Title: Decentralization in LAC
1Decentralization in LAC
- Overview of operations and lessons from
experience - Kathrin A. Plangemann
- May 8, 2006
- With inputs from LCSPS F. Rojas, J. Frank, M.
Mercado-Diaz, M. Junowicz
2Decentralization in Latin America and the
Caribbean
- Decentralization, Deconcentration and Devolution
- LAC one of most decentralized regions
- Subnational expenditures one fourth of total
public spending (from gt 48 in AR to lt 5 in
Central America) - Debate on pros and cons and the how tos still
very much open
3Decentralization in Latin America and the
Caribbean
- Motivation mainly political based on
considerations of democracy, efficiency and
service-delivery - Four main stages/Focus areas
- Political/administrative decentralization
- Fiscal decentralization framework
- Service-delivery focus
- Subnational competitiveness (LED/TED)
4Bank Support to Decentralization in LAC
- Some Examples of Bank Support in LAC
- Adjustment/DPL
- Peru (DECSAL)
- Bolivia (PSAC)
- Colombia (FIAL)
- Mexico (Decentralization SAL)
- Investment Loans (SILs)
- Provincial Development Programs (AR)
- Municipal Development Projects (AR)
- Municipal Development (CL)
- Subnational Governments Public Sector
Modernization (AR) - Investment Loans (TALs)
- Governance 21 (AR)
- Public Sector Modernization (HN)
- Subnational lending
- Adjustment (AR, MX, BR-SWAP)
- Investment (BR, AR, CO)
5Bank Support to Decentralization in LAC
- Some Examples of ESW
- Regional Flagships
- Beyond the center
- Decentralization in other flagships (e.g. Beyond
the city) - IGRs
- Peru
- Bolivia
- Argentina
- Fees for Services
- Chile
- Other Analytical Work
- Ecuador
- Dominican Republic
- Argentina
6DECSAL (Peru)
- Objectives
- Protect fiscal sustainability during Peru's
transition to a more decentralized state - Strengthen institutional management and fiscal
capacity at regional and local levels for their
progressive assumption of service
responsibilities - Support the creation of a better regulatory and
investment environment for upgrading Peru's
regional competitiveness. - Key Areas of Action
- Decentralization and Fiscal Sustainability Tax
Policy, Fiscal Transfers Subnational Borrowing
and Financial Management. - Institutional Development for Decentralization
Accreditation of subnational governments,
Participatory Budgeting Civil Service Reform. - Competitiveness and Economic Growth National
Competitiveness Plan Logistic Cost and
Infrastructure Development Investment Climate
Trade Facilitation Technology Absorption and
Innovation Quality Management
7Decentralization SAL(MX)
- Objectives/Components
- Imposing hard budget constraints on federal
resources provided to states and municipalities - Reducing moral hazard in subnational borrowing
- Increasing the transparency and public
accountability of subnational fiscal and
financial management and of the overall
decentralization process - Setting up initial pilot mechanisms to enhance
efficiency of decentralized expenditures. - Main Impact on decentralization
- The 2000 and 2001 federal budgets provided
funding for the states with allocations
determined by a transparent formula, and with
detailed allocations clearly specified in
legislation including federal transfers to
states - Transfers to states and municipalities that were
at the discretion of the federal executive were
eliminated from the federal budget - Sec. de Hacienda discontinued its policy of
accepting mandatos to collateralize subnational
debt with revenue-sharing transfers - Twenty-five of Mexico's 32 states, and seven
municipalities, have had creditworthiness
assessments published by credit rating agencies,
and more are currently in the process of doing
so - Sec. de Hacienda developed a plan jointly with
subnational entities to improve their accounting,
auditing, budgeting, revenue and debt management
and reporting procedures.
8Municipal Development (CL)
- Objectives
- Developing innovative methodologies and
strategies in local accountability, especially in
the development and implementation of management
information systems and budget and asset
management - Contributing to a permanent system of training
and technical assistance to the municipalities,
incorporating diverse institutional actors,
including the regional governments and - Strengthening and improving local management,
especially in terms of finances, human resources
and municipal services, as well as harmonizing
and equalizing local management capabilities with
respect to the legal and institutional reforms
being pursued by the central government. - Components
- National Institutional Strengthening Design and
implementation of the National Municipal
Information System (SINIM) and a Municipal
Budgeting System (GPM) the streamlining of
social programs at the municipal level the
dissemination of best practices and lessons
learned as well as a project monitoring and
evaluation system. - Municipal Strengthening Basic Module (i)
Community Development Plan, (ii) Municipal
Strategic Plan, (iii) Organizational Development
and Human Resource Management, and (iii)
Municipal Management Information System
Complementary Module (i) streamlining of
business procedures, (ii) improving customer
service, (iii) cadastre systems (iv) social
development and protection of vulnerable groups,
and (v) development of local economies. Flexible
Module ( i) innovative sub-projects, and (ii)
municipal associations.
