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The presentation covers the following points:
1) Objectives of stock take, evidence base and approach
2) Key Findings of the stock take
3) Review proposals to improve the use of Rio marker data for reporting against quantitative financial targets and to international conventions
4) OECD DAC Secretariat engagement and expert input into these conventions
"XBRL is the Napster of financial reporting & accouting" says Conor O'Kelly, First Vice-Chair of XBRL International and one of the worldwide leaders of XBRL.
Conor gives the the latest updates on XBRL from a young CPA perspective.
This is presentation for the Maryland Association of CPAs delivered via Skype at Salisbury University on April 5, 2011.
Module 2 introduction and objectives (presentation)IRC
This document outlines a training module on water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services at the local level. The module has four sessions aimed at understanding the current WASH situation, identifying relevant stakeholders and their roles, examining challenges, and analyzing strategies to address issues in the participant's locality. By the end of the training, participants will have shared information on WASH access and services, identified local stakeholders and responsibilities, recognized challenges, and developed potential solutions in their jurisdiction.
This presentation summarises the main findings and lessons learned from the testing of TrackFin in Brazil. It was made during the TrackFin Intercountry Workshop in Rabat on 28-29th September 2014.
This presentation summarises the main findings and lessons learned from the testing of TrackFin in Ghana. It was made during the TrackFin Intercountry Workshop in Rabat on 28-29th September 2014.
The presentation covers the following points:
1) Objectives of stock take, evidence base and approach
2) Key Findings of the stock take
3) Review proposals to improve the use of Rio marker data for reporting against quantitative financial targets and to international conventions
4) OECD DAC Secretariat engagement and expert input into these conventions
"XBRL is the Napster of financial reporting & accouting" says Conor O'Kelly, First Vice-Chair of XBRL International and one of the worldwide leaders of XBRL.
Conor gives the the latest updates on XBRL from a young CPA perspective.
This is presentation for the Maryland Association of CPAs delivered via Skype at Salisbury University on April 5, 2011.
Module 2 introduction and objectives (presentation)IRC
This document outlines a training module on water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services at the local level. The module has four sessions aimed at understanding the current WASH situation, identifying relevant stakeholders and their roles, examining challenges, and analyzing strategies to address issues in the participant's locality. By the end of the training, participants will have shared information on WASH access and services, identified local stakeholders and responsibilities, recognized challenges, and developed potential solutions in their jurisdiction.
This presentation summarises the main findings and lessons learned from the testing of TrackFin in Brazil. It was made during the TrackFin Intercountry Workshop in Rabat on 28-29th September 2014.
This presentation summarises the main findings and lessons learned from the testing of TrackFin in Ghana. It was made during the TrackFin Intercountry Workshop in Rabat on 28-29th September 2014.
This document discusses the UN-Water GLAAS "TrackFin initiative" to develop a standardized methodology for tracking financing for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services at the national level. The methodology proposes using WASH accounts tables and indicators to analyze (1) total WASH expenditure, (2) how funds are distributed across services, regions, and expenditure types, (3) who pays for WASH services, and (4) how funds are channeled. The approach is modeled on national health accounts. Implementing WASH accounts in select countries aims to inform policy and identify financing gaps to achieve WASH goals.
This document discusses local financing mechanisms for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services. It outlines the need to increase coverage of water and sanitation services globally. Local finance mechanisms aim to ensure sufficient long-term revenue for service delivery, quality improvements, and expanding coverage, especially for low-income consumers. Actors that can help access local financing include funds, microfinance institutions, small towns, the domestic private sector, and utilities. An enabling environment for local financing requires support at the policy, intermediate, and community levels, including capacity building, decentralized fiscal revenues, and transparent community-level management. Constraints to innovative local financing include limited outreach, diversification, and additional finance not always being the solution
The International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) is seeking comments on its Exposure Draft for the Conceptual Framework for General Purpose Financial Reporting by Public Sector Entities by June 15, 2011. The Exposure Draft addresses the role, authority and scope of financial reporting; objectives and users of financial reports; qualitative characteristics of reported information; and defines the reporting entity. It establishes concepts to guide the development of International Public Sector Accounting Standards and other financial reporting guidance for public sector entities. The Conceptual Framework is being developed in phases, with this Exposure Draft addressing the first phase.
Key findings, lessons learned and next steps for TrackFinTrackFin
The TrackFin initiative aims to develop a standardized methodology for tracking financing for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) at the national level. Pilot projects in Brazil, Ghana, and Morocco found that comprehensive WASH financing data could be collected using this process. The methodology needs refinement based on lessons learned. Next steps include expanding the number of participating countries, providing training and support, and coordinating TrackFin with other global monitoring tools to better understand financing needs for achieving sector goals.
