FAO – 19th Feb 2013
The story so far …Perspectives & Reflections to Tam Nong
policyDrivers in Rural developmentPillars of Rural development
Challenges on NRD implementationOne UN Joint Programme – Tam NongMulti - sectoral approach
Outline
The story so far.....Central Committee Resolution 26-NQ/TW on
agriculture, farmers, and rural areas, August 05, 2008
Government Resolution 24/2008/NQ-CP of October 28, 2008 on action plan
Decision 491/QĐ-TTg of April 16 2009 on 19 new rural criteria
Government Decision 800/QĐ-TTg of June 04 2010 approving the National Target Programme (NTP) on New Rural Areas for 2010 – 2020
Why?Urban-rural divide Persistent poverty and poor nutrition
Sustainable economic growth Social stability
Resolution 26Decentralization and democratizationPlanning and implementationIncreased agricultural production Development of industry and servicesPreserve and develop ethnic cultural
identitiesProtect the environmentMaintain securityImprove peoples’ material and spiritual life
19 NATIONAL CRITERIA ON NEW RURAL AREA(Issued with Decision No. 491/QD-TTg dated 16 April 2009 of the Prime Minister)
Planning and implementationTransport and roadsIrrigationElectricityHousing, markets, post officePoor household and income targetsEducation and healthCulture and environmentPolitical institutionsSocial security and order
People centred development Local governance Economics – Agriculture, forestry, fisheries,
and non-agriculture employment.Natural resourcesRural InfrastructureRural service systemsEconomic governance from local to
international level.
Drivers in Rural development
Social Focus on people at the heart of development, people thread
all the pillars together, and the pillars are to support people. Focus on rural livelihoods and well-being Rural development as driver for social cohesion Importance of formal and informal rural institutions Social services – health and education
Economic Includes economic areas under agriculture, livestock, fishery,
forestry as well as those not based on agriculture and natural resources
On and off-farm activity linkages to support rural livelihoods – households and individuals
Urban –rural link
Pillars of Rural Development
Natural Resources Sustainable natural resource management, include biodiversity, land,
water, livestock, soil, etc. Marginal agro-ecosystems (areas) require specific attention. Rights of access to, and control of natural resources in agricultural
production and forestry, particularly for women).
Infrastructure and Services Irrigation, rural water supply and sanitation, rural transport,
information system, health care, education, etc. Focus on inter-linkages between infrastructure and services
Good Governance Focus in increasing local government competencies in the
context of globalization and global market National implementation of global agreements and conventions Local participation in planning Transparcy and accountability
Pillars of Rural Development
Most local leaders have limited knowledge and awarenessResources needed, especially for infrastructure and rural
servicesAgricultural workforce 50%, lacking skills for industrialisation,
employment creation, scale of production (1.6 ha per household), and weak link in livestock development.
Financial mobilisation, updating policies (tax, credit, privatisation, socialisation, etc)
Fiscal decentralisation, predictable and known financial allocations
Low attention on climate changes threats and opportunities - DRR
RD strategy not differentiated for different areas such as poor, non-poor, rich and ethnic minority
Weak coordination across ministries and integration at the provincial level
Low attention on protecting heritage and traditional cultureLimited experience of NRD
Challenges
One Plan IIIOutput 1.1.2: Strategic development options defined and considered to promote inclusive, green, people-centered, and equitable development
Agencies: ILO, IFAD, IOM, UNESCO, UNHABITAT, UNIDO, FAO, UNEF, UNV.
One UN programme – Tam Nong
UNJP Programme framework Goals:
Rural people in a democratic society enjoying the benefits of better living standards, increased incomes, improved public service and social support systems .
Objectives:Improved policy environment and capacity to
plan and implement Tam Nong Resolution Period: 2012 - 2016
The objective will be achieved by: Enhancing farmers’ knowledge for raising incomes,
through increasing access level of farmers to new farming technologies, off-farm production skills, good practices and lesson learnt from successful pilots.
Building an incentive policy environment, which will be conducted by enabling strategic and policy capacity for economic and social public service investment;
Enhancing state management performances for NTP-NRD implementation through the capacity building, multi-sectoral coordination, participatory planning and budgeting, results based monitoring and evaluation
UNJP Programme framework
UNJP Programme frameworkComponent 1: Farmer’s knowledge
enhancement for agriculture modernizationStrategic study on adoption of innovative technology
mechanisms for 2012-2020Model of active Commune Learning Centers for increasing
farmers access to RD knowledge and advanced technologyModels for reducing post harvest lossesPilot on “climate smart agriculture” for increasing resilience to
climate change in frequently affected disaster areas.Study on socialisation / privatisation of technology transfer.Models for improving value chains of agricultural commodities.
UNJP Programme frameworkComponent 2: Enabling strategic and policy
capacity for economic and social public service investmentFinancial mobilisation policy and mechanism. Policy on agriculture land tenuresPension and social insurance policy for farmersRural labour market and urban-rural labour migrationNational small urban/cluster development master plan and
planningRural development strategy and differentiated intervention
mechanism.Rural quality education.Policy advisory task force
UNJP Programme frameworkComponent 3: Capacity building,
coordination, monitoring and evaluation of NTP-NRD implementationParticipatory planning system at nation-wide applicationCross-sectoral coordination and cooperation in
budgeting and planning process from 24 NTPs and NPs for implementing NTP-NRD.
Result based M&E systemLocal leadership training programmes on NTP-NRD
UNJP Multi-sectoral approachNeeds of multi-sectoral approach:
Rural development (RD) is complex, cutting across several sectors and involving various policies and actions.
A close coordination among ministries and state agencies must be taken.
A great number and diversity of stake holders involved: millions of farmers, non-farming households, civil societies and mass organisations, cooperatives, private sector, central and local government, public sector authorities and service providers, etc.
UNJP Multi-sectoral approachRural development framework:
Development scenarios
Evidence based assessment of current situation
Policy Impact assessment
RURAL DEVELOPMENT POLICY
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Institutional arrangements incl. state management roles and functions
Fiscal policy and financial management
Startegies
Plans
Multi – stakeholder approach
NTP NRD (10 years)
64 Provinces, 19 Sectors 2011 - 2013
FAO TCP
IFIs, Bilateral Selective sectors
UN’s OP 3 (5 years)
NTP support up to 5 pilot
provinces, 10 sectors
2010 2011 2012 2013 2014 2015 2016 2017 2018 2019 2020
Public private partner-ship
UNJP – Coordination and Management Programme approaches:
SWAP, RBMFlexible, progressiveHolistic and multi-sectoral approachLinkage between policy research and policy advisory
Funding: ParallelManagement:
Steering committeePMUCoordination groupIndependent Policy advisory group