Part A Recommendations on the Division of Revenue - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

About This Presentation
Title:

Part A Recommendations on the Division of Revenue

Description:

Annexure B presents Executive Summaries of the Submissions that were made by the ... provide free municipal services, increases the financial stress on low ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:29
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 31
Provided by: vinc204
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Part A Recommendations on the Division of Revenue


1
Submission on Division of Revenue 2005/06 Presenta
tion to Parliament Select Committee on
Finance 25 May 2005
2
Background
  • FFC Submission 2005/06
  • Review of the PES formula and the LES formula
  • Outstanding work on some of the projects carried
    forward this year
  • Health conditional grants
  • Financing welfare services
  • Financing learner support material
  • New work started on the following
  • Assignment of powers and functions in the IGFR
    system
  • Housing funding framework
  • Transport funding issues

3
FFC Submission on DoR 2006/07
  • Consists of two sections as agreed with
    Government in the last two years
  • Part A deals with recommendations for the
    division of revenue for 2006/07
  • Part B presents a progress report on the results
    of the Commissions on-going research into the
    financing of learner support material
  • Submission also contains two Annexures
  • Annexure A is read together with Part A of the
    Submission
  • Annexure B presents Executive Summaries of the
    Submissions that were made by the FFC during the
    course of the last fiscal year.

4
Health Conditional Grants
  • Problems - grant design and implementation
  • SCOPA, PSCoF Auditor General Reports
  • 2003/04 FFC Recommended a Review
  • 2004/05 Submission focused on preliminary
    observations
  • Health grants (12 of all grants)
  • NTSG and HPTDG 72 of health grants
  • Design weaknesses
  • Performance against Policy objectives
  • Allocation criteria (cost framework)

5
National Tertiary Services Grant
  • Original Purpose/Objective
  • Cross boundary flows/referrals for highly
    specialized services
  • Detached from hospitals to fund tertiary
    services.. ensure equitable access for all
    citizens..
  • Findings with the NTSG
  • Inequitable distribution of tertiary facilities
  • Coverage not comprehensive excludes level 2
    services
  • The required level of service in public health
    facilities is not clearly specified

6
Recommendations - NTSG
  • Government should retain the grant.
  • Uneven distribution of tertiary facilities likely
    to persist in the short to medium term
  • It is important for the national government to
    support services that are of a cross-boundary
    nature
  • Government should clarify the rationale for using
    the NTSG to compensate provinces for cross
    boundary flows relating to level 3 health care
    services (tertiary) at the exclusion of level 2
    health care services
  • Develop a policy framework and clearly define the
    required minimum level of service and clearly
    distinguish between requirements for tertiary and
    secondary health care
  • Framework should indicate expected service
    levels, human resource requirements, financial
    and capital resource requirements and the funding
    mechanism for tertiary and secondary health care.

7
Health Professions Training and Development
  • Purpose/Objective
  • Finance teaching and research costs
  • Redistributive goal - to develop capacity to
    train health professionals in all provinces
  • Findings
  • No comprehensive review since 1998/99
  • Allocations have been cut on several occasions

8
Gaps identified - HPTDG
  • Absence of a policy framework with quantified
    targets
  • Grant lacks specificity
  • There is no tight linkage between policy
    objectives and the use of funds to achieve
    certain targets
  • Weak interdepartmental coordination between the
    national departments of health and education
  • Provincial decisions may not always be compatible
    with national interest and therefore national
    government needs to play a significant role
  • Absence of a costing framework
  • It is necessary to set the principles upon which
    the allocations are based

9
Further work - HPTDG
  • FFC will Continue engagement with stakeholders
  • With the aim of developing a costing framework
    for the grant
  • Investigate the challenges relating to the
    financing of training and development of health
    professionals in SA
  • Evaluate the allocation method or criteria for
    allocating the grant among provinces
  • Assess the efficiency with which the grant is
    currently being utilized

10
Further work - HPTDG
  • Assess the extent to which the conditions of the
    grant are in line with the stated policy
    objectives of the grant so that the grant can
    only be used for the purposes for which it is
    designed
  • investigate whether there are leakages with
    respect to the HPTDG not being used for the
    purposes for which it is designed
  • Assess the extent to which the conditions of the
    grant are in line with the stated policy
    objectives of the grant
  • Should ensure that the grant can only be used for
    the purposes for which it is designed
  • To what extent does the grant cover all the
    health professionals
  • for instance some diploma students are trained in
    colleges

11
Recommendations- HPTDG
  • Retain HPTDG as conditional grant
  • The framework for the HPTDG must be tightened to
    ensure that the grant is only used to fund
    accredited qualifications and training

12
Financing Social Welfare Services
  • Past FFC Recommendations
  • 2004/05 Submission
  • PES allocations should distinguish between social
    grants and social welfare services
  • 2005/06 Submission
  • Social grants be converted into a national
    conditional grant and the delivery of welfare
    services be maintained at provincial level
  • Objective of current report
  • The development of a sustainable financing
    mechanism for social welfare services through the
    intergovernmental transfer system

