This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under
This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY-NC-SA Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers: Trends and Challenges in PEMPAL Countries Iryna Shcherbyna Public Sector Specialist, World Bank - Governance
1 CONTEXT 1. Introduction: Why are transfers needed? 2. The system of intergovernmental fiscal transfers in PEMPAL countries: What are the key trends and challenges? 3. Performance–Oriented transfers: How can results-based accountability be achieved?
2 PART 1: INTRODUCTION: THEORY AND PRACTICE OF INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL RELATIONSHIPS
3 THE ROLE OF LOCAL GOVERNMENTS IN PUBLIC FINANCES IS DIFFERENT ACROSS PEMPAL COUNTRIES Share of budget revenues in GDP (%) in 2016, PEMPAL Survey Data* 70. 0% 64. 7% 60. 0% 48. 1% 50. 0% 42. 6% 40. 0% 34. 9% 33. 5% 30. 0% 20. 0% 37. 6% 36. 9% 30. 5% 27. 2% 25. 0% 23. 1% 22. 4% 18. 8% 16. 1% 28. 5% 26. 5% 25. 4% 25. 3% 24. 6% 19. 6% 29. 5% 27. 1% 26. 3% 32. 8% 25. 7% 24. 3% 21. 5% 20. 6% 16. 6% 15. 6% 11. 5% 10. 0% 6. 3% 2. 0% 0. 7% 0. 0% Armenia 6. 4% Belarus Bosnia and Hercegovina (Republic of Srpska) Bulgaria 1. 1% Croatia Georgia Central Government Budget * Based on countries self-assessment Kosovo 3. 2% Kyrgyz Republic 5. 0% Macedonia Local Government Budget 2. 8% 5. 0% 11. 2% 7. 1% 9. 4% 3. 2% Moldova Montenegro Romania Consolidated Budget Russia Ukraine Uzbekistan
4 THE DEVIATION OF SHARE OF SUB-NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS’ TAX REVENUES IN GDP (%) in 1995 and 2014 6. 0% 11, 5. 1% 5. 0% 4. 0% 9, 3. 2% 3. 0% 2. 0% 5, 1. 3% 6, 0. 8% 1. 0% 1, 0. 1% 0. 0% 5 -1. 0% -2. 0% 7, 0. 6% 10, 0. 0% 4, 0. 4% 3, 0. 1% 0 2, -2. 4% -3. 0% * Eurostat data 8, 1. 2% 10 14, 0. 2% 12, -0. 2% 13, -1. 1% 19, 1. 5% 16, 1. 0% 17, 0. 9% 18, 0. 3% 15 15, -2. 5% 20, 1. 6% 23, 0. 5% 22, 0. 2% 20 21, 0. 3% 25
5 TAXING POWER OF SUB-NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS Share of local budget tax revenues in GDP (%) in 2014 Eurostat Data 20. 0% PEMPAL countries, IMF GFS Database 20. 0% 18. 0% 15. 7% 16. 0% 14. 0% 12. 2% 11. 3% 10. 8% 9. 5% 10. 0% 5. 9% 6. 0% 8. 0% 5. 6% 5. 4% 6. 0% 4. 1% 3. 9% 4. 0% 2. 5% 2. 2% 0. 4% 0. 9% 0. 8% 1. 4% 1. 2% 0. 8% 5. 0% 3. 5% 4. 0% 2. 3% 1. 6% 2. 4% 2. 0% 2. 9% 1. 4% 1. 3% 0. 9% 0. 5% 1. 0% 1. 2% e ia in ra Uk ss Ru rg ia M ac ed on ia M ol do va Ro m an ia Ge o ic yz Re pu bl oa tia Cr rg Ky ia ar na vi go ce Bu lg s ru la Be He r d an ia sn m Czech Republic Denmark Estonia Finland France Germany Greece Hungary Iceland Ireland Italy Latvia Luxembourg Netherlands Norway Poland Portugal Slovak Republic Slovenia Sweden Switzerland Turkey United Kingdom en ia 0. 0% Bo 2. 0% 10. 8% 10. 0% 7. 2% 8. 0% 12. 0% Ar 12. 0%
6 EXPENDITURE NEEDS EXCEED REVENUES IN ALMOST ALL PEMPAL COUNTRIES Shares of local budget revenues and expenditures in their consolidated budgets, % in 2016, PEMPAL Survey Data* 60. 0% 5. 0 0. 5 50. 0% 40. 0% -6. 2 30. 0% -5. 8 -8. 2 -8. 7 -7. 9 0. 4 0. 0 -2. 1 -7. 0 -9. 9 -8. 5 -14. 3 20. 0% -10. 0 -15. 0 -19. 6 10. 0% -20. 0 an U zb kr U ek is t ai ne si a R us ia om an R te ne gr o va M on ol do M ac M ep R z ed o ub rg eo K yr gy ni a lic ia ia G C ro at ria ga ul B el ar B rm us -25. 0 en ia 0. 0% A -5. 0 Share of local budgets’ revenues in the consolidated budget (without Inter. Governmental Transfers) Share of local budgets’ expenditure in the consolidated budget Difference between revenues and expenditeres' shares (percentage points) * Based on countries self-assessment
7 INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL TRANSFERS FINANCE ABOUT 60 PERCENT OF SUBNATIONAL EXPENDITURES IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES AND TRANSITION ECONOMIES Beyond the expenditures they finance, these transfers create incentives and accountability mechanisms that affect the fiscal management, efficiency, and equity of public service provision and government accountability to citizens.
