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A Practitioner’s Guide to Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers

A Practitioner’s Guide to Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers. Anwar Shah, World Bank ashah@worldbank.org Budgeting and Public Financial Accountability Workshop, Pretoria, South Africa June 18-22, 2007. Perceptions on intergovernmental finance are generally negative.

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A Practitioner’s Guide to Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers

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  1. A Practitioner’s Guide to Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfers Anwar Shah, World Bank ashah@worldbank.org Budgeting and Public Financial Accountability Workshop, Pretoria, South Africa June 18-22, 2007

  2. Perceptions on intergovernmental finance are generally negative • Federal/Central View: Giving money and power to sub-national governments is like giving whiskey and car keys to teenagers. • Provincial and LocalView: We need more grant monies to demonstrate that “money does not buy anything”. • Citizens: The magical art of passing money from one government to another and seeing it vanish in thin air.

  3. Intergovernmental Fiscal Transfersedited by Robin Boadway and Anwar Shah Anwar Shah, World Bank INFOSHOP Book Launch Event April 18, 2007

  4. Ironically these perceptions are well grounded in reality • Primary focus on dividing the spoils • Passing the buck transfers – revenue sharing with multiple factors (Brazil, Argentina, India, Philippines and more) • Asking for more trouble grants – deficit grants (China, Hungary, India, and more) • Pork barrel transfers or political bribes (Brazil, India, Pakistan, USA e.g. $200m bridge to nowhere in Alaska ) • Command and control transfers (most countries) • Overall: Intergovernmental finance is the dominant source of revenue but creates perverse incentives for fiscal management and accountability.

  5. No need to despair …. As properly designed fiscal transfers can be part of the solution rather than part of the problem.

  6. How to do it ? • Realigning incentives (grant design) with grant objectives • Ensuring local autonomy and flexibility while providing incentives for accountability • External, Competitive Results Based Focus • Reinforcing accountability for service delivery to citizens • Reducing transaction costs for redress • Institutional arrangements that overcome the commitment problem

  7. Considerations in the Design of Fiscal Transfers • Consistency of design with a single objective • Simple and transparent allocation criteria • Create incentives for competitive service delivery and support citizen-centered governance • Provide incentives for fiscal prudence • Ensure flexibility in use but accountability for results • Stable and predictable • Equitable ( entitlements vary inversely with fiscal capacity and directly with fiscal needs) • One size does not fit all – urban vs. rural, large vs. small • Sunset clauses to ensure periodic review and assessment

  8. Instruments of intergovernmental finance • Unconditional vs conditional transfers • Unconditional: preserving local autonomy and enhancing inter-jurisdictional equity • Conditional: providing incentives to undertake specific activities • Conditional Transfers • matching vs non-matching • open-ended vs. closed-ended matching • Input based conditionality vs output based conditionality • Input based conditionality often intrusive and unproductive. Output based conditionality can advance grantor’s objectives while preserving local autonomy

  9. Conditional transfers with conditions on spending impair recipient’s autonomy without furthering grantor’s objectives

  10. Traditional versus Output-based grants -1

  11. Traditional versus Output-based grants -2

  12. Traditional versus Output-based grants -3

  13. Output-based transfers: Results Chain Application in Education

  14. Long Route to Accountability Inputs Control Grants National Government State Government Citizens as Clients Local Government Government Providers

  15. Short Route to Accountability Output-Based Grants National Government State Government Citizens as governors Local Government Competitive Provision Govt Non Govt

  16. Transfers to deal with fiscal gap • Fiscal Gap: Structural imbalance as a result of a mismatch between revenue means and expenditure needs. Reasons: Inappropriate assign: Reassign Limited tax bases: Allow joint occupancy or tax decentralization. Tax competition: Federal collection and general (not on a tax-by-tax basis) revenue sharing. Tax room lacking: Tax abatement and tax base sharing (Canada ). Practices to avoid: deficit grants; tax by tax sharing.

