Title: BUILDING THE CAPACITY FOR EFFECTIVE PUBLIC SPENDING
1BUILDING THE CAPACITY FOR EFFECTIVE PUBLIC
SPENDING
- Institutional arrangements and sub-national
finance
Visit of Mexican Legislators On Fiscal Policy and
Public Finance OECD Headquarters, Paris 26
March 2007 Claire Charbit and Lee Mizell OECD
Regional Competitiveness and Governance Division
2Governance of Regional Development Policy
- In all national case studied, RDP is a shared
responsibility often employing contractual
mechanisms for dealing with co-ordination needs
(e.g. France, Italy, Spain, Canada, Germany) - A contract between levels of government is any
arrangement reorganising, beside the
constitution, the rights and duties of
governments - Contracts among levels of government are
unavoidable (vertical interdependencies
assignment of responsibilities) - Contracts allow a customized management of
interdependencies, useful in either unitary or
federal contexts - Contracts are tools for dialog, for clarifying
responsibilities, for learning - Bilateral commitments must be as  verifiableÂ
as possible - Coherence of Regional Policy is needed for
improving public spending.
3Effective place-based spending rests on three
important pillars
at all levels of government
4CHALLENGE 1 Developing coherence by enhancing
institutional arrangements
- Sub-secretariat (e.g. Italy before) Single
ministry (e.g. Italy present) - Agency model (e.g. Canada)
5Fiscal Federalism Issues and Institutional
Concerns
- Local Public Services are absolutely required for
social and economic development - Who provide them and with what type of budget?
- Providing basic services more effectively allow
for available funds for economic development
support - What strategies are used by OECD countries for
improving effectiveness of local public services
delivery? - Place based approaches require the participation
of different levels of government - What are the mechanisms used by OECD countries
for governing regional development policy?
6Sub national governments' share in general
government revenues and expenditure per cent
(2003)
Fiscal Autonomy and Fiscal Decentralisation
Revenues
Expenditures
7Effectiveness of Sub Central Public Spending
- Funding arrangements and budget rules
- Types of grants (earmarked vs. general purpose)
- Multi-year budgeting
- Competition and other market-based mechanisms
- On Supply side (less monopolistic behaviours
thanks to competitive tendering for public
procurement), and - on Demand side (more user fees)
- The relevant size for organising local public
service provision - Mergers vs. cooperation
- Central government incentives
- Urban and rural considerations
- Indicators to measure performance
- Evaluation
- Incentives
8CHALLENGE 2 Strengthening finances for
place-based policies
- 3 categories of challenges
- Funding at the national level
- Co-financing for regional development
- EU Structural Funds
- Fiscal relations among levels of government
- Low own-source revenue
9CHALLENGE 3 Strengthening sub-national
capacities
- Professional workforce
- Extend LSPC to all public servants
- Continue extension of similar reforms at
sub-national levels - Management of diverse stakeholders
- Assess and strengthen existing mechanisms
- Monitoring and evaluation
- Build sub-national capacities for monitoring and
evaluation - Extend evaluation to mechanisms of co-ordination
- Diffuse good practice
- Proposed regional development agencies could
provide forum - Accountability
- Strengthening capacities including sub-national
finance improves accountability
10Sub-national tax revenue in Mexico accounts for
3 of total tax revenue
Distribution of total tax revenue by sub-sector
of government, 2004
Source OECD (2006), Revenue Statistics Note
(1) VAT is collected by the federal government
and all receipts are appropriated to States and
territories