13
Financing Social Welfare Services
  • Policy environment
  • Government adopted a social development approach
    that links individual welfare to economic
    development
  • Expressed through the Welfare White Paper of
    1997, it was largely national in focus and not
    clear on provincial level implementation
  • Resulted in lack of clarity on the nature of
    social welfare services together with undefined
    norms
  • Goal setting has also been difficult as existing
    legislation on social welfare had to be reviewed
  • A financing framework for social welfare services
  • Must regulate inefficient provision through
    prioritization of needs and the proper rationing
    of services
  • Delivery of welfare services can occur through a
    variety of models, viz. no-public role, public
    role and purchaser-provider system

14
Financing Social Welfare Services
  • Challenges to provision
  • Lack of a clearly defined basket of services
  • Uncoordinated delivery and isolated operation by
    different providers and strained relations due to
    unresolved financing policy
  • Urban concentration of resources, e.g.
    residential facilities, places of safety and
    established NGOs
  • Inadequate number of qualified social workers,
    the magnitude of the potential population they
    have to serve and their uneven spread across
    provinces
  • Implications of the Shift for Social Welfare
    Services
  • Social Welfare services may no longer receive
    peripheral attention
  • They may also experience decreased funding and
    further marginalization
  • May not warrant a separate ministry
  • Negative outcomes for children already in the
    system
  • High child poverty tend to results in increased
    involvement in the child welfare system

15
Financing Social Welfare Services
  • Trends in Expenditure
  • Poorer provinces spend a high amount on
    administration than on other services when
    compared to relatively well-off ones
  • Provinces with established NGOs tend to allocate
    more towards subsidies
  • The largest portion of allocations is spent on
    child and family welfare services
  • There is a noticeable declining trend in
    expenditure on social welfare services in the
    past three years with a concomitant increase of
    social security grants expenditure
  • Future Research
  • Estimate the level of demand and calculate a
    rough national average for the delivery of social
    welfare service
  • Engage the National Department on the development
    of norms and standards for social welfare
  • Recommendations
  • Give specific consideration for allocating funds
    to social welfare service in the PES
  • Expedite the setting of norms and standards for
    delivery of a minimum basket of welfare services
    by provinces

16
Framework for Powers and Functions
  • Key Issues
  • No clear delineation of responsibility for some
    functions that are shared by spheres of
    government.
  • where functions are responsibility of one, but
    carried out by another sphere, uncertainty arises
    on whether its assignment, delegation or agency
    agreement.
  • difficult for municipalities to plan and budget
    for the function in medium and long term.
  • Municipalities with significant fiscal capacity
    spending more on functions not strictly
    categorised as local government functions in
    terms of Schedule 4B and 5B of the Constitution. 
  • Consequences for the intergovernmental fiscal
    system 
  • provision of such services could compromise the
    delivery of local govts CMBS

17
Framework for Powers and Functions
  • Key Issues contd
  • increased local government expenditure should
    result in an increased share for local government
    in the vertical division of revenue, even where
    additional expenditure responsibilities are
    assigned through legislation and
  • an increasing asymmetry between the range and
    quality of services delivered by metros and
    larger municipalities on the one hand and smaller
    and fiscally weak municipalities on the other.
  • the absence of a uniform framework, makes it
    difficult to compare the fiscal gap among
    municipalities in SA and to design
    intergovernmental transfers accordingly.
  • Lack of comprehensive definitions and norms and
    standards for many functions.
  • difficult for national or provincial government
    to assign or delegate a function, as specific
    responsibilities and related expenditure needs
    are unknown.

18
Recommendations
  • The draft DPLG Framework on the Assignment of
    Powers and Functions to Local Government and the
    instruments that give effect to the framework
    should be finalised as a matter of urgency. 
  • An Intergovernmental Assignment Framework that
    applies to all three spheres of government should
    be developed. This framework should
  • Identify the location of powers and functions
    according to generally accepted intergovernmental
    fiscal principles as outlined in sections 41(1),
    126, and 156 of the Constitution
  • Ensure that agreement on funding arrangements is
    reached before a function is assigned
  • Develop criteria for assessing whether a sphere
    of government has sufficient capacity to fulfil a
    function and
  • Rationalise the current institutional
    arrangements for assigning or delegating
    functions.

19
Recommendations Contd
  • Monitoring capacity should be established in the
    national sphere of government to ensure that
    assignment and delegation processes are
    consistent with the Intergovernmental Assignment
    Framework. 
  • For any function that may be assigned or
    delegated, Government should
  • Develop a clear definition of that function
  • Develop norms and standards for that function, so
    as to understand service level responsibilities
    and the concomitant funding implications.

