managing the recovery challenge in sudan

31
United Nations Sudan Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan Slide 1 Dec-09

Upload: kersten-jauer

Post on 28-Nov-2014

1.940 views

Category:

News & Politics


0 download

DESCRIPTION

Humanitarian and development situation in Sudan and analysis of the aid operations, with a focus on the South (Ameerah Haq, Deputy Special Representative of the Secretary General and UN Resident and Humanitarian Coordinator, December 2009).

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Managing the recovery challengein Sudan

Slide 1Dec-09

Page 2: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

A. The recovery challenge

B. Sudan’s situation in perspective

Aid profile

Basic needs

Governance and state capacity

Security in the South

C. Key priorities for 2010 and beyond

Slide 2Dec-09

Contents

Page 3: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

A. The recovery challenge

Slide 3Dec-09

Page 4: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

The importance of getting the timing right

Slide 4Dec-09

Aid flows in post-conflict situations

Source: United Nations Sudan

Time

Resources

t 0t -2 t +2 t +4

$

The recovery challenge

Development aid• Poverty-reducing, long-term support

• Led by national actors and priorities

• Based on Paris Declaration principles

Humanitarian aid• Life-saving, short-term action

• Based on neutrality, independence and impartiality

years

Page 5: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Managing the recovery challenge

Slide 5Dec-09

Six key interventions in post-conflict environments

Key interventions

Assess the needs

Manage expectations

Improve basic services visibly

Make people feel safe

Ensure good governanceBuild state capacity quickly

1

6

5

2

3

4

Page 6: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

B. Sudan’s situation in perspective

Slide 6Dec-09

Aid profile

Page 7: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Aid flows to Liberia

Slide 7

Total foreign assistance by type in US$ million

0

250

500

750

1,000

1995 1998 2001 2004 2007

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 2007

Source: OECD CRS Database (10/2009), Commitments (current USD), without peacekeeping costs

Dec-09

Development aid as share of total

Humanitarian

Development

Page 8: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Aid flows to Afghanistan

Slide 8

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

1995 1998 2001 2004 2007

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 2007

Dec-09

Total foreign assistance by type in US$ million

Development aid as share of total

Humanitarian

Development

Source: OECD CRS Database (10/2009), Commitments (current USD), without peacekeeping costs

Page 9: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Aid flows to the Democratic Republic of Congo

Slide 9

0

1,000

2,000

3,000

4,000

5,000

6,000

1995 1998 2001 2004 2007

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 2007

Dec-09

Total foreign assistance by type in US$ million

Development aid as share of total

HumanitarianDevelopment

Source: OECD CRS Database (10/2009), Commitments (current USD), without peacekeeping costs

Page 10: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Aid flows to Sudan

Slide 10

0

550

1,100

1,650

2,200

2,750

1995 1998 2001 2004 2007

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 2007

Dec-09

Total foreign assistance by type in US$ million

Development aid as share of total

Humanitarian

Development

Source: OECD CRS Database (10/2009), Commitments (current USD), without peacekeeping costs

Page 11: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

B. Sudan’s situation in perspective

Slide 11Dec-09

Aid profile

Basic needs

Page 12: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Sudan’s human development indicators have improved

Slide 12

Source: UNDP Human Development Report 2009, countries with human development index values higher than 0.46 and lower than 0.5 in 2000, 2000 = 100

Dec-09

Improvement in Sudan’s Human Development Index compared to its peer group in 2000

1999 2001 2003 2005 20072000

BangladeshNigeria

Papua New G.

HaitiGhana

Mauritania

Malawi

Timor-LesteCote d’Ivoire

Sudan (HDI 2000=0.491; 2007=0.531=150/180)

100

+2%

+10%

+4%

+6%

+8%

HDI Change (2000=100)

rela

tive

to 2

000

Page 13: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Overall, Sudan’s economy is growing quickly

Slide 13

1985 1990 1995 2000 2005100

150

200

250

300

Source: IMF, World Economic Outlook (2009)

Dec-09

Nominally, per capita incomes (PPP) doubled in Africa since 1985, but tripled in Sudan

Sudan

Africa

Developing countries

2007=100

rela

tive

to

1985

Page 14: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Sudan’s population is growing faster than the region’s

Slide 14

1980 1985 1990 1995 2000 2005100

120

140

160

180

200

Source: Sudan Central Bureau of Statistics, US Census Bureau (International Database), www.ssrc.org for urbanization

Dec-09

From 1983 to 2008 Sudan’s population rose from 19m to 39m. It will reach 52m in 2020.