8 KEY OBJECTIVES OF INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL TRANSFERS
9 TYPES OF INTER-BUDGETRAY TRANSFERS (grants) Mandatory Nonearmarked General purpose grant Block grant Discretionary Grants Mandatory Nonmatching grant Matching grant Earmarked Discretionary Source: OECD, INTERGOVERNMENTAL TRANSFERS AND DECENTRALISED PUBLIC SPENDING, Working Paper N 3, 2006
1 0 DEFINITIONS Earmarked grants An earmarked grant is a grant that is given under the condition that it can only be used for a specific purpose. Non-earmarked grants can be spent as if they were the receiving sub-national government’s own (nonearmarked) tax revenues. Mandatory grants (entitlements) are legal, rules-based obligations for the government that issues the grant. This requires that both the size of the grant and the conditions under which it is given are laid down in a statute or an executive decree and that these conditions are both necessary and sufficient. Discretionary grants, and the conditions under which they are given, are not determined by rules but decided on an ad hoc, discretionary basis. Discretionary grants are often temporary in nature and include, for example, grants for specific infrastructural projects or emergency aid to a disaster area. Matching grants are grants designed to complement sub-national contributions. Matching grants are dependent on normative or actual spending for services for which the grants are earmarked or on local revenue collection related to these services. Non-matching grants are grants not directly linked to any sub-national contribution. Current grants are grants assumed to be spent on either current or capital expenditures. Capital grants are grants assumed to be spent only on capital expenditures. Sources: OECD, INTERGOVERNMENTAL TRANSFERS AND DECENTRALISED PUBLIC SPENDING, Working Paper N 3, 2006; WB, INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL TRANSFERS. PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE, 2007
1 1 PART 2: THE SYSTEM OF INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL TRANSFERS IN PEMPAL COUNTRIES
1 2 THE LOWER THE SHARE OF SUB-NATIONAL BUDGET REVENUES IN GGP, THE HIGHER THE IMPACT OF CENTRAL BUDGET TRANSFERS Shares of Local Government Budget revenues in GDP and central budget transfers in local budget revenues (%) in 2016, PEMPAL Survey Data* 80. 00% 73. 1% 68. 6% 70. 00% 60. 00% 54. 4% 51. 5% 50. 00% 41. 7% 40. 00% 30. 00% 21. 0% 20. 00% 16. 6% 16. 1% 15. 8% 11. 5% 10. 00% 9. 4% 5. 4% 4. 0% 7. 1% 6. 4% 5. 0% 8. 1% 5. 0% 0. 9% 3. 2% 2. 8% Kyrgyz Republic Moldova 0. 7% 0. 00% Croatia Belarus Russia Uzbekistan Ukraine Georgia Macedonia Montenegro Share of Local Government Budget revenues in GDP (%) in 2016 Share of central budgets' transfers in local budget revenues (%) in 2016 * Based on countries self-assessment Armenia
1 3 THE STRUCTURE OF LOCAL BUDGET REVENUES IN 2016 PEMPAL Survey Data* Structure of local budget revenues (%) Armenia 19. 1% 7. 8% Belarus Georgia Macedonia Moldova 73. 1% 70. 9% 36. 9% 70. 1% 33. 2% 1. 6% 25. 8% 64. 0% Romania 66. 2% Russia Ukraine 0. 0% 76. 3% 38. 7% 20. 0% Tax revenues 0. 9% 7. 2% 15. 9% 5. 8% 40. 0% 0. 9% 60. 0% 80. 0% Non-tax revenues Inter-government transfers * Based on countries self-assessment 53. 5% 6 7. 2% 26. 0% 5 18. 8% 4 100. 0% 3 1 16. 6% 6. 9% 24. 8% 39. 2% 59. 1% 2 55. 0% 0. 1% 36. 9% 7 68. 6% 18. 8% 70. 8% 8 54. 4% 36. 0% 0. 5% 18. 6% 9 14. 1% 8. 1% 5. 6% Montenegro 10 7. 9%21. 2% 41. 7% 13. 8% Kyrgyz Republic Structure of tax revenues (%) 7. 1% 65. 0% 22. 2% 0. 0% 11. 3% 11. 1% 20. 0% 40. 0% Shared state taxes 60. 0% 80. 0% 100. 0% Local taxes and fees