20
Funding Framework for Housing Delivery
  • Key Issues
  • There are numerous blockages in the housing
    delivery process, largely related to delays in
    finance and planning approvals. 
  • Policy shift towards improving housing quality is
    not fully funded. 
  • Additional costs that arise in the housing
    process such as new housing standards are
    generally borne by local government.
  • Long-term financial liabilities arise for
    provinces or municipalities who carry rental
    housing stock, as rental arrears and operational
    expenses are not covered by rental income. 
  • Increase in number of low income households that
    are unable to maintain the monthly service
    charges, increases the debt burden on
    municipalities.
  • Alternatively the additional recurrent costs
    associated with increased responsibility to
    provide free municipal services, increases the
    financial stress on low capacity municipalities.

21
Recommendations
  • In cases where municipalities have the capacity
    to become accredited to administer housing
    programmes, Government should ensure that funding
    for the administration of housing subsidies is
    made available.
  • Accreditation process should reduce delays in
    rolling out housing delivery. 
  • Government should consider the funding
    implications of any further policy changes, for
    example when higher building standards are
    specified nationally. 
  • Funding gaps should be avoided particularly in
    municipalities with weaker fiscal capacity.

22
Recommendations Contd
  • A sustainable financial framework for the
    on-going demands of rental housing schemes should
    be developed.
  • Consideration should be given to linking new
    housing subsidies with the MIG and the equitable
    share formula so as to ensure that the
    municipalities can deliver basic services to poor
    households. In doing so, the following should be
    taken into account
  • The need to provide municipalities with
    appropriate incentives to extend municipal
    infrastructure and spend funds efficiently and
    effectively
  • The need to achieve equity in addressing the
    expenditure needs of local government
  • The need to take account of the differing
    capacities of municipalities and
  • The need to ensure that LES allocations keep pace
    with the installation of new housing
    infrastructure. 

23
Recommendations Contd
  • Government should address housing delivery
    bottlenecks to reduce under spending in
    provinces, resulting from
  • Delays in local and provincial government
    planning approvals (EIA, transport plans, social
    compact agreements)
  • The lack of project management capacity in some
    provinces and municipalities and
  • Delays in proclaiming land, especially where this
    falls within traditional communal areas.

24
Transport Funding Issues
  • Key Issues
  • Considerable under-investment in S.A.s transport
    infrastructure over the past two decades,
    although this is being addressed through the
    emphasis on infrastructure investment in the MTEF
    2005 
  • Considerable debate internationally and within SA
    regarding the desirability of pricing road
    usage through fuel levies and user charges 
  • Re-classification of some provincial roads as
    national roads has implications for the
    provincial equitable sharing mechanism 
  • Insufficient funding of municipal road
    maintenance in SA, in spite of the fact that up
    to 52 percent of the road network legally falls
    under the jurisdiction of municipalities.

25
Recommendations
  • Government should ensure that the following is
    implemented as a matter of urgency 
  • Develop criteria and processes for classifying
    all roads and assigning each class of roads to
    the respective sphere of government or category
    of local government and
  • assessing the length and condition of all roads,
    and the estimated expenditure need for
    rehabilitation and maintenance arising from
    this. 
  • Government should develop a coherent funding
    framework for roads in South Africa, and this
    framework should consider the role of the
    provincial equitable share and existing
    provincial and municipal infrastructure grants.

26
Recommendations Contd
  • Government should consider the devolution of bus
    and taxi subsidies to municipalities, where the
    capacity exists to manage these services. 
  • Government should implement mechanisms to improve
    the efficiency of inter-modal transport planning
  • Government should address certain issues that
    need to be resolved for setting up transport
    authorities, including funding arrangements and
    how the authorities governing bodies are
    constituted.

27
PROGRESS REPORT
  • Report on Learner Support Material (LSM)May 2005

28
BACKGROUND AND CONTEXT
  • FFC carried out a small survey of schools and
    provinces following its analysis of the trends
    in the financing of learner support materials
  • Concerns expressed by the then Minister of
    Education on the funding of LSM.
  • Survey carried based on a sample of 22 schools
    in three provinces, WC, FS and EC.
  • Survey addressed the following issues
  • Textbook and stationery availability in schools.
  • Causes of shortages LSM and per learner
    allocation.
  • Lifespan of textbooks and buying cycle.
  • School funding, timeliness of delivery
  • control of LSM in schools.
  • EMIS on LSM and logistics.

29
Problems identified in survey
  • Differences exist in per learner allocation of
    LSM.
  • Textbooks and exercise books availability varies
    between schools.
  • No single explanation of causes for shortages
    of LSM (e.g. supply and timely delivery of LSM)
  • Buying cycle of textbooks.
  • Lifespan of textbooks
  • Schools charge different school fees.

30
Conclusion
  • Survey results indicate serious problems
    associated with provision of LSM.
  • However, survey is based on very small sample of
    the schools population and the FFC intends
    expanding the survey in the current work cycle.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com