We are here at a critical moment in the arc of humanity – and the planet.
But it is not a moment without hope.
The resources of wealthy nations can create opportunities, meanwhile the abundance of sun, wind, fertile soil, and young people enjoyed by emerging economies could drive our future.
DUBAI, December 1, 2023 – With an ambitious financing package announced at COP28, the World Bank Group is helping people in developing countries better withstand the devastation of climate change and create a better world for their children and grandchildren.
The World Bank Group is pushing to do more to battle climate change and do it faster, devoting 45 percent of its annual financing to climate-related projects for the fiscal year that runs from July 1, 2024, to June 30, 2025.
This increased ambition is more than just a laudable percentage—it’s putting to work more than $40 billion—around $9 billion more than previously programmed. In 2021, the Bank announced a goal to reach an average of 35 percent by 2025 and is currently ahead of schedule, running at an average of 36.3 percent since July 2022.
In October, the World Bank secured an ambitious—and expanded—mandate to create a world free of poverty on a livable planet. The new climate pledge is a concrete example of the Bank delivering on that mandate.
In addition to boosting resilience and adaptation among those hardest hit by the effects of climate change, World Bank Group projects also will focus on safeguarding ecosystems and biodiversity to protect the health of people and planet.
Having pledged to squeeze more from its balance sheet to fund the fight against climate change, the Bank will continue to deliver on adaptation to help countries devastated by climate shocks and on mitigation to help reduce the greenhouse gases contributing to climate change.
At least 21 million could die from five main health risks caused by a warmer planet
DUBAI/WASHINGTON, Dec. 3, 2023 — The World Bank announced today at COP28 a new Climate and Health Program to urgently respond to the rising negative health impacts of climate change in low- and middle-income countries.
Through this program, the World Bank will help countries to assess their climate and health vulnerabilities, increase investments in climate-resilient health systems, and work with partners to mobilize additional financing, evidence, and collective action to reduce the impacts of climate change on people’s health and livelihoods.
New World Bank data shows that a warmer climate could lead to at least 21 million additional deaths by 2050 from just five health risks: extreme heat, stunting, diarrhea, malaria, and dengue. Preventing these deaths requires immediate action to reinforce health systems, particularly in climate-vulnerable countries, predominantly in sub-Saharan Africa and South Asia. The World Bank also estimates that by 2030 the impacts of climate change on health will force 44 million more people into extreme poverty.
“Climate change amplifies health risks, creating a cycle of ill health and poverty with far-reaching consequences for human capital development,” said Mamta Murthi, Vice President for Human Development at the World Bank. “Through the Climate and Health Program, the World Bank will use its knowledge and financing to help countries address health risks stemming from climate change, work across related sectors, and bring together partners to maximize financing and harmonize investments and actions.”
The Climate and Health Program will include generating evidence on the most cost-effective interventions to tackle the climate and health crisis; increasing financing for solutions that can build sustainable and resilient health systems in client countries; and build strong partnerships to amplify impact. Specifically, the program will:
Create evidence and knowledge to identify country needs and inform investments. This includes systematically assessing climate-related health vulnerabilities in developing countries, focusing on the impacts on lives, livelihoods, and economies and identifying country-specific ‘best buys’ for climate and health.
Invest in solutions that are country-tailored and evidence-based and scale-up investments for low-carbon resilient health systems through the Bank’s $34 billion health portfolio which is already active in over 100 countries. Investments will focus on better surveillance and early warning systems, improving health service delivery in the face of climate-driven disease patterns, climate-proofing health facilities, and strengthening health worker capacity.
Work in partnership with the World Health Organization, Gavi, The Global Fund, foundations, and others to maximize impact by supporting global, regional, and country efforts to scale up climate-health action.
As part of this program, the World Bank is co-convening a Development Bank Working Group for Climate-Health Finance with participation from multilateral and public development banks to align and maximize climate and health investments. The World Bank also works in partnership with the World Health Organization, Gavi and the Global Fund, foundations, and others to scale up climate and health action.
