Author Topic: Tips for Improved Budget Execution??  (Read 943 times)

Geoff

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Tips for Improved Budget Execution??
« on: May 01, 2010, 15:00:15 GMT »
This forum looks like a fantastic idea - I am also really pleased to see that the 'Partners' are a really strong and experinced group with lots of practical experience. I hope we can get some dialogue going on what is for me the single most important aspect of PFM in any low income setting (especially post-conflict), that of improving budget execution.

I suspect the reason no-one has posted on this so far is not because they don't regard it as important, but more that very few people have any real practical and successful experience of improving it in-country over a sustained period. All the strategically prioritised, programme-based, policy-based, MTEF integrated, macro-fiscal framework reconciled budgets in the world will amount to nothing if the appropriations go out of the window when it comes to budget execution. The cross-country PEFA scores (notwithstanding the Secretariat's aversion to using them in this way) consistently indicate that de jure upstream reforms are much easier to introduce and make 'stick' than any real de facto improvement in budget execution, which consistently lags far behind (with rather depressing implications of the for the role of the PFM industry in the developing world).

In extremely low capacity, low income settings, with centralised payments and intense political pressure on the Treasury to deviate from budget execution procedures (and hence extremely limited technical space), what mechanisms have been found to work to improve things? These are likely to be small local procedural innovations that encourage the formalisation of processes and hence empower more 'progressive' officials and limit the channels for informal/political access (and hence probably highly context specific)... but maybe not.

Suggestions most welcome, ideally from those with a few years of practical experience working inside MoFs in such settings!?

Napodano

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Re: Tips for Improved Budget Execution??
« Reply #1 on: May 02, 2010, 07:55:34 GMT »
Greybeard,

the topic is indeed interesting and relevant for countries just starting PFM reform.

Here some thoughts from my side
  • budget execution regulations:MoF regulations on how to implement the budget are useful to set limitations for in-year reallocation of resources (attached find the Albanian MOF instruction on this matter). Politicians may find more difficult to bend written rules. 
  • Parliamentary oversight: the oversight role of finance committees should be promoted; increasing their analytical capacity is often a priority overlooked by donors. Check the TN in the IMF blog  http://blog-pfm.imf.org/files/fad-technical-manual-9.pdf 
  • Civil society scrutiny: here we are talking of involvement of CSOs in both participatory budget preparation and monitoring public expenditures. In some countries Sector Advisory Groups are vehicles to establish a dialogue between the Government and civil society on public finances.

atseacliff

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Re: Tips for Improved Budget Execution??
« Reply #2 on: May 03, 2010, 07:52:37 GMT »
You will probably find the recent IMF blog on Fiscal Responsibility Laws of interest.

http://blog-pfm.imf.org/pfmblog/2010/04/from-soccer-to-fiscal-responsibility-laws-brazils-impact-on-the-maldives.html

Although FRL's pre-requisites are likely to rule out the low capacity countries you will find much in the bloggers PPT presentation (attached to the blog) that will resonate.  Generally addressing specific narrow and short term objectives related to the execution of the budget  (e.g. failure to follow the budget calendar, budget arrears)  are likely to be  fruitful areas to focus attention on. Building external oversight and civil society capacity institutions are important but decidedly longer term priorities.


John Short

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Re: Tips for Improved Budget Execution??
« Reply #3 on: May 10, 2010, 20:09:14 GMT »
One of the reasons the appropriations go out of the window when it comes to budget execution is that planning and budget preparation can be woeful.  Many budget departments in MoFs are really budget  transfer agencies - after-the-event budgeting where the political process takes over and prioritisation is based on power and not policy!. 

