97961 NOTE 1 8 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar1 Defining appropriate institutional and financing arrangements is crucial to achieve sustainable social protection in Myanmar. This will require setting up overarching coordination mechanisms, with strong political leadership at the union level complemented by a more prominent role for region/state governments and local-level structures in social protection programming, financing, and deliv- ery. This will lead to an effective and sustainable social protection system that addresses local priorities and increases accountability to citizens. 1. This Note was prepared by Mariana Infante-Villarroel (World Bank) with comments and inputs from Puja Vasudeva Dutta, Khin Aye Yee, Carlos Galian, Inge Stokkel, and Khim Ma Ma Sew (World Bank) and Lou Tessier (International Labour Organization (ILO)). The Note benefited from discussions with the Myanmar Development Resource Institute (MDRI) team. Any comments and questions can be addressed to ainfantevillarro@worldbank.org. The team is grateful to the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement and to the Ministry of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development for their inputs and facilitation of field trips for the entire assess- ment; and to the Ministry of Labor, Employment and Social Security, the Ministry of Finance and the Ministry of National Planning and Economic Development for their inputs and guidance. The team benefited from contributions and field support from WFP, ILO, UNOPS-LIFT, SC, HAI, ActionAid, IOM, MDRI, and several UN agencies and NGOs throughout the process. The team is grateful to the Rapid Social Response program and its five donors the Russian Federation, Sweden, Norway, the United Kingdom and Australia for funding this assessment. 2 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 3 1. Introduction In order to be able to respond effectively to the needs of beneficiaries, social protection systems aim to harmonize approaches at three levels: policy, program, and delivery. Policy development and coordination require functions that a) allow for overall alignment of social protection provi- sion with high-level development objectives; b) ensure coherent implementation functions across government levels and mandates, thus facilitating inter-institutional coordination; and c) mobilize sustainable and predictable resources for social protection provision at all three levels. Program design and coordination require functions that identify the type of instruments (programs) need- ed to respond to social protection needs and that harmonize and improve the design of existing programs or create new ones to fill gaps. Delivery systems to implement social protection pro- grams include beneficiary identification and enrollment, transactions (e.g. benefit payments and reimbursement), communication and outreach, grievance and redress, record-keeping and infor- mation management, and monitoring and evaluation (M&E). Figure 1: Three levels of engagement of social protection systems2 Source: World Bank (2012). 2. For more information on social protection systems (objectives, components, programs, and results) see the Note on ‘Framework for the development of social protection systems’. 4 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection Myanmar’s institutional architecture for social protection provision is being shaped by its cur- rent reform process: from military rule to democratic governance, from armed conflict to peace, and from a centrally controlled and closed economy to one that can end poverty and promote inclusive growth (World Bank, 2014). The objectives of achieving people-centered development and democratic accountability are opening up opportunities to strengthen the role of government in service delivery. At the same time, the government’s capacity to deliver social programs and services can be strained by persistent gaps in the current institutional and financial architecture. The government will need to address these issues at various levels in the process of building a coherent social protection system. This Note analyzes how and where (at what level of government) best to finance, manage, and deliver social protection in Myanmar, following the principle of ‘finance follows function’ to ensure resources for effective service delivery at all levels of functional assignment.3 See Annex 1 for a conceptual framework. The Note assesses current functions for social protection provision in Myanmar and provides recommendations for enhanced coordination and delivery of social pro- tection policies and programs. International examples can help Myanmar identify arrangements to increase the effectiveness of social protection provision. 2. Current institutional arrangements for social protection provision in Myanmar 2.1 Policy development and coordination Overarching policy frameworks identify poverty reduction as a central objective in Myanmar’s development agenda and suggest the use of social protection to help achieve it. The long-term National Comprehensive Development Plan (NCDP) identifies promoting human development and poverty reduction as one of its strategic objectives. This should be achieved through increased equity and improved access to services, employment opportunities, and citizen participation and through focused activities in the areas of social welfare, education for all, health coverage, and food security. The Framework for Economic and Social Reform (FESR) identifies social protection as a necessary component of Myanmar’s reform process. Several social protection instruments, such as social security provisions, stipends and other types of cash transfers (CTs), and public works programs (PWPs) are explicitly mentioned as having the potential to break intergenera- tional cycles of poverty and are in need of sufficient resource mobilization to take them to scale (Planning Commission, 2013). Despite the enabling policy environment at the higher level, SP policies are being formulated in parallel processes across different ministries. For instance, the Rural Development Strategic Framework (RDSF) and the Social Protection Strategic Plan (SPSP) were both drafted in 2014 and address the question of social assistance as a poverty reduction tool through a multi-sectoral ap- 3. World Bank (2015). This Note does not cover detailed implementation arrangements; more on these can be found in the Notes on ‘The Experience of cash transfers in Myanmar’ and ‘The experience of public works programs in Myanmar’. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 5 proach. The roles and responsibilities for coordination, design, and delivery of social assistance under these frameworks are still being articulated. Sectoral policies in education and health con- tinue to guide elements of social assistance provision, such as demand-side approaches to univer- sal health coverage and education for all, whereas social welfare services fall under the Ministry of Social Welfare, Relief and Resettlement (MSWRR). In terms of social security provision, current programs covering private formal workers and civil servants are guided by separate sets of laws and regulations to be followed by the Ministry of Finance (MOF) for pensions and by the Social Security Board (SSB), Ministry of Labor, Employment and Social Security (MOLESS), for social secu- rity (see Annex 2). There is not yet an overarching institution that provides coherent guidance and coordination. Multiple multi-stakeholder committees, such as sector Technical Working Groups, support policy development and inter-ministerial coordination for various policies and programs that relate to social protection. An overarching body that could articulate social protection provision beyond ministerial mandates as part of Myanmar’s high-level poverty reduction and development agenda is yet to emerge. 2.2 Program design Myanmar’s level of decentralization and the pace of its reforms currently translate into highly centralized structures for social protection provision that reflect broader patterns of social ser- vice delivery.4 Annex 2 illustrates how social protection programs (the school stipends pilot pro- gram,5 the maternal and child health voucher scheme (MCHVS), pensions, and SSB schemes) are being designed and implemented. Decisions on budget allocation, program design, and roles and responsibilities for implementation are highly centralized at the union level (i.e. these are decon- centrated functions).6 Input from region/state governments into program design to reflect local needs is for the most part limited or non-existent.7 For instance, in the school stipends pilot, al- though state/region education officers (S/REOs) are involved in consultations for township selec- tion, state/region governments are not yet actively involved. Township offices play a key role (see next section) in supporting implementation in the stipends, MCHVS, and SSB schemes. However, they have limited capacity to influence or gather feedback on design and standards; training and information-sharing on program coordination are mostly top-down processes. 4. Social sectors are part of Schedule 1 of the Constitution and therefore remain highly centralized, as the authority to issue legislation and undertake planning processes remains with the union government. For more information on Myanmar’s institutional structure at union, region/state, and local level, refer to Nixon et al. (2013) and the World Bank (2015). 5. The Ministry of Education’s (MOE’s) stipend program has two modalities of implementation: a) the ‘national program’ has been in operation since 2009/10 and is based on MOE’s current guidelines for implementation, covering all townships in Myanmar at a small scale and prioritizing orphans; and b) the ‘pilot’ program (described in Annex 1) tests changes to the operational design of the program – namely, criteria to prioritize townships and students, conditions, and increased benefit levels. 6. Deconcentrated, delegated, and devolved functions reflect different levels of discretion in decision-making processes, with decon- centrated being the more centralized channel, typically via a single ministry; devolved functions give near full discretion to local governments and decision-making bodies, along with discretionary resources. More information can be found in Annex 1. 7. Region/states governments have little or no coordination with deconcentrated structures of union-level ministries, while region/ state departments exist, sometimes in addition to union-level ministries, creating an ambiguous sector landscape at region/state level. More information can be found in Nixon et al. (2013). 6 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection Different solutions have emerged to address capacity constraints in program design and imple- mentation in these programs – solutions that depend on available human and technical re- sources. In the SSB schemes, for example, a higher-level ministerial structure – the SSB head office – supports township-level implementers in implementation processes. In other programs, non- government stakeholders such as development partners (DPs) and non-governmental organiza- tions (NGOs) support government in developing or revising operational guidelines or setting up pilot programs (e.g. the stipends program, the MCHVS). Centralizing information for planning and programming purposes is not yet a common practice. The government is taking steps in the direc- tion of strengthening operational capacity within ministries by selecting and training permanent secretaries and by enhancing delivery systems. 