Millennium Challenge Corporation Selection Criteria and Methodology Report for Fiscal Year 2024, 64467-64474 [2023-20163]
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Federal Register / Vol. 88, No. 180 / Tuesday, September 19, 2023 / Notices
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Ypsilanti, Michigan 48198 (NSF
Ypsilanti). OSHA staff performed an onsite review of NSF’s testing facilities at
NSF Ypsilanti on May 3–4, 2023, in
which assessors found some
nonconformances with the requirements
of 29 CFR 1910.7. NSF has addressed
these issues sufficiently, and OSHA staff
preliminarily determined that OSHA
should grant the application.
OSHA published the preliminary
notice announcing NSF’s expansion
application in the Federal Register on
August 16, 2023 (88 FR 55737). The
agency requested comments by August
31, 2023, but it received no comments
in response to the notice. OSHA now is
proceeding with this notice to grant
expansion of NSF’s scope of
recognition.
To obtain or review copies of all
public documents pertaining to the NSF
expansion application, go to
www.regulations/gov or contact the
Docket Office at (202) 693–2350 (TTY
(877) 889–5627. Docket No. OSHA–
2006–0048 contains all materials in the
record containing NSF’s recognition.
3. NSF must continue to meet the
requirements for recognition, including
all previously published conditions on
NSF’s scope of recognition, in all areas
for which it has recognition.
OSHA hereby expands the NRTL
scope of recognition for NSF to include
one additional test site.
III. Authority and Signature
James S. Frederick, Deputy Assistant
Secretary of Labor for Occupational
Safety and Health, 200 Constitution
Avenue NW, Washington, DC 20210,
authorized the preparation of this
notice. Accordingly, the agency is
issuing this notice pursuant to 29 U.S.C.
657(g)(2), Secretary of Labor’s Order No.
8–2020 (85 FR 58393; Sept. 18, 2020),
and 29 CFR 1910.7.
Signed at Washington, DC.
James S. Frederick,
Deputy Assistant Secretary of Labor for
Occupational Safety and Health.
[FR Doc. 2023–20162 Filed 9–18–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4510–26–P
II. Final Decision and Order
OSHA staff examined NSF’s
expansion application, conducted a
detailed on-site assessment, and
examined other pertinent information.
Based on review of this evidence, OSHA
finds that NSF meets the requirements
of 29 CFR 1910.7 for expansion of
recognition, subject to the specified
limitations and conditions. OSHA,
therefore, is proceeding with this final
notice to grant NSF’s scope of
recognition. OSHA limits the expansion
of NSF’s recognition to include the site
at Ypsilanti, Michigan as listed above.
OSHA’s recognition of the site limits
NSF to performing product testing and
certifications only to the test standards
for which the site has the proper
capability and programs, and for test
standards in NSF’s scope of recognition.
This limitation is consistent with the
recognition that OSHA grants to other
NRTLs that operate multiple sites.
MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE
CORPORATION
A. Conditions
In addition to those conditions
already required by 29 CFR 1910.7, NSF
also must abide by the following
conditions of the recognition:
1. NSF must inform OSHA as soon as
possible, in writing, of any change of
ownership, facilities, or key personnel,
and of any major change in its
operations as a NRTL, and provide
details of the change(s);
2. NSF must meet all the terms of its
recognition and comply with all OSHA
policies pertaining to this recognition;
and
Dated: September 13, 2023.
Gina Porto Spiro,
Acting Vice President, General Counsel, and
Corporate Secretary.
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[MCC FR 23–05]
Millennium Challenge Corporation
Selection Criteria and Methodology
Report for Fiscal Year 2024
Millennium Challenge
Corporation.
ACTION: Notice.
AGENCY:
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(I) Which countries MCC will evaluate
(II) How the Board evaluates these countries
A. Overall evaluation
B. For selection of an eligible country for
a first compact
C. For selection of an eligible country for
a subsequent compact
D. For selection of an eligible country for
a concurrent compact
E. For threshold program assistance
F. A note on potential transition to upper
middle income country status after
initial selection
This report is provided in accordance
with section 608(b) of the Millennium
Challenge Act of 2003, as amended (the
Act), as more fully described in
Appendix A.
(I) Which countries are evaluated?
MCC evaluates the policy
performance of all candidate countries
and statutorily-prohibited countries by
dividing them into two income
categories for the purposes of creating
‘‘scorecards.’’ These categories are used
to account for the income bias that
occurs when countries with more per
capita resources perform better than
countries with fewer. In FY 2024, those
scorecard evaluation income categories 1
are:
• Countries whose gross national
income (GNI) per capita is $2,145 or
less; and
• Countries whose GNI per capita is
between $2,146 and $4,465.
Appendix B lists all candidate
countries and statutorily-prohibited
countries for scorecard evaluation
purposes.
The Millennium Challenge
Act of 2003, as amended, requires the
Millennium Challenge Corporation to
publish a report that identifies the
criteria and methodology that MCC
intends to use to determine which
candidate countries may be eligible to
be considered for assistance under the
Millennium Challenge Act for fiscal
year 2024. The report is set forth in full
below.
(II) How does the Board evaluate these
countries?
(Authority: 22 U.S.C. 7707(b)(2))
(1) Policy Performance
Appendix C describes all 20
indicators, their definitions, what is
required to ‘‘pass,’’ their source, and
their relationship to the statutory
criteria. Because of the importance of
evaluating a country’s policy
performance in a comparable, cross-
SUMMARY:
Millennium Challenge Corporation
Selection Criteria and Methodology
Report for Fiscal Year 2024
This document explains how the
Board of Directors (the Board) of the
Millennium Challenge Corporation
(MCC) will identify, evaluate, and select
eligible countries for fiscal year (FY)
2024. Specifically, this document
discusses the following:
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A. Overall Evaluation
The Board looks at three statutorilymandated factors when it evaluates any
candidate country for compact
eligibility: (1) policy performance; (2)
the opportunity to reduce poverty and
generate economic growth; and (3) the
availability of MCC funds.
1 These income groups correspond to the
definitions of low income countries and lower
middle countries using the historical International
Development Association (IDA) threshold
published by the World Bank. MCC has used these
categories to evaluate country performance since FY
2004. Our amended statute no longer uses those
definitions for funding purposes, but we continue
to use them for evaluation purposes.
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country way, the Board relies to the
maximum extent possible upon the bestavailable objective and quantifiable
policy performance indicators. These
indicators act as proxies for a country’s
commitment to just and democratic
governance, economic freedom, and
investing in its people, per MCC’s
founding statute. Comprised of 20 thirdparty indicators in the categories of
ruling justly, encouraging economic
freedom, and investing in people, MCC
scorecards are created for all candidate
countries and statutorily-prohibited
countries. To ‘‘pass’’ most indicators on
its scorecard, a country’s score on each
indicator must be above the median
score in its income group (as defined
above for scorecard evaluation
purposes). For the inflation, political
rights, civil liberties, and immunization
rates 2 indicators, however, MCC has
established minimum or maximum
scores for ‘‘passing.’’ In particular, the
Board considers whether a country:
• passed at least 10 of the 20
indicators, with at least one pass in each
of the three categories,
• passed either the Political Rights or
Civil Liberties indicator; and
• passed the Control of Corruption
indicator.
While satisfaction of all three aspects
means a country is termed to have
‘‘passed’’ the scorecard, the Board also
considers whether the country performs
‘‘substantially worse’’ in any one policy
category than it does on the scorecard
overall.
The mandatory passing of either the
Political Rights or Civil Liberties
indicators is called the Democratic
Rights ‘‘hard hurdle’’ on the scorecard,
while the mandatory passing of the
Control of Corruption indicator is called
the Control of Corruption ‘‘hard
hurdle.’’ Not passing either ‘‘hard
hurdle’’ results in not passing the
scorecard overall, regardless of whether
at least 10 of the 20 other indicators are
passed.
• Democratic Rights ‘‘hard hurdle:’’
This hurdle sets a minimum bar for
democratic rights below which the
Board will not consider a country for
eligibility. Requiring that a country pass
either the Political Rights or Civil
Liberties indicator creates a democratic
incentive for countries, recognizes the
importance democracy plays in driving
poverty-reducing economic growth, and
holds MCC accountable to working with
2 A minimum score required to pass has been
established for the immunization rates indicator
only when the median score is above a 90 percent
immunization rate. Countries must score above 90
percent or the median for their scorecard income
pool, whichever is lower, in order to pass the
indicator.
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the best governed, poorest countries.
When a candidate country is only
passing one of the two indicators
comprising the hurdle (instead of both),
the Board will also closely examine why
it is not passing the other indicator to
understand what the score implies for
the broader democratic environment
and trajectory of the country. This
examination will include consultation
with both local and international civil
society experts, among others. The
hurdle is an important signal of the
importance MCC places on democratic
governance and the role of MCC
programs in helping democracies
deliver development results for their
citizens—a democratic dividend.
• Control of Corruption ‘‘hard
hurdle:’’ Corruption in any country is an
unacceptable tax on economic growth
and an obstacle to the private sector
investment needed to reduce poverty.
Accordingly, MCC seeks out partner
countries that are committed to
combatting corruption. It is for this
reason that MCC also has the Control of
Corruption ‘‘hard hurdle,’’ which helps
ensure that MCC is working with
countries where there is relatively
strong performance in controlling
corruption. Requiring the passage of the
indicator incentivizes countries to
demonstrate a clear commitment to
controlling corruption, and allows MCC
to better understand the issue by seeing
how the country performs relative to its
peers and over time.
Together, the 20 policy performance
indicators are the predominant basis for
determining which eligible countries
will be selected for MCC assistance, and
the Board expects a country to be
passing its scorecard at the point the
Board decides to select the country for
a compact. The Board, however, also
recognizes that even the best-available
data has inherent challenges. Data gaps,
real-time events versus data lags, the
absence of narratives and nuanced
detail, and other similar weaknesses
affect each of these indicators. As such,
the Board uses its judgment to interpret
policy performance as measured by the
scorecards. The Board may also consult
other sources of information to enhance
its understanding of the context
underpinning a country’s policy
performance beyond scorecard issues
(e.g., specific policy issues related to
trade, the treatment of civil society,
other U.S. aid programs, financial sector
performance, and security/foreign
policy concerns). The Board uses its
judgment on how best to weigh such
information in assessing overall policy
performance and making a final
determination.
