Public Expenditure Tracking Studies: Rationale and Results - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 24
About This Presentation
Title:

Public Expenditure Tracking Studies: Rationale and Results

Description:

PETS is a diagnostic tool that tracks resource flows from central government ... Overcharging of fees. Service inefficiencies and poor quality. Problems in service ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:60
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 25
Provided by: WB1496
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Public Expenditure Tracking Studies: Rationale and Results


1
Public Expenditure Tracking Studies Rationale
and Results
  • Oscar F. Picazo
  • Sr. Economist, The World Bank/Pretoria Office
  • Presentation for the DPSA Research Colloquium
  • Ingwenya Lodge, Muldersdrift, Gauteng Province,
    South Africa
  • March 15, 2007

2
What is PETS?(Oxford Policy Management, 2006)
  • PETS is a diagnostic tool that tracks resource
    flows from central government through line
    ministries (e.g., MOH) and intermediary
    administrative levels (provinces, districts) to
    the service delivery unit (e.g., hospital or
    clinic).
  • Budget allocations, timeliness of funding, local
    discretion in use of resources, degree of leakage
  • Comparison of resources at each level (if
    possible, vis-à-vis performance) reasons for
    variances
  • Assessment of fiduciary risk risk that
    resources are not accounted for, or are not used
    for intended purposes

3
Why PETS (health focus)?
  • Some countries are already approaching or have
    exceeded the CMHs standard of US33 per capita
    health spending, yet health indicators are still
    poor
  • Botswana, 171 Lesotho, 29 Namibia, 99 South
    Africa, 206 Swaziland, 66
  • Some countries now exceed the 15 Abuja target of
    govt allocation to health, yet health indicators
    are still poor
  • DR Congo, 16 Mozambique, 20 Namibia, 20
    Tanzania, 15 Sao Tome Principe, 15
  • Large external infusion of health resources (GF,
    GAVI, WB, PEPFAR, etc.) are yet to demonstrate
    equally large improvement in health outcomes

4
Similar changes in public spending can be
associated with vastly different changes in
outcomes
Sources Spending data from World Development
Indicators database. School completion from
Bruns, Mingat and Rakatomalala 2003
5
and vastly different changes in spending can be
associated with similar changes in outcomes
Sources Spending data for 1990s from World
Development Indicators database. Child mortality
data from Unicef 2002. Other data from World
Bank staff
6
Expenditure incidence analyses show the poorest
are highly disadvantaged by public spending
Health
Education
Source Filmer 2003b
7
PETS Rationale the need for a new tool to
analyze health spending and service delivery
(Reinikka, 2005)
  • Evidence of limited impact of health spending on
    health coverage and outcomes
  • Traditional focus of inquiry has been on
    household data (DHS) and demand-side analysis,
    and little inquiry on supply side (how financing
    translates into actual service provision)
  • Global and local demand for evidence of
    efficiency and quality of service delivery (what
    works? what doesnt? why?)
  • Lack of reliable disaggregated data in countries
    with poor governance and weak institutions

8
PETS also impelled by new approaches to
development aid(Adapted from Reinikka, 2005
OPM, 2006)
  • Move towards budget support and PRSCs If donors
    have to put their assistance into the budget and
    give up control of management of inputs (as in
    projects), they need to be confident that the
    money is being used for their intended purposes
    (i.e., minimal fiduciary risk)
  • Output-based aid Health sector is being asked
    to account for its performance and outcomes, esp.
    in MDGs PETS can provide critical ME function
  • Transparency and accountability Global agencies
    and local constituencies are demanding stronger
    fiduciary and performance systems
  • PETS as a diagnostic tool to identify weak areas
  • PETS can lead to practical solutions to address
    weak areas

