Compliance and posted the Bank’s new ses, including policy responses; a book on the Group of 20 and postcrisis Integrity Compliance Guidelines. The guidelines incorporate internation- growth and development; and updated estimates of the number of people ally recognized integrity standards and principles, and set a benchmark who fell into poverty as a result of the food and �nancial crises. that all debarred �rms need to reach before they may recommence work DEC produced several high-pro�le reports this �scal year, including on Bank-�nanced projects. the flagship World Development Report 2011: Conflict, Security and In June 2011 INT released its �rst global report on the roads sector, Development; Global Economic Prospects; Global Development Horizons; based on lessons derived from its investigations and building on the expe- World Development Indicators 2011; Global Development Finance; and the riences of a number of developed and developing countries. The report Global Monitoring Report 2011: Improving the Odds of Achieving the MDGs. highlights the most common fraud and corruption risks and best practices A migration and remittances team produced a fact book, regular online in mitigating those risks as experienced by developed and developing global remittances briefs, and a series of reports on African migration. countries. This work focuses on addressing vulnerability of the roads sec- THE WORLD BANK 31 transparency and accountability in country-level work. Analyses of political economy and governance constraints to development effectiveness have been increasingly used to help design better and more feasible programs. IEG completed its assessment of the implementation of aspects of GAC Phase I in July 2011. The �ndings of the evaluation will feed into a second phase of GAC, which is now under preparation. Phase II will focus on inten- sifying efforts to measure development results, shifting the focus from individual transactions to building sustainable country-level systems and institutions, and taking a more informed and nuanced approach to risk and risk management. The Bank advanced multiple reforms to promote its own inclusiveness, innovation, efficiency, effectiveness, openness, and accountability this �s- cal year; its efforts to improve its own governance won international recog- nition. In October 2010, Publish What You Fund, a U.K.–based coalition of civil society organizations working on governance, aid effectiveness, and MEXICO access to information, rated the Bank the highest-performing institution among 30 major donors. (See http://worldbank.org/governance.) Photo: Curt Carnemark CIVIL SOCIETY The World Bank Group continued to expand its relations with civil society tor, which is critical to advancing poverty reduction and economic growth organizations (CSOs) throughout the world, through policy dialogue efforts in poor countries. (See http://worldbank.org/integrity.) meetings, formal consultations, programmatic collaboration, and grant- funding mechanisms. To discuss the resurgence of high food prices, GOVERNANCE AND ANTICORRUPTION the Bank convened two food roundtables with dozens of civil society lead- The Bank Group began implementing its Governance and Anticorruption ers from the United States, Europe, and developing countries. As a result (GAC) Strategy in mid–2007. The strategy is guided by seven key principles: of the multiyear dialogue, CSOs actively participated in the delivery of food and agricultural services in 16 of 40 countries that received assistance • Fight poverty by building capable and accountable states that create from the Bank’s Global Food Price Crisis Response Program. In addition opportunities for the poor. three CSO representatives joined the steering committee of the Global • Ensure that work is country driven. Agriculture and Food Security Program. • Adapt implementation to individual country circumstances. This �scal year the Bank met with members of the civil society advisory • Remain engaged even in poorly governed countries so that the poor group on the Bank’s health portfolio, with young Arab leaders on the are not penalized for their government’s actions. democratic movements in the Middle East, and with high-level represen- • Engage with a broad array of stakeholders. tatives of the International Trade Union Confederation. It also conducted • Strive to strengthen, not bypass, country systems. a series of formal consultations with CSOs on the Bank Group’s strategies • Work with governments, donors, and other actors. for the environment, education, performance