1 / 30

The PEFA Program – and the PFM Performance Measurement Framework

The PEFA Program – and the PFM Performance Measurement Framework. Public Financial Analysis and Management (PFAM) Course World Bank Washington DC, April 24, 2007. Frans Ronsholt PEFA Secretariat. Content. What is PEFA ? The Strengthened Approach to Supporting PFM Reform

Leo
Download Presentation

The PEFA Program – and the PFM Performance Measurement Framework

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The PEFA Program – and the PFM Performance Measurement Framework Public Financial Analysis and Management (PFAM) Course World Bank Washington DC, April 24, 2007 Frans Ronsholt PEFA Secretariat

  2. Content • What is PEFA ? • The Strengthened Approach to Supporting PFM Reform • The PFM Performance Measurement Framework • Roll-out of the Framework • Assessment Process Issues • The Role of the PEFA Secretariat

  3. What is PEFA ? • Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability Program • aimed at harmonization and alignment • supporting the Monterrey, Rome and Paris Declarations • Established by a core group of international financial institutions and donor agencies • World Bank, IMF, European Commission, UK, France, Norway, Switzerland • Guides and finances the Program • Working closely with other donor agencies • through the OECD-DAC Joint Venture on PFM • PEFA Secretariat located within World Bank

  4. PFM Diagnostics in the 1990s • Large amount of PFM work undertaken, • mostly by development agencies • a good deal of knowledge generated. LIMITATIONS • Duplication and lack of coordination led to heavy burden on partner governments. • Not possible to demonstrate improvements in PFM performance over time in a country • Monitoring of PFM reforms focused on inputs and activities, rather than performance

  5. The Strengthened Approach to Supporting PFM Reform • A country-led PFM reform program • including a strategy and action plan reflecting country priorities; implemented through government structures • A donor coordinated program of support • covering analytical, technical and financial support • A common information pool • based on a framework for measuring and monitoring results over time • i.e. the PEFA PFM Performance Measurement Framework

  6. The PFM Performance Measurement Framework

  7. Components of the Framework • A standard set of high level PFM indicators to assess performance • 28 government performance indicators • 3 donor indicators, reflecting donor practices influencing the government’s PFM • A concise, integrated report –the PFM Performance Report • Standard content and format • provides the narrative to support the indicator assessments (the evidence) • draws a summary from the analysis

  8. Coverage of the Public Sector • Focused oncentral government operations • Links toother parts of the public sector • Sub-National Governments • Public Business Enterprises to the extent these have implications for Central Government • May be applied to sub-national government - Requires minor modifications

  9. Principles of Indicator Design • High levelsystem performance is measured • Assesses performance, but not underlying capacity factors • Full overviewof the PFM system • revenue, expenditure, procurement, financial assets/ liabilities • Basis for design: • The 16HIPC Expenditure Tracking Indicators, but broader • draws onIMF’s Fiscal Standards and Codes(ROSC) • internationally acceptedstandardse.g. GFS, IPSAS, INTOSAI • Widely applicableto countries at all levels of development,but not intended for cross-country comparison

  10. Structure of the Indicator Set C. Budget Cycle Policy Based budgeting D. Donor Practices A. PFM Out-turns B. Cross-cutting features External scrutiny and audit Predictability and control in BudgetExecution Budget credibility Comprehensiveness and Transparency Accounting, Recording, Reporting

  11. Content of Indicator Set A. PFM Out-turns Credibility of the budgetIndicators 1- 4 Deviations from aggregate budgeted expenditure and revenue as well as expenditure composition. Level of expenditure arrears. B. Key Cross-cutting issues Comprehensiveness and transparency Indicators 5-10 Coverage of budget classification, budget documentation, reporting on extra-budgetary operations, inter-governmental fiscal relations, fiscal risk oversight and public access to information. C. Budget Cycle i.Policy-based budgeting Indicators 11-12 Annual budget preparation process, multi-year perspective in fiscal planning, expenditure policy and budgeting

  12. Content of Indicator Set (cont’d) C. Budget Cycle ii. Predictability & control in budget executionIndicators 13-21 Revenue administration, predictability in availability of funds, cash balances, debt & guarantee management, payroll controls, procurement, internal controls and internal audit iii.Accounting, recording and reporting Indicators 22-25 Accounts reconciliation, reporting on resources at service outlet level, in-year budget execution reports, financial statements iv. External scrutiny and auditIndicators 26-28 Scope, nature and follow-up on external audit; legislative scrutiny of annual budget law and external audit reports D. Donor Practices Indicators D1- D3 Predictability of direct budget support; donor information for budgeting and reporting; use of national procedures

