Building a Stronger Tajikistan in the Wake of the COVID-19 Crisis … – ReliefWeb

For the past 30 years, the World Bank has partnered with Tajikistan to help boost economic growth, reduce poverty, and unleash the countrys full development potential. When COVID-19 hit, the World Bank financed the Tajikistan Emergency COVID-19 Project to support the Governments efforts to respond to the health, social, and economic impacts of the pandemic. Four rounds of financing for this project have strengthened the countrys intensive care capacity, vaccine deployment, and protection of vulnerable households, and strengthened pandemic prevention, preparedness, and response at the national and regional level, protecting the country against future shocks and helping build a resilient health sector.

Key Highlights

Challenge: Vulnerabilities Exposed by COVID-19

Tajikistan has experienced an improvement in living standards over the past two decades, with the poverty rate falling from 32 percent in 2009 to 13.4 percent in 2022. However, the country's undiversified economy, reliance on migrant remittances, and high risk of debt distress, make it more vulnerable to external shocks. The recent COVID-19 crisis significantly increased uncertainties and risks for Tajikistan, highlighting the health sector's weaknesses, and leading to increased poverty and food insecurity for the most vulnerable.

The **"Listening to Tajikistan" **survey monitored the well-being of people, focusing on the impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic,based on more than 17,000 interviews with people from all regions of the country. The survey found that people's economic well-being deteriorated severely in 2020; 40 percent of respondents reported that no family member was actively working in May 2020. Food security also deteriorated in 2020 as incomes fell and food prices went up, and in May and June 2020 over 35 percent of households said they had to reduce their food consumption. These impacts were exacerbated by a 20 percent decline in remittances, in a country where more than half of households rely on this source of income to buy food and other basic necessities.

Approach: From Pandemic Response to Prevention and Preparedness

June 4, 2023 marked 30 years of partnership between Tajikistan and the World Bank, and 29 years of Tajikistan belonging to the International Development Association (IDA). During this period, the World Bank **provided over $2.8 billion in support **for improvements to infrastructure, education, healthcare, poverty reduction, and more. These operations are providing better health services for the country's population by strengthening institutional capacity, providing training and equipment, addressing child malnutrition, and providing vaccination and other support against pandemics such as COVID-19.

At the onset of the COVID-19 outbreak, Tajikistan was one of the first countries in the world to receive emergency support from the World Bank, which worked with the country's Ministry of Health and Social Protection of the Population (MOHSP). An original IDA grant of $11.3 million was approved for the Emergency COVID-19 Project to: i) strengthen the country's capacity to provide intensive care to people sick with COVID-19 (e.g. through renovation and equipment for intensive care units); ii) help communities reduce infection (e.g. by providing personal protective equipment for health care workers, and information and behavior change communication for the general population); and iii) protect the vulnerable (e.g. with cash transfers to protect children vulnerable to malnutrition). This support was reinforced by three rounds of additional financing: $8.63 million for COVID-19 vaccines, $12.57 million in grant financing for additional cash transfers, strengthening of oxygen supply, and a stop-gap funding for routine child immunization (February 2021), and a $25 million grant for the procurement and provision of additional vaccines (March 2022).

The World Bank's focus has subsequently shifted towards addressing critical gaps in pandemic prevention, preparedness and response (PPR). Given the success of the national vaccination campaign and lower demand for COVID-19 vaccines, in 2023, the project was restructured to strengthen the country's sanitary and epidemiological services (SES), laboratory capacity, and digitalization of information systems. PPR is also part of the recently approved health project Millati Solim -- Health Nation.

At the regional level, this impetus is translating into initiatives like the Central Asia One Health Framework for Action. The World Bank is collaborating with several Central Asian countries on the Framework, which will help address three shared high-level goals: pandemic prevention and preparedness, the resilience of food systems, and improving regional trade and agricultural sector competitiveness.

Results: Crisis Response and Social Protection

The World Bank committed a total of $57.5 million under the Tajikistan Emergency COVID-19 Projectto help strengthen the country's response to the pandemic and support vaccine procurement and delivery. The results achieved around the three key areas of the project include:

"We are grateful for the efforts of the Government and the World Bank in providing modern facilities for us. It has been three days after my father's surgery. He is feeling better now," says Mirzosharif Sobirov, a resident of Tajikistan's Varzob district.

With World Bank support, Tajikistan was able to procure almost 900,000 doses of Moderna's COVID-19 vaccine. 98 percent of all adults - Tajikistan's COVID-19 vaccination target group (57 percent of the overall population) was vaccinated as of June 2023.

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Building a Stronger Tajikistan in the Wake of the COVID-19 Crisis ... - ReliefWeb

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