The document summarizes the WASH Bottleneck Analysis Tool (BAT) developed by UNICEF to help countries identify and address bottlenecks preventing improved access to water, sanitation, and hygiene services. The BAT brings stakeholders together to discuss challenges, prioritize issues, and develop evidence-based investment strategies. Pilot tests in Ghana and Sierra Leone found the BAT motivated participants and filled an important gap. While not intended as a performance benchmark or funding needs assessment, the BAT aims to support country and global monitoring efforts if indicators can be standardized and reporting mechanisms established.
This document provides a summary of an international benchlearning exercise on national service structures in Finland. It examines the employment services systems of several other countries.
The exercise included reviewing materials and conducting study trips to countries like the UK, Switzerland, and Norway to examine topics like the role of private providers, performance management systems, and cooperation between social and employment policies.
The summaries found that countries like the UK have achieved lower costs for employment outcomes through private providers using result-based procurement, though administrative costs are high. Switzerland has a robust performance measurement model but communication is difficult. Norway successfully implemented cooperation reforms but adds challenges. Preliminary recommendations include piloting result-based procurement and performance management in Finland.
Mobilising Public Finance for WASH by Sophie TremoletIRC
Public finance for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services is needed to complement other financing sources and ensure universal access. It can be used to expand services to unserved communities, ensure sustainability by covering maintenance costs, and leverage other funding sources. However, the public finance cycle for WASH needs improvement. Specifically, countries need to better track funding and outputs, prioritize interventions and develop budgets based on strategic planning, mobilize more domestic resources, and improve how funds are spent. Efforts are needed to document best practices, develop tools to improve budgeting and financing mechanisms, and provide support to sector stakeholders.
Local financing mechanisms for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services are needed to increase coverage, especially for low-income communities. These mechanisms include pooled funds, microcredit, small-town innovations, and enabling policies that support decentralization, capacity building, and participation. Effective financing requires understanding costs, tariffs, billing, and involving actors like utilities, microfinance institutions, and communities to manage funds transparently and sustainably.
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The document discusses strategies for financing sustainable development at the subnational and local levels. It acknowledges that expenditures are increasingly being decided at lower levels of government, which often lack technical capacity and financing. It commits to scaling up international cooperation to strengthen capacities of local authorities. Some strategies discussed include establishing knowledge and financing hubs to develop sustainable projects, providing targeted public support to mobilize private expertise and capital, and using innovative financing techniques for demonstration projects. The goal is to close the large funding gaps needed to achieve sustainable development goals through greater private sector involvement at subnational levels.
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- The RWSS NTP II aims to increase access to clean water and sanitation in rural Vietnam from 2006-2010.
- A Joint Annual Review meeting was held in October 2007 to assess progress and make recommendations.
- 12 recommendations were made, including strengthening capacity building, institutional frameworks, decentralization, budget allocation, and monitoring of benchmarks and triggers.
- Potential pilot activities in sanitation marketing, IEC materials, private management of water schemes, and a national hand washing campaign were identified.
This document discusses reporting practices for the TOSSD framework. It proposes using a single reporting form with four sections to collect data on TOSSD activities at the project level. Section A would identify basic activity details. Section B requests a description, sector, recipients, modality, and channel. Section C requests supplementary geographic and sectoral data and co-financing details. Section D collects volume data on commitments, disbursements, repayments, and private resources mobilized. The document seeks feedback on these reporting tools and principles, and provides follow-up on prior discussions regarding the scope of flows covered, measuring private resources mobilized, and the eligibility of export credits.
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2) Common business opportunities identified include grain, cattle, and petty trading, but current VSLA capital is limited.
3) Seasonal analyses showed household income and expenditures fluctuate, as does availability of casual work, indicating a need for savings and
FULL TITLE:
What is the Cutting Edge for Microfinance in Rural Areas and Arid and Semi-Arid Land?
ROOM: Tsavo A
Translated session: English & French
PANEL:
Chair: Mr. Wolday Amha, Executive Director, Association of Ethiopian Microfinance Institution (AEMFI), Ethiopia
Panelist: Mr. Issa Barro, Inclusive Finance Specialist, United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF), Senegal
Panelist: Mr. Mwangi Githaiga, Managing Director, Kenya Women Finance Trust (KWFT), Kenya
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Presentation made during the second International TOSSD Task Force meeting in Costa Rica, 6-7 December 2017.
http://www.oecd.org/dac/financing-sustainable-development/development-finance-standards/tossd-task-force.htm
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This document discusses the UN-Water GLAAS "TrackFin initiative" to develop a standardized methodology for tracking financing for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services at the national level. The methodology proposes using WASH accounts tables and indicators to analyze (1) total WASH expenditure, (2) how funds are distributed across services, regions, and expenditure types, (3) who pays for WASH services, and (4) how funds are channeled. The approach is modeled on national health accounts. Implementing WASH accounts in select countries aims to inform policy and identify financing gaps to achieve WASH goals.
