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Poverty • Condition of: ... – – – – – hunger, inadequate income, lack of food security, lack of or insecure access to assets,with informal and formal access rules biased against the poor • Lack of power and voice to: – influence rules that determine access to productive assets (productivity of and returns to assets) – influence the organizations that govern these rules Institutions • Organizations are instrumental for empowerment of the poor: – securing access to assets – influencing the rules • Rules (informal and formal) are crucial for access to assets: – reduce uncertainty in exchange; – define choice set; – determine transaction costs, production costs, profitability and feasibility, – provide incentive structure • Institutions = organizations and rules of the game • Institutions matter, particularly for rural people and women • Institutions are political and socio-economic Investing in Organizations Strategic Objectives/Sub-Component Type % of Total Strengthening the capacity of the rural poor and their organizations 26.77 Enabling the poor 12.61 local capacity-building support to local institutions communication community development irrigation management Enabling the enabler 6.23 0.03 1.62 4.26 0.47 14.15 institutional support management/coordination monitoring and evaluation training 3.02 9.19 0.80 1.14 Based on PPMS Policy Environment • Liberalization • Decentralization • Globalization • Empowerment, Freedoms Implications • Markets become predominant institutions: – private entrepreneurship and self-help are key drivers – market oriented and inclusive institutional design (rules and organizations) critical mission for policy makers • Governments play their role differently – role (focus on policy, disengagement from direct economic activities, public goods), and – structure (decentralization) • Organizations of the poor: – play different role: access to markets, assets – play the role differently: influence rules, enforcement of rules – nature of the organizations: demand, the poor as citizens – structure of the organizations: voice, participation • Institutional transformation matters (dysfunctional institutions) Access to Common Property Resources: Oxbow Lakes in Bangladesh • Institutional transformation: – new fisheries management policy: from medium-term lease to long-term license – empowerment of genuine fishermen and women : lake area management group – wage labour to self-management of assets (stocking, harvesting, marketing) – technology services: markets, pluralistic approach, women Access to Water: WUAs • Institutional transformation: – water resource management (irrigation) policy – from governmental/parastatal organizations to water users associations (WUAs) – participation in decision-making, investment and management (operation and maintenance) – from consumers of services to asset managers – associations that ‘buy-in’ services, on competitive basis Access to Technology: Extension • Institutional transformation: – policies for agricultural technology development and dissemination – departments of agricultural extension (training and visit) to pluralism (including, farmer field schools, vouchers…) – informal groups, pluralism in supply – research responsive to demand – competition among suppliers Access to Financial Services • Institutional transformation: – financial sector reform: inclusive of rural and microfinance – from supply of credit by government-controlled organizations to rural finance systems development (organizations of the poor linked into financial organizations) – sustainable membership-based organizations – rules of membership and access to services Conclusion • Inclusive institutions enable poverty reduction, within growth • Secure access to assets determined by rules • Organizational diagnosis, design and transformation is critical to influence rules: – inclusiveness – pluralism: choice (competition), voice, exit – build on traditional organizations, change existing organizations, add windows to existing organizations, new organizations – learning curve – political economy of organizational transformation: interest groups, elites • Organizations help improve the rules, internal and external • Design of rules and organizations key policy concern Issues • Effective models of organizational transformation: best practices, lessons learned elsewhere • From targeting the poor to inclusion How to deal with elites, interest groups? • Building organizational transformation into poverty-reduction strategies • Partnerships for institutional transformation