Medium Term Expenditure Frameworks: From Concept to Practice: Preliminary Lessons From Africa
Author: P Le Houerou and R Taliercio
Date: 2002
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46 pages
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Medium Term Expenditure Frameworks (MTEFs) are receiving renewed attention in the context of the formulation of Poverty Reduction Strategy Papers (PRSPs). Conceptually, MTEFs are the ideal tool for translating PRSPs into public expenditure programmes within a coherent multiyear macroeconomic and fiscal framework. But do MTEFs work in practice? With a view to drawing preliminary lessons from experience, this paper from the World Bank undertakes a comparative assessment of the design and impact of MTEFs on public finance and economic management in nine African countries. Based upon this assessment, it offers recommendations and practical guidelines for improving both design and implementation of MTEFs, and sets out a framework for further evaluation.
The MTEF is intended to facilitate a number of important outcomes. Improved macroeconomic balance, including fiscal discipline, is attained through good estimates of the available resource envelope, which are then used to make budgets that fit squarely within the envelope. MTEFs aim to improve inter-, and intra-sectoral resource allocation by effectively prioritising all expenditures (on the basis of the government’s socio-economic programmes) and dedicating resources only to the most important ones. A further objective of the MTEF is greater budgetary predictability, which is expected as a result of a commitment to more credible sectoral budget ceilings. Moreover, to the extent that budgetary decision making is more legitimate, greater political accountability for expenditure outcomes should also be ensured. The MTEF also endeavours to make public expenditures more efficient and effective, essentially by allowing some ministries greater flexibility in managing their budgets in the context of hard budget constraints and agreed policies and programmes.
The limited quantitative evidence shows, thus far, that MTEFs are not yet unambiguously associated with their objectives. Other conclusions from the study are:
MTEFs alone cannot improve the situation in countries in which other key aspects of budget management, notably budget execution and reporting, remain weak. Other implications:
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Source:
Le Houerou, P., and Taliercio, R., 2002, 'Medium Term Expenditure Frameworks: From Concept to Practice: Preliminary Lessons from Africa', Africa Region Working Paper Series No. 28, World Bank, Washington, D.C.
Author:
Robert Taliercio
, rtaliercio@worldbank.org