1 4 LOCAL BUDGET EXPENDITURES BY FUNCTIONS (%) IN 2016 PEMPAL Survey Data* 100. 0% 90. 0% 80. 0% 20. 3% 41. 1% 33. 7% 36. 7% 7. 1% 3. 6% 10. 1% 11. 5% 80. 9% 22. 7% 9. 1% 4. 2% 4. 9% 28. 9% 7. 8% 3. 5% 6. 4% 60. 0% 50. 0% 24. 9% 26. 1% 39. 0% 70. 0% 8. 1% 11. 3% 16. 0% 40. 0% 30. 0% 20. 0% 3. 0% 2. 9% 30. 9% 31. 2% 21. 6% 10. 0% 0. 3% Armenia 4. 5% 3. 3% 6. 9% 4. 1% 3. 2% 0. 4% Belarus Bosna i Bulgaria Hercegovina 57. 2% 3. 1% 19. 0% 11. 0% 21. 4% 12. 0% 3. 0% Croatia Georgia 58. 1% 26. 2% 25. 6% 36. 0% 12. 9% 10. 3% Kosovo A. Health care B. Education C. Social assistance and protection D. Communal services E. Local infrastructure (roads, transports, other) F. OTHER EXPENDITURES * Based on countries self-assessment 30. 1% 3. 7% 39. 0% 37. 6% 3. 6% 5. 7% 0. 6% 13. 1% 16. 6% 32. 7% 26. 1% 4. 2% 5. 1% 11. 6% 8. 9% 9. 1% 12. 9% 16. 2% 16. 4% 1. 6% Kyrgyz Republic 0. 7% Moldova Russia 18. 2% Ukraine 22. 3% Uzbekistan
1 5 SOME KEY DECISIONS TO BE TAKEN FOR THE DESIGN OF TRANSFERS Non-earmarked grants versus earmarked grants; Mandatory grants versus discretionary grants; List of basic service packages and distribution formulas for non-earmarked grants; Equalization approach, including: Tax capacity of sub-national (local) governments; Service capacity of sub-national (local) governments.
1 6 EQUALISATION VERSUS EARMARKED TRANSFERS IN PEMPAL COUNTRIES ( PEMPAL Survey Data*) A. Equalization transfers 100. 0% 2. 4% 8. 7% 90. 0% B. Earmarked transfers 13. 1% 80. 0% 32. 8% 70. 0% 48. 9% 51. 9% 66. 3% 69. 5% 60. 0% 50. 0% 100. 0% 97. 6% 91. 3% 40. 0% 78. 1% 100. 0% 84. 6% 30. 0% 58. 1% 51. 1% 20. 0% 48. 1% 33. 7% 30. 5% 10. 0% 21. 9% 0. 0% Uzbekistan Ukraine Bulgaria Moldova Russia Serbia Armenia Key principles of the equalization formula: - 6 countries (46%) - Deviation from the median value of targeted revenues; - 4 countries (31%) - Other; - 3 countries (23%) – Equalization of expenditure needs. * Based on countries self-assessment Georgia Belarus Kyrgyz Montenegro Republic
1 7 KEY CHALLENGES IN PLANNING AND EXECUTING OF EQUALISATION TRANSFERS Country Belarus Bulgaria Croatia Key challenges Absence of a fully functioning system of normative budgetary financing of social sectors. The key challenge is achieving fairer distribution for municipalities where the indicators are such that the equalization subsidy/transfer formula is distorted - a need to introduce a fairer model of the equalizing subsidy. Since these are equalization transfers (subsidies) for units with below average fiscal capacity, the challenge lies in the calculation of the fiscal capacity of units of local and regional self-governments. Kazakhstan 12 subvention regions for under delivery by income, 4 regions withdrawals to the republican budget for an amount of excess for incomes. Kyrgyz Forecasted revenue indicators are overstated (deviation from actual Republic forecasts), which negatively affects the volumes of equalization transfers. Montenegro The main challenge is how to determine the criteria for the allocation of equalization fund resources. Romania Finding keys for equal treatment of territorial administrative units Serbia Establishing formulas which ensure fairness in transfer allocations.
