Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review

Guinea-Bissau is a small state in West Africa with a population of around 1.8 million. It is rich in natural resources (fisheries, forestry and agriculture) and biodiversity. Economic activity is, however, dominated by the production and sale of unprocessed cashew, which is also the main source of income for more than two thirds of households. Guinea-Bissau is host to a large variety of ethnic groups, languages and religions, with communal and ethnic-based violence remaining low. The country has a history of political and institutional fragility dating back to its independence from Portugal in 1973. Since independence, four successful coups have been recorded, with another 16 coups attempted, plotted, or alleged. Political fragility has been manifesting itself in frequent government turnover. Political instability has been responsible for large drops in output and government expenditure. After almost three years of political gridlock, a new consensus government came to power in April 2018. In sum, Guinea-Bissau has been caught in a vicious cycle of poor governance, fragmented elites, weak public sector capacity, and a poorly diversified economy. The objective of the Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review (PER) is to analyze government expenditure, fiscal revenue, and public financial management in selected sectors (education, health, and security). The PER is a follow-up to the World Bank’s (2017) Public Expenditure Analysis that provided an overall review of public finances in Guinea-Bissau (see Annex I). It contains a wide range of analyses, with some chapters examining public spending trends and outcomes, while others are more process oriented and place a strong emphasis on PFM systems, at macro- and micro-levels. The education and health chapters go beyond the confines of traditional World Bank PERs—namely the efficiency, effectiveness, and equity of spending. Both of these chapters also review the PFM systems in the respective line ministries with a view to identifying options for reform. Further, the PER analyzes the fiscal implications of continuing to spend over 15 percent of the budget on the security sector and nearly 9 percent of GDP on wage and nonwage compensation.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report biblioteca
Language:English
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2019-01-17
Subjects:FISCAL TRENDS, REVENUE MOBILIZATION, PUBLIC SPENDING, PUBLIC EXPENDITURE, PUBLIC SECTOR WAGES, CIVIL SERVICE, COMPENSATION, PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT, EDUCATION SPENDING, HEALTH FINANCING, HEALTH CARE FINANCING, HEALTH OUTCOMES, FRAGILE STATES, SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT,
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/934031547818643963/Guinea-Bissau-Public-Expenditure-Review-Managing-Public-Finance-for-Development
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31225
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spelling dig-okr-10986312252024-08-07T19:13:28Z Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review Managing Public Finance for Development World Bank FISCAL TRENDS REVENUE MOBILIZATION PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC SECTOR WAGES CIVIL SERVICE COMPENSATION PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT EDUCATION SPENDING HEALTH FINANCING HEALTH CARE FINANCING HEALTH OUTCOMES FRAGILE STATES SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT Guinea-Bissau is a small state in West Africa with a population of around 1.8 million. It is rich in natural resources (fisheries, forestry and agriculture) and biodiversity. Economic activity is, however, dominated by the production and sale of unprocessed cashew, which is also the main source of income for more than two thirds of households. Guinea-Bissau is host to a large variety of ethnic groups, languages and religions, with communal and ethnic-based violence remaining low. The country has a history of political and institutional fragility dating back to its independence from Portugal in 1973. Since independence, four successful coups have been recorded, with another 16 coups attempted, plotted, or alleged. Political fragility has been manifesting itself in frequent government turnover. Political instability has been responsible for large drops in output and government expenditure. After almost three years of political gridlock, a new consensus government came to power in April 2018. In sum, Guinea-Bissau has been caught in a vicious cycle of poor governance, fragmented elites, weak public sector capacity, and a poorly diversified economy. The objective of the Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review (PER) is to analyze government expenditure, fiscal revenue, and public financial management in selected sectors (education, health, and security). The PER is a follow-up to the World Bank’s (2017) Public Expenditure Analysis that provided an overall review of public finances in Guinea-Bissau (see Annex I). It contains a wide range of analyses, with some chapters examining public spending trends and outcomes, while others are more process oriented and place a strong emphasis on PFM systems, at macro- and micro-levels. The education and health chapters go beyond the confines of traditional World Bank PERs—namely the efficiency, effectiveness, and equity of spending. Both of these chapters also review the PFM systems in the respective line ministries with a view to identifying options for reform. Further, the PER analyzes the fiscal implications of continuing to spend over 15 percent of the budget on the security sector and nearly 9 percent of GDP on wage and nonwage compensation. 2019-02-07T16:58:23Z 2019-02-07T16:58:23Z 2019-01-17 Report Rapport Informe http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/934031547818643963/Guinea-Bissau-Public-Expenditure-Review-Managing-Public-Finance-for-Development https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31225 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf text/plain Washington, DC: World Bank