  17. Transfers to set national minimum standards • Rationale: • National economic union or internal common market • Redistributive role of the public sector and the national government • Design: conditional non-matching block transfers with conditions on standards of service and access. • Better practices: Indonesia roads and primary education grants; Brazil health transfers, Colombia and Chile education transfers; Canada health and post-secondary education transfers. • Practices to avoid: Conditional transfers with conditions on spending; ad hoc grants.

  18. An example : A performance oriented education grant to set national minimum standards and encourage competition and innovation and citizen empowerment • Allocation basis among local governments: school age children (ages 6-17) • Distribution to providers: equal per pupil to both government and private schools • Conditions: Universal access to all, private school admissions on merit regardless of parents’ income, improvements in school achievement scores, graduation and drop out rates, no condition on spending • Penalties: public censure, reduction of grant funds • Incentives for cost efficiency: retention of savings

  19. International practices in transfers to reduce regional fiscal disparities • Design: General non-matching fiscal capacity equalization transfers. • Better practices: Fiscal equalization programs (sources of data: CGC, Morris, Finance Canada, Dafflon, Lotz, Shah, Spahn & Werner) • Paternal: Australia (fiscal capacity plus fiscal needs) and Canada (fiscal capacity only) • Solidarity, Fraternal or Robin Hood: Germany (fiscal capacity) • Mixed: Switzerland, Sweden, Denmark • Practices to avoid: General revenue sharing with multiple factors e.g. practices in Brazil and India

  20. Equalization programs are concerned with inter-jurisdictional equity (horizontal fiscal equity) not with with interpersonal equity (vertical equity) • Australia: capacity to provide services at the same standard with same revenue effort and same operational efficiency • Canada: “reasonably comparable levels of public services at reasonably comparable levels of taxation across provinces” • Germany: “to equalize the differences in financial capacity of states” • Switzerland: “to provide minimum acceptable levels of certain public services without much heavier tax burdens in some cantons than others”.

  21. Germany – Fiscal Equalization in 3 stages • Stage 1: Equal per capita distribution of 75% of States’ share of VAT revenues (47.8% of total) to all 16 states and remaining 25% as supplement to financially weak states. • Stage 2: Formal Fiscal Equalization Program through Solidarity Pact II – Rich state contribute to the pool through a progressive tax (45 –72.5% rate) and poor states receive progressive subsidy from the pool. • Stage 3: Federal Supplementary grants

  22. Denmark: Equalization models and standards

  23. Alternate Institutional Arrangements for ET • Central government agency • Intergovernmental Forums • Intergovernmental cum civil society forums • Sub-national government forums • Independent agency model – reporting to executive – permanent or periodic • Independent agency model reporting to legislature

  24. Fiscal Transfers: Negative Lessons or Practices to Avoid • General revenue sharing with multiple factors • Deficit grants • Fiscal Effort Provisions • Input or process based or ad hoc grants • Capital grants without assurance for upkeep • Negotiated or discretionary transfers • One size does not fit all

  25. Fiscal Transfers: Positive Lessons or Practices to Strive For • K.I.S. (keep it simple) • Focus on single objective • Introduce sunset clause • Output based conditional transfers with citizens’ evaluations • Fiscal capacity equalization to a defined standard • Political consensus on the standard of equalization • Institutional arrangements for broad based consultation

  26. Fiscal Equalization Grants: Some Lessons from International Experiences • Equalization formula must determine both the pool and allocations. • Fiscal capacity equalization with an explicit standard is desirable and do-able in most countries. • Fiscal need equalization is much more complex – desirable but may not be worth doing. Rough justice may be better than precise justice. • Output based transfers offers a promising alternative for fiscal need compensation. Enhance results based accountability. • Equalization transfers must not be looked at in isolation of the broader fiscal system especially conditional transfers. • For local equalization – one size does not fit all. • Important to have societal consensus on the standard of equalization • Must have a sunset clause and provision for a review and renewal • Institutional arrangements for a continuous review and periodic revision require serious thoughts as independent grants commission typically recommend more complex formulae.

  27. From Dividing the Spoils to Creating An Enabling Environment for Responsive and Accountable Local Governance • Tax Decentralization • Output based fiscal transfers • operating • capital • Fiscal equalization transfers • Responsible borrowing

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