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(2) The Opportunity To Reduce Poverty
and Generate Economic Growth
While the Board considers a range of
other information sources depending on
the country, specific areas of attention
typically include better understanding
issues and trends in, and trajectory of:
• the state of democratic and human
rights (especially vulnerable groups 3);
• civil society’s perspective on salient
governance issues;
• the control of corruption and rule of
law;
• the potential for the private sector
(both local and foreign) to lead
investment and growth;
• poverty levels within a country; and
• the country’s institutional capacity.
Where applicable, the Board also
considers MCC’s own experience and
ability to reduce poverty and generate
economic growth in a given country—
such as considering MCC’s core areas of
expertise and skills versus a country’s
needs, and MCC’s capacity to work with
a country.
This information provides greater
clarity on the likelihood that MCC
programs will have an appreciable
impact on reducing poverty by
generating economic growth in a given
country. The Board has used such
information to better understand when
a country’s performance on a particular
indicator may not be up to date or is
about to change. It has also used
supplemental information to decline to
select countries that are otherwise
passing their scorecards. More details
on this subject (sometimes referred to as
‘‘supplemental information’’) can be
found on MCC’s website: www.mcc.gov/
who-we-select/indicators.
(3) The Availability of MCC Funds
The final factor that the Board must
consider when evaluating countries is
the availability of funds. The agency’s
budget is constrained, and often
specifically limited, by provisions in the
Act and in applicable appropriations
acts. MCC has a continuous pipeline of
countries in compact development,
compact implementation, threshold
programs, and program closure.
Consequently, the Board factors in
MCC’s overall portfolio when making its
selection decisions given current and
projected funding availability for each
planned or existing program.
*
*
*
*
*
The following subsections describe
how the Board applies each of these
three statutorily-mandated factors:
selection of countries for a compact,
3 For example: women; children; LGBTQI+
individuals; people with disabilities; and workers.
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selection of countries for a subsequent
compact, selection of countries for the
threshold program, and selection of
countries for a concurrent compact. A
note follows on considerations for
countries that might transition to upper
middle income country status after
initial selection.
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B. Evaluation for Selection of Eligible
Countries for a First Compact
When selecting eligible countries for
a compact, the Board looks at all three
statutorily-mandated aspects described
in the previous section: (1) policy
performance, first and foremost as
measured by the scorecards and
bolstered through supplemental
information (as described in the
previous section); (2) the opportunity to
reduce poverty and generate economic
growth, examined through the use of
other supporting information (as
described in the previous section); and
(3) available funding.
At a minimum, the Board considers
whether a country passes its scorecard.
It also examines supporting evidence
that a country’s commitment to just and
democratic governance, economic
freedom, and investing in its people is
on a sound footing and performance is
on a positive trajectory (especially on
the ‘‘hard hurdles’’ of Democratic Rights
and Control of Corruption), and that
MCC has the funds to support a
meaningful compact with that country.
Where applicable, previous threshold
program information is also considered.
For those countries currently
developing or implementing a threshold
program, the Board will examine the
progress the country has made toward
substantial implementation.
The Board then weighs the
information described above across each
of the three dimensions. During the
compact development period following
initial selection, the Board reevaluates a
selected country based on this same
approach.
C. Evaluation for Selection of Eligible
Countries for a Subsequent Compact
Section 609(l) of the Act authorizes
MCC to enter into ‘‘one or more
subsequent Compacts.’’ MCC does not
consider the eligibility of a country for
a subsequent compact, however, before
the country has completed its compact
or is within 18 months of compact end
date. Selection for a subsequent
compact is not automatic and is
intended for countries that (1) exhibit
successful performance on their
previous compact(s); (2) exhibit
improved scorecard policy performance
during the partnership; and (3) exhibit
a continued commitment to further their
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sector reform efforts in any subsequent
partnership. As a result, the Board has
an even higher standard when selecting
countries for subsequent compacts.
(1) Successful Implementation of the
Previous Compact(s)
To evaluate the previous compact’s
success, the Board examines whether
the compact succeeded within its
budget and time limits, in particular by
looking at three aspects:
• The degree to which there is
evidence of strong political will and
management capacity: Is the
partnership characterized by the
country ensuring that both policy
reforms and the compact program itself
are both being implemented to the best
of that country’s ability?
• The degree to which the country
has exhibited commitment and capacity
to achieve program results: Are the
financial and project results being
achieved; to what degree is the country
committing its own resources to ensure
the compact is a success; to what extent
is the private sector engaged (if
relevant); and other compact-specific
issues?
• The degree to which the country
has implemented the compact in
accordance with MCC’s core policies
and standards: Is the country adhering
to MCC’s policies and procedures,
including in critical areas such as:
remediating unresolved claims of fraud,
corruption, or abuse of funds;
procurement; and monitoring and
evaluation?
Appendix D provides details on the
specific information types examined
and sources used in each of the three
areas. Overall, the Board is looking for
evidence that the previous compact(s)
will be or has been completed on time
and on budget, and that there is a
commitment to continued, robust
reform going forward.
(2) Improved Scorecard Policy
Performance
The Board also expects the country to
have improved its overall scorecard
policy performance during the
partnership, and to pass the scorecard in
the year of selection for the subsequent
compact. The Board focuses on the
following:
• The overall scorecard pass/fail rate
over time, and what this suggests about
underlying policy performance, as well
as an examination of the underlying
reasons;
• The progress over time on policy
areas measured by both hard-hurdle
indicators—Democratic Rights and
Control of Corruption—including an
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examination of the underlying reasons;
and
• Other indicator trajectories deemed
relevant by the Board.
In all cases, while the Board expects
the country to be passing its scorecard,
the Board also examines other sources
of information to understand the nuance
and reasons behind scorecard or
indicator performance over time,
including any real-time updates,
methodological changes within the
indicators themselves, shifts in the
relevant candidate pool, or alternative
policy performance perspectives (such
as those gleaned through consultations
with civil society and related
stakeholders). The Board also consults
other information sources to look at
policy performance over time in areas
not covered by the scorecard, but that
the Board deemed to be important (such
as trade and foreign policy concerns).
(3) A Commitment to Further Sector
Reform
The Board expects that subsequent
compacts will endeavor to tackle deeper
policy reforms necessary to unlock an
identified constraint to growth.
Consequently, the Board considers
MCC’s own experience during the
previous compact in considering how
committed the country is to reducing
poverty and increasing economic
growth, and tries to gauge the country’s
commitment to further sector reform
should it be selected for a subsequent
compact. This includes:
• Assessing the country’s delivery of
policy reform during the previous
compact (as described above);
• Assessing expectations of the
country’s ability and willingness to
continue embarking on sector policy
reform in a subsequent compact;
• Examining both other information
sources describing the opportunity to
reduce poverty by generating growth (as
outlined in A.2 above), and the prior
compact’s relative success overall, as
already discussed; and
• Finally, considering how well
funding can be leveraged for impact,
given the country’s experience in the
previous compact.
*
*
*
*
*
Through this overall approach to
selection for a subsequent compact, the
Board applies the three statutorilymandated evaluation criteria (policy
performance, the opportunity to reduce
poverty and generate economic growth,
and available funds) in a way that
assesses the previous partnership from a
compact success standpoint, a
commitment to improved scorecard
policy performance standpoint, and a
commitment to continued sector policy
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reform standpoint. The Board then
weighs all the information described
above in making its decision.
During the compact development
period following initial selection, the
Board reevaluates a selected country
based on this same approach.
D. Evaluation for Concurrent Compacts
Section 609(k) of the Act authorizes
MCC to enter into one additional
concurrent compact with a country if
one or both of the compacts with the
country is for the purpose of regional
economic integration, increased regional
trade, or cross-border collaborations.
The fundamental criteria and process
for the selection of countries for such
compacts remains the same as those for
the selection of countries for nonconcurrent compacts: countries
continue to be evaluated and selected
individually, as described in sections
II.A, II.B, II.C, and II.F.
Section 609(k) also requires as a
precondition for a concurrent compact
that the Board determine that the
country is making ‘‘considerable and
demonstrable progress in implementing
the terms of the existing Compact and
supplementary agreements thereto.’’
This statutory requirement is fully
consistent with prior Board practice
regarding the selection of a country for
a non-concurrent compact. For a
country where a concurrent compact is
contemplated, the Board will take into
account whether there is clear evidence
of success, as relevant to the phase of
the current compact. Among other
information, the Board will examine the
evaluation criteria described in Section
II.C.1 above, notably:
• The degree to which there is
evidence of strong political will and
management capacity;
• The degree to which the country
has exhibited commitment and capacity
to achieve program results; and
• The degree to which the country
has implemented the compact in
accordance with MCC’s core policies
and standards.
In addition to providing information
to the Board so it can make its
determination regarding the country’s
progress in implementing its current
compact, MCC will provide the Board
with additional information relating to
the potential for regional economic
integration, increased regional trade, or
cross-border collaborations for any
country being considered for a
concurrent compact. This information
may include items such as:
• The current state of a country’s
regional integration, such as common
financial and political dialogue
frameworks, integration of productive
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value chains, and cross-border flows of
people, goods, and services.
• The current and potential level of
trade between a country and its
neighbors, including analysis of trade
flows and unexploited potential for
trade, and an assessment of the extent
and significance of tariff and non-tariff
barriers, including information
regarding the patterns of trade.
• The potential gains from crossborder cooperation between a country
and its neighbors to alleviate bilateral
and regional bottlenecks to economic
growth and poverty reduction, such as
through physical infrastructure or
coordinated policy and institutional
reforms.
The Board can then weigh all
information as a whole—the
fundamental selection factors described
in sections II.A, II.B, II.C, and II.F, the
information regarding implementation
of the current compact, and any
additional relevant information
regarding potential regional
integration—to determine whether or
not to direct MCC to seek to enter into
a concurrent compact with a country.
E. Evaluation for Threshold Program
Assistance
The Board may also evaluate
countries for participation in the
threshold program. Threshold programs
provide assistance to candidate
countries exhibiting a significant
commitment to meeting the criteria
described in the previous subsections,
but failing to meet such requirements.
Specifically, in examining a candidate
country’s policy performance, the
opportunity to reduce poverty and
generate economic growth, and
available funds, the Board will consider
whether a country appears to be on a
trajectory to becoming viable for
compact eligibility in the medium or
short term.
F. A Note on Potential Transition to
Upper Middle Income Country (UMIC)
Status After Initial Selection
Some candidate countries may have a
high per capita income or a high growth
rate that implies there is a chance they
could transition to UMIC status during
the life of an MCC partnership. It is not
possible to accurately predict if or when
such a transition may occur.
