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An output-based aid approach is helping to provide access to safe drinking water for low-income households in Jakarta and Surabaya. |
In the DAK project, 81 local governments will be eligible for grants, meaning they will be able to claim reimbursement for reported and verified physical outputs for infrastructure. The State Finance and Development Supervisory Board (Badan Pengawasan Keuangan dan Pembangunan, BPKP) will be responsible for verifying project outputs before the local governments are reimbursed. In 2010 DAK allocation amounts will total about two percent of Indonesia’s national budget.
Both DAK grants and OBA subsidies help to bridge a financing gap that would otherwise be an obstacle to basic service delivery, either because the infrastructure could not be built or because low-income segments of the population could not afford the connection fees to gain access to the services.
Existing OBA projects funded by the Global Partnership on Output-Based Aid (GPOBA) in Indonesia:
- Expansion of Water Services in Low income areas of Jakarta [3]
- Extending Telecommunications in Rural Indonesia [4]
- Expanding Piped Water Supply to Surabaya’s Urban Poor [5]
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