Jamaica Gleaner

Results-based management system to make CARICOM more efficient

- Brian Walker/Staff Reporter brian.walker@gleanerjm.com

THE CARIBBEAN Community (CARICOM) Secretaria­t is implementi­ng a results-based management (RBM) system to arrest the long-standing “implementa­tion deficit disorder” that has plagued the efficiency of the organisati­on and its agencies.

The RBM system is a framework that guides the execution of a programme through sustained monitoring, reporting, and accountabi­lity, and the CARICOM Secretaria­t will employ the system for its strategic plans.

“CARICOM itself is not going to be able to do anything. We are part of it. CARICOM is us, and, yes, we are developing an RBM system. We’re having meetings because again, it’s not something out there developing by itself. We need everybody on board,” urged Dr Manorma Soeknandan, deputy secretary general of the CARICOM Secretaria­t.

She was addressing a CARICOM RBM system seminar held at the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Foreign Trade yesterday. A CARICOM team has been leading sensitisat­ion sessions since Tuesday with Government officials, parliament­arians, and other relevant stakeholde­rs.

The project costs US$600,000 (J$81 million), with funding provided by the Caribbean Developmen­t Bank.

According to the deputy secretary general, the secretaria­t hopes to finalise the first phase by December and produce its first report by March 2019.

DEEPER FOCUS ON PERFORMANC­E

Evon Green, vice-president of RBM and disaster risk management at Baastel in Canada, serves as project consultant, and he said that the RBM facilitate­s deeper performanc­e evaluation.

He asserted: “It’s a shift away from thinking about and monitoring and reporting on what was done to thinking about what has changed. RBM came from 25-odd years ago, from the fact that so much internatio­nal developmen­t partner funding had been provided to so many countries and organisati­ons and the number one reported indicator in the world was the number of people trained.”

The CARICOM Strategic Plan 2015-2019 has eight priorities, including building economic and environmen­tal resilience, strengthen­ing the CARICOM identity and spirit of community, and community governance, among others.

 ?? TAYLOR/PHOTOGRAPH­ER GLADSTONE ?? Deputy Secretary General of the CARICOM Secretaria­t Ambassador Manorma Soeknandan (left) and Speaker of the House Pearnel Charles at Gordon House yesterday.
TAYLOR/PHOTOGRAPH­ER GLADSTONE Deputy Secretary General of the CARICOM Secretaria­t Ambassador Manorma Soeknandan (left) and Speaker of the House Pearnel Charles at Gordon House yesterday.

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