ICGFM Promotes Knowledge Transfer Among Public Financial Management Experts
Friday, December 19, 2008
Daniel Kaufmann Unorthodox Reflections on Governance and Crisis
Thursday, December 18, 2008
ICGFM May 2009 Conference “Country Perspectives on Public Financial Management during Global Economic Uncertainty”
23rd International Consortium on Governmental Financial Management (ICGFM) Conference
“Country Perspectives on Public Financial Management during Global Economic Uncertainty”
Representatives from Africa, Asia, Europe, Latin America, and North America – 50+ countries in 2008 -- will be gathering in Miami to discuss what their governments are doing in response to the global economic downturn and how they are preparing public financial management to deal with the economic uncertainty.
During the first three days, the key themes and areas of interest that will be addressed include:
- Sustaining the public financial reform agenda
- Managing revenue and debt
- Managing the drain on the budget
- Impacts on public private partnership projects
- Changes to donor funding and development partner projects
- Impacts on the implementation of international standards
- Sustaining the delivery of results
23a Consorcio Internacional sobre la Gestión
Financiera Gubernamental (ICGFM)
Representantes de África, Asia, Europa, América Latina y América del Norte - 50 + países en 2008 - se reunirán en Miami para discutir lo que sus gobiernos están haciendo en respuesta a la recesión económica mundial y la forma en que se están preparando gestión de las finanzas públicas a hacer frente a la incertidumbre económica.
Durante los tres primeros días, los principales temas y áreas de interés que se abordarán son:
- El sostenimiento de las finanzas públicas en la agenda de reformas
- Gestión de ingresos y la deuda
- Gestión de desagüe sobre el presupuesto
- Cambios en la financiación de los donantes y asociados para el desarrollo de
- proyectos
- Efectos sobre la aplicación de las normas internacionales
- El mantenimiento de la entrega de resultados
El final de dos días del evento se centrará en la formación y aspectos más técnicos relacionados con la Política de Gestión Financiera, Presupuesto y Contabilidad con especial consideración de la transición a la utilización de los sistemas de los países y la actual campaña para erradicar la corrupción.
ICGFM Le 23ème Conférence du Consortium International sur la Gestion Financière Gouvernementale Management- La Conférence
“Perspectives des pays sur l’Administration de la Gestion Financière Publique pendant l’incertitude Économique Globale ”
ICGFM a été créé il y a plus de deux décades pour servir d'un forum international pour les directeurs financiers du secteur public avec une accentuation sur les pays en voix de développement.
Les représentants de l'Afrique, de l'Asie, de l'Europe, de l'Amérique latine et de l'Amérique du Nord – plus de 50 pays en 2008 - se rassembleront à Miami pour discuter de leurs gouvernements en réponse à la baisse économique globale et comment préparer l'administration financière publique à confronter l'incertitude économique globale.
Pendant les trois premiers jours, les thèmes clé de la conférence s’articuleront autour de :
- Amélioration de la réforme financière publique
- Gestion du revenu et la dette
- Gestion et la canalisation du budget
- Impacts sur les projets de partenariat privés publics
- Changement aux projets de partenaire et de financement des donateurs
- Impacts sur l'implémentation de normes internationale
Les deux derniers jours de l'événement se concentreront sur l’éducation et plus sur l’aspect technique rattaché à la Politique d'Administration Financière, a la Budgétisation et a la comptabilité avec une considération spéciale a l'utilisation du systèmes des pays pour combattre la corruption.
Friday, December 12, 2008
Opportunities for Country Revenue Through Taxing National Resources
Opportunities for Country Revenue Through Taxing National Resources
Wednesday, December 10, 2008
Participants Agree that ICGFM Winter Conference was Useful and Aided in Professional Development
- This conference provided me with useful information: 100% (agree or strongly agree)
- This conference contributed to my professional development: 100% (agree or strongly agree)
- Overall, the speakers presented their material effectively: 95% (agree or strongly agree)
- South Africa Case Study: First in useful, applicability to current professional development and interest.
- The Fallacy of Best Practices: Second in all categories.
