6th Regional Workshop on Integrated Resource...April 12, 2016 PSA Technical Staff Meeting April 21,...
Transcript of 6th Regional Workshop on Integrated Resource...April 12, 2016 PSA Technical Staff Meeting April 21,...
Introduction to the
6th Regional Workshop on Integrated Resource Management in Asian Cities: The Urban Nexus
21-23 June 2016 | Sta. Rosa, Laguna
Outline
The Philippine Experience on the MDGs
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development: Salient Features
National Efforts in SDGs Mainstreaming
Strategies in Achieving the SDGs
Philippine Experience on the MDGs
High Medium Low
Poverty Gap Ratio Income Poverty Proportion of household with per
capita energy <100% adequacy
Food Poverty Underweight children Cohort survival rate
Ratio of literate females to males
15-24 y/o
Proportion of 1 y.o children
immunized against measles
Primary completion rate
Infant and under-5 mortality Proportion of births attended
by skilled health personnel
Share of women in wage employment
in the non-agriculture
Ratio of girls to boys in
elementary participation
Literacy rate (15-24 y/o)
Ratio of girls to boys in
secondary education and
participation rates
Proportion of seats held by women in
national parliament
Ratio of girls to boys in tertiary
education
Prevalence and death rate associated
with tuberculosis
Prevalence and death rate
associated with malaria
Contraceptive prevalence rate
Proportion of tuberculosis cases
detected and cured under DOTS
Maternal Mortality Ratio
Access to safe water Adolescent birth rate
Access to sanitary toilet facility
Philippine Experience on the MDGs
1. Implementation plan should include a financing plan.
2. Sustained and consistent commitment across all stakeholders: government,
private sector, civil society and the international community.
3. Implementation plan should include programs to build resilience, especially
of the poor and near poor, against natural and man-made hazards and
economic shocks.
4. There should be a clear assignment of responsibilities consistent with the
governance structure.
5. There should be an appropriate data monitoring system to support the
accountability mechanism.
PH lessons learned: Good governance is key
6. Localization efforts
– Local chief executives as MDG champions
• Production of local MDG reports
– Capacitating LGUs
– Building data
• CBMS
• Regional MDG Watch
• MDG Costing
Philippine Experience on the MDGs
CHALLENGES
• Spatial and sectoral disparities
• Natural and man-made shocks
• Weak implementation and monitoring at local level
• Data constraints
– Insufficient timely and reliable data especially at the
local level
Philippine Experience on the MDGs
Comparison of MDGs and SDGs MDGs SDGs
Number of Goals 8 17
Number of
Targets
21 169
Number of
Indicators
60 230
General scope/
focus
Social Economic growth, social inclusion &
environmental protection
Target Developing countries,
particularly the poorest
Entire world (rich and poor)
Formulation Produced by a group of
experts
Result of consultation process
among:
- 193 UN Member States
- Civil society
- Other stakeholders
Philippine Priorities on the SDGs
“Make the 2030 Agenda a reality and leave no one behind.”
The Philippines called for:
• Recognition of
migrant rights;
• Addressing climate
change with urgency;
• Collective action for
conservation;
• Equality of
opportunities
National Efforts on SDGs Mainstreaming and Implementation
SDGs Indicators Development
Building Awareness
Review of Existing Institutional Mechanisms
National-level Mainstreaming
PSA Work Plan
Target Date Activity
April 12, 2016 PSA Technical Staff Meeting
April 21, 2016 PSA-NEDA Workshop
May 11-12, 2016 Multi-Sectoral Consultative Workshop on SDGs
May – June 2016 Consultation with IAC/TC and Source Agencies
June 2016 Establishment of IAC on SDGs
July 2016 Initial List of SDG Indicators for National Monitoring
August 2016 Coordination with Data Sources and Identification of SDG Focal Points
July – November 2016 Formulation of metadata
October –November 2016 Consultation with relevant IAC/TC re: metadata
December 2016 Finalization of list of SDG indicators and metadata
Classification of Indicators
• Tier 1: Indicator conceptually clear, established
methodology and standards available and data
regularly produced by countries.
• Tier 2: Indicator conceptually clear, established
methodology and standards available but data are
not regularly produced by countries.
• Tier 3: Indicator for which there are no established
methodology and standards or
methodology/standards are being developed/tested.
Political Commitment
• Integrate the SDGs in the next Philippine Development Plan and Public
Investment Program
• Engage LGUs and communities for localized SDG implementation
• Formulation of SDG Implementation Roadmap
Monitoring and Reporting Mechanisms
• Constitute a dedicated oversight committee with technical secretariat
• Generate and disseminate timely disaggregated SDG data: SDG Chapter in
Philippine Statistical Development Program; SDG Webpage and SDG
Watch; SDG Focal Points within concerned agencies
Planned Strategies in Mainstreaming SDGs
Mainstreaming the SDGs
1.Public awareness
2. Multi-stakeholder approaches
3. Reviewing plans and adapting SDGs
Plan
4. Horizontal policy coherence (breaking the silos)
5. Vertical policy coherence (localizing the agenda)
6. Budgeting for the future
Do
7. Monitoring, reporting and accountability
8. Assessing risks and fostering adaptability
Check
Initiate now Initiate later
Moving Forward
1. A Country Roadmap for mainstreaming the SDGs in the next Philippine Development Plan and the Long Term Vision (Ambisyon) 2040
2. An advocacy and campaign model
3. A stakeholder engagement plan
4. An institutional and governance mechanism
5. A localization plan
6. A monitoring and reporting system
7. A financing framework/plan
8. A virtual repository of mainstreaming approaches and tools that is accessible and continuously updated
• A long-term (25 years) vision for the Philippines.
• A basis for unity among Filipinos.
• An anchor for development planning across administrations.
• A guide for engaging with international development partners.
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What it is envisioned to be?
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51
50
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17
10
No one is hungry
All Filipinos have a chance for adequate job…
No one is poor
Everyone can go to college
Everyone can get treatment when sick
All Filipino families have their own house
Everyone has modern lifestyle
The country is a world leader in science…
Vision for the country:
Hunger, local employment and poverty are the main
economic issues that should be addressed
Base: Total Interviews unwtd/wtd (10000/10000)
I have here statements that people say are important for our economy). Which of the following is the most important condition the
country should attain in the year 2040 (RANK 1)? Which is the second most important (RANK 2)? Which is the third most important
(RANK 3)?
Goals
In 2040, the Philippines will be
– A prosperous, predominantly middle-class society with
average (median) income per capita of $11,000 (at
2015 prices) and net disposable income will have
tripled;
– Free from poverty in all its dimensions;
– A healthy society with life expectancy at birth of at
least 80 years;
– A smart and innovative society, and
– A high trust society.
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“The Philippines shall be a country where all citizens are
free from hunger and poverty, have equal opportunities,
enabled by fair and just society that is governed with order
and unity. A nation where families live together, thriving in
vibrant, culturally diverse, and resilient communities.”
Vision of Filipinos for Country