4 Key Insights from the 2015 Results and Performance of the World Bank Group
Download the 2015 Results and Performance of the World Bank Group Report
IEG Results and Performance of the World Bank Group 2016 (Concept Note)
Results and Performance of the World Bank Group (RAP) is the annual review of what recent IEG
evaluations reveal about the effectiveness of the World Bank Group (WBG), which includes
IBRD/IDA, IFC, and MIGA, in…
World Bank Group Processes and Reforms
IEG evaluates how well the World Bank Group’s policies, processes, and instruments work. These evaluations cut across sectors and practices. For example, we review:
Lending instruments
Corporate strategies…
Checking the boxes: How Can the World Bank Group integrate Gender Strategy and Profitability into its Operations
What are the key factors that impact project performance? Are we checking the (right!) boxes when we integrate gender into World Bank Group operations? Join us to answer these questions at the launch of the 2015…
Is the World Bank Group on Track?
A close look at the World Bank Group Results and Performance Report
Never enough? Resources, knowledge and staying power for gender equality
Gender is the theme chapter of this year's Results and Performance of the World Bank Group report
Results and Performance of the World Bank Group (RAP) 2015
The Independent Evaluation Group's (IEG) Results and Performance of the World Bank Group (RAP) is a comprehensive assessment of World Bank Group performance, drawing on recent IEG evaluations.
Is the World Bank Group on course to meet the twin goals?
Underpinning the World Bank Group's strategic focus are the twin goals. How is IEG contributing to helping the World Bank Group stay on track?
Can the World Bank "kick" this Habit?
On October 8, IEG convened a panel to discuss why the World Bank seems to have a hard time ensuring that its projects and programs are systematically informed by experience from the past and analysis from available data…
Transforming Our World - Aiming to Sustain Development
Lessons from the past suggest the shift thatâs needed might be much larger and in unexpected areas