East Asia Decentralizes : Making Local Government Work

The past two decades have witnessed a fundamental transformation in the structure of government across East Asia. Prior to 1990 most East Asian countries were highly centralized; today, decentralization is ubiquitous throughout the region. From China to Thailand, sub-national governments are now responsible for the delivery of critical services and account for a significant proportion of total public expenditure. In just two decades, local and regional authorities have emerged as the organizational fulcrum on which much of the weight of development now falls. This report is the first attempt to look systematically at this phenomenon throughout East Asia. It is broken into four main sections. Chapters 1 and 2 provide an overview of the intergovernmental structures and frameworks that have emerged thus far, assess the status of the decentralization process, and identify key reform challenges for the future. Chapters 3-7 examine various dimensions of local and intergovernmental finance: sub-national borrowing; local revenues; public expenditure management; and the impact of the process on inter-regional equity and poverty reduction. The management of human resources is also covered here. Chapters 8-10 focus on the impact of decentralization on investment and service-delivery in three key sectors: health, education, and basic infrastructure. The final two chapters (11-12) look at issues connected with local accountability and community driven development.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2005
Subjects:INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES, DECENTRALIZATION, FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY, PUBLIC EXPENDITURES, SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS, GOVERNMENT REVENUE, HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT, EDUCATIONAL REFORMS, LOCAL GOVERNANCE, COMMUNITY DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/05/6431825/east-asia-decentralizes-making-local-government-work
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/7492
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spelling dig-okr-1098674922024-08-08T17:16:02Z East Asia Decentralizes : Making Local Government Work World Bank INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES DECENTRALIZATION FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY PUBLIC EXPENDITURES SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES GOVERNMENT REVENUE HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT EDUCATIONAL REFORMS LOCAL GOVERNANCE COMMUNITY DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT The past two decades have witnessed a fundamental transformation in the structure of government across East Asia. Prior to 1990 most East Asian countries were highly centralized; today, decentralization is ubiquitous throughout the region. From China to Thailand, sub-national governments are now responsible for the delivery of critical services and account for a significant proportion of total public expenditure. In just two decades, local and regional authorities have emerged as the organizational fulcrum on which much of the weight of development now falls. This report is the first attempt to look systematically at this phenomenon throughout East Asia. It is broken into four main sections. Chapters 1 and 2 provide an overview of the intergovernmental structures and frameworks that have emerged thus far, assess the status of the decentralization process, and identify key reform challenges for the future. Chapters 3-7 examine various dimensions of local and intergovernmental finance: sub-national borrowing; local revenues; public expenditure management; and the impact of the process on inter-regional equity and poverty reduction. The management of human resources is also covered here. Chapters 8-10 focus on the impact of decentralization on investment and service-delivery in three key sectors: health, education, and basic infrastructure. The final two chapters (11-12) look at issues connected with local accountability and community driven development. 2012-06-08T13:55:13Z 2012-06-08T13:55:13Z 2005 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/05/6431825/east-asia-decentralizes-making-local-government-work 978-0-8213-6059-0 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/7492 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC
institution Banco Mundial
collection DSpace
country Estados Unidos
countrycode US
component Bibliográfico
access En linea
databasecode dig-okr
tag biblioteca
region America del Norte
libraryname Biblioteca del Banco Mundial
language English
en_US
topic INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
DECENTRALIZATION
FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENT REVENUE
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
EDUCATIONAL REFORMS
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
COMMUNITY DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
DECENTRALIZATION
FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENT REVENUE
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
EDUCATIONAL REFORMS
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
COMMUNITY DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT
spellingShingle INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
DECENTRALIZATION
FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENT REVENUE
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
EDUCATIONAL REFORMS
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
COMMUNITY DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT
INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
DECENTRALIZATION
FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENT REVENUE
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
EDUCATIONAL REFORMS
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
COMMUNITY DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT
World Bank
East Asia Decentralizes : Making Local Government Work
description The past two decades have witnessed a fundamental transformation in the structure of government across East Asia. Prior to 1990 most East Asian countries were highly centralized; today, decentralization is ubiquitous throughout the region. From China to Thailand, sub-national governments are now responsible for the delivery of critical services and account for a significant proportion of total public expenditure. In just two decades, local and regional authorities have emerged as the organizational fulcrum on which much of the weight of development now falls. This report is the first attempt to look systematically at this phenomenon throughout East Asia. It is broken into four main sections. Chapters 1 and 2 provide an overview of the intergovernmental structures and frameworks that have emerged thus far, assess the status of the decentralization process, and identify key reform challenges for the future. Chapters 3-7 examine various dimensions of local and intergovernmental finance: sub-national borrowing; local revenues; public expenditure management; and the impact of the process on inter-regional equity and poverty reduction. The management of human resources is also covered here. Chapters 8-10 focus on the impact of decentralization on investment and service-delivery in three key sectors: health, education, and basic infrastructure. The final two chapters (11-12) look at issues connected with local accountability and community driven development.
topic_facet INFRASTRUCTURE SERVICES
DECENTRALIZATION
FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
SUBNATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
PUBLIC EXPENDITURES
GOVERNMENT REVENUE
HUMAN RESOURCE MANAGEMENT
EDUCATIONAL REFORMS
LOCAL GOVERNANCE
COMMUNITY DRIVEN DEVELOPMENT
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title East Asia Decentralizes : Making Local Government Work
title_short East Asia Decentralizes : Making Local Government Work
title_full East Asia Decentralizes : Making Local Government Work
title_fullStr East Asia Decentralizes : Making Local Government Work
title_full_unstemmed East Asia Decentralizes : Making Local Government Work
title_sort east asia decentralizes : making local government work
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2005
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/05/6431825/east-asia-decentralizes-making-local-government-work
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/7492
work_keys_str_mv AT worldbank eastasiadecentralizesmakinglocalgovernmentwork
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