Cyclical Patterns of Government Expenditures in Sub-Saharan Africa: Facts and Factors
In: IMF Working Papers, S. 1-31
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In: IMF Working Papers, S. 1-31
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In: IMF Working Papers v.Working Paper No. 09/274
In: IMF working paper WP/09/274
This paper documents cyclical patterns of government expenditures in sub-Saharan Africa since 1970 and explains variation between countries and over time. Controlling for endogeneity, it finds government expenditures to be slightly more procyclical in sub-Saharan Africa than in other developing countries and some evidence that procyclicality in Africa has declined in recent years after a period of sharp increase through the 1990s. Greater fiscal space, proxied by lower external debt, and better access to concessional financing, proxied by larger aid flows, seem to be important factors in dimin
In: IMF Working Papers
This paper uses household survey data to estimate the incidence of tax and spending programs in Honduras. Any such exercise is fraught with difficulty, so our simplifying assumptions are carefully explained. Rather than look at tax and spending completely independently, we evaluate net incidence of major programs-such as health care and pensions-to get a more holistic evaluation of redistribution. Our results show that fiscal policy is, on balance, progressive, but that there is room for significant improvement. In particular, energy subsidies, university education and public pension programs
In: IMF Working Papers, S. 1-20
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In: Pacific economic review, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 193-221
ISSN: 1468-0106
AbstractNatural resource revenues are an important financing source for public investment in many developing economies. Investing volatile resource revenues, however, may subject an economy to macroeconomic instability. This paper studies fiscal approaches to investing resource revenues, using Angola as an example. With spend‐as‐you‐go, resource revenues are spent as received, resulting in little external saving; public investment can be interrupted, driving up the capital depreciation rate and undermining stability. Gradual scaling‐up, instead, allows countries to build up external saving to shield investment from revenue volatility. The framework adopted here can be used as a planning tool to define a medium‐term fiscal strategy.
In: Pacific Economic Review, Band 20, Heft 1, S. 193-221
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In: IMF Working Paper No. 13/147
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In: IMF Working Papers, S. 1-56
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In: IMF Staff Papers, SDN/18/01, 2018
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Working paper