Title: March 2, 2004
1Public Sector Governance Lessons of the 1990s
2PSG Lessons of the 1990s
- Written by Ed Campos with Sarwar Lateef and
Shilpa Pradhan, and support from the PSG family - Topics
- What has been done?
- Reality check what have we achieved?
- What have been the lessons learned along the way?
- What are the implications for greater
effectiveness in the future?
3Framework
- PSG refers to the manner in which the State
acquires and exercises the authority to provide
and manage public goods - PSG outcomes are driven by
- Capacity (skills, resources, procedures,
intrinsic motivation) - Accountability
- Accountability refers to the responsibility of
- Policymaker ? Citizen
- Bureaucrat ? Policymaker
4Trends in the 1990s
- Shift from building capacity to also addressing
problems of accountability - In NZ, Australia, and the UK, new public
management reforms were introduced to alter the
relationship between policymakers and bureaucrats
- Free-standing agencies
- Performance-based accountability, through
contracts - Competitive mechanisms, such as contracting out
and internal markets
5Trends in 1990s (2)
- In developing countries, debt crisis of 1980s led
to rationalization of government through
privatization, budget and financial management
reforms, and NPM reforms - To improve financial discipline in policymaking
- Independent central banks
- Fiscal responsibility acts
- MTEFs
- Performance-based budgeting
6Trends in 1990s (3)
- Democratization sought to strengthen the
accountability of politicians to citizens - Checks and balances
- Decentralization
- NGO watchdogs
7Transparency and Citizen Oversight
Tracking Education Dollars in Uganda
US per student
3.5
3.0
Public info campaign
2.5
2.0
1.5
1.0
0.5
0.0
1990
1991
1993
1994
1995
1999
Intended grant
Actual grant received by primary school (means)
Source Uganda Public Expenditure Tracking Surveys
8Trends in 1990s (4)
- Explosion of research on the impact of corruption
led to an awareness of the huge costs that
corruption imposes on development
9Better governance results in higher investment
and growth
Investment share in GDP
Income per capita Growth Rate
20
15
10
Medium
Low
High
High
Medium
Low
Quality of Governance
Quality of Governance in this case was measured
by perceptions of 4,000 firms in 67 countries on
(i) protection of property rights (ii) judicial
reliability (iii) predictability of rules (iv)
control of corruption. Source World Development
Report Survey, 1997
10. . . And better development outcomes
predicted value when taking into account the
causality effects (Development Dividend) from
improved governance to better
11Milestones in Public Sector Governance in the
World Bank
12Explosion of activities Examples of major
programs launched across countries
Latvia (anticorruption)
Russia (customs/treasury)
Ukraine (tax admin)
Albania (public admin.)
Kyrgyz Republic (governance reform)
Jordan (civil society)
Cambodia (PE forestry)
Ghana (PE accountability)
Philippines (transport)
Guatemala (diagnostic to action program)
Indonesia (local governance)
Gabon (water/electricity)
Bangladesh (civil society)
Colombia (diagnostics civil society)
Uganda (PRSC education)
Pakistan (devolution)
India Andra Pradesh (power e-gov) Karnataka
(right to info)
Bolivia (public admin.)
Tanzania (PSR)
Ethiopia (decentralization)
13Some approaches that appear to be working
Latvia (Anticorruption)
Ghana (Public Expenditure Accountability)
Indonesia (Community Empowerment)
Gabon (Water/Electricity)
Uganda (Education, Capacity Building-Action
Learning/Core AC Course)
India Andhra Pradesh (Power E-governance)
14Some evidence that accountability has improved
slightly
15HIPC Assessment of 15 Public Expenditure
Management Benchmarks in 25 countries (Mar02)
16Less evidence that bureaucratic capacity has
improved
17Virtually no evidence that corruption is abating
18Except possibly in ECA
Country Change in Frequency of Administrative Corruption 1999-2002
Albania
Armenia
Azerbaijan
Belarus
BiH
Bulgaria
Croatia
Czech Republic
Estonia
FYROM
Georgia
Hungary
Country Change in Frequency of Administrative Corruption 1999-2002
Kazakhstan
Kyrgyz Republic
Latvia
Lithuania
Moldova
Poland
Romania
Russia
Slovak Republic
Slovenia
Ukraine
Uzbekistan
19Although more firms in ECA are engaging in state
capture
20Common Traits of Governance Reforms
- Oppose existing power structures
- Often not easily observed by the public
- Complicates measurement in some cases
- Reduces opportunities for demand-side pressures
- Require complementary institutions to work well
21What have we learned?