- Reforming Budgetary Institutions: First in useful to future professional development
- PFM Reform Basics and the Panel Summary for PFM Reform Sequencing both had high rates
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
ICGFM in the News
- USA: MarketWatch carried the ICGFM press release about the December Conference: http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/Financial-Experts-Over-30-Countries/story.aspx?guid=%7B77001472-ED70-4DFC-AF59-FB80F25D3ED3%7D
- Mali: Journal Le Républicain in Mali described the benefits of the ICGFM Conference in Miami: http://www.maliweb.net/category.php?NID=38237&intr=
- Mali:The text of the speech from the Auditor General of Mali is available at: http://www.bvg-mali.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=67&Itemid=1
- Ghana: Report from the Ghana Parliamentary Support Project about the Ghana’s PFM Stakeholder Dynamics: Parliament, Civil Society, the Media and Private Sector presentation in Miami: http://parlcomm.org.gh/news/1-latest-news/139-icgfm-2008-international-conference-miami-may-19-23-2008-
- USA: IMF Blog links Bill Dorotinsky's ICGFM DC Forum presentations: http://blog-pfm.imf.org/pfmblog/2008/07/bill-dorotins-1.html
- USA: AGA International Public Sector Bulletin asked for contributions to the International Journal: http://www.accaglobal.com/publicinterest/activities/library/public_sector/ipsb/
- Latin America and the Caribbean: Coverage of the December 2007 Conference: http://www.creceramericas.org/extras/CReCER_Newsletter4_EN.pdf
- Georgia: 2007 Presentation in Georgia about ICGFM and PEMPAL: PEM PAL & ICGFM Learning from experience and cooperation
- Asia: AGAOA Meeting in 2007 indicating enthusiasm for a recent ICGFM conference: http://agaoa.org/Minutes_VC_AGAOAmembers.pdf
- Canada: Transparency in action - the publication of travel expenditures by Ken Cochrane, the CIO of the Government of Canada for the May 2007 Conference: http://www.tbs-sct.gc.ca/expenses-frais/reports-rapports-eng.asp?eventID=2116&empID=205&year=2007&q=2&empType=2&r=t
- Antigua and Barbuda: Antigua Sun covered the speech by the Minister of Finance, Dr. Cort at ICGFM May 2007: http://www.antiguasun.com/paper/?as=view&sun=294411126110112006&an=423611089405292007&ac=Local
Thursday, December 4, 2008
Navigation the ICGFM Blog
All blog entries going back to the May conference are available on the ICGFM blog. There is an
Leaving Comments on the ICGFM Blog
ICGFM Winter Conference Photos Available Online
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
December Conference Ends on a Positive Note
David Nummy of Grant Thornton LLP closed the Winter ICGFM Conference on Wednesday. Participants were asked if they thought that ICGFM should set up chapters in their countries. 64% agreed that this would be helpful.
Mr. Nummy summarized the conference takeaways:
- There is general agreement that the "big bang" approach to PFM reform is not the way to go.
- PFM reform should be anchored on strategy rather than instruments.
- Political will is critical to insure success.
- The reform pace should be driven by the culture.
- Corruption remains a problem.
- Beware of "quick wins".
- PEFA was agreed to be an excellent tool for self-assessment, but not necessarily for external assessment.
ICGFM Workshops Discuss PFM Lessons Learned
ICGFM Overview in Arabic
Medium Term Expenditure Frameworks Used Differently with Different Affects
Survey: If your country has an MTEF, do the forecasts for years 2 and 3 have any legal significance?
- Yes: 17%
- No: 61%
- Indicative significance only: 26%
Survey: What was the major expected benefit of the MTEF in your country?
- Linking policy goals and budget allocations: 50%
- Overcoming the problem of year end lapsing of budget appropriations: 8%
- Medium term planning: 42%
Survey: To what extent has MTEF reforms achieve expected benefits?
- Benefits mainly achieved: 14%
- Benefits partly achieved: 55%
- Very little realization of benefits: 34%
Donors are using Country Systems for Managing Funds
- 100% of the time: 13%
- 75% of the time: 10%
- 50% of the time: 37%
- 25% of the time: 33
- 0% of the time: 7%
Where is PFM Transparency Most Needed
- Strategic priorities: 17%
- Budget priorities: 9%
- Financial reporting: 34%
- Performance reporting: 40%
The Fallacy of Best Practice
Michael Ruffner of the United States Department of the Treasury discussed the "Fallacy of Best Practices." Mr. Ruffner described the role of technical assistance from the US Treasury. He pointed out that there is broad agreement for public financial management reform. However, there are different motivation for this agreement. Nevertheless, this creates a virtuous circle in theory that improves economic growth, promotes prosperity, stability and peace.
Mr. Ruffner believes in the "first things first" approach rather than the "big bang". He described how certain reforms and the ways these are sequenced can be much different. He believes that in the case of PFM reforms, governments learn from each other. We need more efficient international learning so that countries can more effectively understand what works and why it worked. He emphasized the need to separate good principles from fads in PFM reform. Successful PFM reforms require a set of enabling conditions.
