Intergovernmental transfers
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Transcript Intergovernmental transfers
Intergovernmental transfers
Taxonomy, objectives and results
Empirical findings of the OECD
survey
No clear relation between fiscal
autonomy and financial decentralisation
The gap between sub-national tax and
expenditure shares has been widening
A high share of grants is often the result
of large horizontal imbalances (tax base
and spending needs)
Typology of grants
Non-earmarked
Mandatory
General purpose grants
Block grants
Discretionary
Earmarked
Mandatory
Non-matching grants
Matching grants
Discretionary
Capital grants
Current grants
Use of grants – results of the survey
Resources other than taxes and grants are scarce
Grants are on average 50% for states, regions and
provinces
States receive over 6% of GDP in grants (1% in
Canada to over 10% in Belgium)
Grants are on average 40% for local governments
Local governments receive on average over 4% of
GDP in grants (12.4% in Denmark, to less than 1% in
Belgium, Canada, Iceland and Turkey)
The central government is by far the most important
source of grants
In some states, international bodies are an important
source of grants
Objectives of grants
Financing
sub-national services
and investments
Subsidisation
Equalisation
Objective 1: Financing
Why choose grants over sub-national taxes?
Central government is better able to control sub-national spending
Sub-national taxes may have distortionary effects
Sub-national taxation may lead to high inequalities
Sub-national taxes may have high administrative and collection costs
Why NOT choose grants over taxes?
Taxes allow sub-national authorities to adapt the level of services to
local preferences
Asymmetric information and efficient allocation of resources
Taxes come with increased accountability
Sub-national authorities can’t blame grants for the poor quality of
services
Objective 1: Financing
Aims of financing grants:
Enable sub-national authorities to
finance a basic package of services
Best: non-earmarked general purpose grants
Provide (new) services imposed by the
central governement or reach imposed
standards
Best: non-earmarked grants
Objective 1: Financing
Distribution criteria
Law-based versus discretionary
Stable and predictable versus buoyant
and evolutive
Complex versus simple
Based on norm costs, average costs or
actual costs?
Objective 2 - Subsidisation
Aim: compensate for spillover effects
Most efficient:
National spillovers: earmarked matching
grants
Regional spillovers: stimulation of horizontal
co-operation
Objective 3: Equalisation
Aim: enable sub-national governments to
provide similar services at roughly similar tax
effort
Types
Equalisation of tax capacity
Equalisation of service capacity (of spending
needs)
Best grants: non-earmarked general purpose
and horizontal transfers
Equalisation of tax capacity
Solidarity, but also economic reasons
(incentive to inefficient migration)
Measure of tax capacity: revenue
collected if depleted at a certain uniform
(usually average) rate
Caveat: full equalisation removes
incentives to increase tax base
Equalisation of service capacity
(spending needs)
Solidarity and regional/spatial planning (not
economic) reasons
Reasons for inequal cost per unit of service:
Special situation/location
Socio-demographic conditions
Requires calculation of service cost indicators
which
Are based on average or norm costs
Cannot be influenced by sub-national authorities
Decision making
Government is a unitary actor that maximizes the social welfare of the
nation
But there exists:
Critical points in grant design:
Central-local loyalties
Assymetric information
Various forms of lobbying
Choice earmarked – non earmarked
Distribution formulas
Determining tax and service capacity and equalisation level
Discretionary grants
Efficient decision making:
Neutral expertise
Limit the influence of lobbying
Involve sub-national governments
In a setting that encourages objective debate
Council of Europe acquis
European Charter of Local SelfGovernment (Art. 9)
Rec(2004)1 on financial and budgetary
management at local and regional levels
Rec(2005)1 on the financial resources of
local and regional authorities
On-going and planned work in the
Council of Europe
Finalisation of a recommendation on the
provision of services at local and
regional levels
A new general report on local finance in
Europe (update of a 1996 report)
Finalisation of reports on:
Accounting rules and practice at local level
Performance management at local level
Internal audit at local level