The African Development Bank, the Asian Development Bank, the European Bank
for Reconstruction and Development, the Inter-American Development Bank and
the World Bank are making good progress in adopting Managing for Development
Results (MfDR) practices. These MfDR practices aim to improve the design,
implementation, and evaluation of strategies and operations with a view to
achieving relevant development results.
In the 2006 Multilateral Development Bank (MDB) Common Performance Assessment
(COMPAS) report, the MDBs jointly publish information on how they conduct
business and organize themselves to ensure that their operations are geared
towards results. The purpose of the COMPAS is to report on MDB performance,
not on country-level results, which are a joint product of several actors,
including the MDBs. The COMPAS does not intend to encourage comparisons among
MDBs but rather to provide baseline data against which each MDB may ascertain
its own progress over time.
The COMPAS is based on a systematic framework for collecting consistent
information among MDBs. Efforts have been made by the MDBs in the 2006 COMPAS
report to improve the definition of performance indicators and increase the
credibility and reliability of the information presented in it. The MDBs
believe that the 2006 COMPAS report constitutes an acceptable baseline for
measuring future progress.
The 2006 COMPAS shows that the MDBs are increasingly aware of the importance
of results. Results frameworks and systems are being put in place aimed at
measuring the development effectiveness of MDB-financed operations. Self- and
independent evaluation functions are being strengthened. The 2006 COMPAS also
shows that the application of MfDR approaches varies among MDBs, and that a
common challenge is to obtain relevant results information and to use it for
day-to-day decision making.
The report intends to contribute to transparency, accountability, and
learning, satisfying increased demand from both managers and shareholders of
MDBs for information on the effective use of resources.
The COMPAS report was issued in time for the Third International Roundtable on
Managing for Development Results in Hanoi on February 5-8, 2007. It was also
issued as an input to the 2007 Global Monitoring Report coordinated by the
World Bank and the International Monetary Fund.