There is no single model of reform according to Mr. Ruffner. Changes rules and structures do not change behaviour. Understanding the problem defines the range of instruments required for reform. Formulaic reforms are not calibrated to the country context. He warned that behavioural change requires a longer commitment than the donor attention span. He further described how technical assistance can fail to meet government needs.
Mr. Ruffner emphasized that ownership is the most important determinant for success. It is the "buzz word" of the moment. He pointed out that real ownership by the government is the exception. He described the negative consequences of using diagnostic tools like PEFA. He cautioned that technical assistance should be led by practitioners.
Mr. Ruffner introduced a systems view for effective technical assistance that shows the relationship among financial institutions, enforcement, tax administration, budget and debt management.
The best available solution rather than the so-called best practice is the most effective approach according to Mr. Ruffner.Tuesday, December 2, 2008
The Use of Social Auditor Control
Good Practices for Sequencing PFM Reforms
Philip Joyce, Professor of Public Policy and Public Adminstration of the George Washington University (centre) moderated an ICGFM panel to get development partner perspectives for the sequencing of public financial management reform.
Sanjay Vani, Lead Financial Specialist at the World Bank (left), suggested that there in no golden rule for every situation, but there are many case studies about what does not work. He pointed out that a good accounting systems must be available for any reform to be successful. Many reforms are thrust on a county that works at first, but eventually fail because of a lack of political will. Countries need to take leadership over reform programs. Mr. Vani pointed out that there are many interdependencies among reform programs.
Marco Cangiano, Division Chief, International Monetary Fund (second from left), compared reform to making an excellent wine. He suggested that the notion of "quick wins" is consultant lingo that is very attractive to politicians. He cautioned about taking reform short cuts. Getting the data right is unrewarding work but is essential to reform. Mr. Cangiano pointed out that human resources is the most important determinant of successful reform.
Laura Trimble, Associate Director of Budget and Financial Accountability, Office of Technical Assistance, U.S. Department of Treasury (second from right), suggested that it is critical to understand what the country problem is. That way, the country understands the need. She believes that budget planning is not best first step. Cash management and expenditure forecasts are a more important first step. Monitoring and reporting, procurement and other reforms require accounting systems as a prerequisite.
Deborah Spietzer, Financial Management Specialist, Inter-American Development Bank (right), suggested that countries should start with the basics. Legal reform is required before embarking on public financial management reform. She recommends a top-down approach, big picture to small picture, beginning with strategic planning before executing the reform. She suggested that the "big-bang" approach should be avoided. Often, these projects are lead by donors and not the government. Ms. Spietzer described how coordination among donors has become difficult because there are so many multi-lateral and bi-lateral donors. Donors are moving to aid harmonization, yet there remains inconsistent advice among donors.
There were many questions about the best way to work with donors. Panel members recommended that countries should own reform. Nevertheless, donor conditionality can limit country flexibility. Mr. Cangiano pointed out that conditionality is becoming less strict and that there are ways to leverage any conditionality to encourage legal reform.
Good practices described by panel members included communications management to all stakeholders and civil servants and the provision of incentives to civil servants.
Capacity Building in Government
Public Financial Management Reform in India
Case Study PFM Reforms in the Brazilian State of Tocantins
Mrs. Coutinho introduced the control systems for performance and audit implemented by the State of Tocantins. Mrs. Coutinho suggests that the State is reaching maturity. Tocantins is in an area of poverty, but is showing economic growth.
The State of Tocantins has improved capacity through increasing salaries. Independent courts, Parliament and audit organizations are responsible for control and oversight. There is a decentralized approach that includes municipal treasuries.
Mrs. Coutinho introduced a series of problems in financial management experienced in Tocantins including:
- Low budgetary resources
- Poor use of public monies
- Lack of transparency
- Lack of technical capacity in the government
- Inefficient political system
- Mistrust of government
- Lack of societal control
The Court of Accounts has been moving from older paradigms. It has been difficult to move to this new model of management. There have been some successful management programs including training public agents and citizens.
Mrs. Coutinho described the multi-year training program, FORMAP, to improve public agent capacity. Costs for in-person training was found to be too expensive. Distance learning was begun in 2008 and is showing very good results.The expansion of 59 to 139 municipalities has disrupted financial management. Some municipalities are unable to generate very much revenue.
SICAP, a computerized Integrated System of Control and Public Accounting has been implemented. This system has been used by other States in Brazil. The system allows control over municipal budgets and enables eliminating budget items that are unlikely to be beneficial.
