Title: Apresenta
1Think Global, Act Local Social Credit based on
MDGs
Marcelo Neri Social Policies Center CPS/FGV and
EPGE/FGV Marcelo Xerez EPGE/FGV and Brazilian
Central Bank
International Poverty Center, August 2005
2Theory
Principal
Federal Government
UF GF NP. v(YP)
Government Budget YF
T Government Transfer
Agent
Municipality
UM GM NP.?.v(YP)
Municipality Budget YM
YP Poors Welfare Level
Poor
References Besley (1997), Gelbach and Pritchett
(1997), and Azam and Laffont (2001)
3Autarchy (A)
Max GM NP .? . v(YP) YP s.a GM NP . YP ?
YM
The larger the coefficient of the local
governments aversion to poverty, the larger will
be the poors welfare level.
4Unconditional Transfer (I)
The government does not establish any social
target, it transfers unconditionally a fixed
amount, TI.
FOC
Proposition 1 If the federal government perfoms
unconditional transfers to the local governments,
the poors situation does not change.
Crowding-out Effect
5Poverty Incentives (IP)
The government always helps more the
municipalities where the poor are poorer.
Transfer
Max GM NP .? . v(YP) YP s.a GM NP . YP ?
YM (K YP).NP
The smaller the poors income, the greater is the
income per capita transfer carried out by the
government to the municipality gtpoverty
incentives
6Social Credit
Transfer Conditional on the Fulfillment of Social
Targets (MS)
FOC
Proposition 2 the establishment of a social
credit mechanism increases poors income.
7Social Credit
Transfer Conditional on the Fulfillment of Social
Targets (MS)
Linear Contract
Proposition 3 The coefficients belonging to a
linear contract of social targets are
where
8Social Credit
Furthermore, a social credit contract leverages
locally funded social investments.
9Static Models
- Poverty Incentives (IP)
- Autarchy (A)
- Unconditional Transfer (I)
- Social Credit (MS)
- Political Favoritism without Transfer
- (FA)Favoritism with Social Credit (FSC)
10Dynamic Models
- Complete Contracts
- Full Commitment
- Long term commitment
- No commitment or spot commitment
- Incomplete Contracts
11Dynamic Model
Governments Problem
12Non Deterministic Models
- Idiosyncratic Shocks ? Insurance Provision.
- Aggregate Shocks ? Performance Comparison.
13Conclusion Theory
- Unconditional Transfer does not change poors
situation - The smaller the poors income, the greater is
the income per capita transfer carried out by the
government to the municipality gtpoverty
incentives - Social Targets increase the efficiency in the
use of public money and help to reduce the social
difference among the different groups - The existence of a commitment mechanism, when
there is not the possibility of any type of
renegotiation among the parties, makes possible
greater efficiency in the dynamic problem (with
complete contracts)
14Main Lesson It is not enough to know the social
budget employed it is necessary to measure
social results. But how we do it?
15How? through Social Credit mechanisms that
transform poverty emancipation into financial
resources.
16Why? to reduce Moral Hazard problems in social
transfers to local governments.
17Why use MDGs as numeraire in performance based
contracts?
- Exogenous for a Given Country (credibility)
- Coordinate actions across different government
levels from different political parties (spatial
consistency) - Long-Lasting (time consistency)
- Smooth transitions between different political
mandates.
18Care with MDGs Contracts
- Advantage Time and Spatial Consistency
- Pratical Issues
- Not use the value of the indicator at a given
date but its discounted present value along its
path. - 1st MDG should be based on P2 (squared poverty
gap) and not on the proportion of poor (P0).