DIME – FRAGILE STATESDUBAI, MAY 31 – JUNE 4
Concept note for LEAPLivelihood Enhancement & Association of the Poor in Siem Reap (CAMBODIA)LEAP:Hay Younell, Top Neth, Mean Sambath, Nuon Sokhom, Lim Piseth
DIME:Radu Ban, Matthias Rieger
Project site
Siem Reap
Phnom Penh
Siem Reap background
Provincial Profile Land area: 12,000 sq. km Consists of: 12 districts, 100 communes, 875
villages Total population: 900,000 (more than 80%
living in rural) Total households: 136,185 (avg. HH size 6
persons)
Provincial Economy Int’l tourists from 2005-2008: 0.7-1.1 million Provincial GDP (2004): USD 285 million (5.4%
of the national GDP) Tourism industry as the main source of GDP
growth But, Siem Reap remains 1 of the 3 poorest
provinces
Common causes of poverty Lack of assets, low investment and
productivity Majority of ID Poor 1 & 2 owns less than 0.5 ha
of land Majority of these land has a low productivity
Lack of access to finance A study indicates only 58% of HHs (n=80) is
able to borrow About 67% of them use informal source of
money lender, with high IR (4-10% per month) Lack of access to market
Inability to compete with Thai and Vietnamese Products due to inconsistent quality, low volume, time to market...
Lack of market information makes the production and delivery of the right products difficult
Project description
Project Development Objective is to improve livelihoods of the rural poor in select communes in Siem Reap
Component 1: creating and strengthening self-managed institutions of the poor
Component 2: providing access to finance to the poor
Component 3: linking the poor to key markets and value chains
Component 4: project management, coordination, monitoring and evaluation
Project description
Project phasing
Pilot phase: 12 communes (half of villages are treated) 1st phase: 8 communes (PLUS half of the rest villages from the
pilot phase) 2nd phase: 30 communes
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Research questions
Are incomes and livelihood of the poor in the target areas improved?
Indicators
Indicator 1. At least 50% of HH take up new livelihood technologies
Indicator 2. At least 50% of poor HHs are investing in productive assets generating sustained income with project funds
Indicator 3. At least 50% of HH receiving project funds increase their income by at least 30% of the baseline
Key HH survey questions
Income Percentage of poor/non-poor/women in SHGs Sources of income (micro-investment, chicken
raising, other activities for which training is provided by the program...)
Credit, sources of credit (Banks/MFIs), how much? Assets Trust (in SHG, neighboring HHs,...) Social capital (reducing violence, increase
cooperation, more care to one another, ...) Employment (job training, ability to get job, ...) Benefit from Village Association (VA) or Commune
Level Federation (CLF)
Key SHG survey questions SHG performance (frequency of meetings,
attendance, saving, application for credit, ...) Characteristics of SHG members (men/women,
poor/non-poor, occupations, ...) Satisfaction of being SHG member ...
Identification strategy
Sam. 9
Sam. 7
Sam. 3
Sam. 10
Sam. 4
Sam. 1
Sam. 5
Sam. 11
Sam. 8
Sam. 2
Sam. 6
Sam. 12
12 out of 50 target communes randomly selected as sample
In each commune, half of villages randomly chosen as treatment & the rest half as control groups (about 100 villages totally)
Identification strategy
In each village, about 10 poor and 10 non-poor HHs randomly selected for survey
- Treatment villages
- Control villages
Sample
The total sample HHs are about 2,000 HHs (1,000 poor and 1,000 non-poor)
In each village, 2 SHGs randomly selected for baseline survey, and 2 additional SHGs for the follow up survey
Timeline
now - 15 Jul: design of questionnaires, question coding, format of data input, sample selection
15 Jul - 15 Sep: recruitment of M&E and MIS specialists
15 Sep – 30 Sep: training of enumerators and key relevant staffs, plus testing the baseline survey (questionnaires testing)
1 Oct: start the baseline survey and evaluation
1 Oct 2011: follow up survey
Impact evaluation team
Gov’t team:Hay Younell, Top Neth, Mean Sambath, Nuon Sokhom, Lim Piseth
Consulting teams:M&E and MIS Specialists (to be recruited)
DIME:Radu Ban, Matthias Rieger
Estimated budget
Budget for baseline survey (about 2,000 HHs):
Surveyors: 4 teams of 5 people = 20 people, working 30 days @ USD25/day = USD 15,000 (LEAP)
Piloting and training 40 people, working 10 days @ USD25/day = 10,000
4 cars * 30 days @ USD100/day (including gas) = USD 12,000 (LEAP)
Data treatment: 5 people, working 30 days @ USD 35/day = USD 5,250 (LEAP)
Field coordinator: 60 days @ USD 200/day = USD 12,000 (DIME) Economist(s): 30 days @ USD 250/day = USD 7,500 (DIME) Overheads and unexpected costs USD 10,000 (LEAP)
Total : USD 52,250 (LEAP) USD 19,500 (DIME) USD 71,750
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