KAMPALA - An evaluation and monitoring tool aimed at strengthening service delivery and improving accountability across public institutions in Uganda has been unveiled.
Alex Kakooza, Permanent Secretary at the Office of the Prime Minister (OPM), disclosed the launch of the National Evaluation Capacities Index (INCE) at Imperial Royale Hotel in Kampala on Wednesday.
Hamson Obua, Government Chief, representing Minister Justine Lumumba of the Office of the Prime Minister, presided over the event.
INCE, developed with support from the German Institute for Development Evaluation and the World Food Programme (WFP), is designed to standardise and improve national evaluation systems.
The tool promotes evidence-based decision-making, fosters a culture of evaluation, and enables real-time monitoring of government programs. It has already been implemented in countries across Africa and Latin America, including Tanzania, South Africa, Congo, Morocco, Benin, and Ghana.
Kakooza said the innovation is a key step in addressing persistent underperformance in government programs. He revealed that an assessment of the three previous National Development Plans (NDPs) shows that Uganda failed to achieve its targets over 15 years.
“I have checked and established that consistently, NDP I, NDP II, and NDP III recorded success rates below 30 percent. All of them. Recall the day in school when you scored 30 percent on a test—that is where we are,” Kakooza said.
He attributed poor performance to weak coordination, fragmented planning and budgeting, and mismanagement of funds. “Fragmented planning and budgeting continue to undermine effective service delivery,” he said.
Kakooza stressed the need to shift from post-mortem evaluations to continuous monitoring. “Evaluation tends to be post-mortem… monitoring should be routine,” he said.
Under NDP IV (2025–2030), all government entities are required to have five-year strategic plans aligned to national priorities to track progress in real time.
He also highlighted plans to strengthen Monitoring and Evaluation (M&E) capacity across government, noting that few officers are formally designated as M&E professionals. “There will be many jobs… we need M&E professionals to do this work,” Kakooza said, adding that existing staff performing such roles will be regularised.
Denis Hamson Obua the Government Chief Whip speaking during the Launch of the National Evaluation Capacities Index at Imperial Royal on March 25, 2026. (Credit: Nicholas Oneal)