standards, and trade. The Since 2007 the GAC Council, made up of the Bank’s senior management, most extensive of these meetings was on the �rst phase of the Bank’s has met regularly to monitor progress on the implementation of the strat- energy policy, which involved Internet-based consultations and meetings egy. Phase I helped create tools and resources for mainstreaming the GAC with more than 2,000 people in 31 countries. The Bank also provided approach into country analysis and planning and into sector and project grants to thousands of CSOs worldwide through dozens of grant mecha- operations. Eighteen countries, with help from incremental trust fund re- nisms and community-driven development funds. CSOs were involved in sources, have worked to mainstream governance approaches into country the preparation of 81 percent of all new Bank-�nanced projects during programming. Several innovative programs were developed to improve �scal 2011. 32 THE WORLD BANK ANNUAL REPORT 2011 The World Bank at work Results from the �eld In AFGHANISTAN, there has been a In BHUTAN, schools and homes rebuilt In CAPE VERDE, the corporate tax rate 22 percent reduction in infant mortality expeditiously allowed primary school girls was reduced from 35 percent in 2003 to 30 as well as a 26 percent reduction in child in a remote village of eastern Bhutan to percent in 2008. mortality, in just three years. continue their education within days of the 2009 earthquake. In CHILE, an integrated �nancial In ALGERIA, work on mortgage �nance management system implemented in almost doubled the supply of new and In BOLIVIA, 130,000 people in rural 159 central government agencies renovated housing between 2002 and and peri-urban areas now have access facilitated timely budget execution; 2007, and increased housing loans by to electricity. 178 government agencies were supported more than 60 percent. by a performance-based monitoring In BOSNIA AND HERZEGOVINA, and evaluation system for expenditure In ARGENTINA, national immunization approximately 200,000 jobs were created management, 2002–07. rates increased to 94 percent by late 2009 or sustained during 1997–2005. through the provision of health insurance In CHINA, strengthening the Yangtze for the poor. In BOTSWANA, HIV/AIDS prevention River dikes protected about 75 million moved forward with almost 43 percent people and more than 1.6 million hectares In ARMENIA, 45 percent of households of 15- to 24-year-olds practicing safe sex of farmland from flood damage in in urban multi-apartment buildings now in 2010—more than double the number December 2008. use safe, clean, and affordable gas-based in 2004. heating solutions, up from 11 percent In COLOMBIA, 1.7 million families in 2004. In the state of Minas Gerais, in BRAZIL, bene�ted from the Familias en Acción projects to help the government improve conditional cash transfer program in 2008, In AZERBAIJAN, 1.2 million people in public services helped increase the literacy up from 340,000 families in 2004. 431 communities bene�ted from new rate among 8-year-olds to 76 percent in or reconstructed roads during the last 2009, an increase of 11 percent over 2007. In CÔTE D’IVOIRE, 15,000 ex-combatants �ve years. and at-risk youths were provided with jobs. In BURKINA FASO, 94 percent of In BANGLADESH, 20 million people Ouagadougou’s population—1,480,000 In CROATIA, improved wastewater bene�ted from micro�nance programs people—now have access to safe water. collection and treatment and during the last 12 years. strengthened environmental monitoring In BURUNDI, 29,527 adult ex-combatants bene�ted 146,000 residents and In BELARUS, almost 700 schools and were demobilized from 2004 to 2008. 225,000 tourists in 2010. health facilities were retro�tted with Since September 2006, socioeconomic energy-efficient windows and lighting, reintegration has been provided to In DJIBOUTI, 71 percent of students cutting energy use and freeing up 6,886 demobilized ex-combatants, now complete primary school without resources for service provision. including 380 minors. repeating a grade, up sharply from 52 percent in 2003–04. In BELIZE, upgrading the link between In CAMBODIA, the primary completion the capital city of Belmopan and the rate reached 85.6 percent in 2008–09, In the DOMINICAN REPUBLIC, international airport cut vehicle-operating up from less than 50 percent only �ve electricity losses were cut by 14 percent costs by 62 percent and almost doubled years ago. during 2005–08 under a regional road usage during 2002–05. Caribbean project on secure and In CAMEROON, 1.6 million people clean energy. In BENIN, 230,000 residents gained better bene�ted directly from improved access to infrastructure and basic services infrastructure, including more than In ECUADOR, 1,741 households received during the past �ve years. 