Strengthening Legislative Financial Scrutiny in Developing Countries
Author: Joachim Wehner
Date: 2007
Size:
71 pages
(474KB)
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How can the UK’s Department for International Development (DFID) improve its work in strengthening legislative financial oversight? This study from the London School of Economics and Political Science suggests that robust oversight at the country level is crucial for effective direct budget support. DFID's projects involving legislative financial scrutiny are vulnerable to political risks and achievements are fragile. Nonetheless, where the approach is comprehensive, long-term and builds on local, broad-based support, this work can deliver substantial and cost-effective governance improvements.
Legislative strengthening work focusing on financial scrutiny is not widespread. Donors employ a variety of strategies to enhance legislative capacity, but their activities tend to focus on the approval stage and parliamentary audit. The impact of these capacity-building activities is often hard to assess. DFID’s own work in the area of legislative financial scrutiny is not extensive. Some projects involve it as part of a broader set of activities, such as parliamentary reform or public financial management, but most lack a comprehensive approach to this work.
The promise of effective financial scrutiny is that it enhances accountability, participation and transparency and it deepens democracy. On the other hand, there is evidence that powerful legislatures can undermine fiscal discipline. However, institutional safeguards can reduce the risk of legislative financial indiscipline. Safeguards include disallowing amendments that lead to higher spending or deficits.
Legislative financial scrutiny and oversight should be continuous and should cover all stages of the budget process: drafting, approval, implementation and audit. It should be underpinned by the provision of comprehensive, accurate, appropriate and timely information. Legislatures can become more involved in the formulation stage by debating medium-term priorities, and they should closely monitor in-year information on budget execution. Legislative bodies in developing countries frequently encounter obstacles to fiscal oversight, however, such as:
DFID should significantly scale up its work to strengthen parliamentary financial scrutiny. In doing so, it should:
Access full text: available online
Source:
Wehner, J., 2007, 'Strengthening Legislative Financial Scrutiny in Developing Countries: Report prepared for the UK Department for International Development', London School of Economics and Political Science, London
Author:
Joachim Wehner
, j.h.wehner@lse.ac.uk