9II Provincial Development Program (AR)
- Objectives
- Assist the provinces in implementing appropriate
financial management reforms to - generate current account surpluses (own-revenue
enhancement and expenditure control) that
together with prudent borrowing may finance
investment programs and - strengthen their capacity to plan, program,
finance, execute, and monitor investment programs
that are economically efficient, financially
sustainable, institutionally manageable, and
environmentally sound. - Provide financing for institutional development
and physical investments that will promote
provincial economic development. - Components
- Institutional development tax administration,
cadastre, financial management, and human
resources reforms. - Physical investments Service delivery
improvements maintenance and rehabilitation of
existing works, completion of unfinished works,
and the construction of new public infrastructure
and facilities (education, health, and roads,
drainage, water supply, and other services.
10II Municipal Development Project (AR)
- Objectives
- Mobilize external and internal resources in a
non-deficit, non-inflationary way to finance
municipal investmentsparticularly those
contributing to productive activities - Strengthen municipalities capacity to plan,
finance, and execute cost-effective capital
investment programs, thus assisting them to
develop the capacity to eventually finance their
investment needs through the private capital
markets - Strengthen the institutional capacity of
municipalities and provinces to manage their
resources more effectively and to increase the
efficiency of their systems for delivery of
services. - Components
- Municipal Infrastructure Construction and
rehabilitation of public infrastructure (e.g.,
road paving and related works, public lighting
and sanitation), community facilities (e.g.,
markets, and bus terminals), and equipment for
other municipal services (e.g., for road
maintenance, refuse collection and disposal). - Institutional Strengthening financial
management, information systems, accounting
procedures, cadastres, maintenance procedures,
and analyses to identify key policy issues and
make recommendations for improving the assignment
of revenues and responsibilities between the
provincial and municipal levels of government,
Municipalities of the Third Millennium (M3M)
pilot program.
11Subnational Governments Public Sector
Modernization (AR)
- Objectives
- Support the integrated development and adoption
of basic management tools that are conducive to
the efficient and transparent management of
provincial and municipal resources - Strengthen provincial governments in such key
areas as those related to land tax and tax
administration, human resources management,
judicial services, civil registries, control
entities, and public safety functions - Support the strengthening of municipal
governments through activities designed to
demonstrate the benefits of integrated
modernization efforts - Components
- Basic Module Provincial Management Tools
(cadastre systems, property registries, tax
administration systems, financial administration
systems, HRM systems and public safety) and
Municipal Management tools. - Advanced Module Provincial Strengthening
(e-procurement, judicial modernization, advanced
HRM, control and auditing agencies, civil
registries) and Municipal Management Tools
(municipal budgeting, capital investment
planning, project evaluation)
12Basic Municipal Services (AR)
- Objectives
- Improve the coverage, quality and efficiency of
water supply and sanitation services in
participating municipalities - Enhance access to urban drainage infrastructure
in participating municipalities - Increase access to paved roads and reduce
logistics costs through investments in the
pavement of urban and productive roads and - Improve the operational and commercial
performance of municipal basic services through
demand-driven technical assistance for
medium-term investment planning, subproject
preparation, technical supervision, operations
and maintenance and improved commercial
management. - Components
- Municipal Infrastructure Basic Water and
Sanitation, Urban Drainage and Small Retention
Works and, Urban and Productive Roads. - Institutional Strengthening of Municipalities and
Service Providers Demand-Driven Instruments
including Capacity building for the technical,
economic, financial, social and environmental
preparation and assessment of subprojects,
multi-year strategic investment planning and
budgeting, updating and improving cadastre of
users, improvements in billing, collection and
commercial management, technical exchanges,
twinning and outreach activities, information,
communications and education campaigns in key
service sectors, poverty targeting and monitoring
mechanisms as part of investment planning,
preparation of territorial sector development and
urban development plans and, business and
operational planning for service providers.
13Governance 21 (AR)
- Objectives/Components
- Strengthen Management Capacity for Territorial
Economic Development Knowledge building,
territorial planning, administrative
simplification and territorial investment program
coordination. - Expected results
- The government has broadened its knowledge on
territorial economic development, identifying the
main territorial constraints - Subnational governments execute their budget in
accordance with objectives and priorities defined
through consultative and participatory strategic
planning processes - Subnational government have reduced barriers to
investment imposed by administrative procedures - Territorial programs within the Ministrys
Economic Policy Secretariat have been reoriented
to respond more effectively to subnational and
private sector demands. - Strengthening Results-oriented Public Investment
Institutional Strengthening of the National
Directorate for Public Investment Subnational
Public Investment Systems transparency and
accountability of public investment. - Strengthening Results-oriented Financial
Management Technological Upgrade and expansion
of Financial Management Information Systems,
Institutional Strengthening of the National
Public Administration for Results-oriented
Budgeting and Management, Strengthening Financial
Management Capacities and the Transparency of
Public Expenditure Management, Outreach. - Project and Change Management Change Management,
Transparency and Participation, Institutional
Strengthening of selected processes.
