Building
Sector Concerns into Macroeconomic Financial Programming:
Lessons
from Senegal and Uganda
Africa Region Working Paper Series No. 108
December 2007
Abstract
Underinvestment
in infrastructure and social sectors during much of the 1990s has ignited
a lively debate on “fiscal space”—that
is, whether some countries could tolerate a larger public deficit
if the additional resources were invested in growth-enhancing sectors.
Developing countries claim that the standard financial programming
model does not appropriately respond to their needs. Its main drawback
is that it mainly focuses on the short term financial cost of public
investment without considering its medium term growth payoffs. In
the standard model, investment is treated in the same way current
expenditure is. If a fiscal adjustment is needed investments, as
they are often lumpy, are easy targets for budget cuts, irrespective
of their impact on future growth potential. As an alternative, some
countries consider the adoption of alternative rules to assess the
fiscal viability of sector allocation decisions, including taking
out investment expenditure from budget deficit accounting. This paper
elaborates on these ideas and offers a simple extension of the standard
macroeconomic financial programming to explicitly link public spending
for infrastructure, health, and education to economic growth. It
also considers the relationship between capital investment and spending
on operation and maintenance as well as the relevance of productivity
of different forms of sector investment. We test the model for two
countries in Africa—Uganda and Senegal
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