Title: Fiscal Reforms in the New Member States
1Selected Issues in Fiscal Reform in Central
Europe and the Baltic Countries 2005
? Fiscal Challenges for the EU8
Countries? Managing Fiscal Risks in
Public-Private Partnerships? Financing
Higher Education? Controlling Health Care
Expenditures? Assessing Intergovernmental
Fiscal Relations
2Fiscal Challenges and constrains for the EU8
Countries
- Key fiscal challenge is to improve
- sustainability
- quality of public finances
- Constrains
- Aging population
- Upgrading public infrastructure
- Fulfillment of commitments under Acquis
Communicare (i.e. environment) - Role of fiscal institution (fiscal and
statistical governance)
- Fundamental importance for
- meeting SGP goals (euro Entry)
- catching up of NMS to the income levels of EU15
- delivering the Lisbon Strategy goals (greater
social cohesion, combating poverty) - more effective tool of short-tem
macro-stabilization
3Fiscal developments
- Evolution of fiscal balances
- Striking changes in fiscal policy in EU8 in the
last 10Y - EU8 engaged in fiscal consolidation toward the
Maastricht criteria for euro adoption - Fiscal consolidation complicated by
- Completion of transition process (large social
protection system) - EU membership (i.e. implementation of Acquis)
- Growing tax competition
- Structural nature of fiscal imbalances
- NMS coped with these pressures in different ways
and with uneven results - Deficits have tended to shrink
- but in most of EU8 remain away from
surplus/close to balance target - In last years
- Comfortably below 3 of GDP in Baltic countries,
Slovenia - Stubbornly high in Hungary, Poland (close to 5
of GDP) - Consolidation efforts have stabilized debt-to GDP
ratio, at ease below 60 of GDP mark (except
Hungary)
4Fiscal developments
5Fiscal developments
- Tax systems have been overhauled
- Tax burden has been reduced
- Notable exceptions burden higher than
- in mid-90s
- social security contributions in CZ, LT, PL
- direct and indirect taxes in SL
- Overall tax burden NOT HIGH compared to EU15
- close to EU15 in SL, HU
- substantially lower in Baltic countries
- but HIGH given NMS's income level
- Tax wedges still high, higher than in EU15,
especially for low wage earners - Structure of taxation has changed
- Share of direct taxes in total tax revenue
declined, while share of social security
contribution and indirect taxes increased - ongoing tax reform played a role
- Composition still differs from EU15
25
30
35
40
45
2
EU15
0
CZ
LT
-2
HU
PL
-4
EE
LV
Cumulative change 1995-2004
-6
-8
-10
SK
-12
Total taxes, including social contributions,
GDP -
base year 1995
EE 2002, SL 2003
6Fiscal developments
- Dynamics of public expenditure
- Public expenditure-to-GDP ratio have fallen
- In Baltic countries spending
- Increased in response to the Russia crisis and
then reversed to downward trend - Expenditure developments in V4 varied
- Degree of redistribution not higher than EU15
- exception HU and PL
- in Baltic countries among the lowest in EU
- Composition of spending has not changed much over
last decade - Economic/Functional classification Few EU8
countries managed to improve structure of
spending - Social protection/benefits remain largest in EU8
(still below EU15!), followed by collective
consumption - Gross capital consumption ( 3 of GDP), somewhat
higher than in EU15 - Functional class. directed more toward
efficiency-oriented programs and basic
functions of the state than income
redistribution
7Quality of fiscal policy
- Long term strategy for consolidation has to
include not only quantitative aspects but also
issue of qualitative or structural
consolidation. - Successful contractions in EU8 Baltic countries
in 2000 Slovakia 2001 - High quality fiscal adjustments in EU8
- Scale of adjustment is essential half of the
episodes of fiscal consolidations were successful
in reducing deficit at least by 1 of GDP
- Composition of adjustments matters
expenditure-based cuts rather than tax-based - nearly all episodes of large fiscal contractions
(gt1 of GDP) were based on expenditure restrain - HU in 2004 contraction relied mainly on revenue
adjustment - one half of large contractions were expenditure
dominated (deficit/GDP gt70) Baltic states
(2000), SK (2001, 2003), HU (2000)
- Rely on painful expenditure cuts fiscal
contractions relied mainly on cuts in - Gross fixed capital formation (CZ, EE, LV)
- Social benefits/other social transfers in kind
(LT, LV, SK) - Collective consumption
8Quality of fiscal policy
- Growth-enhancing restructuring,
efficiency-improving design and management of
public expenditure/revenues - major policy
challenge - on the revenue side
- set up tax structures that strengthen growth
potential - (by promoting employment creation/investment)
- an analysis of tax expenditures (e.g. tax
exemptions) - on the expenditure side
- identify productive/growth-enhancing
expenditure - (covered by categories like RD, education and
infrastructure investment) - integrated cost-benefit assessment
- introduce effective institutional framework ,
focused on policy outcome/efficiency - Universal framework for assessing quality has not
yet been developed - our analysis aims to give a first hint at quality
of fiscal policy in EU8 - EC synthetic indicator of the composition of
public spending - Panel Data Analysis expenditure/taxes structure
versus growth per capita
