WB moots $900 million country assistance strategy for Lanka
Support for infrastructure-led growth, lagging regions and high
quality service delivery is the focus of the World bank Group’s Country
Assistance Strategy (CAS) for Sri Lanka for the period July 2008 to June
2011. The envisaged lending package of US$900 million for the Sri Lanka
CAS was endorsed by the World Bank’s Executive Directors at a meeting
recently.
The CAS is aligned with the Mahinda Chintana, the Government’s 10
year economic development framework which aims at accelerating growth,
with particular emphasis on equitable development.
The strategy is focused on three objectives: The first is to expand
economic opportunities in lagging regions to achieve more balanced
growth by supporting rehabilitation of roads, irrigation networks and
water supply. Secondly, the CAS centres on improving the investment
climate and competitiveness to encourage private sector investments and
growth.
The third objective is to enhance quality services and accountability
to improve education, health, social safety nets and environmental
protection. A substantive share of the resources during this CAS period
is devoted to roads, particularly the provincial roads to improve inter
connectivity among regions to facilitate faster development in the
lagging regions”.
The design of the CAS is based on extensive consultations with the
Government and with a broad cross-section of Sri Lankan society across
many parts of the country.
“The assistance strategy aims to sustain the impressive poverty
reduction that Sri Lanka has achieved the last five years,” said World
Bank Country Director for Sri Lanka, Naoko Ishii. “The CAS is designed
to deliver positive development outcomes in poor and underserved areas,
including the conflict-affected North and the East”.
The CAS will systematically ensure conflict sensitivity in design,
implementation, monitoring and evaluation of Bank-funded activities. For
example, the Bank’s education programs will support the teaching of
English as a link language, working towards mixed Tamil-Sinhalese
schooling, and teacher education and training. The aim is to encourage
members of different ethnic groups to work together around common goals
in community driven development initiatives.
The CAS also notes the importance of enhancing macroeconomic
stability for achieving higher long term economic growth and for
enabling Sri Lanka to better meet the challenges of the recent steep
increase in international commodity prices.
The World Bank intends to engage in close dialogue with the
Government on this issue in the coming period.
The International Finance Corporation (IFC), the Bank Group’s private
sector arm, plays and important role in the Bank’s strategy by providing
long-term financing and business advice for Sri Lankan companies.
During this CAS implementation period, IFC will increasingly reach
out to second-tier, smaller clients and help develop the domestic
financial market.
In addition, the IFC will continue to provide advisory services
through the South-East Asia Enterprise Development Facility, a
five-year, multi-donor trust fund established especially for this
purpose.
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