Title: Public Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Surveys
1Public Expenditure TrackingandService Delivery
Surveys
- Jordan Public Expenditure Review
- June 15, 2003
- Ritva Reinikka
- Development Research Group, The World Bank
2Public Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery
Surveys
- First Public Expenditure Tracking Survey (PETS)
carried out in Uganda in 1996
- Since then, a large number of PETS and related
surveys have been implemented
- Scope and nature of surveys are differed, but
common theme is link between public spending and
outputs and development outcomes
3We generally believe that providing financing and
flexibility to countries with well-designed
policies allows us to leverage good outcomes.
From policies and spending to benefits
Benefits
Government
Outcomes
4Breakdowns on the way to achieving outcomes are
due to
gaps in
Government
- Policy
- Information/ME
- Capacity
- Household Behaviors
- Institutional Incentives
- Financing
- Other Sectors
Local Gov.
Providers
Individuals
Outcomes
Benefits
5The (missing) link between public spending and
outcomes
Broad allocation of resources
Delays and lack of predictability (e.g.
salaries, medicine stock-outs)
Problems in budget execution
Discretionary reallocation of resources
(favoritism, lack of criteria or information,
etc.)
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE TRACKING AND SERVICE DELIVERY
SURVEYS
Leakage of financial or material resources
Misappropriation of resources (e.g. theft of
medicines)
Problems in service delivery
Absenteeism
Overcharging
Inefficiency, high cost, low quality
Lack of demand for services
6A frameworkfor service deliveryWorld
Development Report 2004
7The Survey Approach
- Approach has varied considerably depending on
context and focus
- Multilevel focus, but frontline providers
(schools or health facilities) as main unit of
observation
- Representative sample
- Data collected through interviews and record
reviews (financial records, stock cards for
medicines, etc.)
- Multi-angular approach for validation of data
- Some surveys include detailed surveys of
frontline provider, including availability/adequac
y of inputs, quality, staff and user interviews,
etc.
8What have we learnt? Leakage
- Education sector in Uganda 1996
- Data from 250 schools and administrative units
- Only 13 percent of intended capitation grant
actually reached schools (1991-95).
- Mass information campaign by Ministry of Finance
(the press, posters)
- Follow-up PETS to evaluate impact of the
information campaign 2/3 of reduction in leakage
thanks to the campaign
- High leakage has also been found in other
countries (Tanzania, Ghana, Zambia, Peru)
9What have we learnt? Ghost workers and
absenteeism
- Salary payments leak differently
- Different measurement approaches
- PETS with data collection on payroll and staffing
data (Honduras 2000, Peru 2002, Zambia 2002,
Mozambique 2002, etc.)
- Unannounced visits to schools and health
facilities (Bangladesh 2002, India 2002, Uganda
2002)
10What have we learnt? Allocation and budget
execution
- Leakage sometimes difficult to assess due to lack
of explicit allocations or entitlements
- But surveys can shed light on other important
allocation and budget execution issues
- Primary health care in Mozambique
- Very large variation across districts and
facilities in non-wage recurrent spending,
staffing, and distribution of medicines
- Severe problems in budget execution, with late
first transfers and slow processing of accounts,
resulting in low predictability
- Weak record keeping at provincial, district, and
facility levels, often with large discrepancies
between levels
- Why this variation? Corruption may be one factor
11The strengths of the approach
- Useful tool for diagnosing and understanding
problems in budget execution and service
delivery, including corruption
- Multilevel perspective important and not achieved
from simple school or facility surveys
- District and frontline provider perspective often
forgotten at central level
- Representative sample provides credibility not
achieved through small-sample studies or
institutional reviews
- Validation of administrative data (financial and
output)
- Can provide basis for monitoring of changes over
time
- Surveys provide data for research that can
improve our understanding of the determinants of
corruption or poor service delivery
- Process of designing and implementing survey is
useful for understanding institutional and
procedural arrangements for budget execution and
service delivery
12Survey Design Surveying what? Why?
- What are the problems? Are there important gaps
in our understanding of the nature, extent, and
source of problems?
- Is a survey the appropriate tool? Stand-alone or
as a complement? Worth the cost?
- Is it feasible? How is the budget structured and
implemented?
- Who is the audience and is there a likely impact?
Is there a political demand?
- Will the information be used? By whom?
13Implementation issues Who? How?
- Requires skills like any other micro survey
- Steps in implementation
- Concept
- Buy-in across the board
- Questionnaire design
- Identify (and contract) implementing agency
- Pilot
- Enumerator training
- Field work (including quality control and data
entry)
- Analysis and dissemination
14Some limitations
- Surveys only provide part of the answer
- What about inter- and intra-sectoral allocations?
- Link with outcomes?
- Budget analysis and social impact analysis
(with household data or through participatory
approaches) are still important
- Surveys should supplement rather than supplant
routine information, control, and integrity
systems
- Surveys provide information but dont necessarily
result in change
- A lack of information about the scope and nature
of problems is not always the primary constraint
to improving PEM and service delivery
- Continuity and link with efforts at strengthening
institutions and routine PEM systems important
- Link with community and other local stakeholders
can be difficult to achieve important to use
findings to strengthen local transparency and
accountability mechanisms
15Finding out more
- Survey reports, instruments, and documentation
on www.publicspending.org
- http//www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/pe/tracking
surveys.htm
- Some references
- Dehn, Reinikka, and Svensson. 2003. Survey Tools
for Assessing Performance in Service Delivery.
In Bourguignon and Pereira da Silva, eds.
Evaluating the Poverty and Distributional Impact
of Economic Policies. Oxford University Press and
the World Bank. Forthcoming - Reinikka and Svensson. 2002. Measuring and
understanding corruption at the micro level. In
Della Porta and Rose-Ackerman, eds. Corrupt
Exchanges Empirical Themes in the Politics and
Political Economy of Corruption. Nomos
Verlagsgesellshaft. - Lindelow and Wagstaff. 2002. Health Facility
Surveys An Introduction. Policy Research
Working Paper 2953. The World Bank.
- Email rreinikka_at_worldbank.org