Participatory budgeting is supported. Plenary sessions of the Court are broadcast to improve transparency. A transparency portal provides procurement, contracts and budgetary information to citizens. This has resulted in increased participation and has reduced non-compliance.
Mrs. Coutinho recognized that programs need financing in order to be sustainable.
Some Skepticism about Donor Assistance
Should Countries Create National Standards or Adopt International Standards?
The Challenge of Reforming Budgetary Institutions in Developing Countries
Richard Allen of the International Monetary Fund introduced his draft paper on reforming budgetary institutions in Developing Countries.
His presentation and draft paper answers three questions:
- What are the main factors that determine the development of budgetary institutions over time?
- What lessons can developing countries learn from the long experience of more advanced countries in reforming their budgetary institutions?
- How can the international financial institutions (IFIs) and other providers of financial and technical support, facilitate the process of reform in developing countries—what adjustments are required to the approaches and models they currently apply?
Mr. Allen presented the case for changing the current approached and models applied by IFIs.
Case Study PFM Reforms in Costa Rica
Mr. Alvarez described how small reforms have been very successful in Costa Rica. He attributed much of the success through the alignment with donors.
Governments More Concerned about Budget Execution than Future Budgets
- More attention to future budgets: 28%
- More attention to actual budgets: 48%
- Equal attention to actual spending and future budgets: 28%
Government Will Pay More Attention to PFM Reforms
- More attention: 79%
- Less attention: 13%
- No change: 8%
Case Study PFM Reforms, A South African Perspective
Freeman Nomvalo the Accountant General of the National Treasury, Government of South
Africa (right), introduced the Financial Management Improvement Project in South
Africa including critical factors that contributed to its success. Mr. Nomvalo described the changes in public financial management in South Africa from a lack of uniformity in financial management and strategic plans towards an accountability framework.
The reform process in South Africa has been executed in four phases. The first phase (1994-1998) saw the introduction of a new classification system compatible with Government Financial Statistics (GFS) and Medium Term Expenditure Frameworks. Information from across government entities were integrated with a data warehouse.
The second phase (1999-2002) saw the introduction of the Accounting Standards Board and improved economic classifications in aid of effectively managing increased government expenditures. Mr. Nomvalo described how South Africa adapted GFS to provide more effective decision-making information.
During the third phase (2003-2006), the government introduced a framework for Public Private Partnerships (PPP). Additional frameworks and policies, in areas such as procurement, were provided. Mr. Nomvalo described how the government empowered managers to manage within a framework. A risk management framework was developed.
The latest phase began in 2007. A project for an Integrated Financial Management System has started with an expectation of full deployment in the next three years. This project includes some off-the-shelf components and some custom development.
Mr. Nomvalo described how effective oversight required a consistent method of reporting and moving towards an accrual basis of accounting. The Government of South Africa operates on a modified cash basis but reporting has many accrual features. The government has developed a framework for improving service delivery and improving capacity.
The Government of South Africa has adapted practices from other countries to create a Financial Capability Maturity Model that has been rolled out through the national government. There are plans to roll this out across all governments.
Mr. Nomvalo described the financial framework process that links priorities with budget preparation and service delivery. Mr. Nomvalo commented that what most people describe as "budget execution" should be described as "service delivery."
Why the process works in South Africa was described. Roles and responsibilities are well defined. Reporting timeframes are clearly. Mr. Nomvalo indicated that political will is necessary for reform and that political reform is much more than politicians. Important civil servants much also have the political will.
Some of the challenges faced by the reform project include migrating to accrual accounting and ensuring that reports are relevant and understandable. Mr. Nomvalo indicated that all stakeholders need to buy into the reform. South Africa has experienced situations where managers are not prepared to spend even though there are funds available. There is no system of financial management that can work without strong oversight.
The Constitution of South Africa requires the development of national standards. These national standards are consistent with IFRS and somewhat more advanced than IPSAS.
The Government of South Africa is implementing the IFMS, focusing on capacity building and working on government-wide reporting. A performance framework is being developed to measure value for money. There remains challenges in measuring outcomes.
The South African experience showed that the following elements were critical for successful PFM reform:
- Focus on addressing the country's problem
- Implement a legal framework that underpins the reform
- Provide a clear definition of roles
- Engage in broad consultation
- Set clear expectations for reporting
- Sustain political will with government
- Provide a clear vision
Mr. Nomvalo warns that although the South African Government has made great strides, there remains considerable challenges.