  13. Calibration and Scoring • Calibrated onfour point ordinal scale (A, B, C, D) • Requirements for each score explicitly specified • Scoring based on extent of internationally recognized ‘Good Practice’ • Indicators have 1, 2, 3 or 4 dimensions • in total 74 dimensions • to provide detailed information & transparency of score • each dimension must be rated separately • Aggregation only from dimensions to indicator

  14. Roll-out of PEFA based Assessments

  15. Roll-out of PFM Assessments • PFM Performance Measurement Framework launched June 2005 • Assessment Status as at March 2007 • 45 substantially completed i.e. draft/final report • 24 on-going but report not yet issued • 27 agreed with government but not started • Roll-out rate: a steady 2-3 new assessments per month • Outlook for mid 2008 • 75-80 countries covered • 8-10 repeat assessments

  16. Geographical distribution

  17. Assessment Process Issues

  18. Decentralized Process • Application of the PEFA Framework to be decided at country level. Decisions to be made: • If and Why ? • When ? • How ? • Recommended by international organizations as good practice (e.g. OECD-DAC, ComSec) • No supra-agency mandates or responsibilities. Each country and organization decides its interest in a PEFA assessment and ability to contribute.

  19. Government Involvement • Government’s role • Self-assessment (with external validation) • Joint assessment (joint team) • Collaboration with donor-led assessment • Determined by interest and capacity • What are the benefits to government? • Government staff may need training

  20. Donor Collaboration • A donor reference group is essential • to ensure that needs of all parties are addressed • to ensure common acceptance of findings • The reference group to agree internally and with the government on: • Diagnostic packaging • Resources for assessment work • Stages and timing of the assessment work • Quality assurance arrangements

  21. Diagnostic Packaging - Purposes of Standard Diagnostic Tools

  22. Diagnostic Packaging – Coverage of PFM Performance Report Implement PFM reforms High level performance overview Formulate PFM reform program PFM-PR Identify main PFM weaknesses Recommend PFM reform measures Identify main PFM weaknesses Recommend PFM reform measures Investigate underlying causes

  23. Diagnostic Packages • Stand-alone PFM-PR - Recommended -e.g. input to decision on focus of subsequent in-depth analysis • PFM Performance indicators integrated into other product - in combination with PER, CFAA or PEMFAR/CIFA - a problematic concept; rarely working well • PFM-PR as a separate/early module of a broader analytical product - often works well (e.g. Afghanistan PER, Ghana ERPFM)

  24. Quality Assurance • Terms of Reference & Draft Report to be Q.A.’d • Government and donor reference group • Should ensure that information is used correctly and reflects the situation in the country • Donor specific arrangements to be respected e.g. World Bank peer review mechanism • The PEFA Secretariat can contribute as peer reviewer, if requested • Will consider if the product respects the Framework’s standards and methodology

  25. The PEFA Secretariat

  26. Mission of the PEFA Secretariat • To disseminate information on the Strengthened Approach to Supporting PFM Reform and the PEFA Performance Measurement Framework. • To support applications of the PEFA Framework at country level for quality and usefulness of the assessments. • Reports to the seven-agency PEFA Steering Committee

  27. Activities of the PEFA Secretariat • Development of the Framework; interpretation and clarification of the indicators • Provision of support and guidance for quality in implementing the assessment in each country • Development of training programs and materials • Monitoring roll-out of the strengthened approach for lesson learning and input into training and guidance

  28. Support Services and Tools Support tools for assessment managers on the website (www.pefa.org): • List of completed, ongoing and planned assessments – updated 3-4 times annually • Links to completed reports, if they are made public Support to assessment managers on request: • Advice / Video-conference briefings to country teams on assessment planning • List of consultants with PEFA assessment experience • Review of terms of reference • Quality reviews of draft assessment reports

  29. Support Services and Tools Support tools for assessors & trainers on the website: • Translations of the Framework (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, Arabic) • Calculation spreadsheets for some indicators • Guidance on information / evidence for assessment • Clarifications and additional guidance on indicators • Training materials Support to assessors on request: • Indicator interpretation and other advice to assessors during implementation

  30. Thank You for Your Attention

More Related