Planning Ministry launches 1st electronic system for ‘Decent Life’ initiative
24 January 2021
Launch continues Ministry's efforts to shift towards
evidence-based planning, automating process of preparing plan, and monitoring
its implementation
Egypt’s Minister of Planning and Economic Development Hala
El-Said has announced the launch of the electronic system supporting the
"Decent Life" initiative.
The system will identify the development needs of the
villages targeted in the initiative, whilst also preparing a plan for various
interventions. It will additionally monitor and evaluate the impact of all
efforts in development and the quality of life.
El-Said said that the launch continues her ministry's
efforts to shift towards evidence-based planning, automating the process of
preparing the plan, and following up on its implementation.
The minister noted the presidential initiative’s importance
for providing a dignified life for Egyptian citizens. She added that it aims to
relieve the burdens of citizens in the neediest communities in the countryside
and informal areas in urban areas.
"The initiative depends on the implementation of a set
of service and development activities that would guarantee a decent life for
that group and improve their living conditions, while improving the economic,
social and environmental level of families in poor villages,” El-Said said, “It
will also enable them to obtain all basic services and providing job
opportunities to support the independence of citizens, and motivate them to
improve the standard of living for their families and their communities.”
The minister emphasised that the new system for the
"Decent Life" initiative is the first integrated system of its kind
in Egypt. It includes the complete stages of the plan’s preparation process,
follow-up, and evaluation of the development impact.
It has been merged with the databases belonging to the
Central Agency for Public Mobilization and Statistics (CAPMAS), which will be
used in making planning decisions.
The system is integrate with the system of spatial changes,
and relies on the methodology of programme and performance plans that link the
appropriations directed to projects and the targeted developmental return. It
is also features an automatic and instantaneous calculation of the quality of
life indicator that the Ministry recently launched.
El-Said said that the system also includes, in its design,
advanced analytical capabilities that would enable it to prepare performance
follow-up reports. These would monitor the state of development in all the
villages, governorates, and centres that are part of the initiative.
The minister noted that this system has become binding on
all parties involved in implementing the initiative. This follows Prime
Minister Mostafa Madbouly’s recent decision to adopt it as a tool for preparing
and following up the “Dignified Life” initiative plan.
The system will be presented at the international and
regional level as a successful and pioneering model in the Egyptian state’s
adoption of the most advanced planning tools.
At the same time, it consolidates the values of governance,
accountability, and transparency, in line with the priorities of the national
agenda for sustainable development under Egypt's Vision 2030.
For his part, Assistant Minister of Planning Dr Jamil Helmy,
who is responsible for the “Decent Life” initiative file, will monitor the
implementation of the sustainable development plan. He said that the inclusion
of learning tools in the system’s design has been taken into account, to help
spread the culture of performance within the state's administrative apparatus
easily.
Helmy added that the coming period will witness intensive
training for all parties on how to deal with the system and benefit from the
huge amount of data it contains. This data is not limited to the financial
aspects for projects and interventions, but also performance indicators,
various reports, pictures and realistic videos related to the geographical
locations of each project.
For his part, Ashraf Abdel Hafeez, Assistant Minister of
Planning for Digital Transformation, indicated that the system comes as the
first fruits of the Spatial Change Center at the Ministry of Planning and
Economic Development.
The centre was recently established as the connection to
geographic information systems and aerial photography was taken into account in
the design of the system.
This is done by providing high-resolution satellite images
that provide data that serve follow-up and decision-making efforts and provide
support for many projects and services provided by the government in various
economic, social, and environmental sectors.