Title: MANAGING THE INSTITUTIONAL AND POLITICAL DYNAMICS OF DECENTRALIZATION IMPLEMENTATION
1MANAGING THE INSTITUTIONAL AND POLITICAL
DYNAMICS OF DECENTRALIZATION IMPLEMENTATION
2OUTLINE
- A. Introduction
- B. Challenges of Fiscal Decentralization
- C. Managing Fiscal Decentralization
- D. Selected Cases
3INTRODUCTIONINTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL SYSTEM
TYPICAL ELEMENTS
- Enabling framework
- Functional Assignments
- Revenue Assignments
- Intergovernmental Transfers
- Subnational Government Borrowing
- Alternative Mechanisms
4A Normative Approach to Implementing Fiscal
Decentralization (Bahl/Martinez-Vazquez)
Step 6 Monitor, Evaluate, and Retrofit
Step 5 Implement the Decentralization Program
Step 4 Develop the Implementing Regulations
Step 3 Pass the Decentralization Law
Step 2 Do the Policy Design and Develop a White
Paper
Step 1 Carry out a National Debate on the Issues
Related to Decentralization Policy
The Platform Deconcentration, Rule of Law, etc.
5Elements (Prerequisites) of Fiscal
Decentralization
- Broad Enabling Framework
- Political Will
- Adequate Local Political System
- Adequate Fiscal System
- Institutional/Managerial System
- Implementation Capacity
6B. CHALLENGESOrigins of Decentralization
- Originated in response to crisis rapid decision
with inadequate political consensus - Imposed/influenced by international donors
- Often too derivative of textbook solutions based
on social science approaches, particularly the
local finance/fiscal federalism literature - Some elements borrowed from other countries
without adaptation
7Different Meaning in Different Contexts
- Reinventing/strengthening elected sub-national
governments where they exist but have not been
functioning well - Transforming local administrative units into
elected levels of sub-national government - Creating sub-national units of administration and
governance where they have not previously existed
8Integration Necessary but Complex
- Fiscal decentralization without administrative
and political resources without institutional
and governance capacity - Administrative decentralization without fiscal
and political local responsibilities/autonomy
without resources and governance structures - Political decentralization without administrative
and fiscal decision making structures without
institutional and fiscal structures
9Institutional Challenges
- Decentralization involves many central actors
- Agencies with broad functions Ministry of
Finance (MOF)/Planning (MOP), Civil Service
Commission - Agencies the oversee local government Ministry
of Local Government (MLG), Home Affairs or
Interior - Agencies with sectoral functions agriculture,
education, health, water, etc. - These various central actors may resist
decentralizing because they lose power. - They may pursue inconsistent decentralization
policies simultaneously, potentially undermining
the development of a coherent, well functioning
LG system
10Institutional Challenges II
- Sectoral ministries may have decentralization
programs that use procedures not consistent with
MOF regulations - MOF and MLG may issue inconsistent LG guidelines
- MOF may use one mechanism for recurrent transfers
while the MOP/ sectoral ministries use
incompatible mechanisms for development transfers - In short complex, fragmented, hierarchical
central bureaucracies with little incentive to
decentralize or coordinate in addition - Undeveloped/inappropriate procedures/incentives
- Lack of technical and managerial capacity at all
levels - Weak transparency/accountability to local
constituencies
11Scope and Structure of Decentralization Reforms
- Two broadly problematic reform types unworkably
comprehensive or limited (often
technical)/uncoordinated with broader agenda - Often coordinated by single lead ministries
perceived as rivals by other key players - Typically unbalanced focus on either supply or
demand side - Typically treat all sub-national governments or
classes (cities, municipalities, towns, etc.) as
if they have similar capacity
12Scope and Structure II Relationships Beyond the
Center
- Relationships among different levels and forms of
subnational government - Relationships among sub-national units at the
same level - Horizontal local relationships between elected
officials and staff - Sub-national government-community group relations
- Private partner relationships for service
delivery and management functions
13Role of International Donors
- Not always strong incentives to support genuine
decentralization, which is complex and delays
projects and moving funds - Self-coordination of donors and sectors also
slows progress and diffuses the credit for
achievements - Often fundamental donor mistrust of even central
capacity
14Role of International Donors II
- Decentralization/coordination complexities and
client capacity concerns influence
decentralization design and outcomes - In some cases, different international donors
support individual ministries for inconsistent
reforms, reinforcing competitive behavior of
central agencies - In some cases, special units or funds,
institutionalize systems and procedures that are
inconsistent with the emerging formal local
government system
15C. MANAGING DECENTRALIZATION Basics
- Clear division of supervisory, regulatory, and
technical assistance functions among the central
government agencies involved - Process for building national consensus on
decentralization goals and systems - Coordination mechanism so that agencies develop
consistent systems/procedures - Implementation strategy to ensure that the
capacities of local governments are not too
quickly overwhelmed and the existing powers of
central agencies are not dramatically challenged
16Design/Coordination
- An effective coordination body should involve all
key stakeholders to an appropriate extent - May be separate coordination bodies for policy
and implementation (often under officials at
