Making Devolution Work for Service Delivery in Kenya

Page 135

Citizen Engagement and Service Delivery

The past two years have also seen a renewed focus on anticorruption efforts. Important institutions in this regard include the investigative agencies, the Director of Public Prosecution, and the judiciary. In addition, the judiciary has also played a role in reaffirming the Bill of Rights—for example, landmark decisions reversing various processes or documents that had not had sufficient public participation. The judiciary has protected devolution and adjudicated many intergovernmental disputes. There has, however, been less progress on citizen engagement in relation to service delivery performance, and citizen engagement is often fragmented. The lack of accessible and timely information on service delivery performance is particularly notable. Citizens lack basic information on how their counties perform on key service delivery outcomes because the data is unavailable—and when it is available, it is often overly technical and fragmented. Similarly, citizens have few opportunities to participate in monitoring service delivery performance except for some small community scorecards and social audit pilots as well as pilots that encourage decentralization within counties by directly involving citizens in service delivery provision and oversight. The experience is mixed as to whether the new accountability systems are creating incentives for improving service delivery. At the national level, devolution has arguably contributed to a more inclusive political settlement and helped reduce the stakes of the “winner takes all” politics that was a feature of the previous highly centralized state. There is also some evidence to suggest that the service delivery track record of governors may have contributed to citizens voting out about half of the pioneer governors in the first elections. But elections alone may be insufficient to orient governors and the county executives to improve services for citizens. More direct forms of accountability are not yet effective because of information and capacity constraints. Furthermore, in some counties, devolution could have exacerbated feelings of local-level exclusion among county minorities. There is also the risk that devolution may disproportionately benefit local elites at the expense of less powerful or marginalized groups. Making devolution work for service delivery requires that all levels of government make a renewed effort to implement the next generation of citizen engagement initiatives—focused on holding counties to account for improving service delivery performances, not just for following rules and making investments. As detailed below, this will require information on outcomes, not just inputs; mechanisms that go beyond consultations on plans and budgets; and tools and increasing capacity that enable citizens to monitor service delivery outcomes. This will require an integrated approach.

CITIZEN ENGAGEMENT AND SERVICE DELIVERY As noted in this report’s analytical framework (see chapter 1), there are three requirements to maximizing the impact of devolution on service delivery and preventing accountability failures that would undermine devolution’s promise to improve service delivery: transparency, participation, and accountability, as follows (World Bank 2012, 163): • The first element relates to information transparency. To participate in decision-making and hold counties and service providers to account, citizens need reliable information about government programs, rules and standards,

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A.4 Service delivery oversight, management, and systems

4min
pages 180-181

A.1 Functions and responsibilities

5min
pages 170-172

A.3 County resource allocation and use

5min
pages 177-179

Major achievements and challenges

10min
pages 154-157

Delivering the future promise of devolution

2min
pages 167-169

The role of development partners

2min
page 166

Policy options to make devolution work for service delivery

18min
pages 158-165

Introduction

1min
page 153

References

2min
pages 151-152

Conclusions

2min
page 149

6.6 Project management committees

2min
page 148

MCA elections

3min
page 145

the civil service

2min
page 143

communication

2min
page 140

Makueni County

3min
page 144

6.1 Elements of social accountability systems

4min
pages 136-137

Citizen engagement and service delivery

2min
page 135

Introduction

2min
page 134

Key Messages

1min
page 133

5.1 Categories of staff on county payrolls in Kenya, FY2018/19

2min
page 127

5.1 Initiatives to improve HRM in Makueni County

2min
page 128

References

1min
page 132

Overarching HRM frameworks

2min
page 126

Capacity building

2min
page 129

Staff performance

2min
page 125

with equitable share funding per capita in FY2018/19

1min
page 118

as a share of FY2019/20 total, by county

1min
page 117

Key messages

1min
page 115

allocation and use of resources

2min
page 112

4.14 Budget execution rates, by county, FY2014/15–FY2018/19

6min
pages 108-110

4.6 Postdevolution asset and liability management remains incomplete

2min
page 106

4.5 Participatory planning in public financial management

2min
page 105

FY2019/20

1min
page 104

expenditure in Kenya, by county, FY2018/19

1min
page 102

4.4 Weaknesses in the structure of budgets at the county level

5min
pages 100-101

4.3 County budget cycle in Kenya after devolution

2min
page 98

4.1 Performance-based conditional grants

2min
page 92

4.2 County creditworthiness

2min
page 95

counties in Kenya, FY2017/18

1min
page 91

Allocation and use of resources at the county level

2min
page 96

spending

2min
page 97

Key messages

1min
page 83

by county, FY2017/18

2min
page 89

3.7 Deficiencies in ECDE information management

2min
page 75

3.8 Quality assurance in the ECDE sector

2min
page 76

Conclusions

2min
page 80

Intergovernmental relations

2min
page 77

under devolution

2min
page 73

3.9 Intergovernmental coordination in the agriculture sector

2min
page 78

County management of sector service delivery

2min
page 69

3.6 Information management in the devolved health sector

2min
page 74

perspectives B3.1.1 Institutional arrangements in the urban water and sanitation

3min
page 66

delivery, by sector

2min
page 59

Disparities in county expenditure on devolved services

2min
page 54

References

1min
pages 31-32

FY2017/18

1min
page 57

Devolution of functions

2min
page 64

2.9 Total county per capita spending, FY2013/14–FY2017/18

1min
page 44

Context

1min
page 23

Kenya

2min
page 65
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