This document discusses local financing mechanisms for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services. It outlines the need to increase coverage of water and sanitation services globally. Local finance mechanisms aim to ensure sufficient long-term revenue for service delivery, quality improvements, and expanding coverage, especially for low-income consumers. Actors that can help access local financing include funds, microfinance institutions, small towns, the domestic private sector, and utilities. An enabling environment for local financing requires support at the policy, intermediate, and community levels, including capacity building, decentralized fiscal revenues, and transparent community-level management. Constraints to innovative local financing include limited outreach, diversification, and additional finance not always being the solution
The International Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB) is seeking comments on its Exposure Draft for the Conceptual Framework for General Purpose Financial Reporting by Public Sector Entities by June 15, 2011. The Exposure Draft addresses the role, authority and scope of financial reporting; objectives and users of financial reports; qualitative characteristics of reported information; and defines the reporting entity. It establishes concepts to guide the development of International Public Sector Accounting Standards and other financial reporting guidance for public sector entities. The Conceptual Framework is being developed in phases, with this Exposure Draft addressing the first phase.
Key findings, lessons learned and next steps for TrackFinTrackFin
The TrackFin initiative aims to develop a standardized methodology for tracking financing for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) at the national level. Pilot projects in Brazil, Ghana, and Morocco found that comprehensive WASH financing data could be collected using this process. The methodology needs refinement based on lessons learned. Next steps include expanding the number of participating countries, providing training and support, and coordinating TrackFin with other global monitoring tools to better understand financing needs for achieving sector goals.
The document summarizes the WASH Bottleneck Analysis Tool (BAT) developed by UNICEF to help countries identify and address bottlenecks preventing improved access to water, sanitation, and hygiene services. The BAT brings stakeholders together to discuss challenges, prioritize issues, and develop evidence-based investment strategies. Pilot tests in Ghana and Sierra Leone found the BAT motivated participants and filled an important gap. While not intended as a performance benchmark or funding needs assessment, the BAT aims to support country and global monitoring efforts if indicators can be standardized and reporting mechanisms established.
This document provides a summary of an international benchlearning exercise on national service structures in Finland. It examines the employment services systems of several other countries.
The exercise included reviewing materials and conducting study trips to countries like the UK, Switzerland, and Norway to examine topics like the role of private providers, performance management systems, and cooperation between social and employment policies.
The summaries found that countries like the UK have achieved lower costs for employment outcomes through private providers using result-based procurement, though administrative costs are high. Switzerland has a robust performance measurement model but communication is difficult. Norway successfully implemented cooperation reforms but adds challenges. Preliminary recommendations include piloting result-based procurement and performance management in Finland.
Mobilising Public Finance for WASH by Sophie TremoletIRC
Public finance for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services is needed to complement other financing sources and ensure universal access. It can be used to expand services to unserved communities, ensure sustainability by covering maintenance costs, and leverage other funding sources. However, the public finance cycle for WASH needs improvement. Specifically, countries need to better track funding and outputs, prioritize interventions and develop budgets based on strategic planning, mobilize more domestic resources, and improve how funds are spent. Efforts are needed to document best practices, develop tools to improve budgeting and financing mechanisms, and provide support to sector stakeholders.
Local financing mechanisms for water, sanitation, and hygiene (WASH) services are needed to increase coverage, especially for low-income communities. These mechanisms include pooled funds, microcredit, small-town innovations, and enabling policies that support decentralization, capacity building, and participation. Effective financing requires understanding costs, tariffs, billing, and involving actors like utilities, microfinance institutions, and communities to manage funds transparently and sustainably.
Fmdv de log financing sd gs subnational levelAntoine Rerolle
The document discusses strategies for financing sustainable development at the subnational and local levels. It acknowledges that expenditures are increasingly being decided at lower levels of government, which often lack technical capacity and financing. It commits to scaling up international cooperation to strengthen capacities of local authorities. Some strategies discussed include establishing knowledge and financing hubs to develop sustainable projects, providing targeted public support to mobilize private expertise and capital, and using innovative financing techniques for demonstration projects. The goal is to close the large funding gaps needed to achieve sustainable development goals through greater private sector involvement at subnational levels.
The document summarizes the Rural Water Supply and Sanitation National Target Programme II Joint Annual Review from 2007. Some key points:
- The RWSS NTP II aims to increase access to clean water and sanitation in rural Vietnam from 2006-2010.
- A Joint Annual Review meeting was held in October 2007 to assess progress and make recommendations.
- 12 recommendations were made, including strengthening capacity building, institutional frameworks, decentralization, budget allocation, and monitoring of benchmarks and triggers.
- Potential pilot activities in sanitation marketing, IEC materials, private management of water schemes, and a national hand washing campaign were identified.
This document discusses reporting practices for the TOSSD framework. It proposes using a single reporting form with four sections to collect data on TOSSD activities at the project level. Section A would identify basic activity details. Section B requests a description, sector, recipients, modality, and channel. Section C requests supplementary geographic and sectoral data and co-financing details. Section D collects volume data on commitments, disbursements, repayments, and private resources mobilized. The document seeks feedback on these reporting tools and principles, and provides follow-up on prior discussions regarding the scope of flows covered, measuring private resources mobilized, and the eligibility of export credits.