9Fiscal policy and growth
- There is as yet no comprehensive analysis of the
relationship between tax/expenditure structure
and growth in the NMS - Results of an econometric panel analysis covering
the period 1996-2004 - I. Constant tax/GDP ratio but change in
structure - Tax structure affects economic growth,
specifically the proportion - of tax revenue raised by direct taxes and social
security contributions have a negative, robust
correlation with economic growth. - Variable reflecting expenditure structure seems
no to be robustly correlated with growth - Gross fixed capital formation - positive but
fragile relationship - Social benefits negative fragile
- II. Change in revenue/expenditure structure
- Distortionary taxes (PIT, CIT, SSC) hamper GDP
growth (coeff. -0.4) - Productive expenditure (including education,
health, general public services) enhance GDP
growth (coeff. 0.3) - Unproductive E behaved ambiguously
- Both results are insensitive to the selection of
the omitted variables. T coefficient more robust
than E (non-linearity and public spending
efficiency as potential explanations)
- preliminary results warrant cautious
interpretation because of the limitation of the
methodology used and quality/availability of data
10Estimation results in detail
11Synthetic indicator of the public spending
- Methodology (developed by EC)
- expenditure items categorized in terms of their
efficiency effects and impact on fostering
long-term growth - each spending component has a range of 2 points
between the best and the worst performer, all
items have the same weight - the higher the sum of scores in all categories,
the better is the composition of public spending
relative to other MS - EC calculation for EU15 were supplemented with
our own calculations for EU8
good scores in
Ranking 2002
ranking doesnt include Estonia
low scores in
12Medium-term fiscal prospects
- Budget deficits are expected to decline
- sharpest decrease is foreseen for Hungary and
Poland - V4 plan to comply with the Maastricht criteria
- in 2006-2008
- Baltic countries, Slovenia envisage sustain
deficit below 3 in period 2004-2007 - Public expenditure goes down
- total expenditure is assumed to decline on
average - total revenue edges up Slovakia, Lithuania and
Poland - Public debt remain below 60 of GDP threshold,
EU15 average - only Hungary has a debt-to-GDP very close to 60,
though assumes declining trend - In V4 debt prospect rely importantly on fiscal
adjustments
13Managing Fiscal Risks in Public-Private
Partnerships Context
- The EU8 have yet to narrow the distance to the
EU15 to improve economic competitiveness and
living standards - However, noticeable differences are visible
across different infrastructure sectors - telecom sector being most advanced in CR, EST and
PO - no country from EU8 has road network to match
those in EU15 - If the EU8 plus Bulgaria and Romania are to
attain the EU15 infrastructure standards, this
would imply sizeable investment requirements. - The EU8 are facing a difficult challenge how to
reduce the existing disparities in the quality
and availability of public services while
maintaining fiscal stability or, in some
countries, conducting fiscal adjustment - In this context PPP become increasingly popular
in the EU8 countries
14Managing Fiscal Risks in PPPs PPPs involve
fiscal risks
- FISCAL RISKS
- A. Direct, debt-like obligations
- Availability payments for the use of roads,
schools, hospitals or prison facilities - (UK, Australia, South Africa and many European
countries) - B. Explicit Contingent obligations
- State guarantees of investors returns
- Widely used in the 19th century, to promote
railways - Revenues and exchange-rate guarantees on toll
roads - (Chile, Colombia, Korea, and Spain)
- C. Implicit Contingent obligations
- taking over private debt of financially
distressed infrastructure firms (Mexico and UK
Railtrack) - Implicit guarantees to PPA contracts of public
energy utility - (Indonesia, Philippines and Turkey)
- While PPPs can be beneficial when they increase
efficiency, the also create fiscal obligations
that are not captured by traditional measures of
government debt. - Accurate fiscal monitoring and good use and
design of PPPs require the fiscal costs and risks
of the major contractual obligations to be
identified and quantified.
15Managing Fiscal Risks in PPPs Fiscal institutions
Whether PPPs can create fiscal space depends to a
large extent on the quality of the legal and
institutional framework for fiscal management
or the quality of fiscal institutions.
- Incentives (min short-term cash expenditure vs
reducing the future fiscal risks) - Information (on traditional liabilities vs on
liabilities incurred in PPPs) - In EU8 there is only a limited information on the
risks involved in PPPs and very little of such
information is made publicly available. PPP
contracts and their content are considered
confidential, which makes it difficult for policy
analysts to assess the long-term fiscal cost - Capacity (may or may not allow G. to analyze
risks in PPPs and to decide which are best borne
by the G.) - In EU8 capacity to actively manage government
risk exposures arising from contingent
liabilities and control long-term obligations has
been limited
16Managing Fiscal Risks in PPPs How to enhance
fiscal institutions to ensure fiscal prudence in
the use and design of PPPs?
