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Friday, May 22, 2026

DRC: The Portfolio That Does Not Deliver


DRC  ·  Full Portfolio  ·  All Global Practices  ·  MDB Reform Platform

Does the World Bank Learn from Portfolio Failures? (Part 5) — The Portfolio That Does Not Deliver

49 Projects. $6.7 Billion Committed. 22 Years. 6.1% to Satisfactory. 93.9% of Resources Below Satisfactory. Seven Global Practices at Zero.

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Full Paper — 22 Pages (PDF) Draws on all 49 IEG ICRRs and PPARs, the DRC CLRV (FY13–20), the IEG CPE Approach Paper (July 2025), the SCD (2018), the CPF (FY22–26), ISRs for 14 active projects, the IEG Master Database, and commitment data from the World Bank Projects Database.
↓  Download Full Paper (PDF)
$6.7BCommitted FY2002–FY2023. One of the largest FCS portfolios in Sub-Saharan Africa.
6.1%to S+ projects ($411M). 93.9% — $6.3 billion — went to projects rated below Satisfactory.
7 GPsat zero percent S+. MTI, Transport, Education, Health, Energy, Agriculture, Water. $4.9B with no project fully achieving objectives.
$150MNo project above $150M achieved Satisfactory. S+ projects averaged $69M. Below-S+ averaged $146M.

$6.3 Billion Below Satisfactory

Between FY2002 and FY2023, the World Bank committed $6.7 billion across forty-nine projects in the Democratic Republic of Congo. Of that, $411 million — 6.1 percent — went to projects that achieved Satisfactory or Highly Satisfactory outcomes. $6.3 billion went to projects rated below Satisfactory. One Highly Satisfactory project in twenty-two years: the SME Development and Growth Project ($100 million, FY2019).

Seven of eleven Global Practices with evaluated projects record zero percent S+: MTI, Transport, Education, Health, Energy, Agriculture, and Water. These seven GPs account for $4.9 billion — 73 percent of committed resources — with no project fully achieving its objectives. Seven sets of technical specialists are not simultaneously incompetent. The failure is structural.

The DPF instrument committed $1.49 billion with zero percent S+ across five operations. The first three DPFs ($740 million) were all rated Unsatisfactory — budget support deployed in a post-conflict state with minimal PFM capacity. IEG found “weak strategy design followed by even weaker implementation.”

The Political Trajectory Shaped the Portfolio

PhasePeriodProjectsCommittedS+ RateKey Finding
EmergencyFY02–0612$2.3B8.3%Three DPFs rated U ($740M)
Institution-BuildingFY07–1315$1.7B6.7%Two HU ratings (Transport, Inga 3)
Political CrisisFY14–1818$1.75B16.7%No country strategy FY18–21
Tshisekedi EraFY19–264$950M25%Sole HS; two DPFs at MS

The floor rose — from U/HU to MS. The below-MS rate dropped from 42% to zero. But the ceiling remained: no project above $150 million achieved Satisfactory in any phase. The Bank learned to avoid catastrophic failure. It has not learned to achieve success at scale.

Why Projects Failed and Why the One Project Succeeded

IEG’s evaluations identify five recurring causes of failure. Scope exceeding capacity: the Multi-modal Transport project ($255M, HU) attempted every transport subsector simultaneously; transport volume fell, SNCC’s deficit tripled. Government commitment absent: the Inga 3 TA ($107M, HU) collapsed when the presidency re-centralised authority; only 4.3% disbursed. SOE reform resistance: SNCC reform “dropped from the program.” Unrealistic design: the HIV/AIDS project ($102M, U) was restructured after acknowledging “weak institutional arrangements.” Instrument mismatch: three DPFs deployed budget support where PFM didn’t exist.

The Success PatternThe sole HS — SME Development ($100M) — succeeded because it “merged analytical MSME sector work, WB lessons learned, and attention to implementation readiness.” Three focused components. Near-perfect disbursement ($99.6M of $100M). Every S+ project shares three characteristics: focused scope, manageable scale (average $69M), and implementation readiness. The failure pattern is the inverse.