Vsla vs mfi linkage and product design study report by teshale endalamawTeshale Endalamaw
The document summarizes the findings of a study assessing the needs and preferences of PSNP participants and Village Savings and Loan Associations (VSLAs) in Dale and Loka Abaya Woredas, Ethiopia for financial products and services. Key findings include:
1) VSLAs expressed a need for larger loan amounts to expand their businesses and a willingness to save with and take loans from microfinance institutions (MFIs) as groups.
2) Common business opportunities identified include grain, cattle, and petty trading, but current VSLA capital is limited.
3) Seasonal analyses showed household income and expenditures fluctuate, as does availability of casual work, indicating a need for savings and
FULL TITLE:
What is the Cutting Edge for Microfinance in Rural Areas and Arid and Semi-Arid Land?
ROOM: Tsavo A
Translated session: English & French
PANEL:
Chair: Mr. Wolday Amha, Executive Director, Association of Ethiopian Microfinance Institution (AEMFI), Ethiopia
Panelist: Mr. Issa Barro, Inclusive Finance Specialist, United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF), Senegal
Panelist: Mr. Mwangi Githaiga, Managing Director, Kenya Women Finance Trust (KWFT), Kenya
This document discusses strategies for strengthening accountability in water and natural resource projects. It provides examples from South Africa, Tanzania, and Zambia of regulator-led actions to promote citizen participation and oversight of service providers. Key challenges discussed include the need for a paradigm shift towards partnerships between citizens, service providers, and governments to improve service delivery. Questions are also raised around ensuring citizen ownership of accountability mechanisms and selecting representative citizen groups.
This document provides an overview of Nigeria's roadmap to adopting International Financial Reporting Standards (IFRS) and converting from Statements of Accounting Standards (SAS) to IFRS. It discusses Nigeria's plan to adopt IFRS in 8 phases, beginning with objectives and qualitative characteristics. It also covers the conceptual framework and foundations of IFRS, benefits of IFRS adoption, and highlights of Nigeria's conversion process from SAS to IFRS. The document aims to guide Nigerian entities through understanding IFRS and transitioning reporting to align with global standards.
Presentation made during the second International TOSSD Task Force meeting in Costa Rica, 6-7 December 2017.
http://www.oecd.org/dac/financing-sustainable-development/development-finance-standards/tossd-task-force.htm
The document discusses customer segmentation analysis conducted in several countries as part of the Making Access Possible (MAP) program. Six common customer segments were identified: salaried workers, farmers, self-employed individuals, irregular earners, dependants, and migrants. Each segment has distinct demographic characteristics, income levels, occupations, and financial needs. Understanding these differences is important for developing targeted policies, products, and services to better promote financial inclusion among various groups. The segmentation approach provides insights to help tailor solutions to the unique needs and realities of each customer segment.
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1. TRACKFIN INITIATIVE METHODOLOGICAL DISCUSSION
SOPHIE TRÉMOLET AND MARIE-ALIX PRAT
RABAT, 29TH SEPTEMBER 2014 TRACKFIN INTER-COUNTRY MEETING
2. CONTEXT
•The Draft Guidance Document provided initial guidance.
•Testing in countries allowed identifying what works, which elements need to be modified, simplified or developed
•Next steps: revise the Guidance Document
oModify methodology based on lessons from country testing
oIntroduce “real-life” examples from the experience gained in WASH sector in Brazil, Ghana and Morocco
oMake it “more user-friendly”: improve the structure, delete unnecessary material
oClarify areas for future methodological development
2
3. OBJECTIVES OF THE SESSION
Based on country results :
•Discuss the nature of WASH Accounts
•Discuss key methodological issues :
oMethodology : Classifications, estimating financing flows, reconciling FS and cost-based approach, Fixed assets approach
oProcess : collecting data, having a dedicated tool, institutionalising the production of WASH-Accounts
•Agree on revisions/inclusions needed in the guidance document
3
4. NATURE OF THE WASH-ACCOUNTS
•Clear preference for sector-relevant WASH- Accounts, rather than based on the System of National Accounts
oISIC, CPC categories were not relevant in countries and thus not explicitly referred to
oCountries used sector-relevant classifications and definitions as proposed in the Guidance Document
•Link with SEEA-W : limited potential at this stage
oIn Brazil, SEEA-W activities are focused on tracking physical water flows, not financial flows as yet
6. POINTS COVERED IN THE PRESENTATION
Methodology - Classifications
1.Classification of services
2.Classification of uses
3.Classification of service providers
4.Classifications of financing sources and financing units
5.Classification of costs
Methodology – Approaches to estimating expenditure in WASH
6.Reconciling the gap between the “financing sources” and “cost-based” approaches
7.Feasibility of selecting the “Fixed Asset stock approach” and methods used
Methodology – Estimating certain financing flows
8.Estimating households’ expenditure for self-supply
9.Treatment of loans
Processes at country level
10.Improving data collection methods
11.Developing a common data collection and analysis tool
12.Developing institutional support for compiling WASH-Accounts & Institutionalisation
Issues at international Level
13.Ensuring the comparability of data
Any other points we need to cover ?