Nonetheless, such countries may have
more resources at their disposal for
funding their own growth and poverty
reduction strategies. As a result, in
addition to using the regular selection
criteria described in the previous
sections, the Board will use its
discretion to assess both the need and
the opportunity presented by partnering
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with such a country, in order to ensure
that MCC’s scarce grant funds are
directed appropriately.
Specifically, if a candidate country
with a high probability of transitioning
to UMIC status is under consideration
for selection, the Board will examine
additional data and information related
to the following:
• Whether the country faces
significant challenges accessing other
sources of development financing (such
as international capital, domestic
resources, and other donor assistance)
and, if so, whether MCC grant financing
would be an appropriate tool;
• Whether the nature of poverty in
the country (for example, high
inequality or poverty headcount ratios
relative to peer countries) presents a
clear and strategic opportunity for MCC
to assist the country in reducing such
poverty through projects that spur
economic growth;
• Whether the country demonstrates
particularly strong policy performance,
including policies and actions that
demonstrate a clear priority on poverty
reduction; and
• Whether MCC can reasonably
expect that the country would
contribute a significant amount of
funding to the compact.
These additional criteria would then
be applied in any additional years of
selection as the country continues to
develop its compact. Should a country
eventually transition to UMIC status
during compact development, it would
no longer be a candidate for selection
for that fiscal year. Continuing compact
development beyond that point would
then be at the Board’s discretion.
Appendix A: Statutory Basis for This
Report
This report to Congress is provided in
accordance with section 608(b) of the
Millennium Challenge Act of 2003, as
amended (the Act), 22 U.S.C. 7707(b).
Section 605 of the Act authorizes the
provision of assistance to countries that enter
into a Millennium Challenge Compact with
the United States to support policies and
programs that advance the progress of such
countries in achieving lasting economic
growth and poverty reduction. The Act
requires MCC to take a number of steps in
selecting countries for compact assistance for
FY 2024 based on the countries’
demonstrated commitment to just and
democratic governance, economic freedom,
and investing in their people, MCC’s
opportunity to reduce poverty and generate
economic growth in the country, and the
availability of funds. These steps include the
submission of reports to the congressional
committees specified in the Act and
publication of information in the Federal
Register that identify:
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(1) The countries that are ‘‘candidate
countries’’ for assistance for FY 2024 based
on per capita income levels and eligibility to
receive assistance under U.S. law (section
608(a) of the Act; 22 U.S.C. 7707(a));
(2) The criteria and methodology that
MCC’s Board of Directors (Board) will use to
measure and evaluate policy performance of
the candidate countries consistent with the
requirements of section 607 of the Act (22
U.S.C. 7706) in order to determine ‘‘eligible
countries’’ from among the ‘‘candidate
countries’’ (section 608(b) of the Act; 22
U.S.C. 7707(b)); and
(3) The list of countries determined by the
Board to be ‘‘eligible countries’’ for FY 2024,
with justification for eligibility determination
and selection for compact negotiation,
including those eligible countries with which
MCC will seek to enter into compacts
(section 608(d) of the Act; 22 U.S.C. 7707(d)).
This report satisfies item 2 above.
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Appendix B: Lists of All Candidate
Countries and Statutorily-Prohibited
Countries for Evaluation Purposes
Income Groups for Scorecards
Since MCC was created, it has relied on the
World Bank’s gross national income (GNI)
per capita income data (Atlas method) and
the historical ceiling for eligibility as set by
the World Bank’s International Development
Association (IDA) to divide countries into
two income categories for purposes of
creating scorecards. These categories are used
to account for the income bias that occurs
when countries with more per capita
resources perform better than countries with
fewer. Using the historical IDA eligibility
ceiling for the scorecard evaluation groups
ensures that the poorest countries compete
with their income level peers and are not
compared against countries with more
resources to mobilize.
MCC will continue to use the historical
IDA classifications for eligibility to categorize
countries in two groups for purposes of FY
2024 scorecard comparisons:
• Countries with GNI per capita equal to
or less than IDA’s historical ceiling for
eligibility (i.e., $2,145 for FY 2024); and
• Countries with GNI per capita above
IDA’s historical ceiling for eligibility but
below the World Bank’s upper middle
income country threshold (i.e., $2,146 and
$4,465 for FY 2024).
The list of countries for FY 2024 scorecard
assessments is set forth below:
Countries With GNI per Capita of $2,145 or
Less
1. Afghanistan
2. Angola
3. Benin
4. Burkina Faso
5. Burundi
6. Cambodia
7. Cameroon
8. Central African Republic
9. Chad
10. Comoros
11. Congo, Democratic Republic of the
12. Congo, Republic of
13. Eritrea
14. Ethiopia
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15. Gambia, The
16. Guinea
17. Guinea-Bissau
18. Haiti
19. Korea, North
20. Kyrgyzstan
21. Lesotho
22. Liberia
23. Madagascar
24. Malawi
25. Mali
26. Mozambique
27. Myanmar
28. Nepal
29. Nicaragua
30. Niger 4
31. Nigeria
32. Pakistan
33. Rwanda
34. Senegal
35. Sierra Leone
36. Somalia
37. South Sudan
38. Sudan
39. Syria
40. Tajikistan
41. Tanzania
42. Timor-Leste
43. Togo
44. Uganda
45. Yemen
46. Zambia
47. Zimbabwe
Countries With GNI per Capita Between
$2,146 and $4,465
1. Algeria
2. Bangladesh
3. Bhutan
4. Bolivia
5. Cabo Verde
6. Cote d’Ivoire
7. Djibouti
8. Egypt
9. Eswatini
10. Ghana
11. Honduras
12. India
13. Iran
14. Jordan
15. Kenya
16. Kiribati
17. Laos
18. Lebanon
19. Mauritania
20. Micronesia, Federated States of
21. Mongolia
22. Morocco
23. Papua New Guinea
24. Philippines
25. Samoa
26. Sao Tome and Principe
27. Solomon Islands
28. Sri Lanka
29. Tunisia
30. Ukraine
31. Uzbekistan
32. Vanuatu
33. Vietnam
Statutorily-Prohibited Countries
1. Burkina Faso
4 Note that, should events that began in July 2023
in Niger be assessed to trigger restrictions on foreign
assistance pursuant to the military coup restriction
in section 7008 of the FY 2023 SFOAA, Niger will
not be a candidate country.
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2. Burma
3. Cambodia
4. Eritrea
5. Guinea
6. Haiti
7. Iran
8. Korea, North
9. Mali
10. Nicaragua
11. South Sudan
12. Sri Lanka
13. Sudan
14. Syria
15. Zimbabwe
Appendix C: Indicator Definitions
The following indicators will be used to
measure candidate countries’ demonstrated
commitment to the criteria found in section
607(b) of the Act. The indicators are intended
to assess the degree to which the political
and economic conditions in a country serve
to promote broad-based sustainable economic
growth and reduction of poverty and thus
provide a sound environment for the use of
MCC funds. The indicators are not goals in
themselves; rather, they are proxy measures
of policies that are linked to broad-based
sustainable economic growth. The indicators
were selected based on (i) their relationship
to economic growth and poverty reduction;
(ii) the number of countries they cover; (iii)
transparency and availability; and (iv)
relative soundness and objectivity. Where
possible, the indicators are developed by
independent sources. Listed below is a brief
summary of the indicators (a detailed
rationale for the adoption of these indicators
can be found in the public Guide to the
Indicators on MCC’s website at
www.mcc.gov/who-we-select/indicators).
Ruling Justly
1. Political Rights: Independent experts
rate countries on the prevalence of free and
fair electoral processes; political pluralism
and participation of all stakeholders;
government accountability and transparency;
freedom from domination by the military,
foreign powers, totalitarian parties, religious
hierarchies and economic oligarchies; and
the political rights of minority groups, among
other things. Pass: Score must be above the
minimum score of 17 out of 40. Source:
Freedom House
2. Civil Liberties: Independent experts rate
countries on freedom of expression and
belief; association and organizational rights;
rule of law and human rights; and personal
autonomy and economic rights, among other
things. Pass: Score must be above the
minimum score of 25 out of 60. Source:
Freedom House
3. Freedom of Information: Measures the
legal and practical steps taken by a
government to enable or allow information to
move freely through society; this includes
measures of press freedom, national freedom
of information laws, and the extent to which
a county is shutting down social media or the
internet. Pass: Score must be above the
median score for the income group. Source:
Reporters Without Borders/Access Now/
Centre for Law and Democracy.
4. Government Effectiveness: An index of
surveys and expert assessments that rate
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countries on the quality of public service
provision; civil servants’ competency and
independence from political pressures; and
the government’s ability to plan and
implement sound policies, among other
things. Pass: Score must be above the median
score for the income group. Source:
Worldwide Governance Indicators (World
Bank/Brookings)
5. Rule of Law: An index of surveys and
expert assessments that rate countries on the
extent to which the public has confidence in
and abides by the rules of society; the
incidence and impact of violent and
nonviolent crime; the effectiveness,
independence, and predictability of the
judiciary; the protection of property rights;
and the enforceability of contracts, among
other things. Pass: Score must be above the
median score for the income group. Source:
Worldwide Governance Indicators (World
Bank/Brookings)
6. Control of Corruption: An index of
surveys and expert assessments that rate
countries on: ‘‘grand corruption’’ in the
political arena; the frequency of petty
corruption; the effects of corruption on the
business environment; and the tendency of
elites to engage in ‘‘state capture,’’ among
other things. Pass: Score must be above the
median score for the income group. Source:
Worldwide Governance Indicators (World
Bank/Brookings)
Encouraging Economic Freedom
1. Fiscal Policy: General government net
lending/borrowing as a percent of gross
domestic product (GDP), averaged over a
three-year period. Net lending/borrowing is
calculated as revenue minus total
expenditure. The data for this measure comes
from the IMF’s World Economic Outlook.
Pass: Score must be above the median score
for the income group. Source: The
International Monetary Fund’s World
Economic Outlook Database
2. Inflation: The most recent average
annual change in consumer prices. Pass:
Score must be 15 percent or less. Source: The
International Monetary Fund’s World
Economic Outlook Database
3. Regulatory Quality: An index of surveys
and expert assessments that rate countries on
the burden of regulations on business; price
controls; the government’s role in the
economy; and foreign investment regulation,
among other areas. Pass: Score must be above
the median score for the income group.