The SCD–CLR–CPF Gap

The Bank’s own Systematic Country Diagnostic (2018) identified governance as the foundational priority: “politics is organized around personalized interactions, and rent is distributed between elites.” Reforms that upset the equilibrium are “highly likely to be contested and/or sabotaged.”

The CLR (2022) confirmed the Bank failed: “limited inroads” on governance. Gécamines reform “dropped from the program.” “Little to no evidence” of progress on PFM or SOE reform. IEG could not even rate development outcome — the M&E was too weak.

The CPF (FY22–26) responded by downgrading governance from foundational priority to “cross-cutting theme” — everyone’s responsibility, no one’s accountability — and proposing DPF as the vehicle for governance reform. The diagnostic gets sharper with each iteration. The operational response remains structurally unchanged.

MTI and the DPF Instrument Bias

MTI controls $1.67 billion — 25 percent of all committed resources — with zero percent S+ across six projects. MTI’s global S+ rate is 18.5%, the lowest of any GP at scale. In FCS: 13.5%. In DRC: zero. The current Country Director (Albert Zeufack, PhD Economics, former Africa Chief Economist) pushed through $750 million in Foundational Governance DPFs, both rated MS.

The Institutional Power Architecture paper documents that economist CDs consistently allocate 1.5–2x more resources to DPFs than non-economist CDs. In DRC, the CD appointment determines whether hundreds of millions flow through the instrument with the worst outcome record in the portfolio.

The Structural Mismatch: Why Seven GPs Fail Simultaneously

The Bank treats a political-administrative failure state as a technical implementation problem. Projects are designed around ministries, SOEs, and fiduciary chains that presuppose a functioning state. In large parts of DRC, the state is fragmented, rent-distributed, geographically absent, and economically dependent on dysfunction. The Bank finances the simulation of state functionality.

IDA allocations outrun absorptive capacity. DRC receives ~$2.5 billion per IDA replenishment. The allocation creates its own demand for projects, regardless of whether the environment can absorb them. When the previous Inga 3 was rated HU, the response was not to reduce the allocation but to prepare a $250 million successor.

The sovereign guarantee destroys operational feedback. Repayment is disconnected from outcomes. Staff careers are disconnected from outcomes. IEG learns. Operations continues.

The Bank may not have an FCV operating model at all. FCV strategies, diagnostics, terminology, frameworks — but the same instruments, supervision, GP incentives, and country programming as middle-income countries with functioning states.

The $150 Million ThresholdNo project above $150 million achieved Satisfactory. S+ projects averaged $69 million. Below-S+ projects averaged $146 million. If this holds across other FCS portfolios, the Bank needs more, smaller operations below the absorptive capacity threshold — not fewer, larger ones. Continuing to approve $500–$700 million operations that achieve MS at best is not a strategy. It is a pattern.

The Human Stakes

100 million people. 69 percent below the poverty line. The number without electricity increased from 60.1 million to 70.2 million between 2013 and 2020. Child stunting rose from 42.7% to 44.7%. 97 percent of ten-year-olds cannot read simple text. 5.6 million internally displaced. HCI rank: 164th of 174 countries. This is the context in which 6.1 percent of $6.7 billion achieved Satisfactory outcomes.


Series: Does the World Bank Learn from Project Failures?

PartCountry–SectorCommitmentStatus
1Nigeria Water$1.8bnPublished
2Angola DPF$2.2bnPublished
3South Africa Energy (Eskom)$9.13bnPublished
4Ghana FCI$615MPublished
5DRC Portfolio$6.7BThis paper
6DRC Inga$107M + $250MTomorrow

Companion Papers

The Dam That Does Not Generate — Inga: governance, accountability, collapse, and re-engagement. The companion deep dive.

Institutional Power Architecture — Economist dominance in Country Management and the DPO instrument bias. The DRC CD sequence mapped.

Policy Without Performance — The DPO Incentive Trap. Why budget support fails in FCS environments.

The FCV Strategy Submission — The Bank’s FCV strategy, examined against the evidence.

Why the System Does Not Learn: A Game Theory Analysis — The Nash equilibrium of the approval culture.

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