6
8. 1. CLASSIFICATION OF SERVICES
•Water / sanitation: overall relevant with minor country-specific adaptations
•Hygiene activities were treated differently – overall difficult to classify
oGuidance: hygiene promotion activities included in S3 “Support services”
oBrazil: created a separate category (S5 Hygiene), mostly with government expenditure
•Countries expressed the need to include a clear definition of hygiene in the Guidance Document. But there is no internationally agreed definition for hygiene:
oShould we create a separate category for hygiene?
oShould we propose a definition or should it be addressed separately by WHO / others?
oHow feasible would it be to disaggregate hygiene from water and sanitation spending ?
oWhat should be the boundaries of activities included under “WASH-related hygiene”
•Exclude food and environmental and solid waste management
•Hygiene promotion programmes, by government or service providers:
–Hand-washing campaigns, menstrual hygiene promotion, chlorine distribution, sanitation promotion?
–Only software or some hardware?
•Households spending on :
–Hand washing, bathing, washing clothes and material/equipment (soap tippy taps, bathroom etc.)
–Chlorine for water treatment ? ( or include it in water?)
•Water Resource Management:
oSome expenditure has been included, but not always clear which ones
8
Discussion # 1: Should a list of WASH-related hygiene services be defined? By whom?
Can expenditure on hygiene be clearly identified?
10. 2. CLASSIFICATION OF USES (2)
•Separating household uses from other types of uses:
oOnly Brazil estimated expenditure by type of use.
oNon-domestic use was treated as one category : it was not possible to disaggregate non- domestic uses by type of users (institutional, industrial, commercial) and between served vs self-supply for non-domestic uses
o88% of the resources were spent for the production of services for served domestic use. Household self-supply was estimated at 2.2% of the expenditure. The remaining non domestic uses (institutional, industrial, commercial) represent 9.8% of the expenditure.
•Estimating expenditure of self-provided institutional/commercial/industrial use:
oConsultants proposed to delete these categories, although tracking this information could be important for providing a complete picture and for policy-making
10
Discussion # 2:
•How can the expenditure by type of use be better estimated ? Should we provide further guidance on how to do it (i.e. based on revenues and/or costs)?
•Should we simplify categories of uses: should we maintain self-provided uses for non-domestic even if hard to quantify?
12. 3. CLASSIFICATION OF SERVICE PROVIDERS (2)
•No need to create more categories of Service providers. Instead, the guidance document encourages countries to create sub-categories:
oP1 “government agencies” can be broken down into:
•P1.1: “national government agencies”
•P1.2: “regional government agencies”
•P1.3: “local government agencies”
oP2 “network corporate providers” can also be broken down:
•P2.1: “Parastatal network corporate providers”
•P2.2: “Private network corporate providers”
•P2.3: “Housing developers”
•The GD will provide more specific examples to use the categories. Example of housing/real estate developers:
oIn Morocco, a significant portion of hardware network investments are financed by housing/real estate developers. In this case, housing developers should be included in P2.
12
Discussion # 3:
•Are the service providers categories adequate?
•How can we encourage the creation of sub-categories to fit countries needs?
15. 4. CLASSIFICATION OF FINANCING SOURCES AND FINANCING UNITS (3)
Two main issues:
•The GD led to different understandings of financing units and financing sources:
oNeeds to be clarified and presented with examples from countries
•The channelling of flows is not well captured:
oNeed a solution to show how funding is channelled through certain financing units that gather funds from several sources (including their own) and make funding decisions
15
17. 4. CLASSIFICATION OF FINANCING SOURCES AND FINANCING UNITS (5)
•Financing units provide financing sources to service providers or to other financing units in the sector.
•The classifications of FS and FUs are used to answer 2 key questions on the funding of service providers :
oWhat are the financing sources of service providers ?
oWho is financing the expenditure of service providers ?
“Served” households
Central Government
Bilateral and Multilateral Donors
Service Providers
Non–domestic users
Tariffs
Domestic Public transfers
International public transfers
Self-expenditure
Banks
Loans
Tariffs for services provided
Domestic public transfers
International public transfers
Voluntary transfers
Private repayable financing
Financing units
Service providers
Key:
•Financing Sources:
•Institutional entities:
18. 4. CLASSIFICATION OF FINANCING SOURCES AND FINANCING UNITS (6)
What are the financing sources of service providers?