different levels) but there must then be
coordination between them - The coordination body needs to be credible, which
means seen by relevant stakeholders as - Neutral (not competing for decentralization
resources) - High level (in a coordinating ministry, special
commission, or president/prime ministers office
rather than peer line ministry)
17Design/Coordination II
- International experience suggests that the
coordination body also needs to have - Capacity to monitor and adjust as appropriate the
implementation of decentralization activities - Sufficient authority and capacity to enforce
decentralization activities that various
reluctant central actors are supposed to undertake
18Implementation Strategy
- Clearly defined starting point consistent with
capacity/performance of local government (may be
asymmetric if appropriate) - Starting point may be at least partially
negotiated, placing some responsibility for
reform steps on local governments - Reform aspects should be integrated
(administrative, fiscal, political) at each step
to the extent feasible--even if initially at a
very basic level
19Implementation Strategy II
- Further steps towards full set of desired
responsibilities should build progressively on
earlier steps - Strong positive and negative incentives for local
governments (and staff) to achieve desired goals
are an important part of overall strategy - Coordinating body should oversee and manage
implementation strategy to ensure that all
parties at all levels of government are meeting
their assigned responsibilities
20Capacity Building Mechanisms
- Two main types
- Technical training local governments to meet
their functional responsibilities - Governance training citizens, elected officials
and LG staff to work with each other - Two main approaches
- Supply driven designed and provided by central
agencies - Demand driven LGs request what they need
21Capacity Building II
- Some lessons on LG capacity building
- Central government will remain an important
supplier, but an element of demand should emerge
if incentive structure is right - Should focus on specific priority functions and
procedures rather than comprehensive/broad - Capacity building should be directly related to
the steps in implementation strategy - Follow-up is important capacity building is not
just classroom training mobile TA teams
22D. EXAMPLES OF KEY INSTITUTIONS AND PROCESSES
- There is no single best practice country in
terms of successful decentralization
coordination, strong implementation strategy and
effective capacity building - Several countries, however, have elements of good
practice in the various institutional mechanisms
and strategies they have adopted for
decentralization
23Coordination Bodies
- Regional Autonomy Review Board (former Indonesia)
- The Decentralization Secretariat (Uganda)
- National Decentralization Committee (Thailand)
- Decentralization Implementation Authority
(proposed Cambodia)
24Implementation Strategy
- Some countries have elements of a strategy
- South Africa and Vietnam to some extent use
asymmetry in service assignment - Cambodia started decentralization very modestly,
giving small resources and few responsibilities
with a focus on building political credibility - Thailand has a highly developed and extremely
detailed decentralization implementation
strategy, but limited progress has been made to
date - Indonesia is working out decentralization of
services on a sectoral and local government basis
25Capacity Building Mechanisms
- Some recent innovations
- Uganda and Bangladesh require LGs to meet
prerequisites to receive development transfers,
with capacity building grants available to LGs
below the threshhold - Kenya piloted a program for developing capacity
in which a package of reforms were negotiated
with the MLG, which provided mobile technical
assistance to train and follow up on LG skill
implementation
26E. SELECTED CASESCambodia a very poor
post-conflict country in early decentralization
- Positive Features elements of a reform strategy
pro-poor transfers local elections substantial
efforts to develop pro-poor governance mechanisms
(participatory planning, etc.) strong donor
support for consolidated local funding - Negative Features weak local revenue system
generally low capacity some evidence of local
elite capture in certain areas poor donor
coordination of governance technical assistance
27Indonesia a large country with areas of
wealth/capacity that rapidly decentralized
- Positive Features redistributive transfers
strong alternative pro-poor finance mechanisms
(CDD) and emerging nongovernmental partnerships
competitive local elections capacity significant
and debt potential in wealthier areas - Negative Features decentralization
rapid/non-strategic weak local revenues low
local government/CDD coordination modest efforts
to develop transparency and citizen engagement
donor coordination remains inadequate
28Kenya long history of local government that
declined and is being reformed
- Positive Features intergovernmental fiscal
system reform relatively coordinated strong
local revenues transfers linked to adoption of
reforms, including participatory planning
competitive local elections solid capacity in
some areas - Negative Features local government reform
efforts slow and fragmented poor coordination
between districts and local governments
subnational lending mechanism dysfunctional
29Uganda strong post-conflict consensus for local
governance/poverty reduction
- Positive Features strong pro-poor focus and
support for local government development
transfers create strong incentives local
elections participatory planning and review
mechanisms improving donor support increasingly
coordinated - Negative Features weak and poorly structured
local revenues recurrent transfers may have
become too conditional lack of clarity regarding
roles of central actors in decentralization
remains