Subnational Data Requirements for Fiscal Decentralization : Case Studies from Central Eastern Europe

Poverty is an outcome of interaction between economic, social, and political forces. The World Bank has emphasized poverty reduction in its programs and operational activities. With the launching of initiatives such as the poverty reduction strategy papers and the Comprehensive Development Framework, it has made considerable progress in integrating antipoverty programs into other lending operations. As mentioned in the World Development Report 2000/2001, Attacking Poverty (World Bank 2001b), poverty has many dimensions. It is not defined only by income, but also has political and sectoral (access to services) dimensions. Today, in most countries subnational governments are responsible for the delivery of services that affect these dimensions of poverty. Because subnational governments control increasingly higher shares of total public resources, their competence in designing public policies and delivering public services becomes crucial in influencing the level of poverty. Indeed, the literature on fiscal decentralization presents evidence that local services, especially health and education, are highly correlated with the incidence of poverty (Bird and Rodriguez 1999). In this context, the need for subnational demographic, social, economic, and fiscal data is becoming more evident at a time when subnational governments are involved in national and global objectives of poverty reduction. Statistical capacity building at the subnational level aims to help statistical offices and subnational governments produce the basic microdata necessary not only for monitoring progress in poverty reduction, but also for ex ante policy formulation by subnational governments.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Hegedus, Jozsef, Yilmaz, Serdar, Bell, Michael E.
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2003
Subjects:ACCESSION COUNTRIES, ACCOUNTABILITY, ADMINISTRATIVE REFORMS, ASSESSMENT ACTIVITIES, ASSESSMENT STUDY, ASSETS, AUDITING, AVAILABLE DATA, BUDGET MANAGEMENT, BUDGETARY INSTITUTIONS, CAPACITY BUILDING, CASE STUDIES, CENTRAL GOVERNMENT, CITIZENS, COMMUNIST, CONSENSUS, COUNTRY OWNERSHIP, DATA AVAILABILITY, DATA COLLECTION, DATA COLLECTION ACTIVITIES, DATA QUALITY, DATA REQUIREMENTS, DECENTRALIZATION IN GOVERNMENT, DECENTRALIZATION REFORMS, DEGREE OF AUTONOMY, DEMOCRATIC SOCIETIES, DESIGNING POLICIES, DEVELOPMENT GOALS, DEVOLUTION, DISTRICTS, DONOR AGENCIES, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ELECTED OFFICIALS, EXPENDITURE, FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE, FINANCIAL DATA, FINANCIAL INFORMATION, FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT SYSTEMS, FISCAL, FISCAL CONTROL, FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION, GOVERNMENT BUDGETS, GOVERNMENT LEVEL, GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT, HOUSING, HUMAN CAPITAL, INDIVIDUAL COUNTRIES, INTERGOVERNMENTAL FINANCE, INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL REFORM, INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL RELATIONS, INTERGOVERNMENTAL SYSTEM, LEGAL SYSTEM, LEGISLATION, LEGISLATURE, LEVELS OF GOVERNMENT, LICENSES, LIVING STANDARDS, LOCAL ADMINISTRATION, LOCAL AUTHORITIES, LOCAL AUTONOMY, LOCAL GOVERNMENT, LOCAL GOVERNMENTS, LOCAL LEVELS, LOCAL OFFICIALS, LOCAL SELF-GOVERNMENT, LOCAL SERVICES, MACROECONOMIC STABILITY, MACROECONOMIC STABILIZATION, MANAGEMENT CAPACITY, MANDATES, MINISTRIES OF FINANCE, MINISTRY OF FINANCE, MUNICIPALITIES, MUNICIPALITY, NATIONAL LEVEL, NATIONAL POLICY, NATIONS, NUTRITION, PARTNER ORGANIZATION, POLICY CHOICES, POLICY LEVEL, POLICY OPTIONS, POLITICAL DECENTRALIZATION, POLITICAL ELITE, POVERTY LEVELS, POVERTY REDUCTION, POVERTY REDUCTION STRATEGY, PRIMARY HEALTH CARE, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRIVATE SECTORS, PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION, PUBLIC EXPENDITURE, PUBLIC EXPENDITURES, PUBLIC FINANCE, PUBLIC MANAGEMENT, PUBLIC POLICIES, PUBLIC POLICY, PUBLIC RESOURCES, PUBLIC SECTOR, PUBLIC SERVICES, PUBLIC SUPPORT, PUBLIC WORKS, PURCHASING POWER PARITY, REDUCING POVERTY, REGIONAL DISPARITIES, REGULATORY FRAMEWORKS, REPRESENTATIVES, REVENUE ASSIGNMENT, SECTOR MINISTRIES, SERVICE DELIVERY, SERVICE PROVIDERS, SEWAGE, SOCIAL ASSISTANCE, SOCIAL POLICY, SOCIAL SOLIDARITY, SOLID WASTE COLLECTION, STATISTICAL DATA, STATISTICAL OFFICE, STATISTICAL OFFICES, STATISTICAL SYSTEMS, SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENT, SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS, SUBSIDIARY, SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT, TAX, TAX REVENUES, TECHNICAL ASSISTANCE, TECHNICAL SUPPORT, TRANSITION COUNTRIES, TRANSITION ECONOMIES, TRANSPARENCY, TREASURY, WAGES DATA ANALYSIS, FISCAL DECENTRALIZATION INDICATORS, ECONOMIC ACTIVITY, SOCIAL ASPECTS, POLITICAL ISSUES, OPERATIONAL STRATEGIES, DEVELOPMENT ACTIVITIES, EDUCATION, DEMOGRAPHIC DATA, GLOBALIZATION, POLICY FORMULATION, GOVERNANCE, POLICY OBJECTIVES,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2004/01/3030386/subnational-data-requirements-fiscal-decentralization-case-studies-central-eastern-europe
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/15042
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!