I fear that the ‘MTEF’ at least as a piece of terminology might have been fatally wounded on several counts:
Firstly, it has been too closely associated with a prescriptive donor agenda and has become intimately linked to the PRSP (or its equivalent). I think of the MTEF as a largely value-free process reform that could, in theory, be used to implement ‘pro-rich’ policies just as easily as ‘pro-poor’ policies. Although we may prefer some version of the latter, I do not believe that this association has necessarily served us well in assisting governments with the introduction of the MTEF approach. Now unfortunately, the ‘MTEF’ is seen, both by partner governments and many advisors, as part of the package of donor stuff’running parallel to the normal business of government.
Secondly, the MTEF and performance-oriented budgeting have in many cases become almost synonymous. Certainly, introducing a strong performance-orientation to budgeting is almost impossible outside a medium term framework, but an MTEF can, potentially, achieve a lot without a strong performance dimension. Look back at the World Bank’s 1998 Public Expenditure Management Handbook; although the MTEF is seen as having a potential impact on aggregate fiscal discipline, on strategic resource allocation and on the efficiency and effectiveness of public spending, the lower down this list one goes, the more important accompanying changes in other institutional processes become, i.e., changes outside the budgetary system. In my view, the downfall of the MTEF in many countries has been a premature focus on the performance dimension in conditions where accompanying institutional changes in these other areas are unlikely to materialise any time soon. A lot can be achieved by focusing on the aggregate fiscal discipline and strategic resource allocation dimensions, i.e. creating an environment in which prioritisation can realistically be expected to take place. And, quite frankly, what chance is there of successfully implementing performance-oriented budgeting if a basic process of top-down, medium term ceiling setting at the aggregate and sector/ministry level is not already institutionalised?
Thirdly, the ludicrous notion of ‘sector MTEFs’ – as opposed to a whole of government approach – has sown a lot of confusion and, in some countries, it might be difficult to step back from this. Not much different from this are the extended pilots in certain key sectors, which never gain credibility because the roll-out of the full MTEF always seems to be somewhere over the horizon.
Is it therefore time to rebrand the ‘emteff’ and restrain our ambitions so that they are more in line with the capacities and political realities of client governments?