22Policymakers can tie their hands, but its not
easy
- Independence of central banks can promote better
macroeconomic policymaking - When checks and balances are operative
- Fiscal Responsibility Acts can potentially bind
governments to sustainable deficits - Especially when combined with credible limits on
government borrowing
23Policymakers can tie their hands, but its not
easy (2)
- Multi-year frameworks, performance budgeting, and
the incorporation of fiscal risks increase
transparency in government decision making - But, because they are politically demanding,
implementing them takes time - Need to unbundle these systems and introduce them
over time
24Capacity constraints are binding
- State should match its role to its capacity
- New public management reforms put the cart before
the horse - Meritocracy is the foundation for further reforms
- But typically such reforms are strongly opposed
25Capacity constraints are binding (2)
- Enclave approaches match capacity with the
demands of managing the political process - But they must be a part of a sustained longer
term effort - Politics complicate the difficulties presented by
capacity constraints
26Its not just about accountability
- Meritocracy matters
- Innovative practices that increase worker
dedication almost always involve greater worker
discretion and autonomy - Increasing the performance orientation of the
public sector has as much to do with inculcating
values, commitment, and pride in service as it
has to do with strengthening accountability
27Accountability mechanisms are designed to be
complementary, but
- Evidence suggests that the synergies between
reforms dont kick in until a country reaches as
moderate level of capacity - At low levels of capacity, leadership makes all
the difference - Prevention is likely to be more effective than
enforcement
28and as a consequence
- Anticorruption commissions and supreme audit
institutions are nice on paper, but disappointing
in practice
29Decentralization is not a panacea
- Decentralization is fundamentally a political
choice rather than a technocratic solution, and
it can be done well or badly - Absent hard budget constraints, local governments
can worsen the fiscal situation - The administrative aspects of decentralization
are as important as the fiscal aspects - Decentralization and increased local
accountability are not synonymous
30neither is social accountability
- Demand side pressures make public sector reforms
more robust - Except when they dont
- Efforts to support demand side pressures are
risky when there is noone in government to
respond to these pressures - Sustained collaboration between reform minded
politicians, civil servants, and concerned civil
society groups is essential for demand-driven
reform to succeed
31Accountability requires information
- Media
- But only if it is credible
- Client feedback
- But only if complaint systems are effective
- Information and communications technology
- Requires reengineering of fundamental processes
to be effective
32Bottom Line
- Technocratic reforms work when leadership is
committed and capacity in and out of government
is reasonably strong - But what should we do when these conditions are
not met?
33Bottom Line (2)
- Interventions to improve service delivery may be
a potentially viable and sound entry point for
governance reforms - Upstream reforms in civil service procedures and
budget management may not mean much to the
average citizen but - Changes in the quality, quantity, and access to
services affect everyday life and thus makes
individuals more amenable to supporting, if not
seeking, reforms in governance
34Bottom Line (3)
- Need to think more about integrated operations in
service delivery and business regulation
35Bottom Line (3)
- Governance reforms are inherently political,
suggesting the importance of - Political analysis in project preparation
- Differentiated approach based on political context
36A Differentiated Approach to Reform
37What to do in Weak States?
38What to do in Capable States?
39What to do in Captured States?
40What to do in Restrained States?
41ECA Country Typology
- Heuristic device to highlight the variations in
patterns of corruption - Provides a foundation for tailoring appropriate
anticorruption strategies
42QA and Discussion