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PETS-QSDS in Sub-Saharan Africa : A Stocktaking Study. / Bernard Gauthier.
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository (formerly "World Bank E-Library Publications") Available online
View online- Format:
- Book
- Government document
- Author/Creator:
- Gauthier, Bernard.
- Series:
- Country Financial Accountability Assessment
- World Bank e-Library.
- Language:
- English
- Subjects (All):
- Access to Information.
- Accountability.
- Accounting.
- Baseline Data.
- Capital Expenditures.
- Cash Transfers.
- Data Collection.
- Data Quality.
- Decentralization.
- Financial Management.
- Health Monitoring & Evaluation.
- Health Outcomes.
- Health Systems Development & Reform.
- Health, Nutrition and Population.
- Hiv/Aids.
- Hospitals.
- Information Asymmetry.
- Life Expectancy.
- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth.
- Moral Hazard.
- Mortality.
- Multilateral Donors.
- Population Policies.
- Public Health.
- Public officials.
- Public Sector.
- Public Sector Reform.
- Public Service Delivery.
- Quality of Education.
- Quantitative Data.
- Sanitation.
- Transparency.
- Workers.
- Local Subjects:
- Access to Information.
- Accountability.
- Accounting.
- Baseline Data.
- Capital Expenditures.
- Cash Transfers.
- Data Collection.
- Data Quality.
- Decentralization.
- Financial Management.
- Health Monitoring & Evaluation.
- Health Outcomes.
- Health Systems Development & Reform.
- Health, Nutrition and Population.
- Hiv/Aids.
- Hospitals.
- Information Asymmetry.
- Life Expectancy.
- Macroeconomics and Economic Growth.
- Moral Hazard.
- Mortality.
- Multilateral Donors.
- Population Policies.
- Public Health.
- Public officials.
- Public Sector.
- Public Sector Reform.
- Public Service Delivery.
- Quality of Education.
- Quantitative Data.
- Sanitation.
- Transparency.
- Workers.
- Other Title:
- PETS-QSDS in Sub-Saharan Africa
- Place of Publication:
- Washington, D.C. : The World Bank, 2010.
- System Details:
- data file
- Summary:
- This study examines Public Expenditure Tracking Survey (PETS) and Quantitative Service Delivery Survey (QSDS) carried out in Africa with the objective of assessing their approaches, main findings, and contributions. Section 2 investigates the context, motivations, and objectives of PETS and QSDS that have been carried out in Sub-Saharan Africa. Section 3 examines the institutional arrangements for resource allocation and service delivery in social sectors. Section 4 presents some of the main findings of tracking surveys. Section 5 analyzes methodological approaches used in previous tracking surveys in order to identify factors that could explain the difference in past surveys' success, and identify potential methodological harmonization. Section 6 presents a series of good practice principles that arise from past experience, and discusses how they could be implemented. Section 7 proposes potential future surveys and endeavors.
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