Implementation & Best Practices


In-Country Lessons Learned
 Cornerstones of PBA – June 2007

Cornerstones for Effective Agriculture and Rural Development Programmes under a Programme-based Approach

These cornerstones are meant to offer a practical tool to facilitate the transition process from ‘donor project aid’ to harmonised and government-led development approaches following the OECD-DAC guidelines for aid effectiveness.

The cornerstones were derived from practical experiences in the preparation and implementation of programme-based approaches (PBAs) and are based on empirical evidence as well.

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WDR Best practices

In support to World Development Report 2008 "Agriculture for Development" (see as well our WDR 2008 page or go directly to  External Link www.worldbank.org/wdr2008), we started a call to our member organisations for best practices in agriculture and rural development - success stories of interventions in rural development.
This provided the editors and authors of WDR 2008 with empirical evidence and examples of successful activities and approaches in agriculture and rural development in a variety of countries.

Now, we are very pleased to make available to a wider audience close to 70 best practices out of the daily work of our member organisations which successfully helped to fight rural poverty.

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Rural Economic and Enterprise Development

Improving poor people's access to employment and income in rural areas of developing countries:

Harnessing the benefit of globalisation for the poor in rural areas calls for a competitive, market oriented production and service sector. This offers development opportunities for new enterprises. A pro-poor growth approach that is ecologically sustainable is advocated.

Between 70 and 85 % of the poor people in developing countries live in rural areas. Limited resources for agriculture, few alternative job opportunities in the countryside and the lack of modern skills of the poor rural population increase the pressure on the natural resources and frequently leave migration as the only way to escape poverty.

Many households in rural areas depend to a significant degree on income from sources outside agricultural production.

  • The poorest segments of the rural population typically derive most of their income from wage labour.
  • Even households primarily engaged in agricultural production depend on non-farming activities to supplement their income and to mitigate risk.
  • Many non-farming economic activities are linked to agriculture, e.g. through value-adding, processing raw materials, supplying inputs and services, and using surplus labour.

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Chapter 4: Realizing gains from trade, price, and subsidy policy reforms

Chapter 4: Realizing gains from trade, price, and subsidy policy reforms

 

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