ECA Tasks African Countries with Embracing Digital Tools for Greater Transparency
The United Nations (UN) Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) has urged countries on the continent to embrace digital tools to foster greater transparency, efficiency, and effectiveness.
Mr Antonio Pedro, Deputy Executive-Secretary of ECA, made the during the meeting on “Leveraging Digital Technologies for Integrated Planning to Advance the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) and Agenda 2063 in Times of Multiple Crises”.
The event took place as a side event at the Tenth Session of the Africa Regional Forum on Sustainable Development (ARFSD-10) in Addis-Ababa.
He said that while many countries do an excellent job of identifying their priorities through extensive stakeholders’ consultation, the number of identified priorities is often so numerous that implementation becomes a challenge.
To address this challenge, ECA, he said, developed the Integrated Planning and Reporting Tool (IPRT), a web-based tool designed to enhance the effectiveness of planning.
“The IPRT aims to strengthen planning systems by leveraging technology, allowing for the digital tracking of national, provincial, and sector plans.
“This is in alignment with annual budgets and international commitments such as SDGs and Agenda 2063,” he said.
Also speaking, Mr Bartholomew Armah, Chief of Development Planning in the Macroeconomics and Governance Division at ECA highlighted the abilities of the tool.
Armah said it could facilitate integrated and coherent planning, addressing the issue of disconnected planning frameworks at various levels and ensuring alignment with global commitments.
“The IPRT represents a significant step forward in the integration of multiple development agendas into national development plans, offering a harmonised approach to progress reporting,” he said.
Ms Annette Griessel, Deputy Director-General, National Planning Coordination, South African Department of Planning, Monitoring, and Evaluation (DPME), highlighted the transformative role of technology in redressing development disparities created by South Africa’s apartheid past.
Griessel restated the progress made in reforming the planning system and ensuring their alignment with the SDGs and Africa’s Agenda 2063.
According to her, progress is seen as a cornerstone in building a capable developmental state.
The IPRT has already been deployed in more than 30 countries with ongoing efforts to ensure its use by other countries on the continent.
It makes tracking of performance on the indicators of national development plans more user-friendly.
The e-meeting was organised by ECA’s Macroeconomics and Governance Division and the Office for Eastern Africa. NERC Accuses Remita of Charging Over N2m Revenue from 2015-2022

