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PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW CLINIC FOR BENIN 13 December, 1999. OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION BY DAVID SHAND Measuring, Monitoring And Evaluating Government Performance. Many Countries Have Reasonable Aggregate Control a comprehensive budget satisfactory accounting and reporting systems
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PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW CLINIC FOR BENIN13 December, 1999 OUTLINE OF PRESENTATION BY DAVID SHAND Measuring, Monitoring And Evaluating Government Performance
Many Countries Have Reasonable Aggregate Control • a comprehensive budget • satisfactory accounting and reporting systems • But little information on public expenditure outputs or outcomes - little link with “policy”. What are they buying? • But nevertheless in some countries a lot of performance information - but relevance and quality?
Problems in prioritization • Lack of clear government priorities - a national plan? • Budget fragmentation - Investment budget versus ordinary budget - Enclaving by Donors • Lack of a firm budget constraint • Lack of a medium term perspective • Therefore difficult To reallocate resources - Resulting in an “add on” mentality - Rather than prioritizing expenditures based on results or performance
Commencing Thoughts….. • Performance Measurement - For performance improvement - For accountability (contracting) • Performance Management Through The Budget - Creating An enabling environment - flexibility and predictability - Making people perform
Performance Management (Budgeting) • Ex ante specification of required outputs/outcomes • Performance or resource agreements; budget funding is provided in return for agreed output and performance levels • Reporting on actual versus targeted outputs and performance • Consequences of actual performance compared with targets?
Performance Management (Budgeting) • Improved information on what is being purchased with the budget allocation. Better basis for budget dialogue. • Informs the budget allocation process, does not control it • Benchmarking - comparisons may improve performance • Performance agreements/contracts in the budget process
Different Aspects of Performance Measurement • Social Indicators • (Program) effectiveness (Outcomes) • (Operational) efficiency (Outputs) • Service quality - timeliness, accessibility, accuracy, etc. (a mixture of outcomes and outputs) • Financial performance - cost recovery, rate of return, cost containment • User satisfaction surveys • Process measures (“Best Practices”)
Performance Measurement - General Comments • Need to prioritize and understand inter-relationships • Don’t forget probity (and equity?) • The public sector production function inputs processes (“best practices”) outputs outcomes overall social impacts
Performance Measurement- General Comments • Full diagnosis of performance requires an understanding of this production function • Allow adequate time and recognize complexity (easy to do badly- inherent limitations) • Ensure comprehensiveness, but don’t over-complicate • Measure the right thing • how to legitimate performance measures (planning processes, consultation with stakeholders) • avoid dysfunctional performance measurement
Performance Measurement - General Comments • In principle it applies to all public sector activities - but difficult in some areas (e.g. research, policy advice, foreign affairs) • Setting targets - at what level? - attainable with difficulty? • Reviewing performance - basis of comparison? • previous performance • targets - what is reasonably achievable, with effort • with comparable organizations (benchmarking, including international comparisons)
Performance Measurement - General Comments • Input Side is also Important - understanding input/outcome or output relationships - accrual accounting • Positive and negative uses of performance information • Allow for dialogue and interpretation • Accuracy and verification of information • Separate from performance pay issues
Program Evaluation - Going Beyond or Behind Performance Measures • An art, not a science-subjectivity and need for demystification • Analysis of past or projected performance • Determining objectives • Evaluating each part of the production function • Quantifying costs and benefits • Understanding cause-effect relationships • Forecasting and uncertainty
Program Evaluation - Going Beyond or Behind Performance Measures • A normal part of management life • Whose responsibility? • Self evaluation? • Relationship with audit? An example - Basic Education • Evaluating the impact on educational outcomes of - more teachers - better teachers - better classrooms - better equipment - better textbooks - better curriculum
Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) • Fiscal targets - what is affordable? • Forward estimates of cost of existing policy • How do forward estimates compare with what is affordable? • Make the necessary changes/adjustments now- medium-term expenditure planning i.e. MTEF becomes the budget process • Provide indicative forward levels of expenditure allocations - aggregate, sectoral, ministry
Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) • Provides reasonable predictability • But not multi-year expenditure appropriations or an agreed entitlement • Issues • ability to forecast revenues and expenditures • taking the fiscal targets seriously • publish the MTEF for greater fiscal transparency • baseline figures must be controlled by the Budget Office • need for regular review and updating
Medium-Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF) • A basis of enforcing prioritization Proposals for funding must compete within the limits set, based on - affordability - relative priority or performance