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  In this issue
Launch of the World Bank's Revamped Public Expenditure External Website
Board Paper on Bank and Fund Collaboration
Heavily Indebted Poor Country (HIPC) Expenditure Tracking Initiative

Budget Execution: Public Expenditure & Financial Accountability training course

Performance-based budgeting: beyond rhetoric
Workshop on the Quality of Public Spending, Brasilia, Brazil
Jordan: Public Expenditure Initiating Activity, Amman, Jordan
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Public Expenditure Newsletter

Issue 7, January - June 2003

Workshop on the Quality of Public Spending in Brazil
26 and 27 June 2003, Brasilia, Brazil

This workshop, organized by the Ministry of Planning and the Institute of Applied Economic Research (IPEA) in Brazil, with Bank support, marked the beginning of the Bank’s program of Analytical and Advisory Assistance (AAA) on public expenditures in Brazil. The main reason for the workshop was the growing realization - expressed clearly by the Ministry of Planning and IPEA - that there is a critical need to monitor and find ways of improving the quality of public spending in Brazil, especially in the current context of tight fiscal constraints.

The seminar included speakers from the World Bank, various government ministries, IPEA and the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean, as well as from a private consultancy and local universities; experiences from Brazil as well as elsewhere were discussed. Bank staff participants included: Yasuhiko Matsuda, Antônio Magalhães, Ritva Reinikka, Suhas Parandekar, Kathy Lindert, Gordon Hughes, Joachim von Amsberg and Andrew Sunil Rajkumar. Some sessions approached the subject from a technical perspective, with participants discussing the measurement and evaluation of different types and compositions of expenditures. In other cases, participants adopted a more institutional perspective, debating various ways of improving the government’s capacity to implement public spending of high quality. There were also several sessions focusing on individual sectors, including education, health, social protection, the environment, water and sanitation, energy and urban development. Links are provided to the workshop’s program as well as the presentations of the Bank speakers; other presentations will be made available at a later date.

In the closing session, a number of key components of a future work program for improving the quality of public spending in Brazil were laid out. These included: (a) identification and publicizing of clear targets/indicators for programs; (b) implementation of better data collection (especially in the area of household surveys); (c) implementation of proper program evaluation; (d) tracking expenditures in different sectors, especially in the health, education, water/sanitation and transport sectors; (e) analysis of earmarking and spending rigidity in Brazil; (f) improvements in the process of release of funds (i.e. in the current system of contingenciamento); and (g) development of methods to improve the institutional aspects of public spending management, e.g. a better allocation of expenditure responsibilities across the different ministries.

To access the presentations from this event, please go to: http://www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/pe/trainingdetails.cfm?ID=12