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BUDGET ANALYSIS AND POLICY ADVOCACY

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Title: BUDGET ANALYSIS AND POLICY ADVOCACY


1
BUDGET ANALYSIS AND POLICY ADVOCACY
  • Mark Robinson
  • (Institute of Development Studies)
  • Warren Krafchik
  • (International Budget Project)
  • 30 January 2007

2
Research aims
  • Document growth of applied budget work
  • Provide systematic analysis of the nature and
    impact of applied budget work
  • Disseminate lessons learned to budget groups and
    policy makers in governments and aid agencies
  • Research collaboration between IDS and
    International Budget Project, funded by ESRC, the
    Ford Foundation, Hewlett Foundation, and Open
    Society Institute.

3
Six case studies
  • DISHA, India
  • Fundar, Mexico
  • IBASE, Brazil
  • Institute for Democracy in South Africa (IDASA),
    South Africa
  • Institute for Public Finance (IPF), Croatia
  • Uganda Debt Network (UDN), Uganda

4
Team composition and fieldwork
  • Two member teams combining a mix of disciplines,
    experience and country knowledge
  • Maximize cross-evaluation and potential learning
    outcomes at least one team member is directly
    engaged in applied budget work
  • Field visits of 10 -12 working days
  • Data gathered from several sources, including
    interviews and focus group discussions with wide
    range of stakeholders, public budget and policy
    data, IBP and group materials, and media reports

5
Key research questions
  • Budget policies Changes in budget policies and
    systems budget allocations implementation
    (efficiency and effectiveness) and outputs
  • Budget process Budget awareness and
    understanding budget transparency participation
    in the budget process

6
Impact budget systems and allocations
  • Budget systems some influence in Croatia and
    South Africa - structural constraints on the
    budget process
  • Budget allocations evidence of increased
    allocations for specific sectors or programmes in
    Mexico (reproductive health), India (tribal
    welfare expenditure) and South Africa (children,
    HIV/AIDS, women)

7
Impact implementation
  • Significant engagement and impact in Gujarat and
    Uganda at local government level through
    expenditure tracking
  • Monitoring reveals strong evidence of
    inefficiency, corruption and expenditure
    misallocations

8
Impact budget awareness and budget literacy
  • Legislative influence strong in Gujarat, Mexico
    and South Africa, resulting from deliberate
    strategy of engagement, and with elite policy
    makers in Croatia
  • CSO influence significant take-up of findings
    from budget analysis by other groups for advocacy
    and analysis, especially in Uganda, India and
    South Africa
  • Media coverage significant reporting by media
    for most organisations, often the sole source of
    information outside government

9
Impact budget transparency and participation
  • Transparency demonstrated capacity to open up
    budget process to public and legislative
    scrutiny, especially at the federal level in
    Mexico and South Africa
  • Participation ability to promote wider citizen
    participation in budget deliberation more
    limited partial exception of Ibase in Rio de
    Janeiro through leadership training and distance
    learning

10
Interim conclusions
  • Strength of independent budget analysis lies in
    information provision and awareness building (for
    legislators, CSOs and media), enhanced budget
    transparency
  • Some positive impacts on budget priorities,
    allocations, implementation and outcomes
    financial impact can be very significant with
    social justice and equity implications

11
Critical success factors
  • Civil society can add value to public budgeting

  • Transparency and inclusiveness positively
    associated with equity, efficiency and
    effectiveness.
  • Limitations? Incremental vs. structural change.
  • Budget work is a flexible tool
  • Can be applied in diverse countries and stages of
    development.
  • Environment should influence program choices but
    does not predetermine impact.
  • Budget work is adaptable to most civil society
    organizations
  • Think tanks vs. grassroots organizations.
  • Specialized budget organizations vs. budget work
    as a tool.
  • Advocacy vs. information organizations.
  • But, dedicated capacity and year-round engagement
    necessary.

12
Critical success factors
  • Quality of analysis and dissemination determine
    potential for impact
  • Accuracy credibility
  • Timeliness usefulness
  • Accessibility legitimacy
  • Actual impact depends on relationships
  • Work within civil society
  • Legislature and executive
  • Potential with external auditors
  • Long-term impact / structural change depends on
    oversight system and coalitions with other actors

13
Implications for donors
  • Growing recognition that civil society
    participation in the budget process is central to
    effective public financial management
  • Direct influence of government budget policies
    through policy dialogue and direct budget
    support
  • Financing for civil society organisations
    directly engaged in budget work

14
Improving the environment for applied budget work
  • Donors can encourage governments to improve
    budget transparency and make budget information
    widely available
  • Donors should provide more comprehensive
    information on aid flows and reduce off-budget
    spending
  • Donors can engage local budget groups in
    diagnostic and analytical work on budget issues
  • Donors should aim to strengthen accountability in
    the budget process and support the roles of
    legislatures, civil society and the media

15
Direct support for civil society budget work
  • Avoid over-burdening civil society organisations
    with fragmented, small-scale project support
  • Long-term core support can support development of
    medium term perspective and strategy by improving
    internal capacity
  • Preconditions for support include sound technical
    capacity and legitimacy, clear linkages between
    analysis and advocacy, a credible monitoring and
    evaluation system to track impact, and legitimacy
    with parliaments, media and civil society

16
Wider significance
  • Contribution to government accountability through
    independent scrutiny of budgets and improved
    participation in the budget process
  • Contribution to improved public expenditure
    management as donors channel an increasing
    proportion of aid through national and sectoral
    budgets
  • Reduced scope for corruption through tracking and
    monitoring of government expenditures and
    improved utilization of scarce public resources
  • Furthering poverty reduction as benefits
    primarily accrue to poor and vulnerable groups
    through improved budget policies, increased
    budget allocations and better service delivery
  • Strengthening democracy through a more informed
    citizenry and greater voice and participation in
    decision making
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