2.3 Delivery systems Townships represent the lowest official administrative divisions of the union at which central government offices exist, and thus become the most important subnational structure in the delivery of social protection programs. Deconcentrated ministerial structures such as SSB town- ship officers and inspectors and township education officers (TEOs) are paramount in social pro- tection delivery, particularly beneficiary selection and enrollment, benefit payments and reim- bursement, and grievance and redress. Region/state levels have some supervisory and supportive roles but district-level structures have a very limited role in social protection delivery, except for in processing pension applications of low-ranking civil servants. Local elected bodies such as village Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 7 and village tract administrators have no formal role in program implementation, although they are sometimes informed about program implementation in their villages or consulted about potential beneficiaries, as in the MCHVS (see discussion on identification below). The General Administration Department (GAD) is an important stakeholder at local level but its involvement with current service delivery is minimal. The GAD has a long history of functions related to collecting demographic data and managing resources – the latter being scaled down – and new functions related to public administration of local governments, including of region/ states. For instance, township administrators are GAD officials and the GAD appoints village tract clerks. The GAD has also served as member and coordinator of social activities (e.g. partnership with MSWRR on disaster risk and articulation with DPs’ social programs) (Kyi Pyar Chit Saw and Arnold, 2014). Its role in decision-making at township level is less prominent, with the appearance of assorted planning committees that share decisions among a wider number of stakeholders, al- though the coordination of such structures is still a major GAD function. A minimal but increasingly important form of subnational government exists at the local level but so far has a limited role in the implementation of social protection programs. Elected village administrators (VAs) and village tract administrators (VTAs) are supported by appointed village tract clerks and could more actively support some of the delivery functions described above.8 VTAs have no active role in the programs analyzed, although VAs have a role in beneficiary identi- fication in the MCHVS. As townships are not composed of elected officials and as such are not primarily accountable to citizens, strengthening the village tract and village levels to support social protection delivery can promote accountability to citizens. Identification National identification exists in Myanmar but not all beneficiaries of social protection programs have it. Myanmar has a national identification system called the National Registration Card or Citizenship Scrutiny Card (CSC), determined in the 1982 Citizenship Law but first issued in 1989. All citizens of Myanmar are entitled to a national ID card from the aged of 10; however, only 69.3 percent of those over 10 years of age possess one, with coverage being particularly patchy in rural areas (GoM, 2015) and among vulnerable groups such as IDPs, migrants and ethnic minorities. The Ministry of Immigration and Population is responsible for issuing ID cards and has offices in all townships. Beneficiaries who have a CSC use it as proof of ID to enroll in social protection pro- grams; alternative ID mechanisms are used for those that do not have it (e.g. household list/book from village administrators). The SSB at union level issues smart cards for beneficiary identification in SSB schemes; the Myanmar Economic Bank (MEB) issues e-pension cards to individual pension- ers in the civil service pensions scheme. Enrollment, verification of eligibility, and compliance Currently, social assistance programs verify eligibility and enroll beneficiaries at local level. School heads and teachers have an important role in identifying beneficiaries of the stipends pro- gram, with TEOs verifying selection, although the level of engagement of school and township 8. Ward and Village Tract Administration Law of 2012, as described in Kyi Pyar Chit Saw and Arnold (2014). 8 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection committees in these activities has so far been limited. The MCHVS sometimes uses village leaders/ administrators to help identify women are eligible and recruits village stakeholders as voucher distributors (midwives and other trusted members in remote areas), who are also in charge of reimbursement. Compliance with conditions in the stipends program and the MCHVS is supported by structures in relative proximity to the beneficiary. As with enrollment, the level of engagement of school committees in supporting compliance monitoring in the stipends program has so far been limited, with school heads taking greater responsibility. Health centers (administrative and medical staff) support verification of access for voucher reimbursement in the MCHVS. The civil service pensions scheme uses local structures to start the enrollment process, though authorization happens at union level. Civil servants are required to apply at the administrative unit of his or her department. Those working at local level process their retirement request at the district or township offices of their respective ministries.9 MOF’s Pensions Department at union level verifies eligibility based on these applications and enrolls the pensioner. SSB township officers are responsible for the registration of companies and workers. Employers need to register their companies with township SSB officers and workers need to register individu- ally in order to receive their smart cards, issued by the SSB at union level. Employers deposit both worker and employer contributions monthly at the SSB office. Transactions (including benefit payments and reimbursement) Responsibilities vary for benefit payments and reimbursements to beneficiaries of SSB schemes. In the case of SSB schemes, the primary responsibility rests with the SSB township offices, which are also responsible for beneficiary enrollment. This can generate a potential conflict of interests, although mechanisms are often in place to provide some oversight of payment processes. For in- stance, SSB township officers are responsible for paying cash benefits directly to beneficiaries, al- though this is based on medical information provided by SSB health facilities and township inspec- tors verify payments are made appropriately.10 SSB township officers are also responsible for decisions with respect to the provision of free healthcare at SSB facilities or reimbursement for use of other facilities, as long as claimed amounts fall below a specified threshold. For higher amounts, the medical board at union level approves reimbursements. In the case of the civil ser- vice pensions scheme, however, payments are made through a third party – MEB. Payment of social assistance benefits is mostly the responsibility of service providers below township level and often imposes an additional unfunded burden. Given limited human resourc- es at local level, school heads need to collect stipends funds at the township office, incurring time and transport costs and risks. The same happens to midwives and voucher distributors, who need to collect funds at health facilities. However, direct payments are currently the most viable option in poor and remote areas, given the underdeveloped financial and mobile payment sector in Myanmar. With the rapid development of the financial and telecommunications market in the 9. There are between 2,000 and 3,000 administrative units processing these pension applications; the entire retirement-to-pension process takes almost an entire year. 10. In some instances, the employer pays the workers’ benefit in advance and claims reimbursement from the SSB. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 9 country, there is the potential for a gradual transition to electronic payment systems for current and future social protection transfers, once adequate legal and regulatory frameworks are in place.11 It would be interesting to assess the effectiveness of delivering cash benefits via MEB in social assistance programs, with MSWRR’s social pension potentially piloting this payment mecha- nism in the near future (Ramkissoon, 2015). Grievance and redress The township level emerges once again as a key level of service delivery by being the focal point for grievances and redresses, with some cases elevated to union level. Grievance and redress systems are only starting to emerge in Myanmar. School and township committees are responsible for addressing any feedback and complaints during beneficiary selection processes in the stipends program. The Ministry of Education (MOE) central office makes available a telephone number for further feedback. Grievance and redress is in practice a township-level function for the SSB scheme; an Appeals Tribunal (union level) exists but this has not yet received complaints. Record-keeping and management information systems (MIS) Systems for record-keeping and information management are largely paper-based and imple- mented locally. Individual-level information on beneficiaries remains at the facility (school or health clinic) or township level; the union level has access only to aggregate indicators, making tracking of beneficiaries difficult. The stipends program distributes paper-based forms; schools submit these to TEOs, who then consolidate and submit them to S/REOs and union level. The Min- istry of Health (MOH) and the World Health Organization (WHO) at union level compile monitor- ing data on the MCHVS collected manually by voucher distributors (VDs), health care providers, health center management agencies (administrative data), and lady health visitors (LHV). Better process definition and IT system development will be required for information systems that facilitate effective record-keeping and produce useful information for management and reporting purposes; however, some improvements are evident already with recent initiatives towards automation. For instance, MEB has implemented an e-pension database that issues e- pension cards to eligible pensioners, lowering the number of visits to the bank branch from two visits to one. The SSB is currently piloting a new computerized information system (implementa- tion started in April 2014) that encompasses the main insurance management functions (i.e. reg- istration, contribution collection, claim, verification of the beneficiary’s identity at the point of service, management of the beneficiary’s medical records) as well as some general management functions (accounting, human resources, and stock management) (ILO and MDRI, 2015). These seem useful steps in the direction of obtaining disaggregated information that can facilitate pro- gram monitoring and enhance service delivery to beneficiaries. 11. For more details on payment systems, see the Note on ‘Developing scalable and transparent benefit payment systems in Myan- mar’. 