scaling up rural sanitation a case study from the world bank’s science of delivery team sarah...
DESCRIPTION
Impact National Level: Rural people without access to improved sanitation down from 64% to 54% (2002 – 2012) Rural residents engaging in open defecation down 49% to 31% ( ) Diarrheal and parasitic diseases Provincial Level (East Java) A RCT of TSSM programme in East Java in 2013 showed 30 percent decrease in childhood diarrhea Funds used earlier for providing hardware subsidies fell to zero National Level: 25 million additional people gained access to sanitation in rural areas ( ) ++ health outcomes, ++ quality of life Provincial Level (East Java) From January 2007 to December 2010, TSSM project invested $3 million $1.7 million in local government investment $7.8 million household investments. Average annual district investment in TSSM was $8.53 per beneficiary. Sanitation entrepreneurs: 15,000 latrines, $1.3 million earnings Improved sanitation coverage in East Java X 10 national averageTRANSCRIPT
Scaling Up Rural Sanitation
A Case Study from the World Bank’s Science of Delivery Team
Sarah Glavey & Oliver HaasDSAI ConferenceNovember 2015
Why do development projects succeed and fail?
• Case study about how the Indonesian government successfully scaled up rural sanitation services to address the needs of 25 million people between 2002-2012
• Our goal in writing the case study was to understand the how? and why?
• Context: building state capacity for implementation of development projects, programmes, interventions
Impact
National Level:• Rural people without access to improved
sanitation down from 64% to 54% (2002 – 2012) • Rural residents engaging in open defecation
down 49% to 31% (1990-2012)• Diarrheal and parasitic diseases
Provincial Level (East Java)• A RCT of TSSM programme in East Java in 2013
showed 30 percent decrease in childhood diarrhea
• Funds used earlier for providing hardware subsidies fell to zero
National Level: •25 million additional people gained access to sanitation in rural areas (2002-2012)•++ health outcomes, •++ quality of life
Provincial Level (East Java)From January 2007 to December 2010,•TSSM project invested $3 million •$1.7 million in local government investment• $7.8 million household investments. •Average annual district investment in TSSM was $8.53 per beneficiary.•Sanitation entrepreneurs: 15,000 latrines, $1.3 million earnings•Improved sanitation coverage in East Java X 10 national average
Science of Delivery
How? &
Why?
Problem Driven Iterative AdaptationX Reproduce external
solutions considered ‘best practice’ in dominant agendas
X pre-determined linear processes
X tight monitoring of inputs and compliance to ‘the plan’
X top down, assuming that implementation largely happens by edict
Andrews, M., Pritchett, L., & Woolcock, M. (2013)
Solve particular problems in local contexts
create an ‘authorizing environment’ for decision making that allows ‘positive deviation’ and experimentation
active, ongoing, experiential learning and iterative feedback of lessons into new solutions
engage broad sets of agents to ensure reforms politically supportable and practically implementable
The Case Study• Literature review: project docs, formal
evaluations, internal notes• Key informant interviews • Identification of how and why gaps• Research questions and interview questions• 30 interviews carried out in Indonesia 2014
(national, provincial, local gov, NGOs, WB)• Key concepts: Pain point, feedback loop,
inflection point, adaptation, organisational change, behaviour change
• Causal mapping• Additional interviews and write up
Case Study Process Overview
The ChallengeThe Development Challenge2 of 4 leading causes of under-5 mortality: diarrhea and typhoid•11% of children in Indonesia suffer from fecal-borne diseases in any two week period. •More than 33,000 children die each year from diarrhea, and another 11,000 die from typhoid
54 million people practice open defecation (WHO/UNICEF 2012). In rural areas just 46% of people have access to improved sanitation31% still regularly engage in open defecation (WHO Global Health Observatory 2012).
Indonesia lost $6.3 billion in 2006—equivalent to 2.3% GDP (World Bank 2008).
Education and Gender equality outcomes
MDGS: Worldwide 2.1 billion people have gained access to improved sanitation. Despite progress, 2.4 billion are still using unimproved sanitation facilities, including 946 million people practicing open defecation.
SDGS:
•6.2 Access to adequate and equitable sanitation and hygiene for all and end open defecation, paying special attention to the needs of women and girls and those in vulnerable situations•6.a Expand international cooperation and capacity-building support to developing countries in water- and sanitation-related activities and programmes •6.b Support and strengthen participation of local communities in improving water and sanitation management
Indonesia’s Delivery ChallengeMore than 100 million of Indonesia’s 250 million people still lack access to improved sanitation (World Bank 2012)
The scale of the need dwarfed Indonesia’s ability to deal with it.
•Population growth and lack of effective large-scale rural sanitation programs led to a decline in rural access to sanitation, from 43 percent in 1985 to 37 percent in 2008.
•Investment in infrastructure and subsidies, had failed to achieve results. •An estimated $600 million in annual investment during 2005–15 was needed to achieve MDG targets•Just $27 million a year invested by government in the sector over the previous 30 years, mostly urban.
•The government needed to increase private investment and find new mechanisms for delivering services at scale, particularly poor people living in a range of dispersed geographical locations across the country’s 17,000 islands.
Mapping Key MomentsConcept Example What Happened Next?
Pain point Failure of subsidiesDemand without supply
Search for new ideas- CLTSDevelop TSSM
Feedback loop Success of CLTS in East Java Scale Up to 5 provinces
Inflection point District heads to opt in to TSSM District investment and commitment
Adaptation/refinement
Development of TSSM to tackle supplyMason training to entrepreneur training
Sanitation entrepreneurshipAPPSANI
Organisational change
Coordinating group WASPOLAWSP and gov social marketing capacitySTBM national policy 2011
Gov capacity increasedNational scale up underway
Behaviour change
CLTSKey community groups
ODF status Champions at all levels
Insights into How and WhySoD Concepts Insights/ExamplesAdaptive Implementation
CLTS was adapted TSSM developed and adapted Ongoing adaptation
Focus on citizen outcome
25 million people gained access to rural sanitation servicesBuy in at all levels to ODF vision
Multidimensional response
Coordinating group – WASPOLABupatis wives, local religious leaders
Evidence for results
Started with field trial but planned for scale – pilots through existing programmesUse of data to gain champions at all stages ‘seeing Is believing’
Leadership for Change
Policy and engagement at national, district, local levelsBuy-in to workshops at local level
Behaviour Change Paradigm shift investment in subsidies to investment in behaviour change/health worker trainingNegative reinforcement, positive reinforcement
Why do development projects succeed and fail in achieving impact?• ‘People do not just receive policies and implement them directly,
but rather they go through a process of trial, learning, iteration and adaptation in their incremental attempts to improve development outcomes…
• Active learning through real-world experimentation allows us (all of us working in development) to learn from the ‘small-step’ interventions we pursue to address problems (or causes of problems). This experimentation does not involve (always) performing a scientific experiment where the context is suspended and the intervention is not allowed to change or vary over the life of the experiment. Rather, it is about trying a real intervention in a real context, allowing on the-ground realities to shape content in the process. This requires seeing lessons learned as a key emerging result. The necessary experimentation processes require mechanisms that capture lessons and ensure these are used to inform future activities’
Andrews, M., Pritchett, L., & Woolcock, M. (2013)
Thank You
Acknowledgements: Oliver Haas, WSP, all who were interviewed
Email: [email protected]
The Global Delivery Initiative links development practitioners who are interested in sharing development experiences and lessons that focus on implementation
and results. Case Study Library:
http://www.worldbank.org/reference/GDI/index.html