98,000 from improved access to electricity from solar home systems in 2008. educational facilities. In the ARAB REPUBLIC OF EGYPT, In GUATEMALA, the time required to In JORDAN, access to justice was the volume of mortgage lending increased register a new business was cut almost in improved when the �rst pro bono lawyers from 300 million Egyptian pounds to 4.2 half, from 45 days during 2004–08. association was created by the Jordan billion Egyptian pounds in just �ve years Center for Legal Aid in coordination with as a result of mortgage sector reforms, In HAITI, 200,000 buildings were assessed the Jordan Bar Association; it provides which included the creation of a mortgage for structural damage in the wake of citizens with a system of ‘one-stop-shops’ �nance regulator and the streamlining of the earthquake. for legal aid, legal counseling, and higher property registration procedures. quality judicial services. In HONDURAS, the number of children In EL SALVADOR, 1.3 million urban enrolled in the grade corresponding to In KAZAKHSTAN, transport costs on public school students bene�ted from their age increased by 19 percent, and the Almaty-Astana road declined on a school feeding program, and student school assistance for students between average by 40 percent, and the accident enrollment increased by almost 6 and 12 years old increased by 9 percent rate between Almaty and Karaganda was 11,000 students. Conditional cash transfer between 1998 and 2004. reduced by more than 20 percent from programs helped 100,000 families as 1999 to 2007. In HUNGARY, pollution in the Danube of 2010. River Basin was reduced by more than In KENYA, 32,000 poor orphans and In ERITREA, 31,556 orphans were placed 50 percent by expanding the wastewater vulnerable children have better living with families by 2005. treatment capacity of utilities during conditions because of cash transfers to 2000–07. their households. In ETHIOPIA, 264,000 primary school teachers were hired, helping to increase In INDIA, over 98 percent of India’s In the KYRGYZ REPUBLIC, the net primary school enrollment rate children now have access to a primary 92 percent of people now have access from 68.5 percent in 2005 to 83.5 percent school within 1 kilometer of their homes; to pharmaceuticals, up from 77 percent in 2009. 5 million children remain out of school, in 2001. compared with 25 million in 2004; In the FORMER YUGOSLAV REPUBLIC transition rates from primary to upper In the LAO PEOPLE’S DEMOCRATIC OF MACEDONIA, real estate cadastre primary rose from 75 percent in 2002 to REPUBLIC, the backbone of the country’s coverage more than doubled from 43 84 percent in 2007. road transport network improved since percent in 2005 to 99 percent in 2009, 1996, with travel speeds rising from 35 and the annual number of registered In INDONESIA, the institutional kilometers/hour to 80 kilometers/hour. transactions increased by 121 percent. framework for addressing corruption was signi�cantly strengthened by the In LATVIA, 90 percent of 5-year-olds In THE GAMBIA, 378,000 urban residents establishment of the Anti-Corruption and 98 percent of 6-year-olds have been bene�ted from better living conditions as Commission, the Anti-Corruption Court, enrolled in preschool since October 2009. a result of infrastructure improvements. the Judicial Commission, the Police Also, government assistance has ensured Commission, and the Prosecutorial that no student need travel more than In GEORGIA, there was a 98 percent Commission in 2007. 60 minutes to get to school. vaccination rate for common childhood diseases in 2009, up from 78 percent In JAMAICA, 85 percent of HIV-positive In LEBANON, 300 kilometers of storm in 2004. pregnant women receiving antenatal care drainage network was improved, along were given anti-retroviral treatment in with 28 kilometers of the potable In GHANA, the improved provision of 2008, compared with only 10 percent water network and 36 kilometers of the maternal and child health care reduced in 2002. sewerage network, from 2000 to 2008. under-�ve mortality rates to 80 per 1,000 live births in 2008, from 111 in 2003; neonatal mortality also declined. In LESOTHO, there was a 10 percentage In MEXICO, 6.8 million students received a In NIGERIA, 3.4 million bene�ciaries point increase in the modern