10 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection Monitoring and evaluation Internal monitoring of processes is often conducted by higher levels, whereas monitoring of service provision is carried out by stakeholders close to beneficiaries. For instance,union-level SSB officers are in charge of the internal auditing of SSB schemes, whereas township-level inspec- tors carry out monitoring of timely delivery of services and reimbursements. The M&E Working Group leads on M&E activities of the stipends program and MOE’s union-level departments un- dertake monitoring activities, whereas school committees and TEOs remain critical in monitoring payments. Health care providers and midwives monitor activities of the MCHVS, albeit with lim- ited feedback loops into program decision-making processes. External monitoring is supported by DPs and NGOs in the stipends program and the MCHVS to help facilitate implementation and scale up activities. The stipends program has benefited from a recent qualitative assessment (process monitoring) and spot-checks by Save the Children with World Bank technical support, which have brought to attention the importance of keeping a focus on targeting vulnerable children in the transition grades (5-6) and if possible as early as grade 4, and the need to further standardize procedures (such as training) and clarify roles (such as those of school and township committees). Similarly, WHO field officers support monitoring activities of the MCHVS to help avoid bottlenecks in implementation. Program evaluations, particularly impact evaluations, are scarce in Myanmar, although process evaluations are growing in number thanks to collaboration with DPs and academia. MOE will undertake a quantitative survey (school survey and household survey) with World Bank technical support. The Health Intervention and Technology Assessment Program (HITAP) conducted a mid- term review of the MCHVS in 2014, and the International Labour Organization (ILO) and the World Bank have supported an operational assessment of the SSB schemes and civil service pensions, respectively. Communication and outreach Several local stakeholders, particularly implementers, carry out communication, outreach, and awareness-raising functions. Township-level officers create awareness (and also monitor enroll- ment in the case of inspectors) on the SSB schemes by visiting companies and providing informa- tion on enrollment and services through mobile enrollment units (ILO and MDRI, 2015). Hospitals also provide medical tours to factories for outpatient services and health education. Community members, schools, health care providers, and other local stakeholders are in charge of providing information on the MCHVS and the stipends program, with mixed results in terms of accuracy of information but generally good results in terms of awareness-rising. Payment events (e.g. of sti- pends) and other contacts between service providers and beneficiaries (e.g. voucher distribution) have been identified as potential opportunities to enhance messages on adequate health-seeking behavior and the benefits of schooling and to provide clear program information. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 11 2.4 Role of non-state actors in social protection provision Development partners, non-governmental organizations, and community-based organizations DPs, NGOs, and CBOs have been actively involved in social assistance provision; their role can change to that of supporting structure of particular activities in the context of government-led social protection provision. DPs have provided social protection directly,with a substantially high- er budget and beneficiary coverage compared with government provision,12 building up a wealth of knowledge that can support government in the technical design and implementation of pro- grams. DPs can also mobilize technical resources to support MIS and M&E system development, as well as impact and process evaluations. NGOs and CBOs have been actively involved in deliver- ing social assistance and social services, often in partnership with government stakeholders such as MSWRR. Supporting roles for NGOs and CBOs can include collaboration on grievance and re- dress mechanisms, monitoring, and communication and outreach activities, as has been done in other countries (see Annex 3). In all cases, support needs to be framed within government-led priorities and programs, with decision-making processes ultimately falling in government hands. Opportunities for partnership in service delivery can enhance specific delivery mechanisms with- out relying solely on these agencies to deliver services and risk undermining government owner- ship. Non-state actors in conflict-affected areas Ethnic conflicts in Myanmar have generated a system of social service delivery in conflict-affect- ed areas that is parallel to that of state actors; the peace agreement will pave the way for think- ing on how to close delivery gaps in these areas. Delivery systems include political and adminis- trative structures of previously armed groups and associated networks of service providers and social organizations (Jolliffe, 2014). Given the complexity of these arrangements and the distinc- tive regional features they have taken, thinking on how to articulate parallel service delivery struc- tures in a social protection system can be mostly a task for subnational structures. Ideally, region/ state governments, as well as stakeholders who can identify roles and responsibilities for govern- ment and non-government actors that suit local contexts and contribute to rebuilding social cohe- sion, should lead the process of stakeholder consultation. Social protection programs can be an important component in building social cohesion through promoting dialogue around service delivery roles. Dialogue around service delivery can help de- crease the anxiety of communities uncertain about new roles of government and non-government actors, and assist government in building a social contract that promotes long-lasting reconcilia- tion. Non-state systems will continue to operate, at least in the short term (Jolliffe, 2014), thus initial stages can focus on establishing institutional arrangements that a) build on existing founda- tions for service delivery that minimize disruption in provision, support a smooth transition, and avoid reigniting grievances; and b) recognize the need for locally adapted approaches to service delivery.13 12. For more information on DP support see Note on Inventory of social protection programs in Myanmar. 13. Social protection programs can address the needs of particularly vulnerable groups such as conflict-affected communities and ex- combatants. More on these programs can be found in the Note on ‘Framework for the development of social protection systems: Lessons from international experience’. 12 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection 3. Financing functions for social protection implementation and sources of funding14 Functions for service provision need to be adequately funded (see Annex 1). Unfunded functions can hamper the quality of service provision and significantly constrain implementation and scale- up processes. Financial, human, and physical resources should follow the assignment of a function for service delivery to run smoothly (‘finance follows function’). Despite a deconcentrated architecture of most social protection programs, which should facili- tate the vertical flow of funds, in some cases respective ministries do not provide funding to cover a specific functional assignment. For instance, township-level teams implementing the sti- pends program lack specific resources and mandates to hire additional staff for administrative support.15 A similar issue arises in the implementation of the MCHVS, with health assistants in health care facilities taking on an additional workload as a result of filling out monitoring forms for the MCHVS without receiving additional support staff to take care of extra responsibilities; a re- view of the program recommends hiring a full-time manager to support current implementation but also, importantly, to facilitate taking the program to scale (WHO, 2014). 3.1 Union level Union-level government has been the main source of funding for publicly led social protection provision through vertical transfers for deconcentrated functions and benefit delivery. Annex 2 shows how the social budget in MOF is the main source for main social protection programs such as stipends and pensions. DPs and other non-state actors have also been involved in funding social protection, particularly social assistance programs.16 Subnational level There are opportunities to explore financing social protection functions out of intergovernmen- tal transfers to region/states (Nixon and Joelene, 2014; World Bank, 2015). The share of union expenditures on intergovernmental transfers increased from 0.6 percent of gross domestic prod- 14. The only government-implemented contributory programs in Myanmar to date are the SSB schemes, financed out of the social budget and contributions from employers and employees. Further analysis on proposed reforms and financing options of the SSS and civil service pensions scheme can be found in the Note on ‘Strengthening social security provision in Myanmar’. 15. Some township teams have found alternative arrangements between team members but some have transferred some of the costs to beneficiaries or have compromised their involvement with program implementation. For instance, beneficiaries of the stipends program in a couple of schools have been charged for transport and photocopy costs, whereas some township teams report having shared program implementation tasks more evenly (SC, 2015). 16. More information on government and DP spending on social protection can be found in the Note on ‘Inventory of social protection programs in Myanmar’. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 13 Figure 2: Deconcentrated and devolved financing channels at region/state level and below Source: Nixon and Joelene (2014). uct (GDP) in 2011/12 to 2.3 percent in 2014/15, equivalent to 14.6 percent of the 2014/15 gen- eral (union) budget, signaling the increasing importance of these intergovernmental transfers and the potential to finance locally relevant initiatives. Three types of intergovernmental transfers could potentially finance social protection functions: grants and loans to region/state governments; the Poverty Reduction Fund (PRF); and the Con- stituency Fund (CF). Grants and loans to region/state governments support region/state budgets and complement tax and non-tax revenues. However, their potential to finance social protection functions is limited given current accountability relations and budgeting processes covering previ- ous budget deficits rather than local needs.17 17. The ability of states and regions to meet local needs is currently low, as autonomy over local spending is limited and account- ability relations of budget and finance officers at region/states is upward to union ministries rather than to local constituencies. In addition, grants and loans finance deficits incurred by region/states with additional resources in the next budget cycle, which can generate the wrong incentives for service provision and could reinforce historical trends to over- or under-spend. The latter means optimal outcomes in achieving equitable financing across region/states (e.g. those with higher poverty rates receive more resources than richer ones) is not encouraged. 