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
Brazil 2010 - Financing sources by type of service providers (PxFS) in Million Brazilian Reals
Repayable
financing
Voluntary
contributions
International
grants
Domestic public
transfers
Households’ expenditure for self-supply
Morocco - Financing sources by service providers - in Million Dhr
Global picture of sector financing sources
Zoom on FS of some service providers
19. Who is financing the expenditure of service providers?
There is a confusion re. tariffs. Both Brazil and Morocco showed tariffs as coming from service providers as the financing unit – when the guidance document implied that households (FU10)/ users should be the FU
4. CLASSIFICATION OF FINANCING SOURCES AND FINANCING UNITS (7)
(This chart was modified from the one in the 10 pager to reflect GD concepts)
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
Financing units by type of service providers (PxFS) - Brazil 2010
Households
NGOs and community-
based organizations
Banks and Financial
Institutions
Bilateral and
multilateral donors
Economic and quality
Regulators
Non-network
corporate providers
Network corporate
providers
Local authorities
Regional authorities
0
5,000
10,000
15,000
20,000
25,000
30,000
35,000
40,000
Financing unit funding to service providers (PxSP) - Brazil 2010
Based on definitions in the Guidance Document
In the Brazil report
20. 4. CLASSIFICATION OF FINANCING SOURCES AND FINANCING UNITS (8)
Who is channelling funding in the sector?
•There are different “layers” of financing units: some generate financing sources, others are channelling financing sources from a mix of units
•Example: a local government which is not providing direct water services and is channelling funding to service providers
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Tariffs for services provided
Domestic public transfers
International public transfers
Voluntary transfers
Private repayable financing
Financing units
Service providers
Key:
•Financing Sources:
•Institutional entities:
“Served” households
Central Government
Bilateral and Multilateral Donors
Service Providers
Local Government
Non–domestic users
Tariffs
Domestic Public transfers
International public transfers
Self-financing (Internally generated funding from property tax, business rates etc.)
Domestic Public transfers
Sanitation Tax
21. 4. CLASSIFICATION OF FINANCING SOURCES AND FINANCING UNITS (9)
•Recommendation: we are proposing to maintain the categories (FS / FU):
oA new category of financing channels / agents would be redundant
oAdditional breakdown of FS can be introduced (e.g. to split local government / central government funding)
oClarify how FU concept should be used, particularly for tariffs
o“Zoomed-in” pictures can be produced for the FUs that act as “Financing channels”, i.e. they have a programmatic control over the allocation of funding from different sources.
22. 4. CLASSIFICATION OF FINANCING SOURCES AND FINANCING UNITS (10)
•Example of “financing channels” : Local Governments, national agencies that provide funding not necessarily associated with provision of services (ex. CWSA in Ghana).
Discussion # 4:
•What do we want to show in terms of flows of funds?
•Are the concepts of Financing sources and Financing Units sufficient to answer these questions ?
-
200
400
600
800
1,000
1,200
2009
2010
2011
Local governments
Fictive example of financing sources of a local government
Repayable financing
Voluntary contributions
International grants
Transfers from central
government
Local government
transfers
Local Sanitation Tax
Tariffs for services
provided
24. 5. CLASSIFICATION OF COSTS (2)
•Other costs may need to specifically identified:
oBrazil has added a new category for taxes on income – This is a big cost for service providers (~5%).
oDepreciation has also been included in costs (though not in a separate category), in order to reconcile the cost-based and the financing source approach (cf. next point)
•Changes proposed: Include C3 in C1; add 2 new categories (taxes and provisions)
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Discussion # 5:
•Should the category C3 (large capital maintenance costs) be removed and included in C1?
•Discuss the changes proposed (taxes and provisions)
Type of costs
Proposed changes
C1
Capital costs including hardware and software
•Extend to large capital maintenance costs. Not only initial costs, but also the costs for the renewal, replacement and rehabilitation of a system.
C2
Operating and maintenance costs
This category can be broken down in more detailed sub categories: HR (salaries and social contributions), Energy, R&D etc.
C3
Large capital maintenance costs
(This category has not been used in country studies – costs have been included in C1.
C4
Cost of capital
C5
Support or software costs
C6
Taxes
This would include Taxes on production “corporate and import tax” and any other taxes related to WASH service provision. Taxes paid on “intermediary consumption (i.e. as part of the production process) would be included in C2.
C7
Provisions
Including provisions for depreciation
26. 6. RECONCILING THE GAP BETWEEN FS AND COST-BASED APPROACH (1)
•The total expenditure to the sector is estimated using 2 methods:
oThe “financing source approach” aggregates the expenditure of financing units or the revenues from each financing sources that are received by service providers
o The “cost-based approach” aggregates the expenditure of service providers. The main objective of this approach is to allow disaggregating by types of services / costs
•The total expenditure figures estimated through these two methods vary slightly.
•Need to identify the reasons for this gap and try to reduce it: Is it due to missing data or to estimation methods?
oTreatment of depreciation (cf. example of Brazil) : If tariffs are set to cover depreciation of assets, than provisions for depreciation should be included in the estimation of total costs.
oCashflow issues: mismatch between the time when revenues come in and expenses incurred
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Discussion # 6:
•What could be other reasons explaining the gap between the two approaches?
•If there is a difference between costs and financing sources: what is this telling us about sector financing ?
•Which approach should be used as the “total expenditure to WASH”?
