World Bank to provide $270m additional financing for CRISP program
The World Bank will provide additional financing of $270 million for the Crisis-Resilient Social Protection (CRISP) program to support the development of an adaptive and crisis-resilient social protection system. Sources revealed that the Board of Directors of the World Bank is expected to meet in the last week of May to approve additional financing (AD) of $270 million.
The proposed AF will provide an additional credit in an amount of $270m to Crisis-Resilient Social Protection. The original project became effective in March 2021 and will be closing by the end of June, 2025. The proposed AF will extend the closing date for the project by a year till the end of June, 2026.
The overall Program boundary is the same for both the original project and the AF. The Government Program’s expenditure supported by Program for Results (PforR) Financing (both Original and Additional) has been revised.
The change is due to incorporating actual expenditures for financial years 2020,-21, 2021-22, and 2022-23, adjustment due to a 75 percent spike in the exchange rate, and adding the budget of fiscal year 2025-26 in the expenditure framework due to extension of closing date up to June 30, 2026. Despite these changes, the overall PforR financing is 9 percent of the government’s program.
Official documents revealed that this AF will contribute to Result Areas 1 and 3 of the parent project. Disbursement Linked Indicator (DLI) proposed under the AF will cover some longer-term policy actions regarding the Benazir Income Support Program (BISP) programs and the National Socio-Economic Registry (NSER).
Under Result Area 1, the proposed results support: adoption of recertification protocols to ensure predictability in program exit and entry for BISP programs during future recertifications; institutionalization of an indexation mechanism for the base cash transfer program (Kafaalat) benefits to prevent erosion in purchasing power and to protect against the impacts of economic shocks; ensure accessibility to potential Kafaalat beneficiaries in the NSER who are not currently enrolled; extension/expansion of MELA and program touchpoints from
Tehsil to Union Council level to improve accessibility; and adoption of NSER as the agreed targeting mechanism nationwide and development of a technology-supported mechanism to facilitate two-way data exchange with other programs.
Under Result Area 3, the proposed actions support measures to correct the current overlap of federal and provincial cash transfer (CCT) programs and to prevent future overlap, including gradual takeover by the provinces of Punjab and Sindh, through their own resources, of the services that are currently being provided by federal health and nutrition focused CCT.