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Aid, economic reform, and public sector fiscal behaviour in developing countries

journal contribution
posted on 2009-08-01, 00:00 authored by Mark McGillivray
This paper looks at interactions between foreign development aid, economic reform, and public sector fiscal behavior. It proposes a model of the public sector fiscal response to aid inflows, which allows for changes in structural relationships due to an exogenously imposed program of economic reform. This model is applied to 1960–99 time series data for the Philippines, which embarked on an IMF- and World Bank-funded structural adjustment program in 1980. Estimates of structural and reduced-form equations paint a dismal picture of the effectiveness of foreign aid to, and the structural adjustment program in, the Philippines so far as fiscal impacts are concerned. Both bilateral and multilateral aid inflows, and the presence of an economic reform program, are associated with decreases in public fixed capital expenditure, decreases in taxation and other recurrent revenue, and decreases in public sector saving. Multilateral aid also appears to be highly fungible.<br>

History

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Location

Oxford, England

Language

eng

Notes

Published Online: 12 Mar 2009

Publication classification

C1.1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal

Copyright notice

2009, UNU-WIDER

Journal

Review of development economics

Volume

13

Season

Special Issue. Development Aid : Theory, Policies and Performance.

Pagination

526 - 542

ISSN

1363-6669

eISSN

1467-9361

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