14 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection In addition to state/region budget support, there are various separately budgeted funds, of which the two most important ones are the PRF and the CF. Although they account for just 5 percent of total transfers to region/states in 2014/15, the CF and particularly the PRF include in- teresting features that can provide better incentives from a perspective of social protection fi- nancing. The PRF accounted for around MMK50 billion in 2014/15 and was allocated according to pov- erty rates and presence of ethnic minorities in states and regions. This translated into MMK 15 billion each for Rakhine and Kachin states, MMK 5 billion for Chin state, MMK 4 billion for Shan state, and MMK 2 billion for Kayin state, with the remaining budget divided equally among the other states and regions (World Bank, 2015; interviews with Budget Office, Yangon region). In previous years, equalization was used to allocate resources (MMK 1 billion per region/state except Chin, which received MMK 2 billion), showing an important increase in resources but also the in- tention to associate funds more closely with poverty reduction objectives and evidence-based fi- nancing. There are no specific criteria to guide the investment of the PRF at region/state level but chief ministers are advised to use the fund for rural development and poverty alleviation mea- sures. The process for allocating funds to each township is also now decided by the region/state government. Some states and regions have kept the equalization principle; others use criteria such as population, poverty, or project size. The CF, also known as the Township Development Fund, allocates some MMK 33 billion equally across townships, with each township receiving MMK 100 million. Representatives of both union and state/region hluttaws18 are allowed to select township development activities in their con- stituencies to a maximum of MMK 5 million per project. Township Development Support Commit- tees (TDSCs) and Township Management Committees coordinate project activities, drawing on proposals from village planning processes. There are opportunities for social protection financing at state/region level in the medium term, particularly through the PRF. First, strengthening further the system of evidence-based resource allocation of the PRF, not only across regions/states but also within region/states across town- ships, could maximize its poverty reduction potential. Second, increasing the autonomy of region/ states to spend intergovernmental transfers can translate into locally relevant projects. The role of TDSCs is an important one in ensuring village-level infrastructure needs are funded and imple- mentation and oversight is conducted transparently. Third, the PRF’s guidelines can be expanded to incorporate ‘soft’ infrastructure for poverty reduction purposes and to include specific guide- lines on potential social protection programs that could strengthen the poverty reduction objec- tive of the fund beyond the currently understood scope on infrastructure development. For in- stance, transfers and social welfare service provision could be discussed in the context of poverty reduction investments to be made eligible for financing under this modality in the medium term. 18. A council or assembly, historically a council of ministers, now denotes legislative bodies at national and state/region level (Nixon et al., 2013). Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 15 3.2 Community-driven development platforms CDD platforms are already financing rural development activities at local level. Delegated and devolved functions for the implementation of the RDSF are being financed through conditional grants from the Ministry of Livestock, Fisheries and Rural Development (MLFRD) to villages and village tracts and provide a model and even a platform to articulate social protection provision around these structures.19 Annex 2 outlines functions for the National Community-Driven Devel- opment Project (NCDDP), where village tracts are the main level of planning, payment processing, and support provision for communities undertaking infrastructure development with project grants directly transferred to village tracts. The Mya Sein Yaung (MSY; also known as Evergreen Village Development Project) transfers resources from MLFRD to finance villages’ revolving funds. From a decentralization perspective, delivery of social protection programs can support further strengthening of these structures by shaping their service delivery role. Embedding social protection schemes as part of CDD platforms in Myanmar can be an appropri- ate short-and medium-term option for social protection financing. Current experience with gov- ernment CDD models, particularly the NCDDP, can facilitate the gradual transition from DP-led social protection provision to a more sustainable institutional architecture. Building government capacity at local level would need significant efforts through a learning-by-doing approach on roles of government and non-government actors, as well as enhancing coordination across local stakeholders, empowering communities, and promoting local accountability. The NCDDP can help build these foundations for social protection delivery in a phased manner while channeling re- sources directly to beneficiary communities for social protection provision. In addition, CDD plat- forms have incorporated elements of evidence-based budget allocation that can encourage more effective poverty reduction outcomes. 3.3 Development partners DPs can also help co-finance government programs through government platforms that facili- tate harmonization and provide an opportunity for institutional and financial sustainability of social protection delivery. Programs such as the stipends and the NCDDP have facilitated pooling resources from various DPs to supplement the government budget. The stipends program chan- nels resources from the World Bank and the government of Australia whereas the NCDDP pools resources from the World Bank, the government of Italy, and the Japan Trust Fund for Social De- velopment. 19. For more information on CDD approaches in Myanmar and the scope of social protection interventions within them see the Note on ‘Social protection delivery through community-driven development platforms: International experience and key considerations for Myanmar’. 16 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection 4. Assessing institutional and financing arrangements for social protection provision in Myanmar Myanmar can enhance certain aspects of its institutional and financing architecture to make social protection more responsive and efficient. Social protection systems need coordinated and well-funded functions at policy, program, and delivery level. Recent policy developments in the country bring opportunities to enhance coordination, program design, and delivery mechanisms, including the potential to include local structures more actively in service delivery. 4.1 Policy and program coordination and financing An overarching coordinating structure that has the mandate to coordinate the allocation of functions and resources for social protection can contribute to developing an effective social protection system. Centralized policy development and implementation can be significantly en- hanced by stronger inter-ministerial coordination arrangements that avoid duplication and pro- mote comprehensive and sustainable coverage. Fiscal sustainability is a foundation for effective social protection systems by ensuring beneficiaries are covered in a predictable and adequate manner. Evidence-based financing has recently started with initiatives like the PRF; this should be further strengthened and championed by the coordinating structure for social protection provi- sion. The social protection coordination structure should also provide guidelines on coordination mechanisms between union, regions and states, and local stakeholders for social protection implementation. While the pace of decentralization is uncertain and makes a long-term analysis of ideal functional allocation for social protection provision difficult, opportunities to link these discussions can be promoted. Functional assignment as part of the decentralization reform is be- ing discussed in Myanmar, but there is no single body responsible for designing and articulating decentralization policy (World Bank, 2015). Aligning discussions on functional assignment for so- cial protection with the decentralization reform should be pursued. New programs are being considered under the SPSP, the potential fiscal implications of which need to be carefully evaluated in relation to ongoing initiatives by various sectors. Building on existing program and delivery systems can facilitate the expansion of functions and coverage in a sustainable manner (e.g. additional benefits and coverage for maternal and child health through an expanded/modified platform of the MCHVS and MOH; for school-age children through sti- pends and MOE) in order to ensure efficiency of service delivery and avoid fragmentation and duplication. Taking existing systems as the basis for promoting a coherent approach to expansion can facilitate assessment of the need for and feasibility of creating additional programs and sys- tems to fill remaining gaps. Increasing support to government programs instead of establishing parallel delivery structures should be pursued in the short and medium term to support the transi- tion to government-led social assistance provision. Pooling DP resources for single-program imple- mentation can help the government coordinate provision and maximize the technical support DPs can provide at particular stages and for particular functions of service delivery. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 17 Tapping into financial resources from township-level funds such as the PRF can be a medium- term objective. Additional government resources that promote the service delivery role of state/ region governments and that could finance delegated and devolved functions at local level can strengthen accountability to citizens and underpin a long-term vision of government service deliv- ery and empowered communities. To this end, clear guidelines for PRF investments that promote social protection as a poverty reduction tool and that facilitate decision-making at local level for investments other than infrastructure would be necessary. Consolidating resources for local-level development around the PRF, as well as consolidating township-level committees to avoid dupli- cating functions, would help build clarity on township-level coordinating structures and better define the scope of technical support townships can provide to community decision-making pro- cesses. 4.2 Roles in service delivery: ministerial structures and region/state governments Current deconcentrated implementation of social protection needs to be further strengthened to continue to promote responsive and accountable service delivery. Current social protection provision is centralized in deconcentrated ministerial structures, reflecting Myanmar’s level of development. Analyzing current ministerial functions for social protection provision and ensuring these are adequately funded can already improve the way social protection is delivered. Involve- ment of DPs in such processes as support to piloting delivery functions in the MCHVS and stipends programs can be replicated and expanded to other programs (e.g. social pensions) and in further areas (e.g. specific delivery systems) to improve current and future practices. Deconcentrated functions have the weakness of generating internal accountability to vertical ministries rather than to citizens; adding strong multi-stakeholder committees (such as school and township com- mittees in the stipends program) or articulating oversight functions into existing ones through clear roles and mechanisms to influence program performance can help address this issue. In the short term, capacity constraints mean several functions are assigned to the same stake- holders (e.g. school heads and health care providers); separating roles would be advisable in the medium term. Besides selecting students and having regular academic functions, school heads and teachers are also in charge of paying stipends to parents as an additional (unfunded) function. The same is the case for midwives and VDs. In the medium term, payments through third parties (e.g. banks) and greater support for program functions such as enrollment can ease