better education when the Quality Schools from the agricultural sector were able to contraceptive prevalence rate, from Program increased the number of schools increase their income by approximately 37 percent in 2004 to 47 percent in 2009. from 21,000 to 39,000 in poor and very 63 percent between 2004 and 2009 poor communities from 2006 to 2009. through access to better equipment. In LIBERIA, 842 kilometers of roads—almost one-tenth of Liberia’s road In MOLDOVA, mother-to-child In the ORGANISATION OF EASTERN network and major road corridors—were transmission of HIV infection decreased by CARIBBEAN STATES, there was an 8.4 rehabilitated or repaired during the last almost 90 percent—from 20 percent percent increase in the net enrollment several years. in 2002 to 1.7 percent in 2007. rate for secondary education in Grenada and a 34.7 percent increase for St. Vincent In LITHUANIA, the rehabilitation and In MONGOLIA, there was a 69 percent and the Grenadines between 2002 and extension of more than 2 kilometers increase in the kindergarten enrollment 2008, and a 10 percent increase in the of breakwaters, from 1999 to 2007, has rate since 2002. transition rate to secondary education for improved the competitiveness, safety, and underserved areas. environment of the Port of Klaipêda. In MOZAMBIQUE, there were 11.3 million tons of port traffic in 2009, In PAKISTAN, local hydropower In MADAGASCAR, 5,000 new businesses compared with 8.2 million tons in 2002. generation increased from about were registered in three regions between 35 percent to 46 percent of total 2006 and 2008, and an estimated In MOROCCO, the mobile phone market generation in 2003–04, providing 10,000 new jobs were created. grew to 7.3 million users in 2003, up increased access to electricity. from less than 117,000 in 1998, when In MALAWI, there was a competition and regulatory reform In PANAMA, an additional 76,000 people 12 percentage point decline in the poverty were introduced. in poor and isolated rural communities headcount, from 52 percent in 2005 to received a new nutritional component as 40 percent in 2008. In NAMIBIA, access to post-basic part of a health services package in 2010. education and training in poor regions was In MALAYSIA, 33 primary schools, increased when 60 percent more grade 11 In PAPUA NEW GUINEA, rehabilitation 26 secondary schools, 447 teacher’s places were created from 2008 to 2009. of the Port of Rabaul, following the quarters, and about 2,700 student hostel eruption in 1994, allowed international units were completed, and a vocational In NEPAL, 168,000 workers were cargo to be shipped again directly to and School to Work Program helped employed, and 118 kilometers of rural from the port by 2007. 2,654 underachieving secondary roads were constructed or rehabilitated students in 2000. during the last two years, through a In PARAGUAY, 325,000 people in rural community-driven operation. areas—25,000 of them members of In MALI, 650,000 more people have indigenous communities—gained access access to electricity as of May 2010. In NICARAGUA, 35 micro enterprises to water and sanitation through the employing approximately 400 people construction and expansion of 600 water In MAURITIUS, unemployment declined were established to routinely maintain supply schemes and the provision of from 9.5 percent in 2005 to 7.2 percent 2,400 kilometers or 88 percent of the 23,000 latrines between 1997 and 2007. in 2008 as a result of the government’s maintainable core road network. reform program, and the unemployment In PERU, more than 15,000 kilometers rate for women decreased signi�cantly In NIGER, use of health care centers of rural roads were rehabilitated between as new job opportunities emerged in the almost doubled, from 20 percent in 2005 1995 and 2006. service sector. to 39 percent in 2009. In the PHILIPPINES, about 5 million In SRI LANKA, 55,000 farm households In UGANDA, by 2007, all major local residents of Bicol, who had suffered power bene�ted from the recultivation of governments had a three-year rolling shortages because of typhoons, bene�ted 35,000 hectares of irrigated land and the development plan and almost all of them from a stabilized power supply in 2008. rehabilitation of seven major irrigation submitted �nal accounts on time to the schemes between 2004 and 2009. Ugandan Office of the Auditor General. In the RUSSIAN FEDERATION, about 65 percent of people infected with HIV In SOUTH AFRICA, reforms to budgeting In UKRAINE, measures to stabilize the received anti-retroviral treatment in 2008, and �nancial