1 8 KEY CHALLENGES IN PLANING AND EXECUTING EARMARKED TRANSFERS Main types of earmarked transfers Key challenges in planning and executing earmarked transfers • • • Identifying distribution criteria for subventions; Using mechanisms and formulas to reflect each municipality’s specifics; Quality and neutrality of the determination of transfer amounts; Excessive quantity and a "singlepoint" nature of earmarked transfers; High impact of non-economic criteria for the allocation of earmarked transfers; Introducing a fairer model of allocating the transfers and linking them to the quality of services provided and achieving solidarity.
1 9 PART 3: ACHIEVING RESULTS–BASED ACCOUNTABILITY THROUGH PERFORMANCE–ORIENTED TRANSFERS
2 0 KEY PRINCIPLES (1) Clarity in grant objectives. ( Grant objectives should be clearly and precisely specified to guide the grant design) Autonomy ( Subnational governments should have independence and flexibility in setting priorities. They should not be constrained by uncertainty associated with decision making at the center. Tax-base sharing – allowing SG to introduce their own tax rates on central bases, formula-based revenue sharing, or block grants - is consistent with these objectives). Revenue adequacy (adequate resources for designated responsibilities) Responsiveness ( having enough flexibility to accommodate unforeseen changes in the fiscal situation of the recipience ) Equity ( Allocated funds should vary directly with fiscal need factors and inversely with tax capacity of each jurisdiction) Predictability ( Publishing mid-term projections ( 5 year) of funding availability. The grant formula should specify ceilings and floors for yearly fluctuations. Any major changes in the formula should be accompanied by hold-harmless provisions.
2 1 KEY PRINCIPLES (2) Transparency ( Both the formula and the allocations should be disseminated widely); Efficiency ( the grant design should be neutral with respect to subnational government’s choices of resource allocation to different sectors or types of activities); Simplicity (The formula should be easy to understand); Incentive ( the design should provide incentives for efficient fiscal management ); Accountability for results (the grantor is accountable for the design and operation. The recipient is accountable to the grantor and citizens for financial integrity and results). Source: WB, INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL TRANSFERS. PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE, 2007
2 2 FEATURES OF TRADITIONAL AND OUTPUT-BASED CONDITIONAL GRANTS Feature Traditional grant Output-based grant Grant objectives Spending level Quality and access to public services Grant design and administration Complex Simple and transparent Conditions Expenditures on authorized functions and objects Output-service delivery results Compliance verifications Higher level inspections and audits Client feedback and redress, comparison of baseline and post-grant data Managerial flexibility Little or none. No tolerance Absolute. Rewards for risks to risk and no accountability but penalties for persistent for failure. Local government autonomy, budget flexibility and transparency little Absolute
2 3 FEATURES OF TRADITIONAL AND OUTPUT-BASED CONDITIONAL GRANTS (2) Feature Traditional grant Output-based grant Focus Internal External, competition, innovation, benchmarking Accountability Hierarchical to higherlevel government, controls on inputs and process with little or no concern for results Results-based, bottom-up, Client-driven Source: WB, INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL TRANSFERS. PRINCIPLES AND PRACTICE, 2007
2 4 IMPORTANT Achieving citizens’ satisfaction with services delivered by subnational governments requires general efficiency of intergovernmental fiscal relations, equitability, and sustainability of interbudgetary transfers.
2 5 THANK YOU Questions? Please refer to: Iryna Shcherbyna (WB, Governance) ishcherbyna@worldbank. org Maya Gusarova (WB, Governance) mgusarova@worldbank. org
- Slides: 26