the burden current implementation arrangements place on service providers. Two key subnational stakeholders are paramount when thinking about current technical capac- ity at local level: township-level officers and the GAD. Townships already perform a number of often-unfunded delivery functions. Supporting technically and financially the role of township of- ficers in service delivery could be a short-term priority for the respective sectoral ministries (MOE, MOH and SSB). The GAD is already an important stakeholder at local level; building on its technical functions but ensuring support to the redefinition of its relationship with local communities around service delivery can support the institutional-strengthening of ministries and subnational units. For instance the GAD could support the groundwork of functional, centrally developed IT, 18 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection MIS, and M&E systems by performing monitoring functions at subnational level that help gather accurate and timely information about program implementation to inform program design and implementation. Region/state governments, and not only deconcentrated ministerial structures, could be in- volved more actively in program design and implementation with the help of clear guidelines on decision-making processes and local inputs needed to inform program standards. Models such as the NCDDP (Annex 2) and India’s Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS; Annex 3) provide examples on how this has been done for infrastructure development programs. For instance, the NCDDP includes multi-stakeholder consultations orga- nized by region/state governments to support geographic targeting procedures (also in Annex 1); these lessons are valuable for other programs as well. The involvement of region/state govern- ments can strengthen the relevance of programs to local context and could support reconciliation and articulation of service delivery roles in conflict-affected contexts. 4.3 Roles in service delivery: communities and local stakeholders Testing social protection provision through CDD structures can support the capacity develop- ment of subnational stakeholders and promote accountability in service delivery. A more prom- inent role for subnational structures can create space to adapt program design and standards to serve citizens in a way that is more tailored to different needs across region/states. Financing lo- cally relevant programs can be done through existing mechanisms such as the NCDDP that pro- mote devolved decision-making and accountability to citizens, following lessons from Indonesia’s PNPM Generasi (see Annex 3). Resources currently flowing to village tract level could pave the way to strengthening these and village-level structures to build a responsive and accountable service delivery platform for social protection in the medium term. In the medium term, the role of subnational structures in social protection delivery has the po- tential to be significantly strengthened to increase accountability to citizens. Districts, villages, and village tracts have a very limited role in actual program implementation. Districts, unlike town- ships, do not have specific functions for service delivery, thus their role may need to be explored based on the coordination needs arising between township and regional/state level. Villages and village tracts have important roles to play in ensuring communication and accountability to citi- zens, thus learning from social protection implemented through CDD platforms can help identify practical ways in which subnational structures can support implementation. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 19 4.4 Roles in service delivery: non-state actors DPs, the private sector, NGOs, and CBOs have an important role to play in helping government establish basic delivery systems and administrative capacity. DPs can support government in evidence-based budgeting (e.g. PRF allocation) through gathering additional evidence to inform policy decisions at even lower levels of government (e.g. townships) in a systematic way. DPs, NGOs, and private firms can help strengthen identification processes, develop MIS, IT, and M&E systems, and provide technical support to program implementation at various levels. NGOs and CBOs can support grievance and redress mechanisms, monitoring, and communication and out- reach at local level. The role of non-state actors in previously conflict-affected areas will need to be articulated with local-level leadership. 5. Short-term recommendations to strengthen institu- tional and financing arrangements for social protection provision in Myanmar Institutional and financing arrangements should support the achievement of a strategic vision for sustainable social protection provision. Setting up an overarching coordination mechanism for social protection needs to be an immediate priority for the government, given its ambitious poverty reduction objectives that call for the expansion and enhanced effectiveness of approach- es in various fronts. Achieving effective coordination arrangements requires strong political lead- ership at the union level. In this context, Indonesia’s model of linking social protection to poverty reduction objectives, financing, and strategic direction is relevant for Myanmar. For instance, In- donesia’s National Team for the Acceleration of Poverty Reduction (TNP2K), chaired by the vice- president, coordinates poverty reduction policies at the national level and provides technical ad- vice to multiple programs in light of poverty reduction objectives (see Annex 3). Pooling DP resources for single-program implementation can enhance coordination; this should be the preferred mechanism to channel non-state funds for social protection provision. Pro- grams such as the stipends and the NCDDP have allowed pooling resources from several DPs to supplement the government budget. This facilitates government coordination on service delivery provision and maximizes the technical support DPs can provide at particular stages and for par- ticular functions of service delivery. Testing social protection provision through the NCDDP can be explored in the near future. The NCDDP provides the opportunity for coordinated financing for social protection through an exist- ing government platform. The NCDDP allows testing locally relevant social protection programs and has the potential to strengthen local capacity and accountability for service delivery. The in- volvement of state/region governments in the identification of areas to be served and the use of evidence to inform these decisions are features that can reinforce locally relevant and evidence- based budgeting processes. 20 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection Fiscal sustainability should underpin implementation of social protection programs through ministerial structures. Building on existing program and delivery systems of ministerial structures can facilitate the expansion of functions and coverage in a sustainable manner. Platforms provided by the stipends program or the MCHVS can promote efficiency of service delivery and avoid frag- mentation and duplication. Taking existing systems as the basis to promote a coherent approach to expansion can facilitate assessment of the need for and feasibility of creating additional pro- grams and systems to fill remaining gaps. Strengthening current service delivery functions at all levels of ministries involved in social protection provision can be an affordable short-term priority. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 21 References ADB (Asian Development Bank) (n.d.) ‘The Indonesian Program Nasional Pemberdayaan Masyara- kat Mandiri: Lessons for the Philippine Disaster Risk Management’. Supplementary Document 7. Manila: ADB. 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Planning Commission (2013) ‘Framework for Economic and Social Reform’. Naypyidaw: GoM. PNPM (n.d.) ‘CDD Financing and Budgeting: The Case of PNPM in Indonesia’. Jakarta: PNPM. Ramkissoon, S. (2015) ‘Technical Options to Implement a Universal Social Pension in Myanmar’. Draft Feasibility Study Report for HAI and MSWRR. 22 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection SC (Save the Children) (2015) ‘Qualitative Assessment: Consolidated Report Myanmar School Grant & Stipend Programme Phase 1 & 2’. Yangon: SC. Sumarto, S.(2015) ‘Indonesia’s Unified Database (UDB): Rationalising a Fragmented System’. Ja- karta: TNP2K. UNDP (UN Development Programme) and UNCDF (UN Capital Development Fund) (2011) ‘Local Government and Social Protection: Making Service Delivery Available for the Most Vulnerable’. New York: UNDP and UNCDF. Villar, F.R. (2013) ‘The Philippine Social Protection Framework and Strategy: An Overview’. 12th National Convention on Statistics, Mandaluyong City, 1-2 October. WHO (World Health Organization) (2014)‘Mid-Term Review of Maternal and Health Voucher Scheme’. Yangon: WHO. World Bank (2011) ‘Social Protection for a Changing India: Volume II’. New Delhi: World Bank. World Bank (2012) ‘Social Protection Strategy 2012-2022’. Washington, DC: World Bank. World Bank (2014) ‘Myanmar Ending Poverty and Boosting Shared Prosperity in a Time of Transi- tion: Systematic Country Diagnostic’. Yangon: World Bank. World Bank (2015) ‘Myanmar Public Expenditure Review’. Yangon: World Bank. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 23 Annex 1: Framework for implementation and financing of social protection systems Functions and financing Social protection systems need functions performed at different levels of government: central, regional/state, and local. Functional assignment of social protection functions is linked to the extent of decentralization pursued by governments but should also follow principles of func- tional assignment that can help achieve efficient, transparent, and responsive service delivery (see Box A1). Given the different degrees of decentralization and the specific challenges countries face in terms of governance and capacity, there is no single blueprint for functions of social protec- tion systems,although patterns can be identified in systems across various countries (see Annex 3). Box A1: Principles for functional assignment 1. The subsidiarity principle states that what the lowest level can undertake efficiently should be kept at that level. If an activity cannot be performed at any lower level, it should be assigned to a higher (more central) level. 2. The responsiveness principle states that lower tiers of governments are closer to the populations they serve, and therefore should be more responsive to their needs. 3. If the activity under consideration displays economies of scale, more centralized provision is more efficient. 4. If the activity under consideration displays externalities (if an activity in one area affects another area), it should be assigned to higher levels of government. 5. If equity is a priority for the activity under consideration, centralized provision may be better. Con- versely, if people in each state and region have different requirements and preferences regarding that activity, lower levels could better address these variations. 6. If the activity under consideration involves a great deal of discretion in decision-making, it should be assigned to a lower level of government. 