GHA_2014_WBCS_v01_M
World Bank Group Country Survey 2014
Name | Country code |
---|---|
Ghana | GHA |
Country Opinion Survey
The World Bank Group is interested in gauging the views of clients and partners who are either involved in development in Ghana or who observe activities related to social and economic development. The following survey will give the World Bank Group's team that works in Ghana, greater insight into how the Bank's work is perceived. This is one tool the World Bank Group uses to assess the views of its stakeholders, and to develop more effective strategies that support development in Ghana. A local independent firm has been hired to oversee the logistics of this survey.
This survey was designed to achieve the following objectives:
Sample survey data [ssd]
Stakeholders in Ghana
The World Bank Country Assessment Survey covered the following topics:
A. General Issues Facing Ghana
B. Overall Attitudes toward the World Bank Group (WBG)
C. World Bank Effectiveness and Results
D.The World Bank Group's Knowledge Work and Activities
E. Working with the World Bank Group
F. The Future Role of the World Bank Group in Ghana
G. Communication and Information Sharing
H. Background Information
Northern, Eastern, Western, and Southern sectors.
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Public Opinion Research Group | The World Bank Group |
From March to April 2014, 1,000 stakeholders of the World Bank Group in Ghana were invited to provide their opinions on the WBG's assistance to the country by participating in a country survey. Participants in the survey were drawn from among the office of the President or Prime Minister; the office of a Minister; the office of a Parliamentarian; employees of a ministry, ministerial department, or implementation agency; consultants/contractors working on World Bank Group-supported projects/programs; project management units (PMUs) overseeing implementation of a project; local government officials or staff; bilateral agencies; multilateral agencies; private sector organizations; private foundations; the financial sector/private banks; NGOs; community-based organizations (CBOs); the media; independent government institutions; trade unions; faith-based groups; academia/research institutes/think tanks; and the judiciary branch.
A total of 830 stakeholders participated in the survey (83% response rate).
The Questionnaire consists of following sections:
A. General Issues Facing Ghana: Respondents were asked to indicate whether Ghana is headed in the right direction, what they thought were the most important development priorities, which areas would contribute most to reducing poverty, which areas would contribute most to generating economic growth, and what would achieve "shared prosperity".
B. Overall Attitudes toward the World Bank Group: Respondents were asked to rate their familiarity with the WBG, its effectiveness in Ghana, WBG staff preparedness, the effectiveness of its activities, to what extent it should provide capacity building support to certain groups, the importance and effectiveness of the WBG's current capacity building work, their agreement with various statements regarding the WBG's work, and the extent to which it is an effective development partner. Respondents were also asked to indicate the sectoral areas on which it would be most productive for the WBG to focus its resources, the WBG's greatest values and greatest weaknesses, its most effective instruments, with which stakeholder groups the WBG should collaborate more, if the WBG should have more or less of a local presence in Ghana, and to what they attributed slowed or failed reform efforts.
C. World Bank Group's Effectiveness and Results: Respondents were asked to rate the extent to which the WBG's work helps achieve development results in Ghana, the extent to which the WBG meets Ghana's needs for knowledge services and financial instruments, the extent to which the WBG measures and corrects its work in real time, and the importance of the WBG's involvement and the WBG's level of effectiveness across thirty-one development areas. Respondents were also asked to indicate if WBG decisions regarding its Ghana program were made primarily in country or at Headquarters.
D. The World Bank Group's Knowledge Work and Activities: Respondents were asked to indicate how frequently they consult WBG knowledge work and to rate the quality of the WBG's knowledge work and activities, including how significant of a contribution it makes to development results and its technical quality.
E. Working with the World Bank: Respondents were asked to rate the extent to which various aspects of the WBG's technical assistance/advisory work contribute to solving Ghana's development challenges and their agreement with a series of statements regarding working with the WBG. Respondents were asked to indicate if the WBG operates with too much risk.
F. The Future Role of the World Bank Group in Ghana: Respondents were asked to indicate what the WBG should do to make itself of greater value in Ghana and which of its services the WBG should offer more of in Ghana.
G. Communication and Information Sharing: Respondents were asked to indicate how they get information about economic and social development issues, how they prefer to receive information from the WBG, their Internet access, and their usage and evaluation of the WBG's websites. Respondents were asked about their awareness of the WBG's Access to Information policy, past information requests from the WBG, and their level of agreement that they use more data from the World Bank Group as a result of the WBG's Open Data policy. Respondents were also asked to evaluate the WBG's information accessibility and responsiveness to information requests.
H. Background Information: Respondents were asked to indicate their current position, specialization, whether they currently collaborate with the WBG, with which WBG agencies they work, their exposure to the WBG in Ghana, and their geographic location. Respondents were also asked if their projects involved both the World Bank and the IFC, and if so, to indicate their view of the two institutions working together.
Start | End |
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2014-03 | 2014-04 |
Casa dos Direitos
Respondents completed questionnaires with a representative from the fielding agency.
Name | Affiliation |
---|---|
Public Opinion Research Group | The World Bank Group |
Use of the dataset must be acknowledged using a citation which would include:
The user of the data acknowledges that the original collector of the data, the authorized distributor of the data, and the relevant funding agency bear no responsibility for use of the data or for interpretations or inferences based upon such uses.
Name | Affiliation | |
---|---|---|
Public Opinion Research Group | The World Bank Group | countrysurveys@worldbankgroup.org |
DDI_GHA_2014_WBCS_v01_M_WB
Name | Affiliation | Role |
---|---|---|
Development Economics Data Group | The World Bank | Documentation of the DDI |
2015-04-12
Version 01 (April 2015)