Source: Worldwide Governance Indicators
(World Bank/Brookings)
4. Trade Policy: A measure of a country’s
openness to international trade based on
weighted average tariff rates and non-tariff
barriers to trade. Pass: Score must be above
the median score for the income group.
Source: The Heritage Foundation
5. Gender in the Economy: An index that
measures the extent to which laws provide
men and women equal capacity to generate
income or participate in the economy,
including factors such as the capacity to
access institutions, get a job, register a
business, sign a contract, open a bank
account, choose where to live, to travel
freely, property rights protections,
protections against domestic violence, and
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child marriage, among others. Pass: Score
must be above the median score for the
income group. Source: Women, Business,
and the Law (World Bank) and the WORLD
Policy Analysis Center (UCLA)
6. Land Rights and Access: An index that
rates countries on the extent to which the
institutional, legal, and market framework
provides secure land tenure and equitable
access to land in rural areas and the extent
to which men and women have the right to
private property in practice and in law. Pass:
Score must be above the median score for the
income group. Source: The International
Fund for Agricultural Development and
Varieties of Democracy Index
7. Access to Credit: An index that ranks
countries based on access and use of formal
and informal financial services as measured
by the number of bank branches and ATMs
per 100,000 adults and the share of adults
that have an account at a formal or informal
financial institution. Pass: Score must be
above the median score for the income group.
Source: Financial Development Index
(International Monetary Fund) and Findex
(World Bank)
8. Equal Employment Opportunity:
Measures a country government’s
commitment to ending slavery and forced
labor, preventing employment
discrimination, and protecting the rights of
workers and people with disabilities. Pass:
Score must be above the median score for the
income group. Sources: Varieties of
Democracy Institute and WORLD Policy
Analysis Center (UCLA).
Investing in People
1. Health Expenditures: Total current
expenditures on health by government
(excluding funding sourced from external
donors) at all levels divided by GDP. Pass:
Score must be above the median score for the
income group. Source: The World Health
Organization
2. Education Expenditures: Total
expenditures on education by government at
all levels divided by GDP. Pass: Score must
be above the median score for the income
group. Source: The United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization and National Governments
3. Natural Resource Protection: Assesses a
country government’s commitment to
preserving biodiversity and natural habitats,
responsibly managing ecosystems and
fisheries, and engaging in sustainable
agriculture. Pass: Score must be above the
median score for the income group. Source:
Yale Center for Environmental Law and
Policy
4. Immunization Rates: The average of
DPT3 and measles immunization coverage
rates for the most recent year available. Pass:
Score must be above either the median score
for the income group or 90 percent,
whichever is lower. Source: The World
Health Organization and the United Nations
Children’s Fund
5. Girls Education:
a. Girls’ Primary Completion Rate: The
number of female students enrolled in the
last grade of primary education minus
repeaters divided by the population in the
relevant age cohort (gross intake ratio in the
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last grade of primary). Countries with a GNI/
capita of $2,145 or less are assessed on this
indicator. Pass: Score must be above the
median score for the income group. Source:
United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization
b. Girls’ Lower Secondary Completion Rate:
The number of female pupils that have
completed the last grade of lower secondary
education divided by the population within
three to five years of the intended age of
completion, expressed as a percentage of the
total population of females in the same age
group. Countries with a GNI/capita between
$2,146 and $4,465 are assessed on this
indicator instead of Girls’ Primary
Completion Rates. Pass: Score must be above
the median score for the income group.
Source: United Nations Educational,
Scientific and Cultural Organization
6. Child Health: An index made up of three
indicators: (i) access to improved water, (ii)
access to improved sanitation, and (iii) child
(ages 1–4) mortality. Pass: Score must be
above the median score for the income group.
Source: The Center for International Earth
Science Information Network and the Yale
Center for Environmental Law and Policy
Relationship to Statutory Criteria
Within each policy category, the Act sets
out a number of specific selection criteria. A
set of objective and quantifiable policy
indicators is used to inform eligibility
decisions for assistance and to measure the
relative performance by candidate countries
against these criteria. The Board’s approach
to determining eligibility ensures that
performance against each of these criteria is
assessed by at least one of the objective
indicators. Most are addressed by multiple
indicators. The specific indicators appear in
parentheses next to the corresponding
criterion set out in the Act.
Section 607(b)(1): Just and Democratic
Governance, Including a Demonstrated
Commitment to—
(A) promote political pluralism, equality
and the rule of law (Political Rights, Civil
Liberties, Rule of Law, and Gender in the
Economy);
(B) respect human and civil rights,
including the rights of people with
disabilities (Political Rights, Civil Liberties,
Equal Employment Opportunity, and
Freedom of Information);
(C) protect private property rights (Civil
Liberties, Regulatory Quality, Rule of Law,
and Land Rights and Access);
(D) encourage transparency and
accountability of government (Political
Rights, Civil Liberties, Freedom of
Information, Control of Corruption, Rule of
Law, and Government Effectiveness, Equal
Employment Opportunity);
(E) combat corruption (Political Rights,
Civil Liberties, Rule of Law, Freedom of
Information, and Control of Corruption); and
(F) the quality of the civil society enabling
environment (Civil Liberties, Freedom of
Information, Equal Employment
Opportunity, and Rule of Law)
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Section 607(b)(2): Economic Freedom,
Including a Demonstrated Commitment to
Economic Policies That—
(A) encourage citizens and firms to
participate in global trade and international
capital markets (Fiscal Policy, Inflation,
Trade Policy, and Regulatory Quality);
(B) promote private sector growth
(Inflation, Fiscal Policy, Land Rights and
Access, Access to Credit, Gender in the
Economy, and Regulatory Quality);
(C) strengthen market forces in the
economy (Fiscal Policy, Inflation, Trade
Policy, Land Rights and Access, Access to
Credit, and Regulatory Quality); and
(D) respect worker rights, including the
right to form labor unions (Equal
Employment Opportunity, Civil Liberties, and
Gender in the Economy)
Section 607(b)(3): Investments in the People
of Such Country, Particularly Women and
Children, Including Programs That—
(A) promote broad-based primary
education (Girls’ Primary Completion Rate,
Girls’ Secondary Education Enrollment Rate,
Total Public Expenditure on Primary
Education, and Equal Employment
Opportunity);
(B) strengthen and build capacity to
provide quality public health and reduce
child mortality (Immunization Rates, Public
Expenditure on Health, and Child Health);
and
(C) promote the protection of biodiversity
and the transparent and sustainable
management and use of natural resources
(Natural Resource Protection).
Appendix D: Subsequent and
Concurrent Compact Considerations
MCC reporting and data in the following
chart are used to assess threshold program
performance, compact performance of MCC
compact countries nearing the end of
compact implementation (i.e., within 18
months of compact end date), or for current
MCC compact countries under consideration
for a concurrent compact, where appropriate.
Some reporting used for assessment may
contain sensitive information and adversely
affect implementation or MCC-partner
country relations. This information is for
MCC’s internal use and is not made public.
However, key implementation information is
summarized in compact status and results
reports that are published quarterly on MCC’s
website under MCC country programs
Topic
64473
(www.mcc.gov/where-we-work) or monitoring
and evaluation (www.mcc.gov/our-impact/mand-e) web pages.
For completed compacts, additional
information is used to assess compact
performance and is found in a country’s Star
Report. The Star Report and its associated
quarterly business process capture key
information to provide a framework for
results and improve the ability to
disseminate learning and evidence
throughout the lifecycle of an MCC
investment from selection to final evaluation.
For each compact and threshold program,
evidence is collected on performance
indicators, evaluation results, partnerships,
sustainability efforts, and learning, among
other elements.
In addition to the Star Reports, MCC also
surveys staff on topics related to the quality
of the partnership during design and
implementation of programs, progress toward
program results, a partner country’s
commitment to undertaking policy and
institutional reforms, and compliance with
MCC standards. Additional information on
the survey can be found in the Guide to the
Program Surveys: https://www.mcc.gov/
resources/doc/guide-to-program-surveysfy23.
MCC reporting/data source
Published documents
COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP
Political Will
• Status of major conditions precedent
• Program oversight/implementation
Æ project restructures
Æ partner response to accountable entity capacity
issues
• Political independence of the accountable entity
Management Capacity
• Project management capacity
• Project performance
• Level of MCC intervention/oversight
• Relative level of resources required
• Quarterly implementation reporting
• Quarterly results reporting
• MCC Star Reports
• Quarterly results published as ‘‘Table of Key Performance Indicators’’ (available by country): https://www.mcc.gov/our-impact/m-and-e.
• Star Reports (available by country): https://www.mcc.gov/resources?fwp_resource_type=star-report.
PROGRAM RESULTS
Financial Results
• Commitments—including contributions to compact and
threshold funding
• Disbursements
Project Results
• Output, outcome, objective targets
• Accountable entity commitment to ‘focus on results’
• Accountable entity cooperation on impact evaluation
• Percent complete for process/outputs
• Relevant outcome data
• Details behind target delays
Target Achievements
• Indicator tracking tables
• Quarterly financial reporting
• Quarterly implementation reporting
• Quarterly results reporting
• Impact evaluations
• MCC Star Reports
• Monitoring and Evaluation Plans (available by country):
https://www.mcc.gov/our-impact/m-and-e.
• Quarterly results published as ‘‘Table of Key Performance Indicators’’ (available by country): https://www.mcc.gov/our-impact/m-and-e.
• Star Reports (available by country): https://www.mcc.gov/resources?fwp_resource_type=star-report.
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ADHERENCE TO STANDARDS
•
•
•
•
•
•
• Audits (GAO and OIG)
• Quarterly implementation reporting
• MCC Star Reports
Procurement
Environmental and social
Fraud and corruption
Program closure
Monitoring and evaluation
All other legal provisions
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• Published OIG and GAO audits.
• Star Reports (available by country): https://www.mcc.gov/resources?fwp_resource_type=star-report.
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Topic
MCC reporting/data source
Published documents
COUNTRY SPECIFIC
Sustainability
• Implementation entity
• MCC investments
Role of private sector or other donors
• Other relevant investors/investments
• Other donors/programming
• Status of related reforms
• Trajectory of private sector involvement going forward
[FR Doc. 2023–20163 Filed 9–18–23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9211–03–P
NATIONAL CREDIT UNION
ADMINISTRATION
Sunshine Act Meetings
10:00 a.m., Thursday,
September 21, 2023.
PLACE: Board Room, 7th Floor, Room
7B, 1775 Duke Street (All visitors must
use Diagonal Road Entrance),
Alexandria, VA 22314–3428.
