Projected Program Beneficiaries Sample Clauses

Projected Program Beneficiaries. The M&E Plan shall also document the analysis conducted to identify the persons or entities expected to benefit from the Program. Beneficiary analysis is an extension of the CBA and seeks to disaggregate the total benefits to determine specifically which segments of society will benefit from the Projects and Activities. MCC considers beneficiaries of Projects and Activities to be those people who experience better standards of living as a result of the Project or Activity (as the case may be) through higher real incomes.4 For definitional purposes, it is important to note that not all MCC project participants are necessarily project beneficiaries. The expected beneficiaries of this Compact over 20 years (unless noted otherwise) are shown in the following table. The text below the table provides a description of the beneficiaries. Project/Activity Estimated Beneficiaries Connectivity and Rural Transport Project 57,400,000 Promoting Reform and Investment in Agriculture Project 1,900,000 Coastal Livelihoods and Climate Resilience Project 1,500,000 Overall Compact* 57,400,000 * The CLCR and PRIA Project beneficiaries are also expected to benefit from the CTR Project. Therefore, the total number of beneficiaries is equal to the number of CTR Project beneficiaries. Connectivity and Rural Transport Project The Licungo Bridge investment is expected to directly benefit 372,000 direct users. In addition to these unique users who directly benefit, reduced transportation costs related to the investment are expected to indirectly benefit roughly 13.3 million individuals living to the north and east of the Licungo river through reduced cost of transported goods and services. The number of road users who benefit from the Rural Roads Activity will depend on the exact segments chosen and the extent to which there is overlap between unique users of the chosen segments. According to MCC's Guidelines for Economic and Beneficiary Analysis, the road maintenance Policy, Institutional Reform and Capacity Building Activity fits the criteria for a national-scale investment and, therefore, the entire population of the country—assessed at the 20th year of the time-horizon for the analysis—should be considered to benefit. This would include roughly 57.4 million individuals, according to UN World Population Prospects forecasts.5 4 As used in this Compact, the term “beneficiary” has the meaning described in the Guidelines for Economic and Beneficiary Analysis. 5 United Nations, Departme...
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Projected Program Beneficiaries. The M&E Plan shall also define in detail the persons or entities expected to benefit from the Program. Beneficiary analysis is an extension of economic rate of return analysis that seeks to disaggregate the total increase in income to determine specifically which segments of society shall benefit from the Projects and Activities. MCC considers beneficiaries2 of Projects and Activities to be those people who experience better standards of living as a result of the Project or Activity (as the case may be) through higher real incomes. The expected beneficiaries of this Compact are shown in the following table: Project Estimated Beneficiaries
Projected Program Beneficiaries. The M&E Plan shall also define the persons or entities expected to benefit from the Program. Beneficiary analysis is an extension of the CBA and seeks to disaggregate the total increase in income to determine specifically which segments of society will benefit from the Projects and Activities. MCC considers beneficiaries of Projects and Activities to be those people who experience better standards of living as a result of the Project or Activity (as the case may be) through higher real incomes.5 For definitional purposes it is important to note that not all MCC project participants are necessarily project beneficiaries. The “Program Overview” section of Annex I presents the projected number of beneficiaries of this Compact.
Projected Program Beneficiaries. The M&E Plan shall also define the persons or entities expected to benefit from the Program. Beneficiary analysis is an extension of the CBA and seeks to disaggregate the total increase in income to determine specifically which segments of society are expected to benefit from the Project. MCC considers beneficiaries of projects and activities to be those people who experience better standards of living as a result of the project or activity (as the case may be) through higher real incomes.1 For definitional purposes, it is important to note that not all MCC project participants are necessarily project beneficiaries. The expected beneficiaries of this Compact over 30 years (unless otherwise noted) are shown in the following table. The text below the table provides a description of the beneficiaries. Project Estimated Beneficiaries Water Supply Project 2,427,657 The Downstream Xxxxx Activity, Wastewater Recycling Activity, and Water Sector Sustainability Activity are expected to increase water supply for the entirety of Ulaanbaatar. Beneficiaries of the Activities include the entire population of Ulaanbaatar. Benefit distribution is based on willingness to pay and consumption. While precise data on how much each household consumes is unavailable, we do know the proportion of total consumption by type of household/business and the proportion of each household type that is poor. These were combined to estimate the proportion of the benefits that go to the poor. In total, those below the Mongolian national poverty line of $2.57 a day receive 7.4 percent of all benefits from the compact, or 13 percent of annual income for the average individual below in the poverty line in benefits over 30 years. 1 As used in this Compact, the term “beneficiary” has the meaning described in MCC’s Guidelines for Economic and Beneficiary Analysis.
Projected Program Beneficiaries. The M&E Plan shall also define the persons or entities expected to benefit from the Program. Beneficiary analysis is an extension of the CBA and seeks to disaggregate the total increase in income to determine specifically which segments of society will benefit from the Projects and Activities. MCC considers beneficiaries of Projects and Activities to be those people who experience better standards of living as a result of the Project or Activity (as the case may be) through higher real incomes.4 For definitional purposes it is important to note that not all project participants are necessarily project beneficiaries. The expected beneficiaries of this Compact over 20 years (unless otherwise noted) are shown in the following table. The text below the table provides a description of the beneficiaries. Project/Activity Estimated Beneficiaries* WSD Project: Water Disinfection 429,000 residents of Dili 64,000 residents of four Dili-adjacent districts WSD Project: Sanitation 301,000 residents of Dili TALENT Project 957,000 students *There is some anticipated overlap in beneficiaries across the projects so the beneficiaries cannot simply be added together to estimate total compact beneficiaries. Because poor households suffer higher disease burden than non-poor households, maximizing disease burden reduction meant maximizing the inclusion of the poor. The footprint of the sanitation system was thus chosen to maximize inclusion of poor households, given engineering and design constraints. Thus, while the poor represent just over 20% of the beneficiary population of the WSD Project, around 30% of the disease burden reduction and lives saved is expected to come from poor households. Given the broad scope of the TALENT Project, beneficiaries are assumed to include all upper secondary graduates who were taught by Project-trained teachers and who subsequently entered the labor force, as well as their co-householders. The total number of beneficiaries is estimated to be 957,721, and the beneficiary analysis suggests that at least initially, the poor will be moderately under-represented amongst beneficiaries.
Projected Program Beneficiaries. The M&E Plan shall also document the analysis conducted to identify the persons or entities expected to benefit from the Program. Beneficiary analysis is an extension of the CBA and seeks to disaggregate the total benefits to determine specifically which segments of society will benefit from the Projects and Activities. MCC considers beneficiaries of Projects and Activities to be those people who experience better standards of living as a result of the Project or Activity (as the case may be) through higher real incomes.17 For definitional purposes it is important to note that not all MCC project participants are necessarily project beneficiaries. The expected beneficiaries of this Compact over 20 years

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