Decentralized rural development and enhanced community participation: a case study from Northeast Brazil
Johan van Zyl,
Tulio Barbosa,
Andrew N. Parker and
Loretta Sonn
No 1498, Policy Research Working Paper Series from The World Bank
Abstract:
In Northeast Brazil, despite sustained efforts to reduce rural poverty and more than $3.2 billion in spending, the rural poor are little better off than they were two decades ago. Brazil's difficult macroeconomic environment has tended to restrict the amount of funds available for rural development. In addition, project implementation has often been seriously undermined by the excessive centralization of decisionmaking in Brazil prior to the approval of a new constitution in 1988. A preliminary evaluation of the latest rural development intervention in the Northeast - the reformulated Northeast Rural Development Program - suggests that rapid progress can be made if community participation is enhanced and decisionmaking authority is decentralized to lower levels of government and other institutions. Tosupport this new approach, the authors recommend that the next generation of rural development projects in the Northeast incorporate several features: 1) expansion of the existing community-based approach into a"municipal fund"program. This hands responsibility for the management of fiscal resources and project implementation to municipalities and communities, further promoting decentralization of decisionmaking and encouraging greater municipal cost-sharing on projects; 2) implementation of a poverty-targeting methodology based on poverty-related criteria, backed by a strong system of checks and balances to thwart mistargeting and misappropriation of resources; 3) establishment of clear rules for the composition and operating procedures of municipal councils, to improve participation and transparency; and 4) establishment of a system of checks and balances to promote transparency.
Keywords: Public Health Promotion; Decentralization; Health Economics&Finance; Poverty Monitoring&Analysis; Health Monitoring&Evaluation; Poverty Assessment; Health Economics&Finance; National Governance; Poverty Monitoring&Analysis; Regional Rural Development (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 1995-08-31
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Citations: View citations in EconPapers (4)
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:wbk:wbrwps:1498
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