STATUS: Open.
MATTERS TO BE CONSIDERED:
1. Board Briefing, Share Insurance
Fund Quarterly Report.
2. NCUA Rules and Regulations,
Financial Innovation—Loan
Participation, Eligible Obligations, and
Notes of Liquidating Credit Unions.
TIME AND DATE:
CONTACT PERSON FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks, Secretary of
the Board, Telephone: 703–518–6304.
Melane Conyers-Ausbrooks,
Secretary of the Board.
[FR Doc. 2023–20300 Filed 9–15–23; 11:15 am]
BILLING CODE 7535–01–P
NATIONAL FOUNDATION ON THE
ARTS AND THE HUMANITIES
National Endowment for the Arts
2023 Tribal Consultation
AGENCY:
National Endowment for the
Arts.
ACTION:
Notice.
The National Endowment for
the Arts will conduct a Tribal
Consultation at the 2023 International
Conference of Indigenous Tribal
Archives, Libraries, and Museums in
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma on
Wednesday, October 25, 2023, 2:30–3:30
p.m. CDT.
DATES: The 2023 Tribal Consultation
will take place on October 25, 2023,
2:30–3:30 p.m. CDT. Tribal leaders
wishing to send a proxy to the
consultation session should send
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SUMMARY:
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• Quarterly implementation reporting
• Quarterly results reporting
• MCC Star Reports
• Quarterly results published as ‘‘Table of Key Performance Indicators’’ (available by country): https://www.mcc.gov/our-impact/m-and-e.
• Star Reports (available by country): https://www.mcc.gov/resources?fwp_resource_type=star-report.
notification to the email address listed
in the address section below by October
18, 2023. If neither a tribal leader nor a
proxy is able to attend this consultation
session, please provide written
comments to the email address listed in
the address section below by November
15, 2023.
ADDRESSES: Please RSVP for this
meeting by emailing NativeArts@
arts.gov. Proxy notifications and written
comments may also be sent to
NativeArts@arts.gov by the dates listed
above.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
The agenda is as follows:
1. NEA Resources
a. The NEA, established by Congress
in 1965, is an independent Federal
agency that is the largest funder of the
arts and arts education in communities
nationwide and a catalyst of public and
private support for the arts. By
advancing equitable opportunities for
arts participation and practice, the NEA
fosters and sustains an environment in
which the arts benefit everyone in the
United States. This is accomplished
primarily by providing resources to
support the creative lives of all
communities in the United States.
Grants are awarded for specific projects
to 501(c)(3) nonprofit organizations,
federally recognized Tribes, or units of
State or local government. Individual
makers, artists, and culture bearers are
recognized and supported through
programs such as the National Heritage
Fellowship, Jazz Masters, and Creative
Writing Fellowships. Forty percent of
the NEA’s program budget is granted to
State Arts Agencies and Regional Arts
Organizations, which make subgrants to
support additional arts activities across
the nation.
i. What is your awareness of our
agency’s work?
ii. Have NEA resources impacted your
community? If so, how?
iii. To what extent do you see the arts
and cultural activities of your tribal
community reflected in the resources
we offer?
iv. The review criteria for our primary
grant program, Grants for Arts Projects,
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includes artistic excellence, which is
defined as ‘‘The quality of the artists
and other key individuals, creative
process, works of art, organizations, arts
education providers, artistic partners,
and/or services involved in the project
and their relevance to the audience or
communities the project aims to serve.’’
How does this definition of artistic
excellence resonate with the artistic and
cultural activities of your tribal
community?
2. Tribal Engagement
a. In recent years, the NEA has made
grants to Tribal governments and Tribal
Colleges & Universities (TCUs). We also
have recognized Indigenous artists with
National Heritage Fellowships. These
direct grants to Tribes, Tribal citizens,
and TCUs are in addition to the grants
we make to Native-serving nonprofits.
i. How can the NEA expand on this
engagement with tribes and increase
awareness of these opportunities?
ii. If the NEA has the resources to
send staff representation to in-person
events, where would our participation
be most effective?
b. The NEA annually updates the
Federal Resources for Native Arts &
Cultural Activities, which is a
consolidation of opportunities offered
by federal agencies for organizations
looking for funding and other resources
to support Native arts and cultural
activities.
i. Have you ever accessed this
publication?
ii. Is this publication a useful resource
to make available to tribal communities?
iii. How can we increase awareness of
this resource guide?
3. Partnerships With Tribal-Serving
Organizations
a. Tribal Arts Councils: At the last
NEA Tribal Consultation session, the
NEA discussed the possibility of
supporting the work of Tribal Arts
Councils, bodies organized to support
arts and cultural activities at the
regional level by providing programs
and support services. These Tribal Arts
Councils could be similar in form to
State, regional or local Arts agencies,
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Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 88, Number 180 (Tuesday, September 19, 2023)]
[Notices]
[Pages 64467-64474]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2023-20163]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
MILLENNIUM CHALLENGE CORPORATION
[MCC FR 23-05]
Millennium Challenge Corporation Selection Criteria and
Methodology Report for Fiscal Year 2024
AGENCY: Millennium Challenge Corporation.
ACTION: Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: The Millennium Challenge Act of 2003, as amended, requires the
Millennium Challenge Corporation to publish a report that identifies
the criteria and methodology that MCC intends to use to determine which
candidate countries may be eligible to be considered for assistance
under the Millennium Challenge Act for fiscal year 2024. The report is
set forth in full below.
(Authority: 22 U.S.C. 7707(b)(2))
Dated: September 13, 2023.
Gina Porto Spiro,
Acting Vice President, General Counsel, and Corporate Secretary.
Millennium Challenge Corporation
Selection Criteria and Methodology Report for Fiscal Year 2024
This document explains how the Board of Directors (the Board) of
the Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) will identify, evaluate, and
select eligible countries for fiscal year (FY) 2024. Specifically, this
document discusses the following:
(I) Which countries MCC will evaluate
(II) How the Board evaluates these countries
A. Overall evaluation
B. For selection of an eligible country for a first compact
C. For selection of an eligible country for a subsequent compact
D. For selection of an eligible country for a concurrent compact
E. For threshold program assistance
F. A note on potential transition to upper middle income country
status after initial selection
This report is provided in accordance with section 608(b) of the
Millennium Challenge Act of 2003, as amended (the Act), as more fully
described in Appendix A.
(I) Which countries are evaluated?
MCC evaluates the policy performance of all candidate countries and
statutorily-prohibited countries by dividing them into two income
categories for the purposes of creating ``scorecards.'' These
categories are used to account for the income bias that occurs when
countries with more per capita resources perform better than countries
with fewer. In FY 2024, those scorecard evaluation income categories
\1\ are:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\ These income groups correspond to the definitions of low
income countries and lower middle countries using the historical
International Development Association (IDA) threshold published by
the World Bank. MCC has used these categories to evaluate country
performance since FY 2004. Our amended statute no longer uses those
definitions for funding purposes, but we continue to use them for
evaluation purposes.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Countries whose gross national income (GNI) per capita is
$2,145 or less; and
Countries whose GNI per capita is between $2,146 and
$4,465.
Appendix B lists all candidate countries and statutorily-prohibited
countries for scorecard evaluation purposes.
(II) How does the Board evaluate these countries?
A. Overall Evaluation
The Board looks at three statutorily-mandated factors when it
evaluates any candidate country for compact eligibility: (1) policy
performance; (2) the opportunity to reduce poverty and generate
economic growth; and (3) the availability of MCC funds.
(1) Policy Performance
Appendix C describes all 20 indicators, their definitions, what is
required to ``pass,'' their source, and their relationship to the
statutory criteria. Because of the importance of evaluating a country's
policy performance in a comparable, cross-
[[Page 64468]]
country way, the Board relies to the maximum extent possible upon the
best-available objective and quantifiable policy performance
indicators. These indicators act as proxies for a country's commitment
to just and democratic governance, economic freedom, and investing in
its people, per MCC's founding statute. Comprised of 20 third-party
indicators in the categories of ruling justly, encouraging economic
freedom, and investing in people, MCC scorecards are created for all
candidate countries and statutorily-prohibited countries. To ``pass''
most indicators on its scorecard, a country's score on each indicator
must be above the median score in its income group (as defined above
for scorecard evaluation purposes). For the inflation, political
rights, civil liberties, and immunization rates \2\ indicators,
however, MCC has established minimum or maximum scores for ``passing.''
In particular, the Board considers whether a country:
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\2\ A minimum score required to pass has been established for
the immunization rates indicator only when the median score is above
a 90 percent immunization rate. Countries must score above 90
percent or the median for their scorecard income pool, whichever is
lower, in order to pass the indicator.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
passed at least 10 of the 20 indicators, with at least one
pass in each of the three categories,
passed either the Political Rights or Civil Liberties
indicator; and
passed the Control of Corruption indicator.
While satisfaction of all three aspects means a country is termed
to have ``passed'' the scorecard, the Board also considers whether the
country performs ``substantially worse'' in any one policy category
than it does on the scorecard overall.
The mandatory passing of either the Political Rights or Civil
Liberties indicators is called the Democratic Rights ``hard hurdle'' on
the scorecard, while the mandatory passing of the Control of Corruption
indicator is called the Control of Corruption ``hard hurdle.'' Not
passing either ``hard hurdle'' results in not passing the scorecard
overall, regardless of whether at least 10 of the 20 other indicators
are passed.
Democratic Rights ``hard hurdle:'' This hurdle sets a
minimum bar for democratic rights below which the Board will not
consider a country for eligibility. Requiring that a country pass
either the Political Rights or Civil Liberties indicator creates a
democratic incentive for countries, recognizes the importance democracy
plays in driving poverty-reducing economic growth, and holds MCC
accountable to working with the best governed, poorest countries. When
a candidate country is only passing one of the two indicators
comprising the hurdle (instead of both), the Board will also closely
examine why it is not passing the other indicator to understand what
the score implies for the broader democratic environment and trajectory
of the country. This examination will include consultation with both
local and international civil society experts, among others. The hurdle
is an important signal of the importance MCC places on democratic
governance and the role of MCC programs in helping democracies deliver
development results for their citizens--a democratic dividend.
Control of Corruption ``hard hurdle:'' Corruption in any
country is an unacceptable tax on economic growth and an obstacle to
the private sector investment needed to reduce poverty. Accordingly,
MCC seeks out partner countries that are committed to combatting
corruption. It is for this reason that MCC also has the Control of
Corruption ``hard hurdle,'' which helps ensure that MCC is working with
countries where there is relatively strong performance in controlling
corruption. Requiring the passage of the indicator incentivizes
countries to demonstrate a clear commitment to controlling corruption,
and allows MCC to better understand the issue by seeing how the country
performs relative to its peers and over time.
