Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Jón R. Blöndal Directorate for Public Governance Santiago de Chile 27January 2003 Contemporary Budget Reform in OECD Member countries.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Jón R. Blöndal Directorate for Public Governance Santiago de Chile 27January 2003 Contemporary Budget Reform in OECD Member countries."— Presentation transcript:

1 Jón R. Blöndal Directorate for Public Governance Santiago de Chile 27January 2003 Contemporary Budget Reform in OECD Member countries

2 Economic Growth Political Commitment to Fiscal Discipline Institutional Arrangements for Budgeting Successful Fiscal Consolidation

3 Medium-Term Budget Frameworks Prudent Economic Assumptions Top-Down Budgeting Techniques Budget Transparency Relaxed Input Controls Focus on Results Accruals Institutional Arrangements

4 Fiscal Objectives Operationalized Credibility/Stability of Fiscal Policy Enables Managers to Plan Better Key Features Level of Detail Time-span Living Document (Reconcile Changes) Caution: Economic Assumptions Medium-Term Frameworks

5 The Most Significant Fiscal Risk Good Working Methods Full Disclosure Sensitivity Analysis Comparison With Private Forecasters Independent Board “Prudency” Factors Canada The Netherlands Economic Assumptions

6 Pre-Set Spending Limit for Each Ministry Reflects Political Prioritization Pre-Set Limits Hamper “Auto” Increases Better Decision-Making “Ownership” of Actions Information Asymmetry Easier to Reallocate Reduces Game-Playing Top-Down Budget Process

7 Significant Advances in late 80s/early 90s –“Things are really as bad as we told you.” Three Elements –Release of Budget Data –Effective Role for the Legislature –Effective Role for Civil Society OECD Best Practices Budget Transparency

8 “Deregulation” in the Public Sector Level of Detail of Budget Appropriations –Salary, travel, etc. Decentralization of HRM Function Common Service Provisions –Office accommodations, etc. Heads of ministry/agency in best position to manage resources effectively & efficiently Relaxing Input Controls

9 “Quid Pro Quo” for Increased Flexibility Very difficult in practice Some more easily measured than others Outcomes versus outputs “What gets measured, gets managed” Information Overload Reliability and Consistency Targets Focus on Results

10 Financial Reporting versus Budgeting Selected Transactions Only Treatment of Unique Assets and Liabilities Heritage, Military, Infrastructure Assets Social Insurance Programs Valuation Methodology Accounting Standards-Setting Accruals

11 All OECD Member countries are moving in this same direction Conclusion

12 The OECD Journal on Budgeting www.oecd.org/gov/budget


Download ppt "Jón R. Blöndal Directorate for Public Governance Santiago de Chile 27January 2003 Contemporary Budget Reform in OECD Member countries."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google