Public services under scrutiny in developing Asia

May 8, 2013
Public services including clean water and sanitation are failing frequently to reach developing nations across Asia, the Asian Development Bank has said in a new report...

Public services in developing Asia’s are frequently failing to reach the needy, said a new Asian Development Bank (ADB) study which recommends improvements to avoid a further widening of the region’s already sharp divide between rich and poor.

The report, Empowerment and Public Service Delivery in Developing Asia and the Pacific, was launched at ADB’s 46th Annual Meeting of its Board of Governors.

It found that the delivery and quality of public services have lagged the meteoric growth rates seen in many economies in the region.

The report examined the challenges state providers face in delivering quality basic services to low income groups, and the potential for giving disadvantaged communities more power over service delivery.

ADB said service delivery across the region is mixed. In South Asia for example, access to primary schooling has grown substantially over the past decade, but the report found there is no evidence of improved access to public health services, and very little progress in the provision of improved sanitation and water sources. Services are often shrouded in heavy national bureaucracy that impedes efficiency.

Turning the present situation around will require state institutions to be far more responsive to demands for services and much more focused on targeting support for those genuinely in need, it said.

Creative solutions must be explored, such as contracting out the delivery of some public services to private parties and non-government organizations, broader adoption of new communications technologies, and a possible shift to a cash-based social assistance transfer system.

“Access to services such as clean water, sanitation, health care, and schooling is an essential ingredient of personal well-being, economic development, and long-term growth,” said ADB chief economist Changyong Rhee. ”Empowering communities can certainly improve service delivery, but this needs to go hand-in-hand with a change in the way the state does business.”

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About the Author

Tom Freyberg

Tom Freyberg is an experienced environmental journalist, having worked across a variety of business-to-business titles. Since joining Pennwell in 2010, he has been influential in developing international partnerships for the water brand and has overseen digital developments, including 360 degree video case studies. He has interviewed high level figures, including NYSE CEO’s and Environmental Ministers. A known figure in the global water industry, Tom has chaired and spoken at conferences around the world, from Helsinki, to London and Singapore. An English graduate from Exeter University, Tom completed his PMA journalism training in London.

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