Front cover image for Fiscal management in adjustment lending

Fiscal management in adjustment lending

This study analyzes the World Bank's experience with fiscal management in 250 adjustment operations in 86 countries. It examines the fiscal records in a sample of 26 countries grouped by region, portfolio characteristics, and economic traits. The study confirms that fiscal deficit reduction is associated with improved external balances and economic growth and that it takes sustained, long-term effort, and continual vigilance against reversals. Fiscal mismanagement, not exogenous shocks, was the principal cause of persistent budget deficits. The study offers the following recommendations for the Bank and its borrowers:1) Estimate the level of the sustainable deficit and provide guidelines for achieving it in Bank economic and sector work and adjustment lending. 2) Improve sequencing of tax reform. 3) Consider explicitly the role of the state and the appropriate mix of public/private provision of services in recommending public expenditure reform. 4) Include poverty alleviation and equity objectives in public expenditure reform. 5) Build adequate monitoring and performance indicators for both tax and expenditure reforms. 6) Enhance Bank-Fund coordination, in support of the Fund's lead role in giving fiscal advice, by strengthening the Bank's ability to analyze taxes and expenditures
eBook, English, 1997
World Bank, Washington, D.C., 1997
1 online resource (xviii, 179 pages) : illustrations
9780585228990, 9780821339657, 9781280018046, 9786610018048, 058522899X, 0821339656, 1280018046, 6610018049
44958035
1. Setting the stage
2. Fiscal management in SALs/SECALs: a close-up view
3. Tax reform
4. Tax administration reform
5. Public expenditure reform
6. Fiscal adjustment under SALs and SECALs: an aggregate view and conclusions
Preface and summaries in English, French, and Spanish