Foreign Assistance: USAID Venture Capital Approach Relies on Evidence of Results but Could Strengthen Collaboration among Similar Programs
Highlights
What GAO Found
From fiscal years 2010 to 2015, the U.S. Agency for International Development's (USAID) Development Innovation Ventures (DIV) program obligated approximately $72.5 million for innovation projects to reduce poverty across a range of sectors, including energy, health, and education. In India, for example, DIV funded intensive learning camps that group children by reading and math abilities rather than by grade level, and a solar micro-grid service providing lighting to off-grid customers for approximately $0.27 per week. While DIV has a global focus and is open to applications regardless of source, approximately 52 percent of its funding is concentrated in two countries, India and Kenya, and 40 percent of its funding is concentrated with four grantees.
USAID Development Innovation Ventures Projects in India's Education and Energy Sectors
DIV is collecting data for several program-level performance measures, which show some positive outcomes, but has not established targets for these measures, making it difficult to assess DIV's progress. GAO's review of DIV's draft framework indicates that it does not include performance targets.
DIV has applied evidence-based requirements for awarding grants and assessing results, emphasizing rigorous evaluations. Specifically, applications that DIV funded in India have generally met the program's evidence requirements, such as including evaluation plans. DIV grantees in India have also provided final reports and evaluations that generally met DIV's requirements. In addition, DIV recently has taken action to ensure that the final reports and evaluations of its projects are publicly disseminated, as generally required by USAID policy.
DIV's limited collaboration with similar U.S.-funded innovation programs in India has contributed to missed opportunities to share information and leverage resources. DIV and several other U.S.-funded programs in India support similar objectives and beneficiaries. For example, the strategy of the USAID mission in India focuses, in part, on innovation and modeled its Millennium Alliance program after DIV. Such programs have funded some similar innovations, such as “clean” cook stoves and low-cost eyewear. Although DIV has begun implementing a plan to improve collaboration, it does not yet reflect a joint approach among similar programs, including those of other agencies. Without such an approach, DIV may not be capitalizing on opportunities to gain efficiencies and maximize the impact of its innovation programs.
Why GAO Did This Study
USAID established the DIV program in 2010 with a goal of creating a portfolio of innovations that contribute to reducing global poverty. Borrowing from the venture capital model, DIV seeks to identify and test innovative development solutions based on three core principles: rigorous evidence, cost-effectiveness, and potential to scale up. As of 2014, India was the largest recipient of DIV funding, representing approximately one-third of the program's portfolio.
In this report, GAO examines the DIV program's (1) distribution of funding and (2) efforts to measure progress toward achieving its goals, and for DIV's activities in India, GAO examines (3) the extent to which DIV uses evidence to make funding decisions and assess results and (4) DIV's collaboration with similar U.S. development assistance innovation programs. GAO reviewed and analyzed DIV documents and data for fiscal year 2010 to 2015, and interviewed agency officials and grant recipients. GAO selected India as a nongeneralizable case study and conducted fieldwork in that country.
Recommendations
GAO recommends that USAID establish (1) performance targets to assess DIV's progress toward its goal and (2) a joint approach to collaboration for similar programs in India, while considering such an approach in other countries, as appropriate. USAID agreed with these recommendations and noted steps it is taking to implement them.
Recommendations for Executive Action
Agency Affected | Recommendation | Status |
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U.S. Agency for International Development | To help ensure that DIV is making progress toward achieving its global development goal, the Administrator of USAID should establish performance targets that will allow periodic assessment of DIV's progress toward achieving its goal. |
USAID agreed with the recommendation, stating that GAO's review helped identify areas for improvement and that USAID discussed steps it was taking to respond to the recommendation. In response to GAO's recommendation, USAID added performance targets to its newly developed results framework and provided the finalized Results Framework to GAO in March 2016. The DIV program is administered within USAID's Global Development Lab, and a USAID official stated that this organizational structure is reflected in the Results Framework. The USAID official stated that within the Results Framework, DIV contributes to the Intermediate Result, "High Impact Solutions Produced." For this Intermediate Result, the Framework contains targets for fiscal years 2016-2020. For example, the Framework contains targets for the percentage of solutions in DIV's portfolio with at least one follow-on deal, increasing from 55 percent for FY2016 to 75 percent for FY2020.
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U.S. Agency for International Development | To help ensure that DIV is making progress toward achieving its global development goal, the Administrator of USAID should establish a joint approach to collaboration reflecting agreement with the USAID mission in India and with other related U.S. agency programs in India, and consider where such a joint approach would be beneficial in other countries. |
To help ensure that USAID's Development Innovation Ventures program (DIV) is making progress toward achieving its global development goal, GAO recommended that the Administrator of USAID establish a joint approach to collaboration reflecting agreement with the USAID mission in India and with other related U.S. agency programs in India, and consider where such a joint approach would be beneficial in other countries. USAID agreed with the recommendation, stating that GAO's review helped identify areas for improvement and USAID discussed steps it was taking to respond to the recommendation. Following the release of the GAO report, DIV reported on steps it has taken to formalize collaboration with the USAID mission in India. For example, according to a DIV official, DIV encourages the USAID mission in India to be involved in joint management of DIV projects that have funding of $1.5 million or more. DIV and the mission in India also have conducted regular calls to share information on DIV and mission projects through standardized information on projects' status. In December 2016, DIV also provided documentation that it has included other U.S. agencies in its coordination efforts in India. In addition, DIV has opened a similar dialogue with USAID missions in Kenya and Uganda to identify areas for collaboration, including sharing information on DIV projects' status in those countries. DIV's improved collaboration with the USAID mission and other agencies in India, and its consideration of this joint approach in other countries, is a promising step toward ensuring that it capitalizes on potential synergies among innovation programs in order to maximize their efficiency and impact.
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