How Does the Composition of Public Spending Matter?

Public spending has effects which are complex to trace and difficult to quantify. But the composition of public expenditure has become the key instrument by which development agencies seek to promote economic development. In recent years, the development assistance to heavily indebted poor countries (HIPCs) has been made conditional on increased expenditure on categories that are thought to be "pro-poor". This paper responds to the growing concern being expressed about the conceptual foundations and the empirical basis for the belief that poverty can be reduced through targeted public spending. While it is widely accepted that growth and redistribution are important sources of reduction in absolute poverty, a review of the literature confirms the lack of an appropriate theoretical framework for assessing the impact of public spending on growth as well as poverty. There is a need to combine principles of both public economics and growth theory to develop appropriate theoretical guidance for public expenditure policy. This paper identifies a number of approaches that are beginning to address this gap. Building on these approaches, it proposes a framework that has its foundation in a broadly articulated development strategy and its economic goals such as growth, equity, and poverty reduction. It recommends the use of public economics principles to clarify the roles of the private and public sectors and to recognize the complementarity of spending, taxation, and regulatory instruments available to affect public policy. With regard to the impact of any given type of public spending, policy recommendations must be tailored to countries and be based on empirical analysis that takes account of the lags and leads in their effects on equity and growth and ultimately on poverty. The paper sketches out such a framework as the first step in what will have to be a longer-term research agenda to provide theoretically and empirically robust and verifiable guidance to public spending policy.

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Paternostro, Stefano, Rajaram, Anand, Tiongson, Erwin R.
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2005-03
Subjects:ADVERSE EFFECTS, ADVOCACY, ALTERNATIVE POLICY INSTRUMENTS, BASIC NEEDS, BENEFIT ANALYSIS, CAPITAL FORMATION, CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK, DEBT, DEBT RELIEF, DEVELOPMENT STRATEGIES, ECONOMIC ANALYSIS, ECONOMIC CONDITIONS, ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT, ECONOMIC GROWTH, ECONOMICS, ECONOMISTS, EDUCATIONAL ATTAINMENT, EMPIRICAL ANALYSIS, EMPIRICAL BASIS, EMPIRICAL EVIDENCE, EMPLOYMENT, EQUILIBRIUM, EXCHANGE RATE, EXPENDITURES, EXTERNALITIES, GOOD GOVERNANCE, GOVERNMENT EXPENDITURES, HEALTH CARE, HEALTH INDICATORS, HEALTH STATUS, HEAVILY INDEBTED POOR COUNTRIES, HIPC, HUMAN DEVELOPMENT, INCOME, INCOME DISTRIBUTION, INCOME INEQUALITY, INTERNATIONAL ORGANIZATIONS, LABOR FORCE, LEARNING, LIFE EXPECTANCY, MARKET FAILURES, NUTRITION, POLICY INITIATIVES, POLICY INSTRUMENTS, POLICY MAKERS, POLICY RESEARCH, POVERTY REDUCTION, PRIMARY HEALTH CARE, PRIVATE SECTOR, PRODUCTIVITY, PROGRAMS, PROPERTY RIGHTS, PUBLIC EXPENDITURES, PUBLIC GOODS, PUBLIC INTERVENTION, PUBLIC POLICIES, PUBLIC SECTOR, QUALITY OF SERVICES, RESEARCH AGENDA, RESOURCE ALLOCATION, SAFETY, SAFETY NETS, SANITATION, SAVINGS, SCHOOLS, SERVICE DELIVERY, SOCIAL INDICATORS, SOCIAL POLICIES, SOCIAL SERVICES, STRUCTURAL POLICIES, STRUCTURAL REFORMS, SUSTAINABLE POVERTY REDUCTION, TAXATION, TRADEOFFS, WAGES, WELFARE ECONOMICS, WELFARE EFFECTS, WORKERS,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2005/03/5717794/composition-public-spending-matter
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/8964
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Public spending has effects which are complex to trace and difficult to quantify. But the composition of public expenditure has become the key instrument by which development agencies seek to promote economic development. In recent years, the development assistance to heavily indebted poor countries (HIPCs) has been made conditional on increased expenditure on categories that are thought to be "pro-poor". This paper responds to the growing concern being expressed about the conceptual foundations and the empirical basis for the belief that poverty can be reduced through targeted public spending. While it is widely accepted that growth and redistribution are important sources of reduction in absolute poverty, a review of the literature confirms the lack of an appropriate theoretical framework for assessing the impact of public spending on growth as well as poverty. There is a need to combine principles of both public economics and growth theory to develop appropriate theoretical guidance for public expenditure policy. This paper identifies a number of approaches that are beginning to address this gap. Building on these approaches, it proposes a framework that has its foundation in a broadly articulated development strategy and its economic goals such as growth, equity, and poverty reduction. It recommends the use of public economics principles to clarify the roles of the private and public sectors and to recognize the complementarity of spending, taxation, and regulatory instruments available to affect public policy. With regard to the impact of any given type of public spending, policy recommendations must be tailored to countries and be based on empirical analysis that takes account of the lags and leads in their effects on equity and growth and ultimately on poverty. The paper sketches out such a framework as the first step in what will have to be a longer-term research agenda to provide theoretically and empirically robust and verifiable guidance to public spending policy.