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A family of flood victims stands before their damaged home although taking refuge in a very makeshift tent in Adam Khan village, some thirty km (19 miles) from Dadu in Pakistan's Sindh province, January 27, 2011. Six months after Pakistan's epic floods demolished this farming village in the southern province of Sindh, its residents still live in limbo on a roadside - Reuters
ISLAMABAD: The World Bank approved a US $125 million credit for the Flood Emergency Cash Transfer Project,
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The project will also strengthen the management of the CDPC through effective grievance redressal mechanisms and establishing control and accountability measures to ensure efficient and transparent delivery of the support.
“The 2010 floods were a disaster of historic proportions that affected over 20 million people and created a massive recovery need,” said Rachid Benmessaoud, World Bank Country Director for Pakistan.
Renmessaoud said that households faced with income shocks often adopt coping strategies that are not beneficial over time, including reducing assets and consumption, increasing borrowing,
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Therefore, the country director added, cash assistance to flood-affected households is essential to mitigate the adverse effects of income shocks besides addressing the issue of poverty and vulnerability.
Importantly, the project will also assist in developing necessary capacities and systems to effectively handle the similar disasters in the future.
Launched in September 2010, the CDCP provided around 1.4 million families with cash grants of Rs. 20,000 (approximately US $230) to cover their immediate needs, said a WB press statement here Wednesday.
The next phase, supported by this project,
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To meet the total financing requirements for the CDCP, the World Bank has worked closely with other development partners, some of which (USAID and Italy) have already committed funds.
“International evidence suggests that cash grants allow the recipients the flexibility of choosing where to put their resources based on their specific conditions and priorities,
Office Home And Student 2010 Product Key,” said Iftikhar Malik, Co-Project Team Leader, adding “Beneficiaries are expected to use these additional grants to not only cover basic consumption but to also recapitalise assets as well as recover their livelihoods.”
The World Bank is well placed to support the government of Pakistan in extending and strengthening the CDCP due to its substantial international and regional experience in protecting the affected and vulnerable through post- disaster cash transfer programs.
In addition to this operation, the Bank has assisted the government in its flood response through financing the Post-Disaster Needs Assessment and making available US $300 million for fast-disbursing financing of critical flood-related imports and US $20 million for highway reconstruction.
The credit is from the International Development Association (IDA),
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US $81 million of the credit carries a 0.75 per cent service charge, 10 years of grace period and a maturity of 35 years, the press statement said adding the remaining US $44 million has the same terms plus a fixed interest charge of 3.2 per cent.
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