| Fact Sheet Millennium Challenge Corporation Washington, DC April 18, 2005 The United States' Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) and Madagascar: A New Partnership for Poverty Reduction and GrowthMadagascar Compact Fact Sheet
Millennium Challenge Corporation and the Republic of Madagascar have signed a four-year, nearly $110 million dollar Compact
The Millennium Challenge Account (MCA) grant to Madagascar will support a program designed to raise incomes by bringing the rural population from subsistence agriculture to a market economy. The program includes three projects that will work together to help rural Malagasy secure formal property rights to land, access credit and protect savings, and receive training in agricultural production, management and marketing techniques. This integrated three-pronged approach will provide the rural population with the necessary conditions to use the land productively, to build profitable businesses and help ensure environmental sustainability.
Madagascar's Vision
Over 80% of Madagascar 's people live on less than $2 a day and, according to the United Nations, it is one of the 27 least developed countries in the world. Two major obstacles to poverty reduction and economic growth in Madagascar are a poorly functioning banking system and a weak land-titling system. These obstacles prevent access to credit and essential business services, block rural investment, and stifle the ability of rural families to meet their own aspirations and have a stake in local institutions. MCC's mission is to fight poverty by helping countries to boost economic growth and opportunity. In the case of Madagascar , MCC funds will help the Malagasy attain:
MCC's compact with Madagascar focuses on a few key measurable indicators of progress towards achieving sustainable growth and poverty reduction. Due to a lack of baseline data and the importance of measuring results to both MCC and Madagascar , the first dime that MCC will spend since its establishment is close to $1 million for baseline surveys of households, farms, and enterprises. The program will use this baseline data and follow-up surveys to track:
Initial economic analysis estimates that household income will increase by five percent of the average land value in each of the targeted areas. In order to see if progress is being made on these outcomes, MCC and Madagascar have agreed on several interim indicators. The program aims to secure property rights for approximately 250,000 hectares of land, benefiting about 62,000 households, increase lending in the target areas by about $30 million, and significantly increase the number of rural producers that adopt new technologies or engage in higher value production. These indicators, together with others at the individual project activity level, will be used to evaluate the impact of the program outlined in the MCC-Madagascar Compact and to monitor the progress made during its implementation. Financial Responsibility Working as Partners Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC), a U.S. government corporation designed to work with some of the poorest countries in the world, is based on the principle that aid is most effective when it reinforces good governance, economic freedom, and investments in people that promote economic growth and elimination of extreme poverty.
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