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EC/UN Partnership on Gender Equality for Development and Peace Implementation of the Aid Effectiveness Agenda from a Gender equality Perspective Lessons from CSO Engagement Network of Ethiopian Women’s Associations (NEWA) Presented to the CSW New York, 29 February 2008 Ethiopia: The economy and gender: a backgrounder 1. The Ethiopian Economy has recently been growing at over 10% annually and this provides opportunities to integrate aid with a strong economy to finance development within 2. There is already a strong partnership between the government and donors within the PASDEP framework where GE is understood as both a cross-cutting issue and as a specific sector. 3. Despite the challenges, the constitution recognises gender as a human right issue, a poverty reduction and a development goal in its own right. 2 The aid landscape The present aid modalities are • Project support • General budget support (GBS) • Protection of Basic Services (PBS) • SWAPs: Government and donors, including the AfDB, WHO, DFID, Italy, Sweden, the Netherlands and the World Bank have been working toward establishing SWAps in health, education and roads, especially in the areas of road construction and primary school 3 enrolment. A SWAp in the Public Sector Women’s status in Ethiopia Indicator Maternal mortality rate Delivery attended by skilled attendants Status Remarks 673/100,000 live births 9% Prenatal care coverage 30 % Contraceptive prevalence rate 15 % Women & girls affected by FGM 73 % primary school gross enrolment ratio 71.5 % Male= 88 % Secondary school gross enrolment ratio 21.6 % Male=36.6 % 27 % National=56 Literacy rate % women with access to agri extension services % of women out of the total landholders 9% 18.6 % % of women permanent employees in civil service 32 % % of women in decision making 21 % Pregnant women with access to PMTCT 0.56 4 Critical areas for gender equality • Poverty and economic empowerment of women and girls • Education and training of women and girls • Reproductive rights, health and HIV/AIDS • Human rights and violence against women and girls • Empowering women in decision making • Women and the environment • Institutional mechanisms for the advancement of women 5 National initiatives addressing GE and women’s empowerment • the 1995 constitution that stopped discriminatory laws and practices • revision of family and criminal laws underaken in line with the constitution and to address violence issues • A national gender situation analysis undertaken in preparation of a national plan • Placing GE issues as one of the national 6 PASDEP and NAP-GE • PASDEP takes ‘Unleashing the potential of Ethiopian women’ as one of its focus in the eight pillars of the strategy • NAP-GE based on the situation analysis aims at participation of women in social and political processes of the country by focusing in seven critical areas of the Beijing • NAP-GE taken as part of the PASDEP 7 The NAP-GE • policies and programmes • Sensitize development planners and to hold them accountable for gender equality Engenders the PASDEP and all other government • Monitor stakeholders’ commitment to GE • Promote gender budgeting • Build the capacity of the civil service for the implementation of the plan 8 Protection of Basic Services (PBS) The PBS Project is an initiative designed by the donor community in cooperation with the Government of Ethiopia and various stakeholders in and outside the country. It is designed to expand and sustain the basic human development programmes that are almost exclusively provided by the GoE. The package comprises of 1. Funds to protect basic services 2. Provision of health commodities 3. Improved developmental and financial transparency and 4. Citizen participation in SOCIAL ACCOUNTABILITY 9 Planning for gender equality • A large part of total expenditures are allocated to education, roads, agriculture and food security, health and water. • Funding for education, health, water supply, and food security has experienced a 32%, 4%, 94% and 36% respectively increase since 2004, • Defence spending declined from over 13% of GDP • The Government has prepared a GRB guideline to begin tracking budget allocations toward programmes that target gender equality. The Government is making efforts to pilot performance based budgeting, whereby information on outcomes influences budget allocations. 11 Budgeting for GE and WE • There is a political commitment towards GRB in the country. • budget tracking initiatives lead by civil society (such as NEWA and PANE) in relation to revenue raising; expenditures towards GE priorities are predictable • NEWA is involved in budget policy making within the MoFED and MoWA, with gender units in sectoral ministries and agencies that are involved in the preparation of draft budgets. • A Gender Budget Analysis Initiative Report was produced with the collaboration of MoFED and CSOs. 12 CSO SAc Monitoring (CRC) and (CSC) • CRCs are participatory surveys that provide QUANTITATIVE feedback on user perceptions on quality, adequacy and efficiency of public services to exact public accountability through the extensive media coverage and civil society advocacy that accompanies the process. • CSCs are QUALITATIVE monitoring tools that are used for local level monitoring and performance evaluation of services, projects and district administrative units by the communities themselves. • A CRC undertaken by PANE involving different organization to evaluate the implementation of the 13 poverty reduction policies. NEWA’s role • popularizing the PASDEP, NAPGE and the MDGs to women and women organizations • provides inputs from gender perspective on the implementation status as well as in its planning stages of PASDEP. 14 NEWA’s role • NEWA is participating in monitoring the effective implementation of PASDEP (underway),Prepared M&E tools. • Provides training on government budget proceses,gender budgeting and tracking to women &women groups • NEWA is participating in monitoring the effective allocation and utilization of budget for the implementation of PASDEP/NAP-GE 15 KEY messages • The GRB guideline in the national budget should show to how much % of budget is allocated for GE activities and what constitutes an engendered budget with clear indicators, means and sources of verification • There is the need for capacity building in all sectors of planning, implementation and monitoring of the NAM 16 Key messages (Cont) • Women machineries,GE advocates in the formulation and monitoring of action plans as well as GRB should be strengthened with regard to Ownership and mutual accountability. • The PBS Project that is designed to expand and sustain the basic human development programmes and that underscores citizen participation in social accountability could serve as model for gender responsive aid effectiveness. • Since this is an area where women lack the necessary knowlege and capacity there should be adequate resources to enable women and women organization to intervene effectively. 17 Thank you 18