Title: Fiscal rules for sub-central governments
1Fiscal rules for sub-central governments a
Norwegian perspective
- Rune J. Sørensen
- Norwegian School of Management (BI), Oslo, Norway
- E-mail rune.sorensen_at_bi.no
- For presentation at the second meeting of the
network on fiscal relations across levels of
government, OECD Headquarters, Paris 8-9
September 2005
2Outline
- Why regulate sub-central governments
- The political strength of cental government
- The Nordic system of local government
- The Norwegian hospital sector
- The allocation costs of tax regulation
3A need for central regulations?
- Common pool problems
- due to vertical fiscal imbalances, and
- weak central government.
- Intertemporal imbalances
- due to local borrowing and residential mobility,
and - soft central budget constraints.
- Imperfect voter controls
4A need for central regulations cont.
- Information problems may induce local
politicians to vote for higher public spending
levels - Local government politicians offer voters a
better service supply, while voters keep national
politicians responsible for tax increases (or
local deficits) - BUT Central government sets minimum standards
and entitlements, which must be met by local
governments (unfunded mandates). Voters may
keep local politicans responsible for tax
increases
52. A strong central government?
- Political structure of central government
- Election systems and party fragmmentation
- Types of parliamentary government
- Selected empirical studies
- Common pool Inman Fitts (1990) Borge Rattsø
(2002) - Intertemporal imbalance Roubini Sachs (1989)
Alesina Perotti (1995) Inman (2003)
63. The nordic local government model
- Administrative federalism
- (Nordic model)
- Individual welfare services
- Representative democracy
- Extensive central controls, including
- High share of central grants
- Limited tax discretion and other fiscal rules
- Fiscal federalism
- (the standard version)
- Local public goods
- Residential mobility, including tax competition
- Local discretion, including
- Local tax financing, small central grants
- Discretion with respect to tax rates
7Norwegian local government consumption Forecasts
in the National Budget and National Accounts1)
1990-2003 averages Planned growth rate 1,6
Actual growth rate 2,4
1)2002 is missing.
84. The Norwegian hospital sector
- In january 2002, Norway transferred the
responsibility for the hospitals from county
governments to central government - Did transfer of responsibility from local to
central government solve problems of spending
control?
9Public health care spending i Norway 1997-2004
10Production growth in the Norwegian hospital
sector measured in DRG points. Source Terje P.
Hagen, University of Oslo 2005.
Central government responsibility
County responsibility
Actual growth rate
Planned growth rate
115. The allocation cost of tax regulation
- Rural municipalities
- They receive large central grants, partly to
compensate diseconomies of scale and
demographics, partly as part of regional policy. - The outcome is high levels of local public
consumption, and very high levels of local public
consumption relative to private revenues. - Urban municipalities
- They receive small central grants.
- Local public consumption is very low relative to
private revenues. - Does central rax regulation induce an allocation
loss?
12Allocation loss due to Norwegian tax regulation
(Sources Statistics Norway 2003 Questionnaries
to local politicians 1995,1999,2003, N6247 Data
from various population surveys 1993-2003, N8594)
13Estimates of allocation loss
- Assumptions
- Price elasticity -0,4
- Income elasticity 0,6
- Allocation loss (consumer surplus) based in
2003-data1000 NOK per capita (municipal level)
or about 3 percent of local government revenue - Source Borge, L.-E. 2003. More tax autonomy for
Norwegian local governments possible
implications for efficiency and service
provision. Mimeo. Norwegian University of Science
and Technology
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