- Promote Risk Awareness
- Impose Disclosure of Fiscal Risk
- Enhance Fiscal Planning, Accounting and Budgeting
for Fiscal Risk - Adopt Fiscal Risk Management
- Enhance International Mechanisms
Table. Improving Fiscal Institutions for PPPs at
a Glance
17Managing Fiscal Risks in PPPs International
mechanisms to promote fiscal prudence in PPPs
- EU surveillance to further evolve fiscal risk
analysis survey infrastructure risks, risk
exposure of local governments, SOEs, financial
institutions - Reward disclosure and punish opacity (EU to
adjust debt and deficit ceilings, early warning
system, contingency reserve fund) - Enhance international standards for disclosure,
accounting, budgeting for PPPs - Enhance auditing standards
- Assist in building fiscal risk management capacity
18Financing Higher Education Trends
- Rush to mass higher education
- Increasing demand for tertiary education
- Met by
- by rapid increase in private provision (PL, LV,
EE, HU) - and/or public institutions increasing enrollment
- Declining resources per student - raising
concerns about the quality of higher education - Dual Track Fee System - affecting the equity of
access to higher education -
Evidence suggests that those who are currently
benefiting from free places are those who come
from better-off families and have had access to
better secondary education
19Financing Higher Education Gross Enrollment
Rates in Tertiary Education
20Financing Higher Education Directions for
further reform
- Introduce efficient and equitable allocation
mechanisms for existing State Financing - Because more resources are required in order to
improve the quality and labor market relevance of
higher education everywhere attract more private
finance to higher education. - Redefine the dual track system
- Charge variable fees
- Clarify Role of Government
- Tensions and Trade Offs
- Autonomy/Accountability
- Assure the autonomy of HEIs, inter alia to
select their expenditure priorities subject to
transparent budgeting practices - Ensure the accountability of all public and
private HEIs to the public interest.
21Controlling Health Care Expenditures Problem
Statement
- The EU8 have carried out extensive health sector
reforms but still - have a costly health care system that does not
control quality or excessive consumption of
health services - Health expenditures are not way out of line
- Key drivers of health expenditures in new member
states - Pharmaceuticals
- Hospital Infrastructure
- Salaries
- But in most countries the sector is in heavy
debt, with expenditures consistently exceeding
revenues - Indebtedness in the health system presents a huge
challenge for the fiscal health of these
countries - These countries cannot carry the health sector
debts for long - The pressure of expenditures appears to be
persistent seemingly out of control - Absorption of available and new technologies
- Ageing and changing demographics
22Health spending in EU8 varies 8.1 of GDP in
Slovenia to 5.4 of GDP in Estonia
Controlling Health Care Expenditures Problem
Statement
Source Country Background Papers OECD 2004
23Among a wider group of comparators, including
well performing middle-income countries, health
spending is not out of line
Controlling Health Care Expenditures Problem
Statement
24A defining feature of the health sector in almost
all of the EU8 is the huge indebtedness
Controlling Health Care Expenditures Problem
Statement
Source Country Background Papers OECD 2004
25Controlling Health Care Expenditures Thinking of
Solutions
- Social health insurance alone will not be able to
bear the full costs of medical care in these
countries - Need a combination of stricter supply-side
measures such as - hospital restructuring and controlling drug costs
- and demand-side measures such as
- greater patient responsibility for own health
- and greater patient contributions, including cost
sharing for pharmaceuticals
26Assessing Intergovernmental Fiscal
RelationsDecentralization reforms
- EU8 countries have made remarkable progress in
reforming their systems of intergovernmental
fiscal relations - Now EU8 countries have much more in common with
the EU15 than with the Soviet-era systems - Subnational governments have become an important
part of the public sector, accounting for about
1/4 of total government spending - Higher transparency and predictability.
- High degree of redistribution in the financing of
social services (perhaps even too much) - Local government finances have not been a source
of fiscal and macroeconomic instability,
reflecting limited fiscal autonomy and strict
borrowing constraints in most countries. - Scope for further improvement exists EU8 need to
encourage greater efficiency in the production of
public services - While the majority of the EU8 finance education
on a capitation basis, this has not been
sufficient to prompt the closure of
under-enrolled classrooms or schools. - In the health sector, efforts to encourage
primary providers to increase the volume of
services they provide have been thwarted by
over-billing, and efforts to ration secondary and
tertiary care using variants of the German points
system have run aground for similar reasons.
27Assessing Intergovernmental Fiscal
RelationsChallenges
- Long term sustainability of EU8
intergovernmental fiscal arrangements will depend
on the ability of central governments to keep
their agreements with local governments. - In monopolizing the tax revenues, central
governments have arrogated to themselves the
power to decide how much revenues local
governments should receive, and how they should
be spent. - But it creates vulnerability, due to claims that
local governments are under funded. - In the case of sector specific financing, central
government mandated increases in costs of service
provision must be accompanied by increases in the
level of financing - In the case of funding discretionary
expenditures, there is risk related to the annual
negotiations between the central and local
governments
28Conclusions
- Fiscal policy key to long term growth
- Further public finance reforms are critical
- Shift taxation away from distortionary taxes
- toward general taxes or/and
- considering new tax sources (eg. property)
- Consolidate public finances
- Create fiscal space for productive expenditures
- address specific challenges in various sectors
- Rationalize expenditure
- Enhance efficiency
- Increasing private financing (social areas, PPPs,
etc) -