management systems were banking sector after the crisis resulted up from 25 percent in 2006. implemented in 41 municipalities between in 6 million depositors regaining access 2003 and 2008. to their bank accounts in banks that had In RWANDA, 750,000 people now have either been recapitalized by the state or access to a reliable electrical supply, In ST. LUCIA, more children gained had been strengthened by the Deposit with electricity load shedding reduced access to education when more than Guarantee Fund between 2009 and 2010. substantially from approximately 2,000 additional secondary school places 50 percent at peak hours in 2004 to were provided through the construction In URUGUAY, 1,000 schools had access to 0 percent in 2010. or rehabilitation of school facilities in the Internet by 2008, compared with none underserved areas in 2007. in 2001. In SAMOA, 24 kilometers of sea wall were rehabilitated to protect coastal villages, In ST. VINCENT AND THE In UZBEKISTAN, 86 percent of women and four bridges were rebuilt by 2008. GRENADINES, the extensive training of received antenatal care in 2008, compared staff and the purchase of emergency and with 79 percent in 2004. In SENEGAL, the gross primary school communications equipment increased the enrollment rate was 84 percent in 2008, government’s disaster response capacity In VIETNAM, new energy efficiency up from 67 percent in 2002. by 2006. standards were introduced for energy- intensive consumer goods in 2008 In SERBIA, public �nancial management In TAJIKISTAN, 71,000 food-insecure and 2009. was strengthened by the introduction of a households bene�ted from wheat seed comprehensive and integrated medium- and fertilizer distribution in 2008. In WEST BANK AND GAZA, some term planning and budgeting framework 85 uncontrolled dumpsites in Jenin and in 2009, and by new laws to enhance the In TANZANIA, 88 percent of trunk and Tubas were closed and rehabilitated, management, oversight, transparency, and regional roads are now in good condition, freeing up 1,200 dunums of land for accountability of procurement in 2008. compared with 51 percent in 2000. development and increasing the value of neighboring properties. In SIERRA LEONE, 700,000 people In THAILAND, 1.15 million poor and gained access to improved health and vulnerable people bene�ted from a In the REPUBLIC OF YEMEN, sanitation facilities, and 148 health facilities low-income health card scheme. 30,000 girls now attend school as a result were renovated and equipped between of conditional cash transfer schemes 2004 and 2009. In TONGA, 42 community halls were introduced in 2008 and 2009. repaired or reconstructed following In the SLOVAK REPUBLIC, by 2007, the cyclone. In ZAMBIA, 1.2 million people in nine signi�cant improvements in its macro towns across the country were provided �scal forecasting capacity helped provide In TURKEY, 4.6 million households access to improved water and sanitation a starting point for preparing the received electricity through improvements facilities between 1996 and 2000. annual budget. to the transmission capacity and efficiency over the last decade. The World Bank Annual Report 2011 Office of the Publisher, External Affairs Team Leader and Editor Cathy Lips Assistant Editor Prateeksha Nagar Editorial Production Susan Graham Janet Sasser Print Production Denise Bergeron Andres Meneses The World Bank Annual Report 2011 was typeset by BMWW. Design oversight was provided by Gensler. 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MIDDLE EAST AND NORTH AFRICA EUROPE AND CENTRAL ASIA FY11 New Commitments FY11 New Commitments IBRD | $1,942 million IBRD | $5,470 million IDA | $123 million IDA | $655 million Portfolio of Projects | $9.4 billion Portfolio of Projects | $22.6 billion Russian Federation Russian Fed. Belarus Ukraine Moldova Mongolia Romania Kazakhstan Bulgaria Georgia Uzbekistan Azerbaijan Kyrgyz Rep. China Armenia Turkmenistan Turkey Tajikistan EAST ASIA AND PACIFIC Afghanistan Rep. of Algeria Tunisia Lebanon Syrian A.R. Iraq Korea FY11 New Commitments Morocco Islamic Rep. West Bank and Gaza of Iran Pakistan IBRD | $6,370 million Jordan Bhutan Libya Arab Rep. Nepal IDA | $1,627 million of Egypt India Portfolio of Projects | $29.9 billion Bangladesh Mexico Dominican Myanmar Vietnam Republic Mauritania Jamaica Cape Verde Rep. of Lao P.D.R. Belize Haiti Sudan Yemen Eritrea Philippines Guatemala Honduras Senegal Mali Burkina Niger Thailand Nicaragua The Gambia Faso Chad Cambodia El Salvador Guinea-Bissau Nigeria Federated States of Micronesia Panama Guinea Côte