1 / 18

Decentralization and Intergovernmental Fiscal Reform

Intergovernmental Transfers: Theory and Practice Roy Bahl Dean, and Professor of Economics Georgia State University (rbahl@gsu.edu). Decentralization and Intergovernmental Fiscal Reform Sponsored by the Decentralization Thematic Group, PRMPS and WBI Washington, DC 29-31 March 2004.

gmoyer
Download Presentation

Decentralization and Intergovernmental Fiscal Reform

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. Intergovernmental Transfers: Theory and Practice Roy Bahl Dean, and Professor of EconomicsGeorgia State University(rbahl@gsu.edu) Decentralization and Intergovernmental Fiscal Reform Sponsored by the Decentralization Thematic Group, PRMPS and WBI Washington, DC 29-31 March 2004

  2. Basic Approaches to Decentralization • Revenue-Sharing Model (Weak Decentralization) • Grants • Shared Taxes • “Minor” Local Taxes • Revenue Assignment Model (Strong Decentralization) • Grants • Shared Taxes • Significant Local Taxes (Autonomy) • Loans • User Charges

  3. Rules 8. Grants and shared taxes must play an important role in almost any decentralized fiscal system in a developing or transition country. Transfers may be designed as more centralized or more decentralized.

  4. Justifications for Intergovernmental Transfers • Close the “fiscal gap” • Equalize fiscal capacity and need • Adjust for spillovers • Increase effectiveness of central expenditures • Political reasons

  5. Cause of “Fiscal Gap” Assigned more expenditures to local governments than revenues or too few revenues Local governments have “gone crazy” and are spending beyond their means Local governments are not making use of the revenue sources available to them Means to Close the Gap Change the revenue or expenditure mix among levels of government Introduce controls or restraints on local governments Enhance local fiscal effort Closing the Fiscal Gap

  6. Equalizing Fiscal Capacity • Equalize the position of governments, not people • Allocate unconditional grants: give funds to government and let them spend as they choose • Allocate conditional transfers: allocate funds for specified purpose • Avoid “gap filling”

  7. Adjusting for Spillovers • Importance of spillovers • Alternatives to transfers • Getting public sector “prices” right • Varying price with capacity

  8. What is an Intergovernmental Transfer? • Grants • Shared Taxes

  9. How Can Intergovernmental Transfers be Decentralizing • Revenue adequacy • Certainty • Unconditional

  10. How Can Intergovernmental Transfers be Centralizing • No transparency in vertical sharing • Ad hoc distributions • Uncertainty and year-to-year changes • Strict Conditions

  11. How Should The Grant System Be Structured? Alternative Form of Intergovernmental Grant Programs Method of determining the total divisible pool

  12. Appropriateness of Various Types of Grants Objective of National Government • Maintain control over local finances • Stimulate expenditures for a particular function/overall tax effort • Equalize services and fiscal capabilities among localities • Increase local tax effort

  13. Appropriateness of Various Types of Grants Objective of Local Government • Maintain control over local finances • Plan efficient budget • Increase adequacy of local revenues Joint Objective • Minimize administrative costs

  14. Natural Resource Revenue Sharing: The Case for More Centralization • The Stability Argument • The Disparities Argument • The Local Capacity Argument • The National Treasure Argument

  15. Natural Resource Revenue Sharing: The Case for More Decentralization • The Cost Reimbursement Argument • The Heritage Argument • The Conflict Resolution Argument

  16. Revenue Sharing in Transition Countries • Very Centralized • Piggybacking • Backdoor Approaches

  17. Intergovernmental Grants: How Not To Do It! • Deficit Grants • Complicated Formulae • No Transparency • No Continuity • Base It On The Amount Spent • No Evaluation

  18. Intergovernmental Grant Lessons • Desired outcomes should drive design • One grant/transfer instrument cannot accomplish multiple objectives. • Expect changes in formula over time • Is “distributable pool” a discretionary element in the central budget or an entitlement of local government?

More Related