The impact of the climate crisis on the health of current and future generations depends on the decisions we make today. The World Bank is committed to supporting countries to address the greatest health challenge of our time.
Join us for a series of events on climate change, live from the 28th United Nations Climate Change Conference.
The World Bank Group is doubling down on its climate action, as part of its new vision to end poverty on a livable planet. Our live programming will focus on climate solutions, emissions reduction, energy transition, adaptation and climate finance; all while exploring the link between climate change and development.
Data visualizations do more than display numbers; good data visualizations tell a story not only to educate, but also to engage and inspire their audiences. Data is crucial for informing knowledge work and measuring the impact of sustainable development programs. The Global Partnership for Sustainable Development Data and the World Bank’s Development Data Group often tell stories with data, and the two organizations wanted to see what data storytellers worldwide could do with development data.
Public servants make an estimated half a billion policy decisions per year. Influencing these decisions at the scale needed to achieve the Sustainable Development Goals will require strengthening entire government administrations.
Development policy is only as effective as the government agencies that implement it, and the performance of these agencies varies widely within low- and middle-income countries. This wide variation in performance points to huge opportunities for improving public policy by strengthening the administrative environment around it.
One promising new approach to influencing public policy—known as government analytics—is to use governments’ own data to understand how well government is functioning and diagnose ways to strengthen it. The World Bank’s new Government Analytics Handbook offers a blueprint for governments and agencies around the world to take up this innovative approach.
With a target of 2030, the world has only six years left to reach the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). By the UN’s latest accounting, progress on many of the goals has stalled or even gone into reverse. The challenge may look steep or perhaps even insurmountable, but there is one public servant who provides us with inspiration for how the world can still meet the goals: James Bond.
That was the surprising claim by Daniel Rogger, a Senior Economist and Research Manager at the World Bank, at a recent Policy Research Talk on the topic of how to best reform public administrations to achieve greater development impact. As Rogger explained, while James Bond may be a fictional movie character, he exemplifies the characteristics of high-performing government servants everywhere—a strong sense of autonomy, a high mission orientation, and a strong drive to seek out novel solutions in ever-changing circumstances. He emphasized that if we don’t have heroes in government, public policy simply won’t be implemented effectively, and we will fail to achieve the SDGs.
To illustrate why the performance of civil servants is so central, Rogger sketched out a rough estimate of how many decisions bureaucrats around the world must make every year in implementing government policy. The answer: half a billion. As Figure 1 illustrates, influencing these decisions at the level of an entire government—rather than at the level of individual decisions, programs, or sectors—holds the key to ramping up development effectiveness.
Figure 1: Contrasting Paths to Influencing Policy Decisions
But is there scope to transform public administrations in a way that can make a difference at the scale of the Sustainable Development Goals? According to a growing body of research by Rogger and his colleagues at the Bureaucracy Lab and elsewhere, the answer is a resounding “yes.” There are remarkable variations in bureaucratic productivity across countries, between agencies within a government, and between individuals within agencies—all pointing to opportunities to improve.
For example, Rogger and colleagues examined the productivity of Ghana’s 31 core public institutions and found large discrepancies between them. A survey of nearly 3,000 Ghanaian civil servants assessed the completion of 3,628 projects and found large disparities in the percentage of uncompleted tasks across ministries (Figure 2). “The value of any new investment is going to be heavily mediated depending on which ministry you’re working with,” said Rogger. “If you work with any but the very best, you immediately lose 40 percent or more of your potential development impact.”
As Rogger explained in a previous talk, this pattern of wide variation in bureaucratic performance is common, especially among the low- and middle-income countries where the SDGs are most pressing. Rogger sees this as a glass half full—these large differences in bureaucratic effectiveness offer great potential for reform.
Notes: This graph ranks Ghana’s 31 core public insitutions based on the percentage of tasks completed by each institution. A team of researchers worked with Ghana’s Office of the Head of Civil Service to conduct a survey of every senior officer in Ghana’s Civil Service, amounting to nearly 3,000 individuals across almost 50 organizations in Accra. For additional details on the methodology and results of the study, see Rasul, Rogger, and Williams (2018).
