Title: Budget Institutions and Fiscal Responsibility: Parliaments and the Political Economy of the Budgetary Process in Latin America
1Budget Institutions and Fiscal Responsibility
Parliaments and the Political Economy of the
Budgetary Process in Latin America
- Carlos Santiso
- Governance adviser, United Kingdom Department for
International Development (DFID) Political
economist, Johns Hopkins School of Advanced
International Studies (SAIS) - XVII Regional Seminar on Fiscal Policy
- United Nations Economic Commission for Latin
America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) - Santiago de Chile, Chile, 24-27 January 2005
2I - Introduction
- Key question
- Can parliaments make an effective contribution to
the budget process while preserving and
reinforcing fiscal discipline? - Central challenge
- Latin Americas difficult combination
presidential systems of government and highly
centralised budgetary systems - How to retain the advantages of strong executive
authority required to ensure fiscal discipline,
while providing the institutional checks and
balances that guarantee accountability.
3(2)
- Main purpose
- Underscore the risks of excessive executive
discretion in public budgeting and the benefits
from a more balanced relationship between the
executive and the legislature in the budget
process. - Suggest ways in which the contribution of
parliaments to budget oversight and financial
accountability could be enhanced in a fiscally
responsible manner. - Find an adequate balance between executive
prerogatives and legislative oversight in public
budgeting.
4(3)
- Parliaments as budgetary institutions
- Conceptualise the governance of the budget.
- Focus on role of parliament as an actor in the
budget process. - Focus on the interaction of executive and
legislature. - Understanding the governance of the budget beyond
the executive. - Understanding the governance of the budget along
the different phases of the budgetary process. - Structure of study
- Reviewing a consensus Hierarchical budget
institutions and centralisation of budgetary
systems. - Assessing the scope of legislative budget
authority. - Evaluating the effectiveness of legislative
budget oversight. - Main findings and recommendations.
5II - Budgetary institutions and government
accountability
- Parliaments as institutions of fiscal governance
- Legislative budget institutions and
second-generation reforms greater focus on
transparency, responsibility and accountability. - First generation reforms in governmental
financial management. - Focus on internal systems budgeting, cash
management, accounting, financial reporting,
internal control and auditing. - Example of Simafal.
- Second generation reforms in public finance
management - Greater appreciation of external systems
external auditing, legislative oversight and
societal accountability. - Budgetary systems as part of broader systems of
fiscal governance and financial administration. - Contribution of parliaments as part of a wider
system of fiscal control and financial
accountability.
6 Accountability cycle of the budgetary process
7(2)
- Fiscal governance and legislative institutions
- Political institutions, budgetary processes and
fiscal outcomes (Alesina and Perotti 1996,1995
Acosta and Coppedge 2001). - Controversy on what is the most appropriate role
of parliaments in budget policymaking and
oversight. - Foundational fiscal pact (Cepal 1998) and
wicksellian connection of public finances
(Breton 1996) but - Dysfunctional fiscal effects of unrestrained
legislative budgetary powers on fiscal
management. - Fiscal responsibility and political
accountability tensions and complementarities.
8(3)
- Fiscal discipline and hierarchical budget
institutions - Institutional solution Centralisation of
budgetary powers and limitation of prerogatives
of parliament in the budget process. - Centralisation of the budgetary process within
the executive (central budget office of finance
ministry) is more likely to guarantee greater
fiscal discipline (Alesina and Perotti 1996
Alesina 1999 Stein 1998). - Institutional features of fiscal governance
three institutional arrangements are more
conducive to fiscal restraint (i) ex ante
numerical constraints on deficits (ii)
top-bottom or hierarchical procedural rules and
(iii) transparent procedures (Alesina 1999). - Political features of fiscal governance
extensive and largely unchecked use of executive
decrees and delegation of legislative budget
powers to the executive.
9Index of budgetary institutions
Stein et al (1998). Average figures for 1990-1995
on a scale from 0 to 1, from the least to the
most centralised.
10(4)
- Risks of hierarchical budgetary arrangements
- Hierarchical budgetary arrangements tend to allow
for excessive executive discretion in public
budgeting, which tends to - Undermine the public legitimacy of the budget as
a policy-setting tool and its credibility as an
instrument of strategic-planning (MTEF) - Weaken the incentives for fiscal transparency and
external scrutiny, which makes fiscal discipline
and expenditure control harder to achieve
(quasi-monopoly of the executive on financial
information) - Undermine the resoluteness of fiscal policy and
budgetary management, while nevertheless allowing
for greater flexibility and decisiveness
(especially in times of crisis) (Haggard and
McCubins 2001) - Overemphasise aggregate fiscal discipline over
the other goals of public budgeting, namely
allocative and operational efficiency (Schick
1998), and the ability to implement
counter-cyclical fiscal policy.
11(5)
- Accountability functions of parliaments in public
budgeting - Ex ante accountability
- Ensure that budget allocations adequately reflect
policy priorities. - Concurrent accountability
- Oversee the execution of the budget by the
executive. - Ex post accountability
- Hold government to account for performance and
results. - Transparency and credibility
- Improve the credibility of the budget by
enhancing transparency in fiscal information and
scrutiny of fiscal policies and - Redress the information asymmetries between the
state and society.
