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Global Development Lab: USAID Leverages External Contributions but Needs to Ensure Timely Data and Transparent Reporting

GAO-19-46 Published: Nov 07, 2018. Publicly Released: Nov 07, 2018.
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Fast Facts

Since USAID’s Global Development Lab started in 2014, it has sought innovative solutions to international development problems such as hunger and illiteracy. The Lab has a goal of supporting some efforts with outside contributions from private and public partners.

We examined how the Lab uses and reports its funding. We found:

The Lab’s funds from USAID dropped from $170.7 million in 2015 to $77 million in 2017.

Some of the Lab’s public reporting on outside contributions was outdated or incomplete.

To improve transparency, we recommended the Lab revise internal guidance to ensure up-to-date and complete reporting on outside contributions.

Global Development Lab Funded Education Project in India

This is a photo of children in a classroom with a barefoot teacher in front of a blackboard.

This is a photo of children in a classroom with a barefoot teacher in front of a blackboard.

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Highlights

What GAO Found

The U.S. Agency for International Development's (USAID) Global Development Lab (the Lab) has programs and activities for each of its five strategic objectives: science, technology, innovation, and partnerships (STIP) and agency integration of STIP. The Lab comprises five centers and two support offices (see figure). The centers house more than 25 Lab programs focused on issues such as development research, digital development, innovation ventures, and private sector engagement. The Lab's funding for its programs has generally been decreasing, as have its staffing numbers, since fiscal year 2015. USAID allocations of program funds to the Lab decreased from $170.7 million in fiscal year 2015 to $77 million in fiscal year 2017.

Global Development Lab's Organizational Structure, as of October 2018

Global Development Lab's Organizational Structure, as of October 2018

Although the Lab has documented its oversight of awards that include non-USAID contributions, some data it collects for these contributions are outdated and its public reporting of such data lacks transparency.

For awards GAO reviewed, the Lab consistently documented its compliance with key award oversight requirements. However, its Internal Guide to Accounting for Leverage (internal guide) does not include instructions for ensuring the data for these contributions are current. As a result, GAO found the Lab's management information system contained outdated data for non-USAID contributions in 10 of 24 awards GAO reviewed.

The Lab publicly reports a broader range of non-USAID contributions than the types described in USAID policy. However, the Lab's internal guide does not require the Lab to disclose the types of contributions represented in its public reporting. As a result, the Lab's public reporting of such contributions lacks transparency.

USAID policy and standards for internal control in the federal government require the use and communication of timely and reliable information. Revising the Lab's internal guide to include instructions for updating data on non-USAID contributions and requiring the Lab's public reporting to disclose the types of contributions represented would help the Lab ensure accuracy and transparency in the information it reports to Congress and the public.

Why GAO Did This Study

The Lab was created as a USAID bureau in April 2014. The Lab was intended to institutionalize and improve USAID's ability to harness and leverage science, technology, innovation, and partnerships in addressing development issues and goals worldwide. The Lab supports projects and activities and announces, issues, and manages awards—or funding opportunities—for innovators to propose new ideas, approaches, and technologies. The Lab also incorporates external (i.e., non-USAID) contributions into its programming.

Senate Report 114-290 included a provision for GAO to review the Lab. GAO's report examines, among other things, (1) the Lab's programs, funding, and staffing resources and (2) the extent to which the Lab has documented its oversight of awards with non-USAID contributions and clearly reported these contributions. GAO reviewed and analyzed agency documents and interviewed agency officials in Washington, D.C., and from six missions. GAO also analyzed selected Lab documentation for fiscal years 2014 through 2017.

Recommendations

GAO recommends that USAID ensure that the Lab revises its Internal Guide to Accounting for Leverage to (1) include instructions for updating data on non-USAID contributions for awards and (2) require its public reporting of non-USAID contributions to disclose the types of contributions represented.

USAID concurred with both recommendations.

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status
U.S. Agency for International Development The USAID Administrator should ensure that the Executive Director of the Lab assures that the Lab's Internal Guide to Accounting for Leverage includes instructions to update all non-USAID contributions data in the Lab's management information system at least annually. (Recommendation 1)
Closed – Implemented
In November 2018, GAO reported that the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Global Development Lab (Lab) management information system contained outdated data on non-USAID contributions -referred to as "leverage"-to Lab-managed projects. GAO recommended that the USAID Administrator ensure that the Lab's Internal Guide to Accounting for Leverage include instructions to update all non-USAID contributions data in the Lab's management information system at least annually. USAID agreed with the recommendation and has implemented corrective actions to resolve the cited deficiencies. In response to GAO's recommendation, USAID updated the Lab's Internal Guide to Accounting for Leverage to include instructions to annually update all non-USAID contributions data in the Lab's management information system and has taken steps to ensure these data are accurately recorded. For example, since issuing its updated guidance in the fall of 2018, the Lab provided training for monitoring and evaluation staff to implement the updated guidance in the end-of-year data call. In addition, according to Lab officials, the Lab developed a process to spot check non-USAID contributions data against documentation, and was able to validate that the data were correctly entered.
U.S. Agency for International Development The USAID Administrator should ensure that the Executive Director of the Lab assures that the Lab's Internal Guide to Accounting for Leverage requires that the Lab's public reporting of leverage data discloses the types of non-USAID contributions represented. (Recommendation 2)
Closed – Implemented
In November 2018, GAO reported that the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID) Global Development Lab (Lab) Internal Guide to Accounting for Leverage (internal guide) did not require the Lab's public reporting of leverage data to disclose the types of non-USAID contributions represented. GAO recommended that the USAID Administrator ensure that the internal guide require the Lab's public reporting of leverage data to disclose the types of non-USAID contributions represented. USAID agreed with the recommendation and has implemented corrective actions to resolve the cited deficiencies. In response to GAO's recommendation, USAID updated the Lab's Internal Guide to Accounting for Leverage to include a requirement to disclose the types of non-USAID contributions represented in public reports. For example, the Lab's update to this internal guide provides a definition of the types of non-USAID contributions included in its calculation of leverage, and requires the definition be included in any material reported publicly or with interested stakeholders. In addition, according to Lab officials, the Lab identified where its leverage data had been used on publicly available material, and added the definition of the types of contributions represented in that data to over 20 websites, presentations, factsheets, and reports.

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