UNCDF in Sierra Leone




Le Défi

Since its emergence from a decade of civil war in 2002, Sierra Leone has experienced substantial economic growth. However, poverty and unemployment remain major challenges, and the country’s infrastructure continues to suffer the consequences of years of mismanagement and neglect. Sierra Leone’s Human Development Index value for 2012 positioned the country at 177 out of 187 countries.

Que fait l'UNCDF pour aider ?

UNCDF has been helping Sierra Leone to meet its development challenges by supporting local economic development initiatives and conditions for an inclusive financial sector. The Kenema District Economic Recovery Programme (KDERP) project seeks to strengthen the capacity of both the district and town councils to collect local revenue for better services and infrastructure. Within the local development structure, the project also supports the parent ministry responsible for local government, and enables relevant authorities to develop and implement the decentralization policy. This in turn supports the further development of a legal and regulatory framework that can link local economic development with national policy initiatives. The project is jointly supported by UNCDF, UNDP, the Government of Sierra Leone, the Belgian Government, and International Telecommunication Union (ITU).

In Sierra Leone UNCDF is also implementing its Gender Equitable Development (GELD) programme, which aims at strengthening local government’s capacities in gender planning and budgeting.

In inclusive finance, the UNCDF Microfinance Sector Development Programme (MITAF II) supports the development of a competitive and sustainable inclusive microfinance sector that provides access to financial services for poor and low-income people and small businesses. Interventions here aim to strengthen the microfinance industry itself, and to create an environment that supports the microfinance industry over the long-term. This project is jointly supported by UNCDF, UNDP, Liechtenstein, KFW Bankengruppe and Cordaid.

With a total budget jointly funded by UNCDF, UNDP, KfW, and CORDAID; and in partnership with Financial Sector Development Program of the Government of Sierra Leone, MITAF II aims at its end at providing access to financial services to around 390,000 active clients, up from 123,000 during its first phase. Funding for the programme remains open to other donors interested in the microfinance sector in Sierra Leone.

En détail

Project

Kenema District Economic Recovery Programme (KDERP)

Pourquoi To improve public revenue management and service provision.
COMMENT
  • Strengthening capacity of local and town councils to collect revenue for services and infrastructure;
  • Helping local authorities to implement decentralization;
  • Increasing economic activity in agricultural sectors;
  • Creating an enabling legal and regulatory environment for local economic development.
Quand 2007-2011
PARTENAIRES UNCDF, UNDP, Belgian Government, ITU.
COûT TOTAL DU PROJET et CONTRIBUTION DE L'UNCDF USD 6,920,000
USD 3,250,000
Project

Gender Equitable Local Development (GELD)

Pourquoi To support gender-responsive planning, programming and budgeting at the local level.
COMMENT
  • Offering capital investment grants for gender-responsive development;
  • Empowering women and men to engage in a gender-sensitive way on development issues; 
  • Supporting local governance authorities and institutions to deliver services in a gender-responsive way.
Quand 2009-2012
PARTENAIRES UNCDF, UN Women, Governments of Belgium and Austria.
COûT TOTAL DU PROJET et CONTRIBUTION DE L'UNCDF USD 8,123,953
USD 7,848,000
Project

Microfinance Sector Development (MITAF II)

Pourquoi To support emergence of a competitive and sustainable inclusive financial sector that provides access to financial services to poor and low-income people in general and micro and small businesses in particular with a special focus on rural areas.
COMMENT
  • Improving capacity and outreach of financial services providers in semi-urban and rural areas;
  • Improving the availability of additional capital to partner Financial Service Providers (FSPs) in semi-urban and rural areas through appropriate instruments and linkages; 
  • Strengthening support infrastructure for the sector;
  • Improving regulatory environment for inclusive finance.
Quand 2011-2015
PARTENAIRES UNCDF, UNDP, Liechtenstein, KFW, Cordaid.
COûT TOTAL DU PROJET et CONTRIBUTION DE L'UNCDF USD 20,015,000
USD 2,325,000
Project

MicroLead

Pourquoi To increase access to financial services, particularly savings, by supporting the expansion of microfinance savings-led market leaders in underserved countries.
COMMENT
  • Offering grants and loans that incentivize leading providers to start up new, or strengthen existing financial institutions that target low-income people, especially with savings, in underserved areas, particularly countries struggling to recover from crisis and conflict;
  • Through a competitive process to select leading indigenous microfinance providers from developing countries to expand their reach by implementing a variety of approaches including greenfields, transformations of MFIs to formally regulated deposit-taking institutions, and providing technical assistance to in-country MFIs;
  • Supporting technical advisors who work to help those providers to develop the institutional capacity to extend their reach.
Quand 2008-2017
PARTENAIRES UNCDF, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, The Mastercard Foundation, LIFT Myanmar.
COûT TOTAL DU PROJET et CONTRIBUTION DE L'UNCDF USD 58,562,939
USD 7,871,850