12III - Legislative budget authority Legal
framework
- Overview of legislative budget powers
- Vary along the four main phases of the budget
cycle (formulation, adoption, execution, and
control). - Gap between formal powers and actual performance.
- Uncommon executive prerogatives in public
budgeting. - De jure or de facto restrictions on legislative
budget powers. - Legislative taxation powers (de facto
delegation). - Legislative budgetary powers (de jure
delegation). - Key variables
- (i) whether parliament is legally empowered to
intervene, - (ii) whether it is endowed with the required
technical capacities, - (iii) whether it possesses the necessary
political incentives, and - (iv) whether the governance environment is
conducive.
13(2)
- Legislative powers along the budget cycle
- Budget formulation
- Constraint Exclusive right of initiative of the
executive. - Budget review and approval
- Amendment powers of parliament,
- Veto powers of the president (package and line
item veto powers), - Over-ride powers of parliament,
- Location of the reversion point,
- Legislative process and structures (internal
rules and legislative capacities), - Time, timing and sequencing of the budgetary
process.
14Constitutional restrictions on legislative budget
authority
Source Alesina et al 1999 World Bank 2001
Casar Pérez 2001 Payne et al 2003 RodrÃguez and
Bonvecchi 2004.
15Time for budget review
Based on Gutiérrez 2001 Chapter III World Bank
2004 for Nicaragua and 1992 organic budget law
for Argentina.
16(4)
- Budget execution
- Oversight of budget execution,
- Scrutiny of budget re-allocations,
- Control of executive decrees.
- Budget control
- Ex post review of public expenditure,
- Certification of public accounts.
17IV - Legislative budget oversight Actual
performance
(1)
- Budget transparency
- Perceptions of performance
- Index of budget transparency (aggregate)
IBP 20035.
18Index of budget transparency (disaggregate)
Based on IBP 20033.
19(2)
- Internal constraints (institutional arrangements)
- Organisation of legislative committee work
- Finance, budget and public accounts committees
full committees or sub-committees - Interaction with sectorial committees and special
or ad hoc committees (inquiry commissions) - Joint committees in bicameral systems
20(3)
- Legislative technical advisory capacity
- Staff levels of budget-related legislative
committees - Members of parliament with professional staff
dealing with budgetary issues
OECD World Bank Budget Database (2003), Question
2.10.h.
OECD World Bank Budget Database (2003), Question
2.10.h.
21(4)
- Political parties in the legislature with
advisory capacity - dealing with budgetary issues
- Number of technical advisory staff serving
political parties and - dealing with budget issues Â
OECD World Bank Budget Database (2003), Question
2.10.f.
OECD World Bank Budget Database (2003), Question
2.10.g.
22(5)
- Legislative budget research capacity
- Cases of Chile (2003), Mexico (1998), Venezuela
(1997), Peru (2002) - Legislative budget offices
OECD World Bank Budget Database (2003), Question
2.10.e.
23(6)
- External constraints (governance context)
- Legislative oversight and external auditing
- Elusive and dysfunctional linkages.
- Economic governance and budget execution
- Insulation of economic policymaking,
- Extensive use of executive decrees,
- Frequent budget re-allocations.
- Political governance and legislative budgeting
- Nature of political regime (presidential or
semi-presidential), - Incentives provided by electoral rules
(majoritarian versus proportional systems,
district magnitude, open and closed lists,
preferential voting), - Impact of quality of political party systems
(coherence and cohesion). - Political opposition and government
accountability - Technical capacities and political incentives.
- The case of Mexico since 1997
-
24V - Concluding remarks Politics of Public
Budgeting
- Enhancing political accountability while ensuring
fiscal discipline Can it be achieved? - Legislative budget powers How much is enough?
How Much is too much? - Finding the adequate balance between executive
prerogatives and legislative powers - Executive dominance in the formulation and
management of the budget is more likely to ensure
fiscal prudence - Legislative oversight is critical to enforce
accountability in the execution and control of
the budget.
25(2)
- Parliaments and systems of fiscal control
- Strengthening institutional synergies in the
national systems of integrity. - Institutions of horizontal accountability
effective internal control and independent
external auditing. - Mechanisms of vertical accountability electoral
rules, party system and political incentives. - Processes of societal accountability public
transparency, social control and external
oversight. - Legislative hierarchical budget institutions
- Institutional devices can help legislatures
reconcile budgetary activism with fiscal
prudence. - Rationalising and centralising the legislative
amendment process (Brazil).
26(3)
- Technical capacities and political incentives
- Question of strategy Should parliaments
technical capacities be built first? Or should
political incentives be enhanced first? - Capacities and incentives ought to be addressed
simultaneously capacity constraints partly
explain why parliaments do not exercise their
budgetary powers effectively, governance
constraints tend to explain why they sometimes do
not exercise them responsibly. - To build effective legislatures, mobilising
political power is more important than increasing
technical skill (Carothers 1999181).