7. If the activity involves significant technical expertise, assignment to a higher level of government may be most suitable. Source: World Bank (2015). Policy development is typically a central government function. Central governments can provide an overarching vision to social protection provision by a) identifying the development objectives social protection can help achieve (e.g. poverty reduction, human capital development) and de- veloping a legal and institutional framework to pursue them (see Indonesia’s TNP2K); b) dealing with equity concerns between geographic areas; c) coordinating different ministries involved in social protection provision; d) ensuring government resources (human, physical, financial) are suf- ficient to implement programs in an effective and predictable manner; and e) providing or facilitat- ing technical support to lower levels of government).20 20. Region/states can perform some of these functions where regional disparities in requirements and preferences, strong techni- cal capacity, and a high degree of fiscal decentralization allow for social protection provision to be coherently coordinated and financed at a lower level (e.g. India). 24 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection Program design may involve several levels of government and stakeholder involvement. Central government is responsible for identifying the types of instruments that better respond to social protection needs and ensuring program design responds to the needs the program is set to ad- dress, the latter often jointly with regional stakeholders. This involves setting standards for pro- gram implementation, such as minimum benefit levels, eligibility criteria, and processes and pro- cedures (e.g. drafting operations manuals (OMs)). Central governments are also better positioned to assess the externalities programs can bring to national and regional contexts. Region/state governments can help adapt the design to the context and often compile information at regional level to support implementation and scale-up processes. For instance, the OM of India’s MGN- REGS was drafted by the central Ministry of Rural Development (MRD), unbundling activities and assigning responsibilities for program implementation that provided clear guidelines for state- level OMs. Similarly to program design, setting up delivery sub-systems includes functions such as designing and developing the actual systems and managing processes and information flows. Therefore, set- ting up delivery systems is typically performed at central level. Developing MISs, payment systems through third parties (e.g. financial institutions), or M&E systems requiring monitoring frame- works and impact evaluations involves central-level decision-making processes such as procuring the technical expertise to develop the systems. Table 1 : Deconcentrated, delegated and devolved service delivery Aspect of service Deconcentrated Delegated Devolved delivery Source and receiver of Ministry delegates to its own Ministry/agency to local authorities State/agency to local authori- authority branches or parastatal/semi-independent ties bodies Funding Ministry to its own branches From assigning entity to local Local levels raise/receive (not showing in local govern- authority (showing in local govern- resources through revenues or ment's budget) ment's budget) block grants Implementation Limited by ministry's regula- Constrained by policy, procedures, High degree of discretion but discretion tions, procedures, standards, and standards set by assigning somewhat limited by national and instructions agency but some level of discretion standards in implementation Reporting and To ministry headquarters To assigning entity and local coun- Primarily to citizens through accountability cil/citizens local councils; vertical ac- countability still present in early stages of decentraliza- tion Source: Adapted from UNDP and UNCDF (2011). While setting up delivery sub-systems is usually done at central level, program implementation through delivery sub-systems is mostly, though not exclusively, a local task. Intermediate levels of subnational administration such as districts and townships can provide technical support to local levels in undertaking beneficiary identification and registration, beneficiary support through griev- ance and redress mechanisms, communication campaigns, and collection of program information to feed MIS and M&E systems. Whereas government should provide overall leadership and coordination at all levels, DPs, the private sector, and other non-governmental actors (NGOs, CBOs, academia, research institutes, and think-tanks) can perform specific activities within social protection functions. Technical sup- Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 25 port is an area where DP expertise can support government at various levels. DPs and NGOs of- ten support program design since they can mobilize specialized expertise to inform these pro- cesses. Independent bodies such as academia, research institutes, and DPs can undertake impact evaluations of social protection programs, which are instrumental to inform program revision and scale-up processes. Indonesia’s PKH and PNPM Generasi as well as India’s MGNREGS have bene- fited from external impact evaluations by DPs and academia that have contributed to govern- ment’s own efforts to improve program performance. Functional assignment for social assistance implementation should be accompanied by suffi- cient funding to implement such mandates, following the principle of ‘finance follows function’ (World Bank, 2015). There are different ways in which functions can be assigned and funded at various levels of government; they can be deconcentrated, delegated, or devolved, translating into different degrees of discretion for implementation, different options for financing mecha- nisms, and different types of accountability relations. Social protection programs can be implemented through a mix of deconcentrated, delegated, and devolved functions. For instance, India’s MGNREGS transfers significant resources from MRD to local governments (the panchayat, which includes district, block, and village levels) following a functional assignment that gives local governments discretion on project identification as well as several responsibilities in asset creation, employment processes, and project monitoring, follow- ing central- and state-level standards. Transfer programs can also delegate to local governments decisions on the type of transfer (cash or inkind), the type of and need for conditions, and the degree of enforcement based on local capacity (UNDP and UNCDF, 2011). CDD programs include planning and decision-making processes that would otherwise take place at central level, such as choosing schemes to implement out of a menu of options and adapting eligibility criteria to local needs.21 Therefore, CDD models can be used to finance delegated and devolved functions from central ministries or agencies to local governments or CBOs. Perfor- mance-based financing mechanisms and community facilitators of local decision-making process- es have been used in programs such as Indonesia’s PNPM Generasi to incentivize locally relevant investments that better achieve expected results. Sources of funding22 Overall, central governments are better placed to reliably finance the implementation of non- contributory, social assistance programs. They can mobilize larger resources for safety nets com- pared with regional or local governments, particularly if the latter have few sources of revenue (Grosh et al., 2008). Central governments can also address issues of regional disparities by redis- tributing resources to the areas that need them the most. Lastly, central governments can make funding available in a counter-cyclical manner (e.g. in times of crises or economic slowdown), precisely when social protection provision is needed the most. 21. More information on CDD programs can be found in the Note on ‘Social protection delivery through community-driven develop- ment platforms’. 22. Contributory social security programs are (partly) financed through contributions from employers and workers, thus are subject to inter-temporal fluctuations in the number of contributors and actual beneficiaries, salaries, contribution rates, and other factors. Social security financing is analyzed in the Note on ‘Strengthening social security provision in Myanmar’. 26 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection Depending on the degree of political and fiscal decentralization, decisions on intergovernmental transfer can be informed by bottom-up planning, and region/states governments can top up central funding for specific programs or introduce additional funding for more locally relevant programs. For instance, state governments provide complementary funding under MGNREGS to finance 25 percent of non-wage costs (World Bank, 2011). Bottom-up planning has informed cen- tral-level transfers for MGNREGS implementation, avoiding a ‘quota’ system since spending is de- termined by demand for work at local level.23 DPs can support central and regional governments in financing social assistance through mecha- nisms that aim to avoid fragmentation of service provision. Governments can provide platforms to pool resources from several DPs for single programs, which can support a coordinated approach to service delivery and ensure functions at different levels of government are coherently and pre- dictably funded. For instance, PNPM Generasi is funded through a combination of funds from the government of Indonesia and from DPs that pool resources jointly in the PNPM Support Facility. Accountability Governance in social protection can be defined as the set of incentives and accountability rela- tionships that define how providers are held accountable for their ability to deliver services with quality, efficiency, and transparency (WB, 2012). Accountability is thus generated from imple- menters to citizens (external) and within implementing levels (internal). Table A1 identifies the type of accountability generated by different functional assignment and financing arrangements. The more decentralized the arrangements, the more accountability is generated from government to citizens. Internal accountability is also important to ensure quality service delivery and varies according to the degree of concentration of functions in single entities. Local leaders and locally elected governments can be assessed (and elected/re-elected) based on the quality of service delivery and thus have a relatively strong incentive to perform well on this front. Belonging to the community they serve meansthey bear social pressure to deliver well to their community. CDD models are an example of how to make these incentives part of the gov- ernance structure, albeit with the associated risk of elite capture in highly discretionary models.24 Internal accountability and/or external monitoring are necessary to prevent misappropriation of resources by local stakeholders, particularly when there is a relatively high degree of discretion. Social audits can complement accountability to citizens and support quality service delivery as in the case of India’s MGNREGS. 23. This is a rights-based program where the state needs to guarantee funds for the provision of 100 days of work annually; however, a mismatch between insufficient supply of infrastructure projects and excessive demand for work persists. 