Development
Impact Honors Promote Highest Standards in Development by Recognizing Projects
Advancing America’s Economic and Security Interests around the Globe
WASHINGTON –
Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner today recognized outstanding projects
undertaken by the Multilateral Development Banks (MDBs) at the inaugural
Development Impact Honors, hosted by the U.S. Department of the Treasury. The
event brought together heads of the Multilateral Development Banks, Members of
Congress, leaders of the development and business community, and senior
administration officials to recognize and promote excellence in
development.
“Given the challenges facing the
global economy today, our support for the Multilateral Development Banks has
never been more important,” said Secretary Tim Geithner. “Investments in
these institutions are part of this Administration’s strategy to strengthen
economic growth. While the MDBs fight hunger, poverty and disease around
the globe, they also help open up new markets, support our manufacturing and
service sectors, and create jobs in the United States. They have been as
instrumental in reducing trade barriers and leveling the playing field for
American businesses as the trade agreements we've negotiated.”
The Treasury Department convened a
senior interagency group of representatives of the Treasury, Department of
State, U.S. Agency for International Development, Millennium Challenge
Corporation, and Overseas Private Investment Corporation to evaluate 58 MDB
projects nominated for the Development Impact Honors. Projects were judged
based upon their focus on priority sectors, innovation in overcoming previous
difficulties, quality of preparation, focus on beneficiaries, quality of
results, effectiveness of risk mitigation, and generation of lessons learned.
“The Multilateral Development Banks
have truly stepped up to the challenges of our times,” said Under Secretary for
International Affairs Lael Brainard. “When food prices spiked, we worked with
the MDBs to find ways to address global hunger. When the Arab Spring started,
we worked with the Banks to help countries remain economically stable so that
democratic transitions could deliver on their promise. That is why, when last
year we faced a once-in-a-generation decision to provide new capital to the
MDBs, the United States worked on a bipartisan basis to provide support for
these institutions.”
About the Honorees
Mali-Senegal Road Project:
African Development Bank
Recognizing that an effective
transport corridor requires more than a road, this African Development Bank
project combined construction of an international road with a radio
communication system allowing operators to report problems; border crossing
stations equipped with scanners to speed crossing times; axle scales along the
corridor; awareness training on road safety and transmission of diseases; and
socioeconomic infrastructure that meets the needs of local communities. As a
result of the project, transport times for agricultural products have fallen by
half, and shipping charges have dropped significantly.
Afghanistan Telecom
Development Company Project: Asian Development Bank
Helping to re-establish critical
connectivity in a fragile, conflict environment, this Asian Development Bank
project provided private sector loans and political risk guarantees to help the
Telecom Development Company Afghanistan Limited (Roshan) invest in mobile phone
operations throughout Afghanistan. From modest beginnings, Roshan has expanded
mobile telephone services to 4.5 million subscribers in more than 200 cities
and all of the country’s 34 provinces, binding together a country whose
communications infrastructure had been fractured by decades of conflict. The
program is notable for its emphasis on serving the poor, employing and
protecting women, allowing farmers to shop by text for the best prices for
their products, and facilitating social services. Roshan’s products also
include a mobile phone wallet and money transfer system to help Afghans access
financial services.
Basic Nutrition Program:
Inter-American Development Bank
Designed to address the prevalence
of acute malnutrition and anemia among poor children under two years of age,
this Inter-American Development Bank program funded the distribution of an iron
supplement and a food coupon to facilitate the preparation of a daily meal for
children. Evaluation of the program indicated that it lowered the prevalence of
anemia among affected children by 30.3 percent and reduced the prevalence of
malnutrition by 49.1 percent. The program was so successful in overcoming
previously unsuccessful approaches—which had failed primarily due to unsuitable
choices of food for distribution and a lack of follow-up education and training
of community workers—that it was expanded beyond its initial target of reaching
15,000 vulnerable children, to serve 41,000 children.
Amazon Region Protected
Areas Program (ARPA): World Bank Group and Global Environment Facility
The ARPA was designed by the World
Bank Group and Global Environment Facility to address deforestation in the
Amazon by expanding and consolidating “protected areas.” The goal was to
increase the fraction of the Brazilian Amazon that was under strict conservation
use to a minimum of ten percent, and to improve the effectiveness of management
of these areas. The project overcame challenges including poverty, poor
coordination between stakeholders, lack of managerial capacity and resources,
and the vastness of the territory.
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