27. 6. RECONCILING THE GAP BETWEEN FS AND COST-BASED
APPROACH (2)
• Example from Brazil :
o In the first iteration, the financing source approach estimated WASH sector
funding at R$ 54.2 billion and the "costs-based” approach estimated total
expenditure at R$ 50.9 billion in 2012.
o In the second iteration, depreciation was added in the costs. The financing
source approach estimated the funding at R$ 51.8 billion, and the "costs-based”
approach at R$ 52.5 billion in 2012.
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R$ 0,00
R$ 20.000,00
R$ 40.000,00
R$ 60.000,00
2010 2011 2012
Despesas totais - abordagens financiamento e custos
Fontes Financ Custos
R$ 0,00
R$ 10.000,00
R$ 20.000,00
R$ 30.000,00
R$ 40.000,00
R$ 50.000,00
R$ 60.000,00
2010 2011 2012
Despesas totais - abordagens financiamento e custos
Fontes Financ Custos
First iteration – without depreciation Second iteration- including depreciation in costs
28. 7. FEASIBILITY OF SELECTING THE FIXED ASSET STOCK APPROACH AND METHODS USED (1)
•This approach is more difficult to apply due to data limitations but potentially interesting
•It was only tested in Brazil
oFixed asset stocks of service providers were estimated based on their balance sheets when available
•Missing data had to be estimated based on an average asset cost per connection
•Data from different types of SPs and different years was estimated in different ways (historical value, including or not depreciation). This required an important treatment of data
•Fixed assets stocks were valued in the studies based on historical costs, including depreciation
oFixed asset stocks of households were estimated based on estimated unit costs of replacing equipment owned (septic tank, water tanks, wells) and the reported number of self-supplied households from household surveys
oData on municipal assets (for WRM for instance) could not be valued
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29. 7. FEASIBILITY OF SELECTING THE FIXED ASSET STOCK APPROACH AND METHODS USED (2)
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Tabela WA 11 (ASxP) - Estoques de ativos por tipo de fornecedor do WASH - Abordagem estoque de ativos2012Valor histórico ajustado a valor presente por índices setoriais médios editados pela FGV (exceto P5) Provedores WASHP1P2P3P4P5Estoque de ativosR$ milhõesInstituições governamentaisFornecedores corporativos da redeFornecedores corporativos fora da redeONGs e organizações comunitáriasDomicilios (autofornecimento) TotalParticipação % S1Abastecimento de águaR$ 30.246,03R$ 87.472,94R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 6.277,98R$ 123.996,9556,33% S2Esgotamento SanitárioR$ 20.966,52R$ 60.636,16R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 11.957,31R$ 93.559,9942,50% S3Serviços de apoio e suporteR$ 660,32R$ 1.909,69R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 2.570,011,17% S4Gestão de recursos hídricosR$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,000,00% S5Higiene/saúdeR$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 0,000,00% AS1Estoques finais de ativosR$ 51.872,87R$ 150.018,78R$ 0,00R$ 0,00R$ 18.235,29R$ 220.126,94100,00% Participação %23,56%68,15%0,00%0,00%8,28%100,00% Preços atuais de construção
30. 7. FEASIBILITY OF SELECTING THE FIXED ASSET STOCK APPROACH AND METHODS USED (3)
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Discussion # 7:
•How useful is this approach? Is it worth replicating elsewhere? Should it be done on a case study basis only?
•Can the asset-based approach bring interesting information even when different asset-valuation methods are used?
•Data on fixed assets stocks is not easily available.
oBrazil has a very developed information system (SNIS) which collects data from service providers, including their balance sheet.
•Need to develop strategies for estimating stocks from different SPs and types of services
•Should assets be valued at their historical or replacement value?
•What can we learn from recording fixed assets stocks value from different years ?
32. 8. ESTIMATING HOUSEHOLDS’ EXPENDITURE FOR SELF- SUPPLY(1)
•The guidance document proposes to estimate household expenditure for self-supply based on coverage trends (from household surveys) and estimated unit costs
What was done in countries?
•Testing confirmed that this expenditure is not currently estimated
•Household budget surveys only collect data on O&M, so only O&M spending for self-supply could be reliably estimated, although which costs are included is not always clear
•It was not possible to estimate household investment for self-supply:
oBrazil:
•Sanitation: Could not be estimated because the total number of households using latrines overall decreased over the period
oGhana:
•Sanitation: there was no coverage increase between 2010-2012 so household investments in individual latrines was very limited
•But there was an increase in the number of shared latrines, in which households are also likely to invest: these investments were not estimated however
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33. 8. ESTIMATING HOUSEHOLDS’ EXPENDITURE FOR SELF- SUPPLY(2)
•Household investment costs need to be estimated more reliably – Several issues:
oEstimating investments from households when the overall trend is negative or constant
oCapturing investments from households moving inside a level of service (for instance going from poor improved to better improved) or into shared toilets: how could these be assessed in more detail?
oEstimating non-monetary costs (time spent by households, material uses etc.)
oEstimating household investments via community structures, particularly in water
•Identifying solutions to improve estimated unit costs of household :
oFor each type of self-supply : have a detailed list of the costs to include
oConduct specific national surveys or include questions in the national survey, particularly to estimate household investment costs in self-supply
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Discussion # 8:
•How can we estimate investment in latrines when the overall trend is negative?