24. Note on ‘Social protection delivery through community-driven development platforms’. Annex 2: Example of institutional arrangements of social protection programs in Myanmar Type of function Function Stipends program (MOE; pilot MCHVS (MOH) NCCPD (MLFRD) Civil service pensions Social security (SSB) of enhanced (MOF) implementation arrangements) Policy development Policy develop- Steering committee: FESR. Central-level coordinating RDSF. Central-level coor- Parliament: Civil Service Parliament: Social Security and financing ment, legal Central-level coordinating agency: MOH dinating agency: MLFRD. Rules and Regulations in Act, 1954; Social Security framework, and agency: MOE. Support from Foreign Aid Management 1920 and reformed by the Law, 2012. Central-level coordination Technical Working Group that Working Committee sup- Civil Service Law (2013) coordinating agency: SSB, includes MOE, President’s Of- ports MLFRD as steering and the Civil Service Rules chaired by MOLESS and fice, and MOF committee (2014). Central-level coor- including board members dinating agency: MOH from MOF, MOH, MSWRR, and others Budgeting and MOE (central); mostly de- MOH (central); mostly Department of Rural De- MOF (central); decon- a) Operations: SSB; decon- financial manage- concentrated functions and deconcentrated functions velopment (DRD) (central) centrated functions for centrated functions and ment financing. Township-level and financing. Midwives, transfers funds directly to verification but centralized financing; quotas for program implemen- LHVs, and hospital village tract forums based financial management for b) benefits: contribu- tation. TEOs transfer funds to management agency in on village tract-level plan- payments through MEB tions paid monthly by schools, which pay to benefi- charge of local financial ning. Village tract forums company managers based ciary parents management form finance sub-com- on employees’ salary (2% mittees to manage the from employers, 2% from block grant and transfer employees, plus 1% addi- resources to village sup- tional from employers for port committees to cover injury fund; full implemen- project implementation. tation of 2012 Law will DRD staff at township take total contributions to level responsible for 13%). Autonomous finan- financial management cial management by SSB support (accounting) and (in the past, contributions information disclosure flowed back to MOF) Sources of funding General budget; social budget; General budget; social General budget; MLFRD General budget; social a) General budget; social allocation to MOE. Support budget; allocation to budget. Support from budget; allocation to MOF budget; allocation to SSB from government of Australia MOH. Support from World Bank, governments pensions and gratuities (for operational costs such protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social and World Bank WHO/GAVI Alliance of Italy and Japan as salaries); b) contributions from affiliates 27 Type of function Function Stipends program (MOE; pilot MCHVS (MOH) NCCPD (MLFRD) Civil service pensions Social security (SSB) of enhanced (MOF) 28 implementation arrangements) Program design Design and Operational guidelines devel- Operational guidelines OM developed by MLFRD Department of Pensions, SSB (central) implementation oped by MOE (central level), developed by MOH (cen- (central) MOF (central), respon- standards with technical support from tral level) with technical sible for overall program World Bank support from HITAP architecture. Beneficiary and employer (respec- tive ministry/government entity) calculate benefit level (township, district, or region/state). Central or region/state level MOF verifies calculation Set-up and scale- TEO teams responsible for Department of Health Project Secretariat at Department of Pensions, SSB operational arm: cen- up processes rolling out implementing (MOH, central); health DRD, MLFRD (central). MOF (central); Department tral-level team and field functions and supporting centers (voucher distribu- Project Secretariat is of Pensions, MOF (states/ offices, 977 townships, and coordinating with school tion to midwives at local assigned several DRD regions), Supervision Units several medical centers The Role of Social Protection heads and committees. S/ level). Technical support staff and shall recruit con- 1 and 2 and Calculation REOs hold consultations for from WHO township sultants as necessary for Unit township selection, approve officer to help setup and implementation of proj- stipend students, and monitor monitor processes and ect. DRD staff at township implementation of programs, coordinate between local level provide technical including visits to TEOs, pro- and central stakeholders support to village tract ducing reports/statistics, and in project planning and addressing complaints. MOE execution and help with will review national program inter-ministerial coordina- based on results from piloting tion. NGOs and firms enhanced implementation assist township officers arrangements Eligibility criteria MOE (central level), with MOH (central) as per DRD (central) with help Ministries where Parliament: Social Security technical support from Techni- operational guidelines; from Ministry of National civil servants have worked. Act, 1954;Social Security Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: cal Working Group and World further identification of Planning select criteria District-level supervisors of Law, 2012. Enterprises Bank poor pregnant women for township selection future pensioners approve with more than 5 em- via hospital equity fund based on poverty data. retirement for low-rank ployees need to register questionnaire Consultation with region/ civil servants. Region/state with SSB. Students and state governments supervisory level approves enterprises with fewer for medium rank and than 5 employees can join director-generals for high- voluntarily rank future pensioners Type of function Function Stipends program (MOE; pilot MCHVS (MOH) NCCPD (MLFRD) Civil service pensions Social security (SSB) of enhanced (MOF) implementation arrangements) Delivery sub- Beneficiary identi- Schools in township commit- Midwives and VDs Chief ministry of region/state Future pensioner and SSB issued smart cards systems fication tees select schools in need and with support from shortlists three townships based supervisor (township, with personal information, allocate quota. School commit- village leaders who on consultation. Foreign Aid district, region/state or photo, and fingerprints tees select students in need, attest women are Management Working Commit- central depending on rank) with a unique social secu- township committees verify. In poor tee selects final townships prepare case files with rity number practice, little/varied involve- documentation such as ID, ment of non-education commit- photo, and service book. tee members (parents, NGOs) MEB issues e-pension card Enrollment and School committees enroll Enrollment: midwives Village support committees Calculation Unit, Pension • Enrollment: com- compliance (for beneficiaries and monitor com- and VDs. Compliance: with support from village tracts Department (central), or pany registers with SSB conditional cash pliance. Varied involvement of verified at health implement subprojects and pension staff at state and township officer, states transfers (CCTs)) non-education members; usu- center organize the necessary labor regional level no. of workers, and ally school heads take charge of collects contributions. activities Workers register with township officer and re- ceive cards in a month • Compliance/verification of eligibility: a) medical treatment: verified at SSB facilities or by township SSB officer if needs referral. Free treatment in SSB facili- ties. Reimbursements for medicine, diagnos- tics, and treatment (outside SSB facilities) go to township SSB officers (less than MMK 30,000) or central level where medical board check eligibility; b) cash benefits: SSB clinics re- protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social fer patient to township office which approves it 29 Type of function Function Stipends program (MOE; pilot MCHVS (MOH) NCCPD (MLFRD) Civil service pensions Social security (SSB) of enhanced (MOF) 30 implementation arrangements) Asset creation - - Village tract forums responsible - - (for PWPs) for development of subproject plans, receiving project funds, and implementing subprojects. Technical and administrative support to village tract forums will be provided by community facilitators appointed under the project and by DRD township- level staff Payments, Direct payment and record- Voucher distribution Village tract level receives funds, Calculation unit at central Cash benefits: direct pay- services, and keeping by school heads to and reimbursement: disburses, and transfers to or region/state level ments by SSB township transactions teachers and then to parents; most commonly village support committees for processes pensions, con- officer. In some instances, TEO processes payments and midwives and other program implementation solidates payment books, employer pays the work- transfer resources to schools trained community and sends them to MEB. ers’ benefit in advance and The Role of Social Protection members; per- MEB pays into pensioners’ claims reimbursement to form both voucher accounts. Township bank the SSB. Services: 40 gov- distribution and reim- branches send informa- ernment enterprise clinics, bursement functions. tion to state/region MOF 3 workers’ hospitals, and Record-keeping by pensions department on 92 SSB clinics provide midwives and LHVs total monthly payment, free health care services list of new pensioners (and to insured workers and their amount), and total are linked to the SSB for pensioners medical supplies. Hospitals also provide medical tours to factories for outpatient service and health educa- tion Grievance and School committees and town- - Grievance sub-committees at - Appeals Tribunal (no Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: redress mecha- ship committees are responsible village tract level; township DRD appeals made yet). Most nisms for addressing any feedback officer ensures filed grievances complaints handled at and complaints during selection are responded to. Support from township level process. The program has a NGOs/consultants at local telephone number (MOE central level. Central-level follow-up as office) needed. Captured in MIS Type of function Function Stipends program (MOE; pilot MCHVS (MOH) NCCPD (MLFRD) Civil service pensions Social security (SSB) of enhanced (MOF) implementation arrangements) MIS Reporting forms are submit- MOH and WHO com- Central level: design and compil- Supervision units (central) SSB (central) updates ted from schools to TEOs, and pile at central level; ing by DRD with support from prepare reports by type of and compiles database consolidated and submitted to VDs, health care pro- NGO/firm. DRD township level: pension (compensation, monthly based on registra- S/REOs and central level. Paper- viders, health center enters data survivors, etc.), category tion and contribution based, deployment of data management agen- (civil servant, state-owned information collected at entry is underway cies (administrative), enterprise, political), and township level and LHVs fill forms to states and regions. No gather information at disaggregated information local level on individual pensions paid to old pensioners. Manual data and basic excel systems. Will update IT systems in the near future Monitoring • Internal: school committees, VDs, health care pro- Central level: DRD M&E and Director and deputy Internal auditing unit for TEOs, S/REOs, Department of viders, health center finance officers; auditor general director of Supervision internal processes. SSB Basic Education and Depart- administrative staff, Unit travel to update local (central) monitors number ment of Education Planning WHO field officers staff on new rules and of registered companies and Training. M&E Working regulations. MOF officers and workers. Township Group leads in M&E activities (central) do spot-checks inspectors check company • External: qualitative assess- on local-level records information on workers ment (process monitoring) and companies not paying and spot-checks by Save the contributions, verify cash Children (SC) with World benefits paid, and seek Bank technical support