Together, the 20 policy performance indicators are the predominant
basis for determining which eligible countries will be selected for MCC
assistance, and the Board expects a country to be passing its scorecard
at the point the Board decides to select the country for a compact. The
Board, however, also recognizes that even the best-available data has
inherent challenges. Data gaps, real-time events versus data lags, the
absence of narratives and nuanced detail, and other similar weaknesses
affect each of these indicators. As such, the Board uses its judgment
to interpret policy performance as measured by the scorecards. The
Board may also consult other sources of information to enhance its
understanding of the context underpinning a country's policy
performance beyond scorecard issues (e.g., specific policy issues
related to trade, the treatment of civil society, other U.S. aid
programs, financial sector performance, and security/foreign policy
concerns). The Board uses its judgment on how best to weigh such
information in assessing overall policy performance and making a final
determination.
(2) The Opportunity To Reduce Poverty and Generate Economic Growth
While the Board considers a range of other information sources
depending on the country, specific areas of attention typically include
better understanding issues and trends in, and trajectory of:
the state of democratic and human rights (especially
vulnerable groups \3\);
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\3\ For example: women; children; LGBTQI+ individuals; people
with disabilities; and workers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
civil society's perspective on salient governance issues;
the control of corruption and rule of law;
the potential for the private sector (both local and
foreign) to lead investment and growth;
poverty levels within a country; and
the country's institutional capacity.
Where applicable, the Board also considers MCC's own experience and
ability to reduce poverty and generate economic growth in a given
country--such as considering MCC's core areas of expertise and skills
versus a country's needs, and MCC's capacity to work with a country.
This information provides greater clarity on the likelihood that
MCC programs will have an appreciable impact on reducing poverty by
generating economic growth in a given country. The Board has used such
information to better understand when a country's performance on a
particular indicator may not be up to date or is about to change. It
has also used supplemental information to decline to select countries
that are otherwise passing their scorecards. More details on this
subject (sometimes referred to as ``supplemental information'') can be
found on MCC's website: www.mcc.gov/who-we-select/indicators.
(3) The Availability of MCC Funds
The final factor that the Board must consider when evaluating
countries is the availability of funds. The agency's budget is
constrained, and often specifically limited, by provisions in the Act
and in applicable appropriations acts. MCC has a continuous pipeline of
countries in compact development, compact implementation, threshold
programs, and program closure. Consequently, the Board factors in MCC's
overall portfolio when making its selection decisions given current and
projected funding availability for each planned or existing program.
* * * * *
The following subsections describe how the Board applies each of
these three statutorily-mandated factors: selection of countries for a
compact,
[[Page 64469]]
selection of countries for a subsequent compact, selection of countries
for the threshold program, and selection of countries for a concurrent
compact. A note follows on considerations for countries that might
transition to upper middle income country status after initial
selection.
B. Evaluation for Selection of Eligible Countries for a First Compact
When selecting eligible countries for a compact, the Board looks at
all three statutorily-mandated aspects described in the previous
section: (1) policy performance, first and foremost as measured by the
scorecards and bolstered through supplemental information (as described
in the previous section); (2) the opportunity to reduce poverty and
generate economic growth, examined through the use of other supporting
information (as described in the previous section); and (3) available
funding.
At a minimum, the Board considers whether a country passes its
scorecard. It also examines supporting evidence that a country's
commitment to just and democratic governance, economic freedom, and
investing in its people is on a sound footing and performance is on a
positive trajectory (especially on the ``hard hurdles'' of Democratic
Rights and Control of Corruption), and that MCC has the funds to
support a meaningful compact with that country. Where applicable,
previous threshold program information is also considered. For those
countries currently developing or implementing a threshold program, the
Board will examine the progress the country has made toward substantial
implementation.
The Board then weighs the information described above across each
of the three dimensions. During the compact development period
following initial selection, the Board reevaluates a selected country
based on this same approach.
C. Evaluation for Selection of Eligible Countries for a Subsequent
Compact
Section 609(l) of the Act authorizes MCC to enter into ``one or
more subsequent Compacts.'' MCC does not consider the eligibility of a
country for a subsequent compact, however, before the country has
completed its compact or is within 18 months of compact end date.
Selection for a subsequent compact is not automatic and is intended for
countries that (1) exhibit successful performance on their previous
compact(s); (2) exhibit improved scorecard policy performance during
the partnership; and (3) exhibit a continued commitment to further
their sector reform efforts in any subsequent partnership. As a result,
the Board has an even higher standard when selecting countries for
subsequent compacts.
(1) Successful Implementation of the Previous Compact(s)
To evaluate the previous compact's success, the Board examines
whether the compact succeeded within its budget and time limits, in
particular by looking at three aspects:
The degree to which there is evidence of strong political
will and management capacity: Is the partnership characterized by the
country ensuring that both policy reforms and the compact program
itself are both being implemented to the best of that country's
ability?
The degree to which the country has exhibited commitment
and capacity to achieve program results: Are the financial and project
results being achieved; to what degree is the country committing its
own resources to ensure the compact is a success; to what extent is the
private sector engaged (if relevant); and other compact-specific
issues?
The degree to which the country has implemented the
compact in accordance with MCC's core policies and standards: Is the
country adhering to MCC's policies and procedures, including in
critical areas such as: remediating unresolved claims of fraud,
corruption, or abuse of funds; procurement; and monitoring and
evaluation?
Appendix D provides details on the specific information types
examined and sources used in each of the three areas. Overall, the
Board is looking for evidence that the previous compact(s) will be or
has been completed on time and on budget, and that there is a
commitment to continued, robust reform going forward.
(2) Improved Scorecard Policy Performance
The Board also expects the country to have improved its overall
scorecard policy performance during the partnership, and to pass the
scorecard in the year of selection for the subsequent compact. The
Board focuses on the following:
The overall scorecard pass/fail rate over time, and what
this suggests about underlying policy performance, as well as an
examination of the underlying reasons;
The progress over time on policy areas measured by both
hard-hurdle indicators--Democratic Rights and Control of Corruption--
including an examination of the underlying reasons; and
Other indicator trajectories deemed relevant by the Board.
In all cases, while the Board expects the country to be passing its
scorecard, the Board also examines other sources of information to
understand the nuance and reasons behind scorecard or indicator
performance over time, including any real-time updates, methodological
changes within the indicators themselves, shifts in the relevant
candidate pool, or alternative policy performance perspectives (such as
those gleaned through consultations with civil society and related
stakeholders). The Board also consults other information sources to
look at policy performance over time in areas not covered by the
scorecard, but that the Board deemed to be important (such as trade and
foreign policy concerns).
(3) A Commitment to Further Sector Reform
The Board expects that subsequent compacts will endeavor to tackle
deeper policy reforms necessary to unlock an identified constraint to
growth. Consequently, the Board considers MCC's own experience during
the previous compact in considering how committed the country is to
reducing poverty and increasing economic growth, and tries to gauge the
country's commitment to further sector reform should it be selected for
a subsequent compact. This includes:
Assessing the country's delivery of policy reform during
the previous compact (as described above);
Assessing expectations of the country's ability and
willingness to continue embarking on sector policy reform in a
subsequent compact;
Examining both other information sources describing the
opportunity to reduce poverty by generating growth (as outlined in A.2
above), and the prior compact's relative success overall, as already
discussed; and
Finally, considering how well funding can be leveraged for
impact, given the country's experience in the previous compact.
* * * * *
Through this overall approach to selection for a subsequent
compact, the Board applies the three statutorily-mandated evaluation
criteria (policy performance, the opportunity to reduce poverty and
generate economic growth, and available funds) in a way that assesses
the previous partnership from a compact success standpoint, a
commitment to improved scorecard policy performance standpoint, and a
commitment to continued sector policy
[[Page 64470]]
reform standpoint. The Board then weighs all the information described
above in making its decision.
During the compact development period following initial selection,
the Board reevaluates a selected country based on this same approach.
D. Evaluation for Concurrent Compacts
Section 609(k) of the Act authorizes MCC to enter into one
additional concurrent compact with a country if one or both of the
compacts with the country is for the purpose of regional economic
integration, increased regional trade, or cross-border collaborations.
The fundamental criteria and process for the selection of countries
for such compacts remains the same as those for the selection of
countries for non-concurrent compacts: countries continue to be
evaluated and selected individually, as described in sections II.A,
II.B, II.C, and II.F.
Section 609(k) also requires as a precondition for a concurrent
compact that the Board determine that the country is making
``considerable and demonstrable progress in implementing the terms of
the existing Compact and supplementary agreements thereto.'' This
statutory requirement is fully consistent with prior Board practice
regarding the selection of a country for a non-concurrent compact. For
a country where a concurrent compact is contemplated, the Board will
take into account whether there is clear evidence of success, as
relevant to the phase of the current compact. Among other information,
the Board will examine the evaluation criteria described in Section
II.C.1 above, notably:
The degree to which there is evidence of strong political
will and management capacity;
The degree to which the country has exhibited commitment
and capacity to achieve program results; and
The degree to which the country has implemented the
compact in accordance with MCC's core policies and standards.
In addition to providing information to the Board so it can make
its determination regarding the country's progress in implementing its
current compact, MCC will provide the Board with additional information
relating to the potential for regional economic integration, increased
regional trade, or cross-border collaborations for any country being
considered for a concurrent compact. This information may include items
such as:
The current state of a country's regional integration,
such as common financial and political dialogue frameworks, integration
of productive value chains, and cross-border flows of people, goods,
and services.
The current and potential level of trade between a country
and its neighbors, including analysis of trade flows and unexploited
potential for trade, and an assessment of the extent and significance
of tariff and non-tariff barriers, including information regarding the
patterns of trade.
The potential gains from cross-border cooperation between
a country and its neighbors to alleviate bilateral and regional
bottlenecks to economic growth and poverty reduction, such as through
physical infrastructure or coordinated policy and institutional
reforms.
The Board can then weigh all information as a whole--the
fundamental selection factors described in sections II.A, II.B, II.C,
and II.F, the information regarding implementation of the current
compact, and any additional relevant information regarding potential
regional integration--to determine whether or not to direct MCC to seek
to enter into a concurrent compact with a country.