Carrot or Stick? Diverging Approaches to Promoting Accountability in the Civil Service
Over the last few years, Rogger and his colleagues at The Bureaucracy Lab have devoted themselves to identifying the types of reforms that can create high-performing public servants—the James Bond-equivalents in education, health, and every other sector of government.
Promoting accountability is one way to do this, and Rogger contrasted the results of two reform programs—one relying on centralized, punitive accountability and another on positive forms of motivation with greater autonomy—to demonstrate what works in practice.
The first example comes from Pakistan and highlights the pitfalls of relying too heavily on centralized, punitive accountability systems. Over a six-year period, the provincial government of Punjab sought to boost the performance of the education sector, in part by putting in place a strong management information system. Detailed data were used to flag underperforming teachers and educational administrators, leading to de facto punishment. But Rogger and his fellow researchers found that schools where punishments were doled out soon reverted back to their pre-punishment level of performance, resulting in no long-term improvements in attendance, test scores, or other measures of educational performance.
Rogger contrasted this to an example from Liberia, which rolled out its first comprehensive civil service appraisal system in 2016 as part of a series of reforms to rebuild the civil service following decades of civil war. Instead of a hierarchical and punitive approach to performance management, the new system was designed to recognize staff achievements and generate open dialogue as a means to give staff positive motivation. Researchers found that the introduction of the appraisal system helped reduce absenteeism and turnover and also increased staff satisfaction.
An additional example from Ghana further highlights the benefits of civil service reforms that emphasize positive reinforcement and autonomy rather than hierarchical authority. The World Bank collaborated with Ghana’s Office of the Head of Civil Service to train civil servants on creative problem solving and innovation. Researchers collected data over the course of two years and found that classroom training focused on individuals—as opposed to teams—helped produce innovators, who in turn helped create more collaborative and innovative organizational cultures.
Public Administration Reform Tied to Better Government Analytics Can Boost Development Progress
Drawing out general lessons from existing research, Rogger argued that reforms should focus on building up the professional features of a civil service—clarifying duties, identifying talents, and fostering strong professional values. Nevertheless, he emphasized that there is still much more to learn about building effective public administrations.
Given the stakes involved, Rogger issued a challenge to the World Bank and the wider development community to make much greater investments in building the knowledge base. Three areas of focus could produce outsized development payoffs.
The first is making government analytics central to public administration reform. Government administration is unique, complex, and highly diverse, and detailed microdata can help governments accelerate how quickly they can identify areas for improvement, take action to remedy deficits, and spread best practices across agencies.
A second focus is on the World Bank’s own work with government partners. Bank projects and financing can be paired with efforts at building public administration by providing officials with inspiration, tools, and comparative data. As Rogger colorfully described it, World Bank staff can be the “Q” to the James Bonds of developing countries’ civil service—providing the best tools available to allow civil servants to excel at their jobs.
Finally, a third area of work involves further scaling up a “Trial and Adopt” approach that the Bureaucracy Lab has been using for years. The approach involves working directly with public officials on the specific problems they face, and bringing data, evidence, and evaluations to bear that allow for mid-course corrections, learning by doing, and scaling up successes.
As a down payment on this substantial investment, Rogger and his colleagues have recently published The Government Analytics Handbook and associated website, which bring together the latest evidence and practitioner insights on how to leverage data to make governments work better. The book covers a range of microdata sources—such as administrative data and public servant surveys—as well as tools and resources for undertaking the analytics, with the goal of helping governments take a data-informed approach to diagnose and improve how public organizations work.
Many practitioners have already found great value in the tools now made systematically available in the book. As Pedro Guerra, Chile’s Deputy Director of Civil Service, previously remarked, the public servant surveys are “an ideal civil service survey diagnostic to pursue evidence-based civil service management reforms.”
“Our job is not to constantly seek out ways to punish public servants when they get it wrong,” said Rogger. “Rather, our best chance to achieve ambitious development goals is to invest in helping them get their administration right to give them the freedom to succeed.”
You must be logged in to post a comment.