companies that should be registered Evaluation Quantitative survey (school sur- HITAP technical DRD township office organizes No unit is in charge of ILO assessment vey and household survey) with support (mid-term annual multi-stakeholder review analyzing monitoring World Bank technical support review) at township level information Communication, School committees handle com- VDs; messages mostly Knowledge market place: annual No unit is in charge of SSB township staff: mobile outreach, and/ munication with beneficiaries on financial benefit; knowledge exchange between communication units and inspectors or community and general public. Township messages on health communities. NGOs/commu- visit companies and create mobilization committees communicate benefits could be nity facilitators help communi- awareness protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social program information to school strengthened ties plan, decide, and execute committees. In practice, mis- subprojects so communication communication still an issue; ad and mobilization is part of hoc community outreach and program implementation, public communication strategies with disclosure of project documents 31 mixed results to communities Source: GoM (2014); ILO and MDRI (2015); SC (2015); WHO (2014). Annex 3: 32 International examples of institutional arrangements for social protection provision Type of function Function Unified Database (Indonesia, PKH (Indonesia, CCT) PNPM Generasi (Indonesia, MGREGS (India, PWP) targeting system) community empowerment program) Policy development and Policy development, legal TNP2K, chaired by vice-pres- Law 11/2009 on Social Wel- Law 11/2009 on Social Wel- Parliament: Rural Employ- financing framework, and coordination ident, coordinates poverty fare. Presidential Instruction fare; Presidential Instruction ment Guarantee Act (2005); reduction policies at national 3/2010 on Socially Just De- 3/2010 on Socially Just De- rights-based and guaranteed level and provides technical velopment Program. TNP2K, velopment Program; Decree by law. Central-level coordi- advice chaired by vice-president, co- of the Coordinating Minister nating agency: MRD ordinates poverty reduction for Social Welfare 25/2007 on policies at national level and Guideline of PNPM Mandiri provides technical advice Budgeting and financial TNP2K Ministry of Social Affairs au- Direct block grant transfers Principle of bottom-up plan- The Role of Social Protection management thorizes payments, Treasury from Treasury Office to com- ning with villages developing Office within Ministry of munity account at sub-district plans and budgets based on Finance disburses funds to level. Performance-based estimated man-days of work central office of the post sys- financing to incentivize re- demanded in the course of tem for payment execution. sults. To decide on allocation the year. Budget not subject TNP2K tops up and fills gaps of funds within a village, to quotas. Bottom-up plan- if needed trained facilitators help each ning is supposed to inform village elect an 11-member MRD’s budget allocation to management team as well as states and then to districts, select local facilitators and although difficulties of this volunteers. Following com- principle in practice munity planning processes, elected team makes final budget allocation Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: Sources of funding Ministry of Finance, TNP2K, Ministry of Finance, TNP2K Ministry of Finance, multi- Central level provides major- Poverty Reduction Support donor PNPM Support Facility ity of funds (90%); states Facility (PRSF) complement by covering quarter of non-wage costs. Act mandates that 60% of total costs should be labor costs. States to provide unemployment allowance if they fail to provide work within 15 days of demand Type of function Function Unified Database (Indonesia, PKH (Indonesia, CCT) PNPM Generasi (Indonesia, MGREGS (India, PWP) targeting system) community empowerment program) Program design Design and implementation Bureau of Statistics (BPS) Ministry of Planning led Directorate-General for Vil- Central (MRD) drafted OM. standards design process, Ministry of lage and Community Empow- States drafted their state- Social Affairs is implementing erment, Ministry of Home specific versions based on agency Affairs (PMD), designed MRD guidelines with clearly program and set standards. detailed roles and responsi- Communities with PNPM bilities across functions for facilitators identify projects program implementation to improve education and health indicators Set-up and scale-up pro- BPS District, sub-district and PMD State governments (strong cesses village PKH staff and PKH variation in readiness across facilitators states). Dedicated staff should be hired at panchayat level for program implemen- tation. Communities have a role in participatory planning Eligibility criteria TNP2K. Central level Using Unified Database (see PMD: communities with Parliament: Act states all determines criteria for column 1), poor households poor results on maternal and households are eligible and proxy means testing (PMT) selected with children aged child health and education. that a third of beneficiaries of households potentially 0-15 or less than 18 years Vulnerable groups most should be women. Self-selec- eligible for anti-poverty but who have not completed benefiting are poor women tion in practice programs basic education, or pregnant/ and children. 8 provinces, lactating mothers 290 kecamatan, and 2,892 vil- lages (2012) Delivery sub-systems Beneficiary identification Local leaders inform BPS PKH ID card/national ID card Communities with support States are capturing informa- enumerators about potential from PNPM facilitators tion on Unique Identification households that could meet (UID) in program enrollment PMT Enrollment and compliance - Enrollment automatic For complementary feeding Village-level officers in charge (for CCTs) for households meeting and household education of enrollment and manage- demographic requirements or health financial support, ment of workers at worksite. and PMT criteria. Health and the community with sup- Support from district level education service providers port from PNPM facilitators (all local levels, Panchayat Raj protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social support beneficiary monitor- identifies poor households institutions) ing and recording compliance with small and school-aged with conditions; provincial children, and pregnant and and district/municipality lactating mothers levels support local opera- tions and ensure availability 33 of supply-side services Type of function Function Unified Database (Indonesia, PKH (Indonesia, CCT) PNPM Generasi (Indonesia, MGREGS (India, PWP) targeting system) community empowerment 34 program) Asset creation (for PWPs) - - Community social mapping Local governments (Pan- and participatory planning chayati Raj; districts, blocks, with support from PNPM and villages) support com- facilitators munities in project identifica- tion. Village level mandated to undertake at least 50% of projects. Remaining projects also identified at sub-state level (block and district level). Variation across states (e.g. in Tamil Nadu 100% of projects done by villages). Communi- ties: annual participatory planning exercise to decide on list of projects Payments and transactions - Central and regional offices Disbursement requires sign- Cash payments through The Role of Social Protection of Indonesian postal service off by government officials banks and post offices. and minimum of 4 signatories Accounts usually opened in on bank accounts name of woman in household (e.g. Andhra Pradesh). Direct cash payments to beneficia- ries still present when bank/ post office network presence and capacity is limited Grievance and redress TNP2K, but a functioning PKH facilitators at sub-district PNPM Complaints Handling Reporting one level higher mechanisms system still needs to be level, PKH complaints man- Units from sub-district up, than the person responsible developed ager at district level managed by PNPM Oversight for implementation Committee MIS TNP2K, but no formal institu- PKH administrators at district PNPM Oversight Committee, Central level: compile state- Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: tional home yet level maintain MIS Coordinating Ministry for level information. State-level: Social Affairs development of web-based, local-language, MIS in most states. Local-level data entry on employment and assets created Type of function Function Unified Database (Indonesia, PKH (Indonesia, CCT) PNPM Generasi (Indonesia, MGREGS (India, PWP) targeting system) community empowerment program) Monitoring TNP2K District/municipality levels Village meetings to account Overall program monitor- for funds used and monitor- ing: field staff reporting ing of physical progress. to central-level ministry. Performance-based financing Project supervision: local schemes based on monitor- government. Social audits: ing results communities Evaluation TNP2K with support from Impact evaluations by Bap- Including by PNPM Support State-level evaluations by the PRSF penas (2009), World Bank Facility, World Bank, SMERU development partners and (2010) academia Communication, outreach, Local leaders and enumera- Ministry of Communications PNPM facilitators, including Strong civil society role in and/or community mobiliza- tors and Information Technology through village and project advocating right to work and tion supports program communi- information boards information, contributed to cation campaigns awareness (e.g. in Rajasthan) Source: Indonesia – ADB (n.d.), Febriany et al. (2011), IPC-IG and TNP2K (2013), PNPM (n.d.), Sumarto (2015), Villar (2013); India – World Bank (2011). protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social 35 36 Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: The Role of Social Protection 'Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar' is the eighth note in the series Building Resilience, Equity and Opportunity in Myanmar: the Role of Social Protection. All notes are available at www.worldbank. org/myanmar. Myanmar Social Protection Notes Series The note – ‘Building resilience, equity, and opportunity in Myanmar: The role of social protection’ – provides an overview of the technical notes in the series. These include: 1. Risks and vulnerabilities along the lifecycle: Role for social protection in Myanmar 2. Framework for the development of social protection systems: Lessons from international experience 3. Inventory of social protection programs in Myanmar 4. The experience of public works programs in Myanmar: Lessons from a social protection and poverty reduction perspective 5. The experience of cash transfers in Myanmar: Lessons from a social protection and poverty reduction perspective 6. Social protection for disaster risk management: Opportunities for Myanmar 7. Strengthening social security provision in Myanmar 8. Institutional landscape for implementation and financing of social protection programs: Towards effective service delivery in Myanmar 9. Social protection delivery through community-driven development platforms: International experience and key considerations for Myanmar 10. Reaching the poor and vulnerable: Key considerations in designing targeting systems 11. Reaching the poor and vulnerable in Myanmar: Lessons from a social protection and poverty reduction perspective 12. Developing scalable and transparent benefit payment systems in Myanmar World Bank Office Yangon 57 Pyay Road, Corner of Shwe Hinthar Road, 6 1/2 Mile, Hlaing Township, Yangon Republic of the Union of Myanmar. Tel: +95 1 654824 www.worldbank.org/myanmar www.facebook.com/WorldBankMyanmar