E. Evaluation for Threshold Program Assistance
The Board may also evaluate countries for participation in the
threshold program. Threshold programs provide assistance to candidate
countries exhibiting a significant commitment to meeting the criteria
described in the previous subsections, but failing to meet such
requirements. Specifically, in examining a candidate country's policy
performance, the opportunity to reduce poverty and generate economic
growth, and available funds, the Board will consider whether a country
appears to be on a trajectory to becoming viable for compact
eligibility in the medium or short term.
F. A Note on Potential Transition to Upper Middle Income Country (UMIC)
Status After Initial Selection
Some candidate countries may have a high per capita income or a
high growth rate that implies there is a chance they could transition
to UMIC status during the life of an MCC partnership. It is not
possible to accurately predict if or when such a transition may occur.
Nonetheless, such countries may have more resources at their
disposal for funding their own growth and poverty reduction strategies.
As a result, in addition to using the regular selection criteria
described in the previous sections, the Board will use its discretion
to assess both the need and the opportunity presented by partnering
with such a country, in order to ensure that MCC's scarce grant funds
are directed appropriately.
Specifically, if a candidate country with a high probability of
transitioning to UMIC status is under consideration for selection, the
Board will examine additional data and information related to the
following:
Whether the country faces significant challenges accessing
other sources of development financing (such as international capital,
domestic resources, and other donor assistance) and, if so, whether MCC
grant financing would be an appropriate tool;
Whether the nature of poverty in the country (for example,
high inequality or poverty headcount ratios relative to peer countries)
presents a clear and strategic opportunity for MCC to assist the
country in reducing such poverty through projects that spur economic
growth;
Whether the country demonstrates particularly strong
policy performance, including policies and actions that demonstrate a
clear priority on poverty reduction; and
Whether MCC can reasonably expect that the country would
contribute a significant amount of funding to the compact.
These additional criteria would then be applied in any additional
years of selection as the country continues to develop its compact.
Should a country eventually transition to UMIC status during compact
development, it would no longer be a candidate for selection for that
fiscal year. Continuing compact development beyond that point would
then be at the Board's discretion.
Appendix A: Statutory Basis for This Report
This report to Congress is provided in accordance with section
608(b) of the Millennium Challenge Act of 2003, as amended (the
Act), 22 U.S.C. 7707(b).
Section 605 of the Act authorizes the provision of assistance to
countries that enter into a Millennium Challenge Compact with the
United States to support policies and programs that advance the
progress of such countries in achieving lasting economic growth and
poverty reduction. The Act requires MCC to take a number of steps in
selecting countries for compact assistance for FY 2024 based on the
countries' demonstrated commitment to just and democratic
governance, economic freedom, and investing in their people, MCC's
opportunity to reduce poverty and generate economic growth in the
country, and the availability of funds. These steps include the
submission of reports to the congressional committees specified in
the Act and publication of information in the Federal Register that
identify:
[[Page 64471]]
(1) The countries that are ``candidate countries'' for
assistance for FY 2024 based on per capita income levels and
eligibility to receive assistance under U.S. law (section 608(a) of
the Act; 22 U.S.C. 7707(a));
(2) The criteria and methodology that MCC's Board of Directors
(Board) will use to measure and evaluate policy performance of the
candidate countries consistent with the requirements of section 607
of the Act (22 U.S.C. 7706) in order to determine ``eligible
countries'' from among the ``candidate countries'' (section 608(b)
of the Act; 22 U.S.C. 7707(b)); and
(3) The list of countries determined by the Board to be
``eligible countries'' for FY 2024, with justification for
eligibility determination and selection for compact negotiation,
including those eligible countries with which MCC will seek to enter
into compacts (section 608(d) of the Act; 22 U.S.C. 7707(d)).
This report satisfies item 2 above.
Appendix B: Lists of All Candidate Countries and Statutorily-Prohibited
Countries for Evaluation Purposes
Income Groups for Scorecards
Since MCC was created, it has relied on the World Bank's gross
national income (GNI) per capita income data (Atlas method) and the
historical ceiling for eligibility as set by the World Bank's
International Development Association (IDA) to divide countries into
two income categories for purposes of creating scorecards. These
categories are used to account for the income bias that occurs when
countries with more per capita resources perform better than
countries with fewer. Using the historical IDA eligibility ceiling
for the scorecard evaluation groups ensures that the poorest
countries compete with their income level peers and are not compared
against countries with more resources to mobilize.
MCC will continue to use the historical IDA classifications for
eligibility to categorize countries in two groups for purposes of FY
2024 scorecard comparisons:
Countries with GNI per capita equal to or less than
IDA's historical ceiling for eligibility (i.e., $2,145 for FY 2024);
and
Countries with GNI per capita above IDA's historical
ceiling for eligibility but below the World Bank's upper middle
income country threshold (i.e., $2,146 and $4,465 for FY 2024).
The list of countries for FY 2024 scorecard assessments is set
forth below:
Countries With GNI per Capita of $2,145 or Less
1. Afghanistan
2. Angola
3. Benin
4. Burkina Faso
5. Burundi
6. Cambodia
7. Cameroon
8. Central African Republic
9. Chad
10. Comoros
11. Congo, Democratic Republic of the
12. Congo, Republic of
13. Eritrea
14. Ethiopia
15. Gambia, The
16. Guinea
17. Guinea-Bissau
18. Haiti
19. Korea, North
20. Kyrgyzstan
21. Lesotho
22. Liberia
23. Madagascar
24. Malawi
25. Mali
26. Mozambique
27. Myanmar
28. Nepal
29. Nicaragua
30. Niger \4\
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\4\ Note that, should events that began in July 2023 in Niger be
assessed to trigger restrictions on foreign assistance pursuant to
the military coup restriction in section 7008 of the FY 2023 SFOAA,
Niger will not be a candidate country.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
31. Nigeria
32. Pakistan
33. Rwanda
34. Senegal
35. Sierra Leone
36. Somalia
37. South Sudan
38. Sudan
39. Syria
40. Tajikistan
41. Tanzania
42. Timor-Leste
43. Togo
44. Uganda
45. Yemen
46. Zambia
47. Zimbabwe
Countries With GNI per Capita Between $2,146 and $4,465
1. Algeria
2. Bangladesh
3. Bhutan
4. Bolivia
5. Cabo Verde
6. Cote d'Ivoire
7. Djibouti
8. Egypt
9. Eswatini
10. Ghana
11. Honduras
12. India
13. Iran
14. Jordan
15. Kenya
16. Kiribati
17. Laos
18. Lebanon
19. Mauritania
20. Micronesia, Federated States of
21. Mongolia
22. Morocco
23. Papua New Guinea
24. Philippines
25. Samoa
26. Sao Tome and Principe
27. Solomon Islands
28. Sri Lanka
29. Tunisia
30. Ukraine
31. Uzbekistan
32. Vanuatu
33. Vietnam
Statutorily-Prohibited Countries
1. Burkina Faso
2. Burma
3. Cambodia
4. Eritrea
5. Guinea
6. Haiti
7. Iran
8. Korea, North
9. Mali
10. Nicaragua
11. South Sudan
12. Sri Lanka
13. Sudan
14. Syria
15. Zimbabwe
Appendix C: Indicator Definitions
The following indicators will be used to measure candidate
countries' demonstrated commitment to the criteria found in section
607(b) of the Act. The indicators are intended to assess the degree
to which the political and economic conditions in a country serve to
promote broad-based sustainable economic growth and reduction of
poverty and thus provide a sound environment for the use of MCC
funds. The indicators are not goals in themselves; rather, they are
proxy measures of policies that are linked to broad-based
sustainable economic growth. The indicators were selected based on
(i) their relationship to economic growth and poverty reduction;
(ii) the number of countries they cover; (iii) transparency and
availability; and (iv) relative soundness and objectivity. Where
possible, the indicators are developed by independent sources.
Listed below is a brief summary of the indicators (a detailed
rationale for the adoption of these indicators can be found in the
public Guide to the Indicators on MCC's website at www.mcc.gov/who-we-select/indicators).
Ruling Justly
1. Political Rights: Independent experts rate countries on the
prevalence of free and fair electoral processes; political pluralism
and participation of all stakeholders; government accountability and
transparency; freedom from domination by the military, foreign
powers, totalitarian parties, religious hierarchies and economic
oligarchies; and the political rights of minority groups, among
other things. Pass: Score must be above the minimum score of 17 out
of 40. Source: Freedom House
2. Civil Liberties: Independent experts rate countries on
freedom of expression and belief; association and organizational
rights; rule of law and human rights; and personal autonomy and
economic rights, among other things. Pass: Score must be above the
minimum score of 25 out of 60. Source: Freedom House
3. Freedom of Information: Measures the legal and practical
steps taken by a government to enable or allow information to move
freely through society; this includes measures of press freedom,
national freedom of information laws, and the extent to which a
county is shutting down social media or the internet. Pass: Score
must be above the median score for the income group. Source:
Reporters Without Borders/Access Now/Centre for Law and Democracy.