9
Focus and Coverage of PETS(Adapted from
Lindelow, 2003)
10
PETS Approach and Design Considerations(OPM,
2006 Lindelow, 2003 Ye Canagarajah, 2002)
  • Highly context-specific
  • Mgt systems reflect the accretion of historical,
    political, cultural, and administrative factors
  • Co-existence of formal and informal systems
  • Formal administrative systems of codified laws,
    orders, procedures, and practices, i.e., budget
    mgt, accounting system, drug/equipment supply,
    personnel system, MIS, private payments (user
    fees).
  • Problem Even in formal systems, procedures may
    not be followed, or rules may not be clearly
    specified, leading to discretionary behavior
  • Informal systems and practices, e.g., payments to
    expedite receipt of resources or services power
    structures between center and periphery, or
    between local councils and facilities
  • Reliance on hard and soft information sources
  • Hard data financial records, drug stock cards,
    etc.
  • Soft info interviews of managers, staff, and
    patients importance of perceptions and
    confidentiality
  • Importance of unannounced visits facility in its
    routine state

11
PETS Approach and Design Considerations
  • Need for representative and statistically valid
    sample
  • Standard nomenclature for facilities may not
    reflect actual services they render
  • Need to distinguish between corruption vs.
    wasting of resources
  • Corruption deliberate leakage of resources with
    intention to privately capture benefits
  • Wasting inefficiency in resource use, e.g.,
    expired drugs, under-qualified or over-qualified
    staff
  • How to account for honest errors in reporting
    or underreporting due to, among others,
    unqualified staff?
  • Triangulation of results
  • Multilevel and multi-angular validation of data
  • Difficulties of valuing in-kind resources (drugs,
    supplies, TA, training)

12
PETS in Africa
13
Key Findings of PETS
  • Staff absences and ghost workers
  • Diversion (leakage) of nonwage expenditures gt
    local capture of resources by councils and
    other influential community groups or individuals
  • Late or partial receipt of salaries
  • Late or partial receipt of nonwage funds
  • Universally poor accounting and reporting systems
    across African countries
  • Widespread lack of public information on resource
    availability especially at local level

14
Rates of Absence Among Teachers and Health
Workers in the Public Sector, Various
Years(Reinikka and Svensson, 2006)
15
of Ghost Workers on Payroll, Various
Years(Reinikka and Svensson, 2006)
16
Leakage of Nonwage Funds in Primary Education
and Health, Various Years(Reinikka and Svensson,
2006 PWC, 2001)
17
Uganda PETS Experiences(Reinikka, 2004 Others)
  • Motivation Despite significant increases in
    budget allocations for primary schools in the
    1980s until mid-1990s, enrolment in primary
    schools remained stagnant. Why?
  • Findings PETS found that between 1991-95
  • On average, only 13 of annual per-student grant
    reached primary schools 87 were misappropriated
    of captured by local officials for purposes
    other than education
  • Highly inequitable allocation of funds, i.e.,
    larger schools and those with wealthier pupils
    benefited disproportionately from annual student
    grants less than half of schools received any
    funds at all
  • Results Realization that conventional mechanisms
    such as audits and supervision are not enough,
    especially if institutions are weak.
  • Citizens must be given information and empowered
    to express their voice through, say, citizen
    report cards or community score cards.
  • Public advertising of transfers from central
    Treasury to local councils are now routine
    (posting budget on the school door or wall).
  • Rates of leakage of nonwage funds have declined
    dramatically.

18
Leakage of Nonwage Funds in Primary Education
in Uganda, 1991-95 and 2001(Reinikka, 2001
Reinikka and Svensson, 2004)
19
Tanzania PETS Experiences(PWC, 1999 REPOA
ESRF, 2001 Sundet, 2004)
  • Motivation PETS funded by DfID, which was then
    considering budget support program
  • Findings
  • Direct donor contributions favor better-off
    districts.
  • Councils ignore many directives high rates of
    leakage in nonwage funds general underreporting
    of other charges.
  • Weak accounting, internal control, and auditing
    weak monitoring by parent Ministries.
  • Of the recorded expenditures, Councils spent more
    than 50 of funds on items not directly
    benefiting service delivery.
  • Cash payroll system provides large scope for
    paying ghost workers.
  • Results
  • Wide scope of the surveys, very limited sample
    sizes, and non-uniformity of instruments over
    time constrained the conclusiveness of the PETS.
  • Except for implementation of IFMIS, no major
    actions were taken to redress the shortcomings.
  • Treasury decided to advertise in the media all
    transfers to districts.