Sudan

Northern Africa

Africa

1983=100 2008

-20%

0%

20%

40%

60%

1955 1965 1975 1985 1995 2005

Est. level of urbanization in Sudan

rela

tive

to 1

983

Page 15: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Different challenges in a vast country

Slide 15Dec-09

A country the size of a continent Challenges by region

0 200 500km

Rwanda

Burundi

Area comparatives (1:1)

• Darfur: IDP return, hum. aid to 4.7m people, community level recovery

• East: forgotten crisis, protracted refugee situation, health crisis

• Three Areas: PCA, Misseryia migration, recovery/conflict resolution

• South: budget pressure, tribal conflict, food crisis, protection

• National: CPA milestones, GoSS and GNU cooperation, Darfur peace process

France

NL

Afghanistan Zimbabwe

SierraLeone

Page 16: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Extreme regional differences

Slide 16Dec-09

Net primary school attendance (%) Net primary school att. (bottom 10, world)

Source: Sudan Household Health Survey (SHHS) (2006)

0

20

40

60

80

100South

Darfur

22%

36%

38%

40%

45%

47%

47%

50%

51%

52%

Somalia

Chad

Niger

Liberia

Ethiopia

Burkina Faso

Eritrea

Haiti

Guinea

Congo, Dem. R.

Source: UNICEF, State of the World’s Children (2009)

North and rest

Page 17: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

0

500

1,000

1,500

2,000

2,500

Extreme regional differences

Slide 17Dec-09

Maternal mortality (per 100,000 births) Maternal mortality (bottom 10, world)

Source: Sudan Household Health Survey (SHHS) (2006)

2,100

1,800

1,800

1,500

1,400

1,400

1,300

1,200

1,100

1,100

Sierra Leone

Afghanistan

Niger

Chad

Angola

Somalia

Rwanda

Liberia

Burundi

Congo, Dem. R.

Source: UNICEF, State of the World’s Children (2009)

South

Darfur

North and rest

Page 18: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

0

20

40

60

80

100

Extreme regional differences

Slide 18Dec-09

Access to improved sanitation (%)

Source: Sudan Household Health Survey (SHHS) (2006)

South

Darfur

5%

7%

9%

10%

11%

11%

12%

12%

13%

19%

Eritrea

Niger

Chad

Ghana

Ethiopia

Sierra Leone

Madagascar

Togo

Burkina Faso

Guinea

Access to sanitation (bottom 10, world)

North and rest

Source: UNICEF, State of the World’s Children (2009)

Page 19: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Extreme regional differences

Slide 19Dec-09

Infant mortality (bottom 10, world)

Source: Sudan Household Health Survey (SHHS) (2006), National Census (1993)

0

40

80

120

160South*

2006

1993

Infant mortality in Sudan (per 1,000)

165

155

124

124

118

117

116

115

113

109

Afghanistan

Sierra Leone

Chad

Equatorial Guinea

Guinea-Bissau

Mali

Angola

Mozambique

CAR

Rwanda

Source: UNICEF, State of the World’s Children (2009)

* State-level data not available

North and rest

Page 20: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Social services receive insufficient public funds

Slide 20

Source: Government of Southern Sudan, Ministry of Finance and Economic Planning (01/2009)

Dec-09

Composition of GOSS public expenditure in 2008

Infrastructure$373m (14.2%)

Security$862m (32.9%)

Transfers$207m (7.9%)

Health$52m (2.0%)

Economic functions$89m (3.4%)

Rural dev. / environ.$90m (3.4%)

Education$133m (5.1%)

Public administration$235m (9.0%)

Rule of law$236m (9.0%)

Accountability$300m (11.5%)

Social affairs$39m (1.5%)

Page 21: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Most aid to Sudan is humanitarian. Most of it is food.