4. Government Effectiveness: An index of surveys and expert
assessments that rate
[[Page 64472]]
countries on the quality of public service provision; civil
servants' competency and independence from political pressures; and
the government's ability to plan and implement sound policies, among
other things. Pass: Score must be above the median score for the
income group. Source: Worldwide Governance Indicators (World Bank/
Brookings)
5. Rule of Law: An index of surveys and expert assessments that
rate countries on the extent to which the public has confidence in
and abides by the rules of society; the incidence and impact of
violent and nonviolent crime; the effectiveness, independence, and
predictability of the judiciary; the protection of property rights;
and the enforceability of contracts, among other things. Pass: Score
must be above the median score for the income group. Source:
Worldwide Governance Indicators (World Bank/Brookings)
6. Control of Corruption: An index of surveys and expert
assessments that rate countries on: ``grand corruption'' in the
political arena; the frequency of petty corruption; the effects of
corruption on the business environment; and the tendency of elites
to engage in ``state capture,'' among other things. Pass: Score must
be above the median score for the income group. Source: Worldwide
Governance Indicators (World Bank/Brookings)
Encouraging Economic Freedom
1. Fiscal Policy: General government net lending/borrowing as a
percent of gross domestic product (GDP), averaged over a three-year
period. Net lending/borrowing is calculated as revenue minus total
expenditure. The data for this measure comes from the IMF's World
Economic Outlook. Pass: Score must be above the median score for the
income group. Source: The International Monetary Fund's World
Economic Outlook Database
2. Inflation: The most recent average annual change in consumer
prices. Pass: Score must be 15 percent or less. Source: The
International Monetary Fund's World Economic Outlook Database
3. Regulatory Quality: An index of surveys and expert
assessments that rate countries on the burden of regulations on
business; price controls; the government's role in the economy; and
foreign investment regulation, among other areas. Pass: Score must
be above the median score for the income group. Source: Worldwide
Governance Indicators (World Bank/Brookings)
4. Trade Policy: A measure of a country's openness to
international trade based on weighted average tariff rates and non-
tariff barriers to trade. Pass: Score must be above the median score
for the income group. Source: The Heritage Foundation
5. Gender in the Economy: An index that measures the extent to
which laws provide men and women equal capacity to generate income
or participate in the economy, including factors such as the
capacity to access institutions, get a job, register a business,
sign a contract, open a bank account, choose where to live, to
travel freely, property rights protections, protections against
domestic violence, and child marriage, among others. Pass: Score
must be above the median score for the income group. Source: Women,
Business, and the Law (World Bank) and the WORLD Policy Analysis
Center (UCLA)
6. Land Rights and Access: An index that rates countries on the
extent to which the institutional, legal, and market framework
provides secure land tenure and equitable access to land in rural
areas and the extent to which men and women have the right to
private property in practice and in law. Pass: Score must be above
the median score for the income group. Source: The International
Fund for Agricultural Development and Varieties of Democracy Index
7. Access to Credit: An index that ranks countries based on
access and use of formal and informal financial services as measured
by the number of bank branches and ATMs per 100,000 adults and the
share of adults that have an account at a formal or informal
financial institution. Pass: Score must be above the median score
for the income group. Source: Financial Development Index
(International Monetary Fund) and Findex (World Bank)
8. Equal Employment Opportunity: Measures a country government's
commitment to ending slavery and forced labor, preventing employment
discrimination, and protecting the rights of workers and people with
disabilities. Pass: Score must be above the median score for the
income group. Sources: Varieties of Democracy Institute and WORLD
Policy Analysis Center (UCLA).
Investing in People
1. Health Expenditures: Total current expenditures on health by
government (excluding funding sourced from external donors) at all
levels divided by GDP. Pass: Score must be above the median score
for the income group. Source: The World Health Organization
2. Education Expenditures: Total expenditures on education by
government at all levels divided by GDP. Pass: Score must be above
the median score for the income group. Source: The United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization and National
Governments
3. Natural Resource Protection: Assesses a country government's
commitment to preserving biodiversity and natural habitats,
responsibly managing ecosystems and fisheries, and engaging in
sustainable agriculture. Pass: Score must be above the median score
for the income group. Source: Yale Center for Environmental Law and
Policy
4. Immunization Rates: The average of DPT3 and measles
immunization coverage rates for the most recent year available.
Pass: Score must be above either the median score for the income
group or 90 percent, whichever is lower. Source: The World Health
Organization and the United Nations Children's Fund
5. Girls Education:
a. Girls' Primary Completion Rate: The number of female students
enrolled in the last grade of primary education minus repeaters
divided by the population in the relevant age cohort (gross intake
ratio in the last grade of primary). Countries with a GNI/capita of
$2,145 or less are assessed on this indicator. Pass: Score must be
above the median score for the income group. Source: United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
b. Girls' Lower Secondary Completion Rate: The number of female
pupils that have completed the last grade of lower secondary
education divided by the population within three to five years of
the intended age of completion, expressed as a percentage of the
total population of females in the same age group. Countries with a
GNI/capita between $2,146 and $4,465 are assessed on this indicator
instead of Girls' Primary Completion Rates. Pass: Score must be
above the median score for the income group. Source: United Nations
Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization
6. Child Health: An index made up of three indicators: (i)
access to improved water, (ii) access to improved sanitation, and
(iii) child (ages 1-4) mortality. Pass: Score must be above the
median score for the income group. Source: The Center for
International Earth Science Information Network and the Yale Center
for Environmental Law and Policy
Relationship to Statutory Criteria
Within each policy category, the Act sets out a number of
specific selection criteria. A set of objective and quantifiable
policy indicators is used to inform eligibility decisions for
assistance and to measure the relative performance by candidate
countries against these criteria. The Board's approach to
determining eligibility ensures that performance against each of
these criteria is assessed by at least one of the objective
indicators. Most are addressed by multiple indicators. The specific
indicators appear in parentheses next to the corresponding criterion
set out in the Act.
Section 607(b)(1): Just and Democratic Governance, Including a
Demonstrated Commitment to--
(A) promote political pluralism, equality and the rule of law
(Political Rights, Civil Liberties, Rule of Law, and Gender in the
Economy);
(B) respect human and civil rights, including the rights of
people with disabilities (Political Rights, Civil Liberties, Equal
Employment Opportunity, and Freedom of Information);
(C) protect private property rights (Civil Liberties, Regulatory
Quality, Rule of Law, and Land Rights and Access);
(D) encourage transparency and accountability of government
(Political Rights, Civil Liberties, Freedom of Information, Control
of Corruption, Rule of Law, and Government Effectiveness, Equal
Employment Opportunity);
(E) combat corruption (Political Rights, Civil Liberties, Rule
of Law, Freedom of Information, and Control of Corruption); and
(F) the quality of the civil society enabling environment (Civil
Liberties, Freedom of Information, Equal Employment Opportunity, and
Rule of Law)
[[Page 64473]]
Section 607(b)(2): Economic Freedom, Including a Demonstrated
Commitment to Economic Policies That--
(A) encourage citizens and firms to participate in global trade
and international capital markets (Fiscal Policy, Inflation, Trade
Policy, and Regulatory Quality);
(B) promote private sector growth (Inflation, Fiscal Policy,
Land Rights and Access, Access to Credit, Gender in the Economy, and
Regulatory Quality);
(C) strengthen market forces in the economy (Fiscal Policy,
Inflation, Trade Policy, Land Rights and Access, Access to Credit,
and Regulatory Quality); and
(D) respect worker rights, including the right to form labor
unions (Equal Employment Opportunity, Civil Liberties, and Gender in
the Economy)
Section 607(b)(3): Investments in the People of Such Country,
Particularly Women and Children, Including Programs That--
(A) promote broad-based primary education (Girls' Primary
Completion Rate, Girls' Secondary Education Enrollment Rate, Total
Public Expenditure on Primary Education, and Equal Employment
Opportunity);
(B) strengthen and build capacity to provide quality public
health and reduce child mortality (Immunization Rates, Public
Expenditure on Health, and Child Health); and
(C) promote the protection of biodiversity and the transparent
and sustainable management and use of natural resources (Natural
Resource Protection).
Appendix D: Subsequent and Concurrent Compact Considerations
MCC reporting and data in the following chart are used to assess
threshold program performance, compact performance of MCC compact
countries nearing the end of compact implementation (i.e., within 18
months of compact end date), or for current MCC compact countries
under consideration for a concurrent compact, where appropriate.
Some reporting used for assessment may contain sensitive information
and adversely affect implementation or MCC-partner country
relations. This information is for MCC's internal use and is not
made public. However, key implementation information is summarized
in compact status and results reports that are published quarterly
on MCC's website under MCC country programs (www.mcc.gov/where-we-work) or monitoring and evaluation (www.mcc.gov/our-impact/m-and-e)
web pages.
For completed compacts, additional information is used to assess
compact performance and is found in a country's Star Report. The
Star Report and its associated quarterly business process capture
key information to provide a framework for results and improve the
ability to disseminate learning and evidence throughout the
lifecycle of an MCC investment from selection to final evaluation.
For each compact and threshold program, evidence is collected on
performance indicators, evaluation results, partnerships,
sustainability efforts, and learning, among other elements.
In addition to the Star Reports, MCC also surveys staff on
topics related to the quality of the partnership during design and
implementation of programs, progress toward program results, a
partner country's commitment to undertaking policy and institutional
reforms, and compliance with MCC standards. Additional information
on the survey can be found in the Guide to the Program Surveys:
https://www.mcc.gov/resources/doc/guide-to-program-surveys-fy23.
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Topic MCC reporting/data source Published documents
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
COUNTRY PARTNERSHIP
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Political Will
Status of major conditions Quarterly Quarterly results
precedent implementation reporting published as ``Table of Key
Program oversight/implementation Quarterly results Performance Indicators''
[cir] project restructures reporting (available by country): https://
[cir] partner response to accountable MCC Star Reports www.mcc.gov/our-impact/m-and-e.
entity capacity issues Star Reports (available
Political independence of the by country): https://www.mcc.gov/
accountable entity resources?fwp_resource_type=star-
report.
Management Capacity
Project management capacity
Project performance
Level of MCC intervention/
oversight
Relative level of resources
required
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
PROGRAM RESULTS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Financial Results ............................. .................................
Commitments--including contributions Indicator tracking Monitoring and
to compact and threshold funding tables Evaluation Plans (available by
Disbursements Quarterly financial country): https://www.mcc.gov/
Project Results reporting our-impact/m-and-e.
Output, outcome, objective targets Quarterly Quarterly results
Accountable entity commitment to implementation reporting published as ``Table of Key
`focus on results' Quarterly results Performance Indicators''
Accountable entity cooperation on reporting (available by country): https://
impact evaluation Impact evaluations www.mcc.gov/our-impact/m-and-e.
MCC Star Reports Star Reports (available
by country): https://www.mcc.gov/resources?fwp_resource_type=star-report report.
Percent complete for process/
outputs
Relevant outcome data
Details behind target delays
Target Achievements
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADHERENCE TO STANDARDS
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Procurement Audits (GAO and OIG) Published OIG and GAO
Environmental and social Quarterly audits.
Fraud and corruption implementation reporting Star Reports (available
Program closure MCC Star Reports by country): https://www.mcc.gov/
Monitoring and evaluation resources?fwp_resource_type=star-
All other legal provisions report.
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[[Page 64474]]
COUNTRY SPECIFIC
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Sustainability Quarterly Quarterly results
Implementation entity implementation reporting published as ``Table of Key
MCC investments Quarterly results Performance Indicators''
Role of private sector or other donors reporting (available by country): https://
Other relevant investors/investments MCC Star Reports www.mcc.gov/our-impact/m-and-e.
Other donors/programming Star Reports (available
Status of related reforms by country): https://www.mcc.gov/
Trajectory of private sector resources?fwp_resource_type=star-
involvement going forward report.
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[FR Doc. 2023-20163 Filed 9-18-23; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 9211-03-P