Djibouti Marshall Costa Rica R.B. de Central Islands Guyana d'Ivoire Ghana Benin African Ethiopia Sri Lanka Venezuela Sierra Leone Colombia Cameroon Rep. Liberia Palau Suriname Togo Malaysia Somalia Equatorial Guinea Maldives Uganda Ecuador São Tomé and Principe Gabon Kenya Kiribati Rep. of Rwanda Congo Kiribati Burundi Seychelles Dem. Rep. Solomon of Congo Tanzania Indonesia Papua Islands Comoros New Guinea Angola Timor-Leste Tuvalu Samoa LATIN AMERICA AND THE CARIBBEAN Peru Malawi FY11 New Commitments Brazil Zambia Bolivia Vanuatu IBRD | $9,169 million Madagascar Fiji Fiji Tonga IDA | $460 million Zimbabwe Mauritius Poland Namibia Portfolio of Projects | $32.5 billion Botswana Paraguay Ukraine Mozambique SOUTH ASIA South Africa Swaziland FY11 New Commitments Lesotho Chile IBRD | $3,730 million Argentina Romania Dominican Uruguay Croatia Serbia IDA | $6,400 million Republic Bosnia and Herzegovina Kosovo Portfolio of Projects | $38.1 billion Antigua and Bulgaria Montenegro Barbuda St. Kitts and Nevis Albania FYR Macedonia AFRICA Dominica FY11 New Commitments St. Vincent and St. Lucia IBRD | $56 million the Grenadines Countries eligible for IBRD funds only IDA | $7,004 million Grenada Countries eligible for blend of IBRD and IDA funds Portfolio of Projects | $38.7 billion Trinidad and Tobago Countries eligible for IDA funds only R.B. de Venezuela Inactive IDA-eligible countries Countries not receiving World Bank funds Offices of the World Bank Offices with the Country Director present World Bank region boundaries In A F G H A N I S TA N , there has been a 22 percent reduction in infant mortality as well as a 26 percent reduction in child mortality, in just three years. | In A LG E R I A , work on mortg ge finance almost doub n child e ears. rk e na mortgage fin b more than 60 percent. | In A R G E N T I N A , national immunization rates increased to 94 percent by late 2009 through the provision of health insuranc for the poor. | In A R M E N I A , 45 percent of households r perc on ra ough o of health su nce r poor. n s from 11 percent in 2004. | In A Z E R B A I J A N , 1.2 million people in 431 communities benefited from new or reconstructed roads during the last five years. | In B A N G L A D E S H , 20 millio people ben fited perc 1.2 peo om rom new or nstruc uct n las ve durin he la five ye s l io 20 llion eo bene d s nergy-effi ws y and freeing up resources for se vice provis on | In B E L I Z E , upg ad ng the link between the capital city of Belmopan a facilities were retrofitted with energy-efficient windows and lighting, cutting energy use and f ce ser ice o on. c p eso rces or se ic provision. nn. n p ding pgr di e upg adi g the l be een tal capita city Belmop mo lmopan nfrastructure and basic services during the past five ye rs. | In B H U TA N , schools and homes rebuilt expeditiously allowed primary during 2002–05. | In B E N I N , 230,000 residents gained better access to infr 2002–05 230,00 t ai nt gain o infr uctu asic e vic during the as s g ng h years. e yea o scho and om eb y ary earthquake. | In B O L I V I A , 130,000 people in rural and peri-urban areas now have access to electricity. | In B O S N I A an H E R Z E G O V I N A , approximately 200,000 jobs were created or sustained dur n opl pl 30,000 peopl in u a and eri-urb er -u b urba a v w hav c ess to electricity. tr ty. tr ty.y and pr p ppro ely ,0 e ,000 obs were created sustai a 15- to 24-year-olds practicing safe sex in 2010—more than doubl the number in 2004 | In the state of Mi 5 year-olds r ing 0 ex n 2010—more han double han bl r ber in 2004. er 0 th state f Minas Gerais, in B R A Z I L , proj s to help the government impr ve public services helped in ease the lit he te Ger i j rojects lp h el the e en imp e publi ervice ent pro bli i lped increase i In B U R U N D I , 29,527 adult ex-combatants were demobilized from 2004 to 200 Sinc Septem er 2006, socioeconom c reintegration has been provid to 6,886 demobilized ex combatants, including 380 min ex mbat n we obi emobil 20 to 20 m 008. ince eptemb 006 n onomi ei g on has en mobiliz vided 6,8 6 demobilized ex-co n inclu in 3 0 min infrastructur including more tha 98,000 from improved access to educatio fa ties | In C A P E V E R D E , the corporate ta rate was reduced from 35 percent i 2003 to 30 percent in 2008. | In C H I L E , a infrastr cture, ing 00 re than ,000 f m ed t ss o educational facilities. he corpor or o a was tax ate wa e from 5 p cent in 0 percent 2 0 and evaluati n system for expenditure management 2002–07. | In C H I N A , stre gthening the Yangtze