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
topic FISCAL TRENDS
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC SECTOR WAGES
CIVIL SERVICE
COMPENSATION
PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION SPENDING
HEALTH FINANCING
HEALTH CARE FINANCING
HEALTH OUTCOMES
FRAGILE STATES
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT
FISCAL TRENDS
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC SECTOR WAGES
CIVIL SERVICE
COMPENSATION
PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION SPENDING
HEALTH FINANCING
HEALTH CARE FINANCING
HEALTH OUTCOMES
FRAGILE STATES
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT
spellingShingle FISCAL TRENDS
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC SECTOR WAGES
CIVIL SERVICE
COMPENSATION
PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION SPENDING
HEALTH FINANCING
HEALTH CARE FINANCING
HEALTH OUTCOMES
FRAGILE STATES
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT
FISCAL TRENDS
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC SECTOR WAGES
CIVIL SERVICE
COMPENSATION
PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION SPENDING
HEALTH FINANCING
HEALTH CARE FINANCING
HEALTH OUTCOMES
FRAGILE STATES
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT
World Bank
Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review
description Guinea-Bissau is a small state in West Africa with a population of around 1.8 million. It is rich in natural resources (fisheries, forestry and agriculture) and biodiversity. Economic activity is, however, dominated by the production and sale of unprocessed cashew, which is also the main source of income for more than two thirds of households. Guinea-Bissau is host to a large variety of ethnic groups, languages and religions, with communal and ethnic-based violence remaining low. The country has a history of political and institutional fragility dating back to its independence from Portugal in 1973. Since independence, four successful coups have been recorded, with another 16 coups attempted, plotted, or alleged. Political fragility has been manifesting itself in frequent government turnover. Political instability has been responsible for large drops in output and government expenditure. After almost three years of political gridlock, a new consensus government came to power in April 2018. In sum, Guinea-Bissau has been caught in a vicious cycle of poor governance, fragmented elites, weak public sector capacity, and a poorly diversified economy. The objective of the Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review (PER) is to analyze government expenditure, fiscal revenue, and public financial management in selected sectors (education, health, and security). The PER is a follow-up to the World Bank’s (2017) Public Expenditure Analysis that provided an overall review of public finances in Guinea-Bissau (see Annex I). It contains a wide range of analyses, with some chapters examining public spending trends and outcomes, while others are more process oriented and place a strong emphasis on PFM systems, at macro- and micro-levels. The education and health chapters go beyond the confines of traditional World Bank PERs—namely the efficiency, effectiveness, and equity of spending. Both of these chapters also review the PFM systems in the respective line ministries with a view to identifying options for reform. Further, the PER analyzes the fiscal implications of continuing to spend over 15 percent of the budget on the security sector and nearly 9 percent of GDP on wage and nonwage compensation.
format Report
topic_facet FISCAL TRENDS
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
PUBLIC SPENDING
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
PUBLIC SECTOR WAGES
CIVIL SERVICE
COMPENSATION
PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION SPENDING
HEALTH FINANCING
HEALTH CARE FINANCING
HEALTH OUTCOMES
FRAGILE STATES
SECURITY AND DEVELOPMENT
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review
title_short Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review
title_full Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review
title_fullStr Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review
title_full_unstemmed Guinea-Bissau Public Expenditure Review
title_sort guinea-bissau public expenditure review
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
publishDate 2019-01-17
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/934031547818643963/Guinea-Bissau-Public-Expenditure-Review-Managing-Public-Finance-for-Development
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/31225
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