1 / 33

Project Implementation Process (CREW Project)

Project Implementation Process (CREW Project). Rijit Sengupta CUTS International FIRST PAC MEETING CREW PROJECT 14 th March 2013 Jaipur, India. Outline. Introduction About the Project Project Phases Management & Programmatic issues. I. INTRODUCTION. 1. Genesis of CREW Project.

tulia
Download Presentation

Project Implementation Process (CREW Project)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Project Implementation Process(CREW Project) RijitSengupta CUTS International FIRST PAC MEETING CREW PROJECT 14th March 2013 Jaipur, India

  2. Outline • Introduction • About the Project • Project Phases • Management & Programmatic issues

  3. I. INTRODUCTION

  4. 1. Genesis of CREW Project • Competition can promote consumerandproducer/business welfare – not much doubt • Competition not an end in itself, but a means for achieving developmental goals • Presence of competition law not adequate, a comprehensive approach necessary - competition reforms • DCs suffer from implementation challenges: - Government support often meager - Limited stakeholder understanding & support - Development partners’ priorities - Etc.

  5. 2. Competition Reform Defined Competition reforms = A + B + C A: Enabling government policies that promote competition in markets B: Appropriate regulatory framework, institutions and actions for promoting competition in sectors C:Well defined competition legislation and effective enforcement mechanisms

  6. 3. Motivation for CREW • Some research had been done to establish the link between competition and productivity, growth and consumer welfare • Experience of competition and regulatory agencies accentuated the link between well-functioning markets and resulting welfare • Why was CUTS Interested? - Is it possible to better demonstrate positive effects of competition reforms on producers and consumers in DCs? - Is there a way to isolatethe such positive effects of competition reforms, given the problem of attribution?

  7. II. ABOUT THE PROJEC T

  8. 1. Goal & Objectives Goal To better demonstrate measurable benefits from effective competition reforms in DCs, for ensuring long-term support for competition Objectives • Enhance understanding of benefits from competition reforms in DCs • Develop & Test a Methodology to assess efficacy of competition reforms in benefitting consumers and producers • Advocate to key actors (National & International) for greater support to competition reforms in DCs • Sustain momentum on competition reforms and take it forward

  9. 2. Outputs & Outcome Outputs • Documented evidence of benefits from competition reforms in key markets • Dialogues involving multiple stakeholders on benefits of competition reforms in DCs • Strategy for capacity building of DC competition agencies and sector regulators • Framework (Tool) guiding process of competition reforms in DCs • Demand from elsewhere for similar exercise Outcome Greater attention and impetus for competition reforms in key DC markets resulting in consumer and producer benefits

  10. 3. Implementation Plan Phase I: Identify the degree and nature of competition in the two sectors – main competition concerns (Diagnostic Report) – RESEARCH & OUTREACH/CONSULTATIONS • 4 Countries & 2 Sectors Phase II:Develop methodology for assessing benefits of competition reforms in two sectors (Framework + Methods + Tools) – DESIGN THE FRAMEWORK (with METHODS/TOOLS) & CONSULTATIONS Phase III:Apply sectoral FCPs in micro-locations in 4 project countries – MICRO-LEVEL TESTING, ADVOCACY & PUBLIC EDUCATION

  11. 4. CREW Project Actors Program Level • CREW Implementation Team: CUTS+Advisers+Nathan • PAC Country Level • Country Partner Organisation • National Reference Group (NRG) • National Entities: Competition/Sectora Regulator, Business Associations, Research Organisation/CSO, Media

  12. 5. Coordination Mechanism - Actors NRG-2

  13. 6. CREW Actors: Information & data flow

  14. III. PROJECT PHASES

  15. 1. PREPARATORY ACTIVITIES:Selection of Project Countries • Presence/absence of a national competition law, agency • Local (research and advocacy) institutions with orientation on competition and consumer protection issues • 2 countries each from the regions: Africa and Asia • One country in each region of DFID’s interest • One member state each of SADC and ASEAN • CUTS experience of having implemented an earlier competition project • CUTS confidence of implementing the activities

  16. 1. PREPARATORY ACTIVITIESSelection of Sectors • High impact on the poor • Availability of data • Essential goods and services • Nature of sector regulatory framework

  17. 2. PHASE I Activities Diagnostic Phase(RESEARCH & OUTREACH/CONSULTATIONS) • Gather information about prevailing state of competition (including competition concerns) in two sectors of four project countries • Collect evidence of benefits/losses accruing to consumers and producers in the two sectors • Identify ‘enabling’ and ‘opposing’ factors for countries to derive these benefits • Collate experience from four countries for each sector - inputs for the design phase (Phase-II)

  18. 3. Programme Logic (Phase-I)

