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Minding the Gaps Comparing Uganda and Tanzania

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Title: Humanitarian Policy Group Author: Lucy Morris Last modified by: Williamson Created Date: 11/5/2001 4:06:05 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Minding the Gaps Comparing Uganda and Tanzania


1
Minding the Gaps Comparing Uganda and Tanzania
  • Tim Williamson
  • Centre for Aid and Public Expenditure
  • Overseas Development Institute
  • t.williamson_at_odi.org.uk

2
Comparing Tanzania and Uganda
  • There are many similarities between the two
    countries
  • 2nd Generation PRS, improving and evolving
    Poverty Monitoring Systems
  • Years of budget reform (MTEF, IFMIS etc)
  • Aid dependant, with strong accountability demands
    from donors
  • Dominant executive, with relatively weak domestic
    accountability systems
  • different trajectories of ownership of the
    PRS..
  • Tanzania increasing with iterations of the PRS
  • Uganda strong coalition of interest around PEAP
    early on, but political ownership less evident
    now.
  • and very different approaches to linking
    policy/the PRS to the budget, and reporting

3
How do the lessons from Minding the Gaps apply in
Uganda and Tanzania?
  1. Focus on strengthening and harmonization of
    existing processes and adopt a gradual approach
    to reform
  2. Support from within High level ownership of
    policies, a challenge function within the
    executive and clear sector roles.
  3. Foster incentives for integration
  4. Keep it simple

4
Lesson 4 Keep it Simple
  • 1990s Two contrasting approaches to introducing
    the MTEF
  • Tanzania chose to move to full programme
    budgeting and activity based costing in the MTEF
  • Uganda adapted its existing budget presentation,
    by grouping institutions by sector and a simple
    use of performance indicators
  • and differing outcomes in terms of
    budget-policy link
  • In Tanzania very detailed agency MTEF documents,
    but difficult to see the overall policy budget
    link.
  • In Uganda arguably it is easier to see policy
    links in budget documentation, despite a less
    sophisticated system.
  • Quality of sector/MDA submissions vary in both
    cases there is need to focus on operational
    efficiency in both cases

5
Lesson 3 Foster Incentives for Integration
Linking Reporting to Decision Making Processes
  • Both have new ideas for PRS reporting. But what
    role does PRS reporting play in domestic decision
    making?
  • Are the plans largely addressing donor
    accountability concerns?
  • Can they inform domestic policy
    decisions/accountabilty?
  • but the decision making process around the
    budget is a key entry point for reporting
  • E.g. in Uganda there is use of performance
    analysis and information in budget documentation,
    but less so in Tanzania
  • .and so are sector policy processes in Uganda
  • In Uganda Annual Sector Performance Reports feed
    into well established Sector Review
    Processes.but not linked to budget.
  • What about PRS clusters and pillars?
  • In Tanzania the focus is on PRS clusters. Good
    for addressing cross cutting issues, but
    accountability and decision making?

6
Lesson 2 Build Support from Within
  • Start with making the budget policy oriented
  • The Strategic Budget Allocation System (SBAS) in
    Tanzania
  • a sophisticated domestically conceived system to
    link the budget to the PRS
  • but would it all have been necessary
  • if MDA MTEFs were already well linked to policy
  • and the PRS was structured in a way that made it
    easy to interface with the budget (e.g. sectors
    not clusters)?

7
Lesson 2 Build Support from Within
  • Sectors, Cabinet and the Budget Process
  • Strategic Phase in both Tanzania and Uganda
  • but budget challenge still weak
  • Cabinet and involvement in reviewing the
    MTEF/Budget Strategy and the Budget
  • Cabinet given explicit choices in Uganda, but
    appears a fait accompli in Tanzania
  • No cabinet committees to review the budget in
    either country, so extensive scrutiny is not
    likely
  • In Uganda Parliamentary Budget and Accounts
    committees increasingly active..
  • How can they be supported?

8
Lesson 1 Strengthen and Harmonise Existing
Processes Gradual Approach
  • A Gradual Approach?
  • Tzs budget formulation reforms too sophisticated
    early on address fragmentation first?
  • PRSMTEFPerformance budgetingStrategic Planning
    all at once..
  • Uganda simpler approach to budget formulation
    reform
  • But financial management dimension has lagged
    behind
  • Strengthen and Harmonise existing processes
  • In Tanzania new initiatives were added to an
    already fragmented system...
  • In Uganda PRS initiatives were built on existing
    systems. This helped with coherence (but is this
    changing?).

9
and finallyThe Primacy of Political Ownership
  • Tanzania and Uganda demonstrate that the domestic
    policy agenda is dynamic.
  • .to maintain ownership any framework for linking
    the PRS to the budget must be flexible and
    relevant to current policy.
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