Increasing Public Expenditure Efficiency in Oil-rich Economies : A Proposal
Keywords
BUDGETINTEREST
TAX BASE
CORRUPTION
CONSTITUENCIES
POLITICAL ECONOMY
POLICY RECOMMENDATIONS
OIL RESOURCES
GOVERNMENT INVESTMENT
INTERNATIONAL BANK
REVENUES
GOVERNANCE
POVERTY
DOMESTIC REVENUE
REVENUE COLLECTION
STATE
EXPENDITURE EFFICIENCY
PUBLIC SPENDING
SUBNATIONAL
FISCAL
STATE TAX
DEMOCRATIC PROCESS
LACK OF ACCOUNTABILITY
DISCLOSURE
INVESTMENT
REPRESENTATIVE GOVERNMENT
URBANIZATION
GOOD GOVERNANCE
EDUCATION SPENDING
PUBLIC BUDGETING
EXPENDITURE CONTROL SYSTEMS
INCOME TAXES
QUALITY OF PUBLIC SPENDING
CONTRACT
TAX ADMINISTRATION
OIL PRICES
OUTCOMES
REDISTRIBUTION
GOVERNANCE INDICATORS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
INSTITUTIONAL CONSTRAINTS
INDEPENDENCE
FEES
LEVEL OF TAXATION
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE EFFICIENCY
DEMOCRACY
TAX
SERVICES
PUBLIC OVERSIGHT
GOVERNMENT SPENDING
TAX ADMINISTRATION CAPACITY
SHARE
PUBLIC GOODS
PER
PROPERTY
FISCAL PERFORMANCE
TOTAL TAX REVENUE
PUBLIC SPENDING LEVELS
STATE AID
ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT
TRANSPARENCY
PUBLIC
CENTRAL GOVERNMENT
BUREAUCRACY
RESOURCE CURSE
LOCAL TAX
INTERESTS
OIL BOOMS
HOLDING
DEFICIT
EXPENDITURE CONTROL
ECONOMIC GROWTH
ANNUAL BUDGETS
HUMAN CAPITAL
GOVERNMENTS
SUB-NATIONAL
PURCHASING POWER
DISTRICTS
FINANCE
GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT
NATIONS
PUBLIC FUNDS
FISCAL FEDERALISM
PUBLIC BUDGETS
POLICY FORMULATION
PUBLIC RESOURCES
ACCOUNTABILITY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEWS
PERSONAL INCOME
FORECASTING
TAX EFFORT
CREDIBILITY
GOOD
GOVERNMENT ACCOUNTABILITY
TAX POLICY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
EXPENDITURE PER CAPITA
REVENUE VOLATILITY
NATURAL RESOURCES
ECONOMIC ANALYSIS
BUDGETARY OPERATIONS
REGIONS
POLICY MAKERS
CHECKS
CITIZENS
FUTURE
POLICY VARIABLES
BANK POLICY
TAX REVENUE
DEVELOPING COUNTRIES
EXPENDITURE CONTROLS
FISCAL STABILIZATION
STATES
EFFICIENCY OF PUBLIC SPENDING
MACROECONOMIC STABILITY
OIL PRODUCTS
FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION
TAXES
TAX EVASION
CONSUMPTION EXPENDITURE
CONSENSUS
EXCHANGE
POLITICAL FEASIBILITY
MEDIUM-TERM EXPENDITURE FRAMEWORKS
PERSONAL INCOME TAX
OPTION
INCENTIVES
POLITICIANS
INTERNATIONAL STANDARD
GLOBALIZATION
SERVICE DELIVERY
ACCOUNTABILITY OF PUBLIC SPENDING
OIL BOOM
REVENUE ADMINISTRATION
ACCOUNTING
LIEN
SUBSIDIES
REVENUE
POLICY FRAMEWORK
TAXATION
DOMESTIC TAXATION
TOTAL ENROLLMENT
OIL RESERVES
PUBLIC EDUCATION EXPENDITURE
TAXPAYERS
PUBLIC SERVICES
INSTRUMENTS
EXTERNAL FUNDING
TAX REVENUES
SMALL BUSINESSES
REVENUE MANAGEMENT
MEDIUM-TERM EXPENDITURE
EFFICIENCY IN PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC POWER
INSTITUTIONAL ARRANGEMENTS
PERMANENT INCOME HYPOTHESIS
CIVIL SERVICE
PROPERTY TAXES
INFRASTRUCTURE
PUBLIC EDUCATION
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http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3774Abstract
This paper proposes that, to increase the efficiency of public spending in oil-rich economies, some or all of the oil revenues be transferred to citizens, and fiscal instruments such as taxation be used to finance public expenditures. The authors develop the case as follows. First, they confirm the well-known result that public-expenditure efficiency is lower in oil-rich countries compared with other developing countries. Second, they show that this efficiency gap is associated with differences in accountability to citizens of government's spending decisions. They find that various measures of accountability are systematically weaker in oil-rich countries. They attribute this difference to the fact that oil revenues typically accrue directly to the government, unlike tax revenues, which pass through the hands of citizens. Third, they show that, controlling for a number of factors, accountability is stronger in countries that rely more on direct taxation to finance public spending. They conclude that accountability, and hence public expenditure efficiency, can be increased by transferring oil revenues to citizens and then taxing them to finance public spending. The paper reviews existing schemes that redistribute oil revenues to the population, such as the Alaska Citizen Fund, to assess the feasibility of a modest proposal in African countries. The authors conclude that, while it may be difficult to implement such a proposal in existing oil producers, there is scope for introducing it in some of Africa's new oil producers.Date
2010-04-01Identifier
oai:openknowledge.worldbank.org:10986/3774http://hdl.handle.net/10986/3774
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