Slide 21

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009

Source: OCHA Financial Tracking Service (10/2009), dotted line indicates data not available

Dec-09

Food aid, agriculture and early recovery as a share of total humanitarian aid

50%

100%

0%

Food aid

AgricultureEarly recovery

59%($684m)

5%($58m)

Page 22: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

B. Sudan’s situation in perspective

Slide 22Dec-09

Aid profile

Basic needs

Governance and state capacity

Page 23: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Rise in public revenue challenges state capacity

Slide 23Dec-09

Government revenue by source (billion $) Transfers to the South (billion $)

Source: Sudan Ministry of Finance, IMF Staff-monitored programme, International Financial Statistics

1994 1998 2002 2006 20100

2

4

6

8

10

12

2004 2006 2008 20100.0

0.5

1.0

1.5

2.0

2.5

3.0

Taxes

Other (incl. oil)

Page 24: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Weak government institutions

Slide 24Dec-09

Government effectiveness Control of corruption

Source: World Bank, World Governance Indicators (2009)

South Africa

Ghana

Ethiopia

Cameroon

Nigeria

Kenya

Cote d'Ivoire

Guinea

Zimbabwe

Sudan

0 25 50 75 100

South Africa

Ghana

Ethiopia

Kenya

Cameroon

Nigeria

Cote d'Ivoire

Guinea

Sudan

Zimbabwe

0 25 50 75 100

Percentile rank Percentile rank

Page 25: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Weak government institutions

Slide 25Dec-09

Regulatory quality Rule of law

Source: World Bank, World Governance Indicators (2009)

South Africa

Ghana

Ethiopia

Kenya

Cameroon

Nigeria

Sudan

Cote d'Ivoire

Guinea

Zimbabwe

0 25 50 75 100

South Africa

Ghana

Kenya

Nigeria

Cameroon

Ethiopia

Cote d'Ivoire

Guinea

Sudan

Zimbabwe

0 25 50 75 100

Percentile rank Percentile rank

Page 26: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Low share of aid devoted to capacity building

Slide 26

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 2007

Source: OECD CRS (10/2009), Commitments (curr. USD), Aid for purposes of institutional and government capacity building, training, research (DAC codes ending 10, 81, 82, ...)

Dec-09

Institutional capacity building as a share of total foreign assistance

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 20070%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 2007

0%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 20070%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 20070%

25%

50%

75%

100%

1995 2001 2007

Afghanistan Dem. Republic of Congo Sudan

Sierra Leone Liberia Iraq

Page 27: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

B. Sudan’s situation in perspective

Slide 27Dec-09

Aid profile

Basic needs

Governance and state capacity

Security in the South

Page 28: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Renewed tensions in Southern Sudan

Slide 28Dec-09

Clashes, intertribal conflict, LRA incursions More than 332,000 displaced in 2009

0 200 500km

Major clashes

LRA activity

Intertribal conflict

0.8

31

2.4

25

12258

1421

76

IDPs

United NationsSudan

Page 29: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

C. Key priorities for 2010 and beyond

Slide 29Dec-09

Page 30: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Key priorities for 2010 and beyond

Slide 30Dec-09

What we have to get right

Key interventions

Save lives

Recovery challenge in Darfur

Strengthen governance

Build state capacity

Lay foundations for recoveryHelp stabilize and secure

5

6

1

4

2

3

• Coordinate response to acute crises• Ensure essential services and safety nets• Avoid that humanitarian aid substitutes for

lack of recovery and development

• Continue humanitarian action, but seek recovery local recovery opportunities

• Mobilize recovery and development actors and funding now

• Fast-track MDG achievement• Support transition to government-led

development.

• Create accountability frameworks• Review and clean up public pay rolls• Strengthen public financial mgt.• Juba compact

• Mitigate conflicts and reduce threats • Focus UN support on CPA milestones• Coordinate with UNAMID, UNMIS, JMST

• Build capacity to plan, coordinate and deliver assistance at state level

• Rapid capacity placement• Capacity development working group

Page 31: Managing the recovery challenge in Sudan

United NationsSudan

Darfur: make the integration with UNAMID work

Slide 31Dec-09 | Prepared by Kersten Jauer and Melanie Hauenstein

United NationsSudan