Title: State Equalization Transfers to Municipalities in Brazil
1State Equalization Transfers to Municipalities in
Brazil
- Fernando Blanco Cossio
- World Bank Brazil Country Management Unit
2Outline
- Brazilian Intergovernmental Transfers System
- State Equalization transfers to municipalities.
- State VAT Transfers to Municipalities
- FUNDEF Basic Education Fund
- Conclusions
3Brazilian Intergovernmental Transfer System
- Mechanisms established in the constitution of
1946 and expanded in the 1967 and 1988
constitutions. - Earmarking of tax revenues distributed by
automatic formulas. - Federal transfers to state and municipalities
have regional equalization objectives FPE and
FPM and Regional Funds. - State transfers to municipalities earmarked tax
revenues and distribution based on origin and
demand driven.
4State VAT Transfer to Municipalities
- State VAT is the most important tax in Brazil
(10 of GDP). - 25 of state VAT collection should be distributed
to municipalities - 20 according to origin basis
- 5 according to re-distribution formulas that can
vary among states - per capita income, HDI, proportion of poor, etc
5State VAT transfer mechanism is equalizing?
- Given the low weight of the redistribution
component this transfer is regressive. - Reasons Concentration of revenue collection on
state capitals and industrial cities. - Also, problems with the lack of updated
socioeconomic information creates difficulties
for redistribution objective.
6FUNDEF Basic Education Fund
- Objectives
- Guarantee Financing for Basic Education.
- Demand driven mechanism that promote equalization
of basic education expenditure per student within
the state. - Alleviate regional disparities in education
expenditure per student
7Earmarking Revenue Mechanism for Funding of Basic
EducationWithin-state redistribution of resources
- Fund is financed by 15 of
- State Participation Fund
- Municipal Participation Fund
- State VAT
- Other state revenues
- Federal contribution if needed
- Resources are distributed according to
- Number of students in basic education in each
municipality. - The state level per student is
- FUNDEF resources / number of students in the
state.
8Other aspects
- Federal government defines a national minimum
levels of expenditure per student. - If state Fund does not achieve this minimum
level, federal government complement the
resources to achieve the national minimum level. - Thus, regional differences are partially
alleviated. - State governments also have basic schools, thus
they receive resources from the state Fund. - There is different minimum values according to
the grade of students. - Conditionalities in the use of Fundef resources.
9Results
- Basic objective was achieved equalization of
basic education expenditure per student. - Strong increase of enrollment rates.
- Increase of teacher salaries.
- Weak results in terms of improvement in quality
of education? - Competition among municipalities and between
state and municipalities. - In some states it generated decentralization of
education. - State governments are complaining for resources
losses. Problems to finance secondary education. - Large disparities among states subsist.
10Conclusions and Policy Implications
- Regional redistribution mechanism to be efficient
should be based on demand driven. - Conditional transfers are more efficient than
unconditional. - Are the transfers going to the right places
- Is there a trade-off between reducing regional
inequalities and improving aggregate welfare? - Economies of scale Population - Social
indicators
11Population, poverty and geography
Poverty Rate (Poor/Population)
12Population, poverty and geography
Poverty Density (Poor/km2)
13Poverty rate and density by municipality, NE -
Brazil
Poverty Density
Poverty Rate
14Expenditure/eligible population
15Population with no access to improved water
16Policy Implications (cont)
- Geography and returns to investments economies
of scale. - Population, poverty and geography.
- Poverty rate vs poverty density
- Need for flexibility- different redistribution
mechanisms.