Project profile — Sustainable Livelihoods for Ultra Poor



Overview 

CA-3-A032941001
$4,581,842
Canadian Hunger Foundation (CA-CRA_ACR-0010011087)
2006-08-21 - 2012-03-31
Closed
Global Affairs Canada
OGM Indo-Pacific

Country / region 

• Bangladesh (100.00%)

Sector 

• Basic Education: Early childhood education (11240) (15.00%)
• Basic Health: Basic health care (12220) (15.00%)
• General Environmental Protection: Environmental policy and administrative management (41010) (15.00%)
• Other Multisector: Rural development (43040) (55.00%)

Policy marker 

• Gender equality (significant objective)
• Environmental sustainability (cross-cutting) (significant objective)
• Participatory development and good governance (significant objective)
• Trade development (not targeted)
• Biodiversity (not targeted)
• Climate change mitigation (not targeted)
• Climate Change Adaptation (not targeted)
• Urban issues (not targeted)
• Desertification (not targeted)
• Children's issues (not targeted)
• Youth Issues (not targeted)
• Indigenous Issues (not targeted)
• Disability (not targeted)
• ICT as a tool for development (not targeted)

Description 

The project helps an estimated 33,000 poor households, including female-headed households, in Chandpur District to improve their livelihoods, increase their incomes, and achieve food security. The objective is to bring about an increase in real incomes of 15% to 30% in the target areas. The project helps selected poor families, including some that are "ultra-poor", lift themselves out of poverty by helping them improve their livelihoods and increasing their access to education, health care, and government processes and services. Project activities include: helping people start income-generating activities or improve their skills to obtain better jobs; helping them to first develop the minimum of assets needed so they can access micro-finance; providing education for children who cannot access schools; providing health services to families who are not able to access existing facilities; helping people prepare for and recover from natural disasters; and improving water and sanitation for the communities.

Expected results 

N/A

Results achieved 

Results achieved as of the end of the project (February 2012) include: (i) 10,500 ultra-poor households received an asset (livestock, land leases for paddy or potato cultivation, and tools for starting small businesses) along with relevant training based on their own plans to improve their livelihoods, leading to positive changes in household income and food security; (ii) 446 profitable micro-enterprises were established and expanded (enabling them to experience significant profit increases); (iii) the proportion of women accessing and controlling household resources such as agricultural land, housing, savings, small business and health services, either individually or jointly with another household family member, increased for every asset category, with joint control over agricultural land, for example, increasing from 24% in 2006 to 96% in 2011; (iv) the proportion of households eating three meals a day all year round increased from 13% in 2006 to 71% in 2011; (v) the proper use of sanitary latrines increased from 35% at the start of the project to 83% at the end; and (vi) more than 19,500 poor families benefited from interventions such as access to deep tube wells that provide safe drinking water, rehabilitation of link roads to improve access to markets, vaccination of livestock, and safe delivery services from traditional birth attendants. These results contributed to helping 10,500 ultra-poor households, including those headed by women, sustainably improve their livelihoods, increase their incomes and achieve food security. In addition, 19,500 near-poor households benefitted from community projects.

Budget and spending 


Original budget $0
Planned disbursement $0
Transactions
Transaction Date Type Value
18-05-2011 Disbursement $116,816
31-03-2012 Disbursement -$2,259
Country percentages by sector
Type of finance Aid grant excluding debt reorganisation
Collaboration type Bilateral
Type of aid Donor country personnel