River dikes protect d about 75 mil ion peop e and more than 1.6 million hectares of farmland from flood tion xpendi m o expendit ent, 0 2–0 n tr gthen t trengthe kes angtz River dik s cte bout cted ill o d eopl and m n1 illion h rmland f o es f farml d 15,000 T om tants d at-risk youths were pro ed with jobs. | In C R O AT I A , improved wastew ter collection and treatment and strengthened environmental monitoring ben fited 146,000 res dents s 15,0 ex-combatants and at provided n d tewater collect on r llecti ec eatmen n strengthene enviro t treatm g ne n al m 000 s g benefited 146,00 esi ents elect icity los were cut by 14 percent during 2005–08 under a regional C bbean project on secure and clean ener y. | In E C UA D O R , 1,74 househ lds received ele ricity fr electr c losses were c e ing 005 bb giona Caribbea gi b t on e c ean e erg a r UA 741 ouseho h home syste ems 2008. 8. elect c from solar home systems in 2008. which inc ed the creation of a mortgage finance regulator and the str am inin of prope ty registration procedures. | In E L S A LVA D O R , 1.3 million urban public sc ol stude s benefited from a school h which included he fina m d h treaml ning proper istratio p oced stration t mi lion urban pub school m ted m dents ben te from s ool o ol by 2005. | In E T H I O P I A , 264,000 prima school teachers were hi ed, helpi to increase the net primary school enr ll n 264 000 p imary h l h hired hel d lping o increase th n d, e imary h o nroll m llment rate from 68.5 percent in 200 to 83.5 percent in 2009. | In the F O R M E R Y U 68 5 nt 2005 35 e in 20 h the 121 percent. | In the G A M B I A , 378,00 urban residents benefited from bette living con tions as a res lt of inf 1 n ent n 78, 8, 8,000 e nefit d fr etter condi o s resesu e infrastructure improvements. | In G E O R G I A , there was a 98 percent vaccination rate for co t n va n rate r o A from 111 in 2003 neonatal mortality also declined. | In G UA T E M A L A , the time required to registe a new bus 11 n 2003; 1 ity a y ime d i te ter usiness was cut almost in half, fro 45 days during 2004–08. | In H A I T I , 200,000 buildings w a om rom n 0 buildings for students between 6 and 12 years old increased by 9 percent between 1998 and 2004. | In H U N G A R Y , poll tudents w rs l r t etwee 8 and r Basi en e nding e ollution in the Danube River Basin was reduced by more than 50 percent by expanding the wastewa compared with 25 million in 2004; transition rates from primary to upper primary rose from 75 percent in 2002 to 84 percent in 2007. | In I N D O N E S I A , the institutional framework for add ssi corruption m ared 4; n er m y e ent 2002002 ei w addressing n In J A M A I C A , 85 percent of HIV-positive pregnant women receiving antenata ca were given anti-retroviral treatment in 2008, compared with only 10 percent in 2002. | In J O R D A N , access to justice was n 85 perc s c atal care er iv tal a a ere nt al e h a ai gal counselin , and higher quality judicial services. | In K A Z A K H S TA N , transpo t costs on the Almaty A ana road declined on average by 40 percent, and the accident ra e bet een Almaty and Kara aid, legal c seling er r higher qualit po port e o he Almat Asta n v geg rat betw e K Y R G Y Z R E P U B L I C , 92 percent of people now have access to pharmaceuticals, up from 77 percent in 20 1. | In the L AO P E O P L E ’S D E M O C R AT I C R E P U B L I C , the backbone of the country n c ce om 77 pe t 200 nt e y in presch e er 009 o tr oe n chool. | In L E B A N O N , 300 kilometers of storm dra nage network wa in reschool since October 2009. Also, government assistance has ensured that no student need travel more than 60 minutes to get to sch rai r ork wa co trac c ra a nce rate, from c t p percent in 2009. | In L I B E R I A , 842 kilom ters of roads—almost one-tenth of Li contraceptive prevalence rate, fro 37 percent in 2004 to 47 pe n 42 i omete ds most m s on i a nth Liberia’s road network and major road corridors—were rehabilitat environment of the Port of Klaipêda. | In M A D AG A S C A R , 5,000 new businesses were registered in three regions between 2006 and 2008 and an estimated 10,000 new jobs were created. | In M A L AW I , n onmen m he Port e t ê pê A g ered e gistered e en 0 2008, n 2,700 stud t hostel units were completed, and a vocational School to Work Program helped 2,654 underachieving secondar students in 2000 | In M A L I , 650,000 more people have access to electricity as of May t 7 studen ostel un m omple e d v cational Sc oo 4 nd rach v n d rachi ary tu e 00. 