This evaluation examines the Caribbean Development Bank’s (CDB) Country Engagement Strategy (CES) for Saint Lucia for the period 2020–23, including activities designed and implemented until December 2024. The evaluation uses a mixed-methods approach, combining document reviews, portfolio analysis, and stakeholder interviews, to inform the next CES. The evaluation process supported participation, reflection, and co-creation. During the inception phase, feedback was collected from CDB staff and Government of Saint Lucia (GOSL) counterparts to refine the focus and ensure evaluation questions would generate insights aligned with both CDB’s strategic needs and GOSL priorities. A Theory of Change workshop was conducted with CDB and GOSL stakeholders to reconstruct the underlying logic of the CES and identify key assumptions and change pathways. This collaboration provided a shared foundation for assessing progress and strategic alignment. Validation of emerging findings was carried out via an online workshop. A hybrid co-creation workshop was held with Saint Lucia-based stakeholders and CDB staff to collaboratively develop recommendations and ensure proposed actions are useful, specific, and actionable, with the aim of increasing the success of the next CES.
Student Loan Scheme - Jamaica (2018)
Education
Project Completion Validation Report
Complete
Jamaica
Summary
In May 2010, the Caribbean Development Bank (CDB) approved a loan in the amount of twenty million United States dollars (USD20 mn) to the Students’ Loan Bureau (SLB) of Jamaica to assist in improving the country’s human resource capacity by providing loans to eligible students under the Bank’s Student Loan Scheme (SLS) for upgrading tertiary level skills in professional, technical and vocational programmes. SLB provided counterpart funding of USD80 mn over a period of five years made available from reflows. In December 2012, CDB approved a second loan to SLB in the amount of USD20 mn to facilitate the continued expansion of tertiary education for citizens from low-income households in Jamaica.