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MTEFs: Concept and Lessons

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'big-bang' covering all MTEF aspects at once, plus IFMIS and Civil Service Reform ... MTEF is designed to improve decision-making, and focuses on budget formulation. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: MTEFs: Concept and Lessons


1
MTEFsConcept and Lessons
  • Bill Dorotinsky
  • The World Bank
  • May 2, 2006

2
Outline
  • MTEF Concept
  • Technical objectives
  • Process View
  • Sequenced decision-making
  • Component View - unbundling
  • Major Blocks
  • More manageable pieces
  • Output View
  • Experience
  • Ghana
  • South Africa
  • Uganda
  • Lessons

3
Three Objectives of Public Expenditure Management
Systems
  • Macrofiscal discipline and stability
  • Avoid public finance crises
  • Support economic growth and stability
  • Strategic allocation of resources
  • Match government policy with programs, objectives
  • Technical efficiency
  • Getting the most from each ruble spent

4
Technical Objectives of MTEF
  • Improve macrofiscal situation
  • lower deficits, improved economic growth
  • more rational approach to retrenchment and
    economic stabilization
  • Improve impact of Government policy
  • link between government priorities/policies and
    government programs
  • Improve program performance/impact
  • Shift bureaucracy from administrative to
    managerial culture
  • Managerial flexibility innovation lower
    cost/output greater effectiveness of
    programs/policies
  • Improved resource predictability

5
MTEF Improved Budget Process
  • Stage 1. Macroeconomic and public sector
    envelopes
  • Stage 2. High-level policy aligning policies
    objectives under resource constraints (top-down)
  • Stage 3. Linking policy, resources, and means by
    sector (bottom-up)
  • Stage 4. Reconciling resources with means
  • Stage 5. Reconciling strategic policy and means

6
Stage 1. Macroeconomic and public sector envelopes
7
Stage 2. High-level policy aligning policies
objectives under constraints
8
Stage 3. Linking policy, resources, and means by
sector
9
Stage 4. Reconciling resources with means
10
Stage 5. Reconciling strategic policy and means
Policy assessment and reconciliation
Policy official dialogue Modify
baselines Finalize decisions
Revised Requests, Unresolved Issues
Budget Proposal
11
MTEF Major Components
  • Medium-Term Fiscal Framework
  • Aggregates, policy
  • Medium-Term Budget Framework
  • Ceilings and sector strategies
  • Program budgeting/Activity-based costing
  • Within ministries, programs, costing,
    input-output models
  • Performance measures

12
Unbundling MTEFs
  • Medium-Term Fiscal Framework
  • Multi-year Macroeconomic forecast
  • Multi-year revenue, debt sustainability analysis
    and debt policy, yielding expenditure envelope
    (fiscal policy paper)
  • Medium-Term Budget Framework
  • Multi-year forecast of spending under current
    policy or current level of services, by ministry
    or program
  • Multi-year ceilings for sector ministries
  • Multi-year sector strategy
  • Program budgeting/Activity-based costing
  • Multi-year cost estimates of new policies or
    programs (recurrent), or expansion of existing
    programs, prepared by sector ministries
  • Multi-year estimates of cost of existing
    policies, programs, subprograms, or activities
    prepared by sector ministries
  • Multi-year estimates of cost of new projects
    (capital), or expansion of existing projects,
    prepared by sector ministries

13
Unbundling MTEFs
14
Unbundling MTEFs (2)
15
Unbundling MTEFs (3)
16
Unbundling MTEFs (4)
17
Summary
  • MTEF is about
  • Process reform
  • Integrating planning and budgeting
  • Changing Incentives of Key Actors
  • Integrating policy and technical aspects of
    budgeting
  • Thinking multi-year
  • Misconceptions
  • MTEF is only multi-year estimates
  • MTEF separate process, document only
  • Preconditions?
  • Civil service/administrative reform for
    allocative flexibility?

18
Ghana
  • MTEF first introduced in 1999
  • Declared a success at first budget
  • big-bang covering all MTEF aspects at once,
    plus IFMIS and Civil Service Reform
  • Problems encountered
  • Limited MDA capacity
  • Data limitations
  • EBFs
  • Weak macroforecasting undermined MTEF
  • Rigidity of spending inhibited reallocation

19
Ghana (2)
  • Problems encountered (continued)
  • No visible change in budget formats, information
    provided (e.g. budget speech)
  • Limited buy-in outside core MoF group
  • Implemented as project versus reform of budget
    process, as technical versus policy-oriented
  • Linking next budget with multi-year estimates
  • Top-down implemented, but bottom-up not quite in
    place

20
South Africa
  • First attempt 1994
  • Department of Finance only
  • Failed, too internal
  • Second attempt 1997
  • Inclusive process, with sectoral working groups
  • All departments at once
  • Led by policy officials
  • MTEF is budget process
  • Have MTBPS and sectoral plans
  • But sectoral plans formal
  • Performance emphasized more recently
  • Reprioritization within sectors has happened
  • Over and under spending reduced

21
Uganda
  • Started in 1992
  • in MoFPED
  • With MTFF, major economic classes
  • To address macrofiscal problems and counterpart
    funding problems
  • Gradually expanded
  • 1995 sector analysis (Ag, Roads, Health,
    Education)
  • 1997 all sectors (sector working groups)
  • 2000 local governments
  • 2001 MTEF required submission to Parliament
  • Donor-financed investments (PIP) separate process
  • Limited performance orientation, though expanding
  • More top-down, with limited detailed costing from
    the bottom-up
  • MTEF home-grown but still not fully integrated
    with the budget process
  • Emphasis on PEAP priority programs

22
Lessons in Implementation
  • MTEF is designed to improve decision-making, and
    focuses on budget formulation. It will not solve
    all PEM problems.
  • MTEF is not a standardized product, per se. The
    principles can be implemented in various ways.
  • MTEF needs to be customized to the country,
    including initial conditions in PEM, human and IT
    capacity.
  • With MTEF, and PEM reform generally, doing too
    much at once can overload the Government capacity
    and prevent progress on all reforms.

23
More lessons
  • Start with a medium-term fiscal framework
  • MTEFs should not be launched in selected sectors
    until there are medium-term ceilings in place
  • Integration of capital and recurrent budgets need
    not be done immediately
  • Performance information (outcomes, outputs) need
    not be incorporated immediately
  • Flexibility for spending ministries to allocate
    resources across programs, subprograms, and
    activities can be introduced gradually
  • Pressure on ministries to find resources within
    current expenditures may be more successful when
    accounting systems are in place to provide good
    information on program and activity costs
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