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USAID Supports Government
Progress to Self-Sufficiency
To help Timor-Leste's government as it moves toward economic and institutional
self-sufficiency, USAID and other donors are partners in the Consolidation
Support Program (CSP), managed by the World Bank. CSP helps fund the government
budget in the priority activities of good governance, job creation, and
service delivery to reduce poverty. The first CSP supervisory mission
convened recently to monitor the government's progress on specific performance
benchmarks. Results were broadly positive, though a few delays were highlighted,
particularly in the education sector. CSP partners noted an increase in
government ownership of the program and monitoring of results. The program
was praised for allowing frank discussions on sensitive policy issues.
USAID provides about 12% of CSP funds. (Dec. 20, 2005)
Second Round of Local Elections Highlights
First Round Success
After its first-ever local elections, held in 442 villages and 2,228 subvillages
over the past year, Timor-Leste is currently holding re-elections in 18
jurisdictions where the first round resulted in a tie or where the Court
of Appeal upheld complaints of irregularities. The elections drew a high
percentage of voters and offered the Technical Secretariat for Electoral
Administration and the independent National Elections Commission opportunities
to improve registration and voting processes in advance of elections for
president, prime minister, and Parliament in 2007. USAID has supported
the full local elections process, from voter registration and education
to monitoring and verification. (Dec. 20, 2005)
Regional Summit Spurs Financial Education Planning
Three staff members from national NGOs Timor-Aid and Rotaract Club attended
a private-sector organized financial education summit in Malaysia recently
to learn how other countries tackle major problems of low numeracy rates
and poor money-management skills. Timor-Leste's literacy rate is only
about 50%, with numeracy levels well below that. The three participants
said that they will use the practical ideas they learned--particularly
from successes in countries such as Fiji, Guam, and Sri Lanka--to work
with communities and the government to advance financial education. USAID
supports Timor Aid and Rotaract in their literacy/numeracy and youth programs
to build better foundations for Timor-Leste's entrepreneurs. (Dec. 20,
2005)
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