Without good budgeting based on planning and policy, and honest estimation of likely resources, good budget execution cannot really take place as it becomes a case of rubbish in rubbish out.  Yes, budget execution is fundamental, but so too is budget formulation.  The focus on control - ensuring that allocated funds are not misappropriated - has often ensured that a balanced approach to PFM reform  is not undertaken.  It would be interesting to get people's experiences of sequencing and if sometimes the cart is put before the horse and the reason why that has taken place.
« Last Edit: May 11, 2010, 07:47:42 GMT by Napodano »

petagny

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Re: Tips for Improved Budget Execution??
« Reply #4 on: May 12, 2010, 06:52:16 GMT »
John makes a good point. It's not just poor expenditure planning either: shaky or politically driven revenue forecasts can produce a budget that is not deliverable. Improving revenue forecasting can therefore contribute to creating an environment in which better execution becomes at least a possibility.

STONE

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Re: Tips for Improved Budget Execution??
« Reply #5 on: May 17, 2010, 17:39:25 GMT »
Has the new Chancellor been on the board to pick up on Petagny's  point for his new Office of Budget Responsibility.  Independent forecasts to ensure no "tweaking" interesting idea I'll post some more on the macro-framework bit on that.

Back to Greybeard's interesting question on how to ensure that budgets are executed as planned and that there is no within year ad hoc rebudgeting?  I suspect the answer comes back to good policy and planning processes AND a commitment to sound PFM by politicians - the desire to execute the budget as planned.  There are all sorts of ways trying to achieve this and centralised payments systems of the French tradition are meant to do that but from what I understand from Greybeard it is exactly the fact there is centralisation that a focal point for interference, lobbying, pressure, special pleading or whatever that makes it easier to re-direct funds.

In some country budget system laws and traditions it is explicitly recognised that there is a possibility for interference and they seek to protect civil servants by making it a requirement for instructions to override execution rules and procedures to be recorded in writing and made available to the oversight organisations Supreme Audit Institutions and Parliamentary Oversight committees - in the hope that this will act as a deterrent.

The hope lies in commitment to sound PFM with the view that if one wants to spend money on something that has not been budgeted for either use formal (contingency) reserves or better still just wait for next year's budget.

Other countries have discretionary "funds" for Presidents/PMs so that they have money to distribute to petitioners - the fund just sets an ex ante limit on the extent of this diversion.
« Last Edit: May 17, 2010, 17:50:54 GMT by Napodano »

petagny

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Re: Tips for Improved Budget Execution??
« Reply #6 on: May 19, 2010, 04:12:01 GMT »
Today's Guardian has a timely illustration of Stone's point about civil servants protecting themselves from politicians:

'Civil servants came under increasing pressure from ministers in the dying months of the Labour government to carry out expensive orders that they disagreed with and responded by submitting an unprecedented number of formal protests in the run-up to the general election.

The five separate protests came in the form of written ministerial directions – requested by the most senior civil servant in a department when they disagree with a minister's decision so strongly that they refuse to be accountable for it.'

http://www.guardian.co.uk/politics/2010/may/18/civil-servants-labour-spending

Apparently, the UK taxpayer now has a stake in Blackpool's crumbling tourist attractions.

Napodano

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Re: Tips for Improved Budget Execution??
« Reply #7 on: October 16, 2013, 06:22:44 GMT »
An interesting article by Matt Andrews on Transparency in (budget) Formulation and Transparency in Execution, TIF vs.TIE.

Using the Open Budget Index (OBI), Andrews states:

1. '...there is generally something here about countries (generally) scoring better on transparency in formulation than transparency in execution. And it appears that the gap between TIF and TIE either stays high or increases over time in many countries'.

2. ' If transparency is weaker in the execution process because countries have weaker institutional capability in execution, surely we need to be more vocal about such a situation. Execution processes are crucial and if they are lagging in functionality then one has to ask why and spend more time focusing on ensuring such functionality improves'.

Worth reading all Matt has to say and diggin in on the data analysis at http://matthewandrews.typepad.com/the_limits_of_institution/2013/10/how-transparent-are-open-budgets.html
« Last Edit: October 16, 2013, 07:32:38 GMT by Napodano »

 

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