•Should we try and estimate non-monetary costs ?
•How can household spending surveys be improved?
34. 9. TREATMENT OF LOANS (1)
•Loans have been included as a Financing Source: “repayable finance”
oPerspective: total financing flows to fund outgoings on investments
oAll loans (including concessional) included in repayable finance
•In the guidance document, we proposing to account for loans as it is done in the Health Accounts:
•include the principle of the loan in FS6 “Repayable finance”;
•Include the interest paid in C5 “Capital Costs”;
•The repayment of the loan is excluded.
•The guidance document does not specifically address the issue of how loan repayments are covered (from tariffs or subsidies…)
•If loan repayments are excluded: this may be a source of the difference between the Financing source approach / the cost-based approach.
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Discussion # 9:
•Can we combine non-repayable and repayable financing as FS?
•What can learn from the health sector in this area?
35. 9. TREATMENT OF LOANS (2)
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Operating costs
Maintenance costs
Investment costs (rehabilitation and new)
COSTS
REVENUES
Tariffs
Taxes
Transfers
SERVICE PROVIDERS’ FINANCES
Loans
Operating costs
Maintenance costs
COSTS
REVENUES
Tariffs
Taxes
Transfers
SERVICE PROVIDERS’ FINANCES
Year 1 - loan
Year 2 – loan repayment
Financial costs
Repayment of the loan
37. 10. IMPROVING DATA COLLECTION METHODS
•In Morocco and Ghana, questionnaires were developed for different types of actors (government agencies, local governments, donors, NGOs, service providers etc.)
•In Brazil, national information systems (SNIS, IBGE, form national funding schemes etc.) were mainly used.
•Developing national surveys will help filling data gaps (household and non- domestic expenditure for self-supply)
•One result of this exercise was to identify how national information systems can be improved to collect the data required for WASH-Accounts in future years
oE.g. In Ghana, TrackFin helped confirm that water and sanitation expenditure need to be separately identified in the GIFMIS (Ghana Integrated Financial Management Information System), recording expenditure of all government agencies
37
Discussion # 10:
•Should the Guidance Document propose standard questionnaires or should we leave it to countries to develop their own questionnaires?
•How can surveys be used to improve estimates?
38. 11. DEVELOPING A COMMON DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS TOOL (1)
•A simple data collection tool in excel format was provided for testing
•In practice, the country teams used the structure of the tool, but developed their own tailor-made excel spreadsheet to reflect data availability in their country
•This was a very cumbersome exercise: In Morocco for instance more than 13,000 data items were collected and had to be manually allocated to the different categories of expenditure
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39. 11. DEVELOPING A COMMON DATA COLLECTION AND ANALYSIS TOOL (2)
Should we develop a software for compiling WASH-Accounts?
•The health sector has developed two separate tools: a Health Account production and a Health Account analysis tool. These tools are now used by over 20 countries, and are much appreciated for the systematic support they provide.
•Advantages – The software would:
oSimplify the exercise, by standardizing the treatment of the data:
•Coding different types of flows
•How the financial flows are distributed between different types of financing sources or financing units
•Avoiding double-counting of flows
•Producing summary tables / pivot tables of WASH Accounts.
oCut down the costs of replicating the exercise from one year to another, through the coding of data sources.
oIt would also support proper traceability and accountability of the work done behind the figures.
• This tool could be easily adapted from the Health Accounts software
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Discussion # 11:
•Should we develop a tool for producing and analysing WASH-Accounts?
42. 12. DEVELOPING INSTITUTIONAL SUPPORT FOR COMPILING WASH-ACCOUNTS & INSTITUTIONALISATION (1)
•The success of the production of WASH-Accounts highly depends on the involvement of high-level decisions makers to :
oOpen doors for data collection
oSpread lessons learned from WASH-Accounts to influence policy making
•In Morocco, the creation of a steering committee formed by directors, who was guiding the WASH-Accounts Team was a key factor of success
•What should be the recommended structure of the WASH-Accounts team? Should it be a team of consultants or ministry staff ?
42
Discussion # 12:
•What additional organisational tips can we include in the guidance document to support the data collection, analysis and dissemination?
44. 13. ENSURING THE COMPARABILITY OF DATA
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Treatment of inflation
oAt present: results are presented in nominal terms
oShould results should be converted in real terms to track evolution over times and clearly identify the impact of inflation?
•Exchange rate conversions
oAt present: use market exchange rates
oShould we control for differences in price levels between countries using PPP indices? If so, which indices should be used?
45. THANK YOU FOR YOUR ATTENTION!
Sophie@tremolet.com
Marie-alix@tremolet.com
Allelyd@who.int
Gordonb@who.int
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