February 2009 prem 4 Africa Region


Fiscal balance and Credibility of the Budget



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Fiscal balance and Credibility of the Budget


    1. All municipalities visited show a level of revenues slightly above the level of expenditures, which seems to show that they all respect fiscal discipline. However, the reality is more complex. Except for Sao Vicente, where the introduction of IT enabled rigorous monitoring of municipal resources and expenditures, there is no clear system for monitoring payment delays. Most municipalities thus have debts and under-reported contingent liabilities, which are either accounted for in previous budget years or pending because a negotiation process in ongoing. A further cause of concern is that the field visit did not obtain relevant data from the sources on this issue (see section below on intergovernmental debts and arrears). However, this lack of success may also be linked to the brevity of the field visit.

Figure 4.11: Comparison, Resources, and Expenditures:
Selected Municipalities, 2004-06




Findings of the 2004 report on contingent liabilities


    1. A 2004 report on contingent liabilities attempted to take stock of intergovernmental debts in the country and illustrates suboptimal communication with central government and poor financial management: intergovernmental debts and municipal arrears. Annex 7 includes the synthesis tables supplied in the report, but it should be noted that the numbers were to a large extent estimates due to the data limitations. In this report, the central government was a net debitor toward the municipalities as a whole, but 5 municipalities (of 17 at the time) were net debitors toward the central government.

    2. Table 4.10 reviews the 2004 report’s main conclusions regarding the sources of the debts, and examines whether these potential sources of debts are still relevant today.

Table 4.32: Sources of Debt

Status in 2004

Comments as of today

Intergovernmental debts from the central government toward the municipalities

Non- or delayed reversion of taxes

Ecological tax

Data are available from 2000–04. Only in 2001 were any amounts transferred to municipalities for this tax, which should have integrally benefited them. No data were available for the previous years but a similar problem may have occurred.

The 2005 and 2006 syntheses of transfers made to municipalities transmitted by the Ministry of Finance show that various amounts were transferred for previous years for each of these 3 taxes, seeming to indicate a catch-up or a partial catch-up on arrears.

Since the tourism tax is now extinct, and the fire tax is part of a single tax on results, these two taxes are no longer sources of new arrears.

Tourism tax

Same source.

Fire tax

No transfer recorded.

Reduced amounts of formula-based transfer (FEF) transferred to some municipalities

FEF

To compensate the debt of some municipalities toward the center, the State decided to transfer reduced FEF amounts to 9 municipalities as a sanction/compensation. The legality of this measure was always contested.

FEF is now transferred integrally and timely.

However, the issue of whether the FEF could be used as an instrument to constrain municipalities in paying back their arrears is under discussion, and the government has indicated that it wants to propose a legal amendment to allow this.

Other debts

Delays in transferring contracts-programs allocations

The report gave mitigated information on this point. Delays were recorded by municipalities, but the central government argued that the delays resulted from the municipalities’ not transmitting the necessary documents to justify the transfers.

There was no mention of the issue during the field visits, but it could still be an issue.


Intergovernmental debts from the municipalities toward the central government

Debts toward DGCI

Income tax on municipal staff collected directly by municipalities that should have been reversed to the center, but some municipalities had not.

Debts on stamp rights.

First item remains an issue––PRSC mission interview, December 2006.

Debts toward DGA

Customs duties (principally from Praia) not paid to DGA. However, report noted that the information was sketchy.

No current information on this issue.

Debts toward institutes

Concern INGRH and INERF but wide discrepancies between data from creditor and debtors.

No current information on this issue.



    1. Besides the intergovernmental debts, the report also noted that municipalities accumulated significant arrears toward public and para-public enterprises. The two enterprises toward which most debts were incurred were ELECTRA and CV Telecom (see detailed table in annex 7).

Table 4.33: Municipal Debts to Public and Para-public Enterprises

Status in 2004

Comments as of today

Debts from municipalities toward public enterprises

Toward ELECTRA

Debts estimated at 135 M CVE.

Debts toward ELECTRA seem to have been reduced from 2006 to 2007, except for public lighting, for which arrears increased. However structural problem still remains; see section below.

Toward CV Telecom

Debts estimated at 135 M CVE.

No information.



    1. The issue of intergovernmental debts or debts of municipalities toward public enterprises is far from being resolved, even if some measures are being taken to solve the problem. Following the 2004 report, some immediate measures were taken for the areas in which there was immediate agreement on the report’s conclusions. To completely solve the problem, two main agreements must be reached: an agreement on the exact amounts of past arrears (or a negotiation of these) and an agreement on the issues that, if not solved, will lead to the build-up of new arrears.

    2. For the agreement on past arrears, a multisectoral commission was to be created in 2007. The commission would have representatives from the Ministry of Finance (IGF, DGO, Treasury, DGAL) and the National Association of Cape Verdean Municipalities (ANMCV). Its role would be to visit each municipality, proceed to an audit, and agree on a viable solution to solve the problem.

    3. For the agreement on the issues that, if not solved, will lead to the build-up of new arrears, the situation is more complex, and nowhere more sensitive than for the debts toward ELECTRA57. The arguments from the municipalities to suspend or delay their payments to ELECTRA are two-fold. First, they would like to be duly compensated for the use by the public company of buildings that belong to the municipalities. The concession contracts do not seem to be clear on this issue, but municipalities argue that this is the common practice. Second, municipalities argue that they also build up arrears because they use electricity to supply water to their farmers. However, but the price of water is centrally regulated. This central control puts municipalities in a difficult situation, whereby their water production cost is above the authorized retail price.


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