20
Mozambique PETS Experiences(Lindelow, 2003 St.
Antoine, et al., 2006)
  • Motivation Large external assistance since end
    of civil war. But government had initial
    reservations about PETS.
  • Findings
  • Very large variation across districts in nonwage
    recurrent spending, staffing, and drug supply
    inefficiency, favoritism, or corruption?
  • Severe problems in budget execution, with late
    first transfers (4 months) and slow processing of
    accounts, resulting in low budget predictability
  • Weak record keeping at provincial, district, and
    facility levels, often with large discrepancies
    between levels
  • Large user-fee revenue losses free-riding of
    influential citizens
  • Results
  • Donors deliberately allocating more equitably
    across provinces and districts, but govt
    allocation remains strongly incremental.
  • To reduce fiduciary risk, govt increased the
    level of spending to be approved by central HQ,
    but this further slowed down budget execution.
  • User fee system remained unreformed for the
    most part.

21
Nigeria PETS Experiences(Das Gupta, Gauri
Khemani, 2003)
  • Motivation Desire to assess decentralized
    delivery of health services under a federal
    system
  • Findings
  • Large-scale leakage of public resources in Kogi
    State, away from original budget allocations.
  • 42 of health staff had not been paid salaries
    for gt 6 months, even though budget allocations
    were sufficient to cover wage costs.
  • To augment salaries, public servants act as
    private providers, expropriating drug supplies
    and selling them to patients.
  • Results
  • No documented after-PETS experiences, but study
    suggested providing local citizens with more
    information about budget resources to hold their
    local representatives accountable.

22
Months in the Year that Salaries in Local
Government Authorities in Kogi State, Nigeria
Have Not Been Paid 2001-02(Das Gupta, Gauri
Khemani, 2003)
23
Implications of PETS Findings
  • Advocating for CMS US33 health spending per
    capita, and AUs Abuja target of 15 health
    share, are not sufficient conditions to improve
    health outcomes
  • Need to look more closely at how existing
    resources are used
  • Actual receipt, speed, and equity of central
    flows to districts and facilities
  • Effective use of received resources, and the
    institutional and staff incentives to use
    resources properly
  • Top-down audits and supervision are not highly
    reliable under weak management systems
  • Bottom-up efforts to empower local communities
    with budget information and citizens voice are
    equally important

24
PETS Limitations(Lindelow 2003 OPM, 2006)
  • PETS only provides part of the answer
  • Analyses of inter- and intra-sectoral budget
    allocation, expenditure incidence, and social
    impact (using household data or through
    participatory approaches) are equally important
  • Need to link PETS with sector outcomes, possibly
    through Quantitative Service Delivery surveys
    (QSDS)
  • Need to know total amount of resources flowing
    into the sector, through National Health
    Accounting (NHA)
  • PETS should supplement rather than supplant
    routine HMIS and FMIS
  • If there is no good financial paper trail, PETS
    results would be very weak
  • Lack of standardized PETS indicators to compare
    countries (unlike DHS)
  • OPM has suggested 22 core indicators encompassing
    formal informal systems
  • Surveys provide information but dont necessarily
    result in change
  • Lack of info about the nature and scope of
    problems is not always the primary constraint to
    improving public expenditure management and
    service delivery
  • Importance of continuity of tracking and its link
    with efforts to strengthen institutions and
    routine systems
  • Need to link PETS with efforts to increase
    voice of community and other local stakeholders
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com