14Banks Support to Subnational Governments in
Argentina
15Overall trends in LAC
- Need for decentralization reforms high and
demands for support continue to be strong. - Decentralization often part of a broader PS
reform, stand-alone operations on fiscal
decentralization rare. - Increasing focus on complementary areas of
support to subnational governments - from a public sector reform, and
- private sector development perspective.
- Cross-cutting issues of particular importance in
LAC include - Role of the Social Funds (Central America, PE, BO
etc.). - Citizens Participation (BR, PE, AR, CO, Central
America). - Inequality debate/Lagging regions (BR, AR, CL)
- Role of Champions alliances of reform.
- Greater need to focus on demand-side and
supply-side incentives.
16Starting a decentralization operation Key
design questions
- Role of the Bank towards Decentralization
- Neutrality Supporting the demands of government,
bringing in international experience and in some
cases, damage control. - Honest Broker Balancing opposed interests in the
country at the vertical and horizontal levels and
helping focus the dialogue on key technical
questions, often of a more long-term nature. - Selection of a Counterpart
- Opposing legal mandates and decentralization
objectives of the Ministries of Finance, sectoral
ministries, Primer Ministers Offices, Planning
Ministries, State Modernization Commissions and
Decentralization Councils. - In most cases, MOF counterpart as guardian of
fiscal discipline, particular in operations with
focus on fiscal decentralization. - Increasingly work directly or indirectly with
subnational governments.
17Fiscal decentralization in LAC
- Principles and practice
- Principles generally well-defined (e.g. BR, CO,
PE Fiscal Responsibility Laws however, also
AR). - Implementation lagging behind.
- Need to combine ex ante rules with ex post rules,
e.g. on subnational debt to enhance credibility
(market incentives accompanied with
administrative control). - Fiscal neutrality of decentralization myth.
- Important to create stronger partnerships around
need to create fiscal sustainability of
decentralization framework.
18Key pillars of fiscal decentralization
- Fiscal decentralization framework
- Revenue management
- Changes in legal framework difficult given
limited political will (e.g. introduction of new
taxes, changes in tax base/rate, some work on
revenue-sharing arrangements). - Institutional strengthening of tax administration
at central and subnational levels (AR, GT, EC,
BO). - Expenditure management
- Changes in legal framework at outset of
decentralization process sometimes possible,
particularly regarding new responsibilities for
subnational governments. - Sectoral design and sequencing (big bang vs.
gradualism). - Clear intergovernmental functional assignment of
responsibilities. - Intergovernmental transfers
- Political demand for changes often low (e.g. AR).
- Matching grants
- Block transfers to municipalities as of GDP
independent of capacity, sectoral
responsibilities. - Subnational debt
- Put on agenda (Peru study on municipal debt).
-
19Demand-driven packaging of fiscal
decentralization support
- Fiscal decentralization and complementary areas
of institutional support/entry points - Fundamental importance of combining fiscal
decentralization with institutional reform e.g.
Peru DECSAL itself, plus the accompanying TAL. - Given the limited will to reform the fiscal
decentralization framework, instead of looking at
ex ante allocation of expenditure, focus on ex
post quality of expenditure. - Rather than addressing who gets what portion out
of total public sector spending, such proposals
emphasize transparency and co-financing -between
levels of government and between the private and
the public sector - as well as incentives for
demand-driven intergovernmental program
coordination. - Focus areas at central and subnational levels
- Public investment strengthening
- Financial management and broader PEM
- Civil service reform
- Anti-corruption
- Greater move to sectoral decentralization and
sector-specific Bank products -
20Linkages with subnational competitiveness
- Subnational competitiveness and LED/TED
- Motivation for decentralization/decentralization
reform is and increasing focus on
competitiveness, at the national and subnational
level - Projects bringing together fiscal
decentralization and competitiveness aspects
(e.g. Peru DECSAL) - Particular focus on subnational competitiveness
questions (e.g. CL, AR) - Intergovernmental cooperation
- Intergovernmental investment program coordination
(e.g. CL) - PSD at the subnational level (administrative
simplification, strategic planning, productive
development, PPPs) e.g. AR -
21Moving forward
- From a focus on whether to decentralize, to a
focus on how to - From a focus from fiscal decentralization to
complementary action in public sector
strengthening and PSD - Complementing Bank support with public-sector
focused interventions to those focused at helping
develop subnational competitiveness - Priorization and sequencing of reform,
selectivity of interventions - Greater emphasis on analysis of political economy
of reform, partnerships with stakeholders, change
management - Increasing shift to design of sectoral
decentralization - More emphasis on ME at central and subnational
level (e.g. CO, AR) and measuring overall impact
of decentralization - Direct assistance to subnational governments,
both at regional and municipal level (with or
without guarantee) - Greater need for prior or accompanying analytical
work - Need for greater cross-sectoral collaboration
22Thank You!Questions?kplangemann_at_worldbank.org
Extension 30301