2000. n 65 r y as new job opportunities emerged in the service sector. | In M E X I CO , 6.8 million students received a better education when the Quality Schools Program increased the number of schools from 21,000 to 39 rtun ew job portu di e ive ve e ett ca ucat on when choo y Scho am i 9 In M O N G O L I A , there was a 69 percent increase in the kindergarten enrollment rate since 2002. | In M O Z A M B I Q U E , there were 11.3 million tons of port traffic in 2009, compared with 8.2 million tons in e er e e kind rgart ar r the o io por n post-basic educa on and training in poor regions w s inc ased when 60 percent mo grade 11 places were created from 2008 to 2009. | In N E PA L , 168,000 workers were employed and 118 kilometers of rur i ducati o s was increa when n ent more re fro 008 08 9 A 0 r routinely maintain 2,400 kilometers or 88 percent of the maintainable core road network. | In N I G E R , use of health care centers almost do maintain 2 i in pe ble or road network. se se ealth care nter alm doubled, from 20 percen in 2005 to 39 percent in 2009. | In N I G E R I A e o ent O F E A S T E R N C A R I B B E A N S TAT E S , there was an 8.4 percent in rease in the net enrollment rate for secondary education in Grenada and a 3 percent inc nt increase a e f ec dar ducati uc uca ion n 34.7 increase for St. Vincent and the Grenadines b t PA ion in 003–04, providing increased access to electricity. | In PA N A M A , an additional 76,000 people in poor and isolate rural communities received a new nutritional component as part of a he of total generation in 2003 sed 0 p n oo oor olated u e tri o A by 2007. | In PA R AG U AY , 325,000 people in rural areas—25,000 of them members of indigenous communities gained acce to water and sanitation through the construction and expansion of 600 water 25 a em emb ties—gai d acces i i ined cces gai ess o struction 5 million residents of Bicol, who had suffered power shortages because of typhoons, benefited from a stabilized power supply in 2008. | In the R U S S I A N F E D E R AT I O N , a col, o f Bico ho had suff ra yphoo s, b ow r suppl p 008. 20 f ople n about 65 percent of peopl in substantially from approximately 50 percent at peak hours in 2004 to 0 percent in 2010. | In S A M O A , 24 kilometers of sea wall were rehabilitated to protect coastal villages, an four bridges were rebuilt by oximately perc pe 00 c rs of s s re t ote g and o b g r rebu by comprehensive and integrated medium m planning and budgeting framewo k in 2009, and by new laws to enhance the management, overs ght, transparency, and accountability of procurement in 2008. | In S m-term la ated medium- l ng f amewor d an anage en oversi n y cy bilit n 2008. by 2007, significant improvements in its m eme e l oe n apacity helped provide a starting point for preparing the annual budget. | In S R I L A N K A , 55,000 farm households benefited from the recult n its macro fiscal forecasting cap el elped o oi ge get. ua budget t the recult were implemented in 41 mun cipaliti s bet een 2003 and 2008. | In S T. LU C I A , m n i uni palitie betw 008 more children gained access to education wh more than 2,0 additional secondary school places were provided thro ine ned when n 2,000 l al s o d thro communicat ns equipment incr ased the government’s disas respon capacity by 2006. | In TA J I K I S TA N , 71,000 foo nicatio incre nt ent’ aster ponse y by 00 o T H A I L A N D , 1.15 million poor and vul 15 m e d vulnerable people benefited from a low-in ome he l peop ene enefi ow-inc health card scheme. | In TO N G A , 42 2 decade. | In U G A N D A , by 2007, all major local go l 7 all m ocal gov loc l gov governments had a three-year rolling development plan and almost all of the ad t d vel ing develo most the anks d eith r bee ecapitali ither e th h bank accounts in bank that had either been recapita zed by the st e or had been strengthened by the Deposit Guarantee Fund eca c the stat d been hened t d posit Guarantee Fund with 79 percent in 2004. | In V I E T N A M , new energy efficiency standards were introduced for energy-inte sive consumer go y a gy efficiency a da d were in roduce for e e e n od e d t y inten o value of neighboring properties. | In the R E P U B L I C O F Y E M E N , 30,000 girls now attend school as a result of condition tend atten chool l esul result conditdition THE WORLD BANK 1818 H St NW ISBN 978-0-8213-8828-0 90000 Washington, DC 20433 USA Telephone: 202-473-1000 Facsimile: 202-477-6391 Web site: www.worldbank.org/annualreport/2011 9 780821 388280 E-mail: wbannualreport@worldbank.org SKU 18828