国产热热热精品,亚洲视频久久】日韩,三级婷婷在线久久,99人妻精品视频,精品九热人人肉肉在线,AV东京热一区二区,91po在线视频观看,久久激情宗合,青青草黄色手机视频

BIZCHINA> Review & Analysis
Raise the quality of government spending
By Vinod Thomas (China Daily)
Updated: 2009-11-25 07:54

Raise the quality of government spending

The incipient recovery of the world economy owes to the increased spending by governments of advanced and developing economies both. However, a sustainable recovery will depend not only on the amount of spending, but also on its quality. Many developing nations entered the crisis with good fiscal balances. Yet, there is a premium everywhere on ensuring that the money is spent well. Public budgets must also confront the rise in unemployment and the growing danger of climate change.

These requirements suggest three priorities, especially for countries at the forefront of the fiscal expansion.

First, financial flows need to be adequate and timely, especially in the face of growing fiscal gaps. The international financial institutions have augmented their official flows, especially to developing countries. The World Bank Group delivered a record $60 billion worldwide in 2009, with Indonesia, Brazil, Mexico, India, and China as the top recipients. The IMF's support reached $160 billion globally while the Asian, African, European, and inter-American development banks provided unprecedented volumes to their regions.

Raise the quality of government spending

All this has helped, but to sustain the economic revival, private capital flows must also be re-invigorated. Private financial flows to developing countries fell from $1,200 billion in 2007 to $360 billion in 2009. Reversing this trend is fundamental. The poorer developing countries still face a $12-billion gap this year, and may not be able to cover even the most essential social spending. And across the board, the extraordinary fiscal expansion needs to give way to a pickup in private consumption and investment.

Second, it is essential to manage the growing government deficits from the fiscal stimulus and the economic slowdown. Fiscal deficits in 2009 are estimated to be nearly 7 percentage points of GDP higher than in 2007 in G20 nations, and 5 percentage points higher in G20 emerging economies. The ratio of public debt-to-GDP in the G20 could, by one estimate, rise by nearly 15 percentage points between these years. Going forward, a sharp fiscal adjustment and stronger growth will be needed to pay off the debt.

To generate economic growth, the stimulus spending needs to be directed to high-productivity areas. For

example, channeling outlays to finish infrastructure projects has higher payoffs than providing untargeted subsidies, be it for energy or food. But even here, any spending on infrastructure would not automatically generate growth. And only a few countries have put in place mechanisms for analyzing, tracking, and evaluating project costs and benefits.

Related readings:
Raise the quality of government spending China allocates $73b central investment for stimulus plan
Raise the quality of government spending APEC leaders pledge to keep stimulus policies
Raise the quality of government spending Extra stimulus spending, 2011 growth likely: Morgan Stanley
Raise the quality of government spending More stimulus needed for consumers

Third, with nearly 90 million more people pushed into poverty because of the crisis, effective social programs (in education, health, and safety nets) need to be protected. Some countries are shielding social spending and expanding safety nets. In Brazil, Colombia, Mexico, and Turkey, where strong institutions are in place, conditional cash transfers are effective. China has combined labor market actions and safety nets to stabilize employment, while Indonesia has combined safety nets and livelihood approaches. The World Bank has stepped up lending for social programs, especially financing for safety nets.

Unfortunately the financial crisis has diluted attention to climate change and the environment. Yet, the fiscal stimulus presents an opportunity to shift to sustainable investments - as South Korea, China, Mexico and the US are doing to some degree. The World Bank Group has increased support for renewable energy and spearheaded climate funds. The Copenhagen summit in December provides a chance to integrate climate change into the crisis response.

Since the global economic revival is still fragile, it would be premature to retract the fiscal expansion as that could stall the recovery.

However, rising deficits and debts oblige us to ensure that the money is put to effective use - not only to elicit good returns on the public spending, but also to avoid a future crisis.

The author is director-general of the Independent Evaluation Group, the World Bank, Washington D.C.

 

 


(For more biz stories, please visit Industries)
贵南县| 勐海县| 镇坪县| 东乡| 五峰| 甘肃省| 红河县| 中山市| 平度市| 和林格尔县| 顺昌县| 吉林市| 和静县| 临桂县| 沂源县| 陈巴尔虎旗| 关岭| 乐业县| 嵊泗县| 潞城市| 江安县| 淮南市| 华阴市| 弋阳县| 神木县| 淮北市| 吉隆县| 含山县| 凤翔县| 溧阳市| 垫江县| 吴桥县| 叙永县| 保定市| 吴川市| 台中县| 南京市| 浦县| 巩留县| 卢湾区| 林州市|