  19. 4. Phase IIDesign Phase[DESIGN THE FRAMEWORK (with METHODS/TOOLS) & CONSULTATIONS] Draw Inputs from the Diagnostic Phase (for preparing 2 sectoral FCPs) in terms of: • Indicators of benefits of competition reforms for consumers and producers • Evolve a common methodological framework • Selection of applicable Methods and Tools

  20. 5. Benefits of competition reforms for Consumers(Possible Indicators) • Access: Goods and services reach consumers in areas where they were not available earlier • Quality: Quality of goods and services enhanced by firms to attract customers • Choice: New firms/products enter otherwise ‘concentrated’ markets • Price: Prices are reduced in a ‘contestable market’ • Time savings by consumers

  21. 5. Benefits of competition reforms for Producers(Possible Indicators)  Access to essential services: Firms can easily access infrastructure networks, etc.  Free movement of goods & services: Mobility not affected by policies, practices (inputs & outputs)  Predictability of regulatory actions: Legislations enforced by autonomous yet accountable institutions

  22. 5. Benefits of competition reforms for Producers (Indicators)  Cost savings: Effective implementation of strategies to reduce costs, e.g. improved application of ICT tools  Fair market processes: Easy entry and exit in markets; considerable ‘ease of doing business’  Level-playing field: principle of ‘competitive neutrality’ is observed  Transparency in market: Well laid out policies and predictable implementation processes (market regulators)

  23. 6. How to measure benefits? BENEFITS Methods = Qualitative + Quantitative

  24. 7. Phase III: Validation Phase(MICRO-LEVEL TESTING, ADVOCACY & PUBLIC EDUCATION) • Research: (a) competition distorting policies & (b) impact of ACPs on producers, consumers • Parliamentary outreach and discussions • Government-Business Forum • Media (information) campaign • Training Workshop for CAs and Sector Regulators - Enhance enforcement capacity (based on market studies) - Highlight need for coordination of actions (CA + SR) • National Orientation Workshop (other sectors) - Expanding support for competition reforms - Better buy-in (other sectors)

  25. IV. MANAGEMENT & PROGRAMMATIC ISSUES

  26. 1. Technical oversight Advisers • Two Advisers (R ShyamKhemani & Fred Jenny) • Point out relevant techniques, methods • Guide in developing ToRs of reports, etc. • Advise on sources of useful information • Secure useful reports, data • Help draft and re-draft parts of reports • Play an active role in outreach • Get involved in capacity building activities Associate Organisation(Nathan Associates) • Performs Core Research function • Draft the background paper • Prepare sectoral FCPs

  27. 2. Development partners Role • Propose PAC members • Guide project implementation process • Participate in ‘internal review’ • Involve closely with ‘external evaluation’ • Stock-take project progress, periodically • Act in coordination • Engage country-offices in project countries/region • Involve other donors & IGOs • Other donors to join in supporting CREW subsequently

  28. 2. Development partners Reporting & Management • Donor Coordination • Reporting arrangements • GAANT Chart • Operational Strategy Note (OSN)

  29. 3. Project Advisory Committee (PAC) Role • Point sources of useful information (techniques, methods, data ) at country/sector levels • Quality control of project reports, briefs, etc. • Strategic advise (advocacy & outreach) • Finalisation of project countries (4) • Advise for choosing sectors (2) • Address challenges in implementation • Get involved in capacity building

  30. 3. PAC: Confirmed Members • Fred Jenny, OECD Competition Committee (Chair) • Pradeep S Mehta, CUTS • DFID Representative (Miguel Laric) • GIZ Representative (Eiko Kauffmann) • Martha Licetti, Competition Team, World Bank • Eberhed Feess, Frankfurt School of F&M, Germany • Natalie Timan, OFT, UK • Rafaelita Aldaba, PIDS, Philippines • Deunden Nikomborirak, TDRI, Thailand • David Ong’olo, Kenya • George Lipimile, COMESA Competition Commission • Yannis Katsoulacos, AUEB, Greece

  31. 3. PAC: Meetings & Engagement • Physical meetings once a year (CREW meetings) • Special Invitees • Meetings on sidelines of international conferences (OECD GCF, UNCTAD IGE, ACF, etc.) • SKYPE meetings (bi-annual) • Quarterly reports and feedback • Any other possibilities

  32. 4. Update about Preparatory Phase • Planning Meeting (8-9 Nobember 2012, Bonn) • Drafting the Operational Strategy Note (OSN) • Identification of PAC members • ToR of Project Adviser(s) • Identification of Project Associate Organisation (PAO) • Drafting of background paper by PAO, ‘Measuring impacts of competition reforms : suggested approaches & methods’ • Inception Meeting in March 2013 (Jaipur, India) - Identification of project countries - Identification of sectors - Partners orientation

  33. Thank You CUTS Team Beginnings are always exciting!

More Related