Online

Fiscal Rules and Economic Size in Latin America and the Caribbean

Following the collapse of commodity prices in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) in 2014-15, many countries in the region were unable to cushion the impact of the shock in order to experience a more gradual adjustment, to a large extent because they had not built adequate fiscal buffers during th...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Blanco, Fernando, Saavedra, Pablo, Koehler-Geib, Friederike, Skrok, Emilia
Format: Online
Published: Washington, DC: World Bank 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/935121618461168939/fiscal-rules-and-economic-size-in-latin-america-and-the-caribbean
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34417
https://doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1382-5
_version_ 1866367760671440896
author Blanco, Fernando
Saavedra, Pablo
Koehler-Geib, Friederike
Skrok, Emilia
author_facet Blanco, Fernando
Saavedra, Pablo
Koehler-Geib, Friederike
Skrok, Emilia
author_sort Blanco, Fernando
collection Colección Libros - Series (activas)
description Following the collapse of commodity prices in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) in 2014-15, many countries in the region were unable to cushion the impact of the shock in order to experience a more gradual adjustment, to a large extent because they had not built adequate fiscal buffers during the commodities’ windfall from 2010-14. Many LAC countries entered 2020 and the COVID-19 crisis in an even more difficult position, with rising debt and limited fiscal space to smooth the negative impacts of the pandemic and adequately support their economies. Fiscal policy in most LAC countries has been procyclical. Public expenditure and debt levels have expanded in good times and contracted in severe downswings due to insufficient fiscal buffers, making crises deeper. Fiscal rules represent a promising policy option for these and other economies. If well-designed and implemented, they can help build buffers during periods of strong economic performance that will be available during rainy days to smooth economic shocks. This book—which was prepared before the COVID-19 crisis—reviews the performance and implementation of different fiscal rules in the region and world. It provides analytical and practical criteria for policy makers for the design, establishment, and feasible implementation of fiscal rules based on each country's business cycle features, external characteristics, type of shocks faced, initial fiscal conditions, technical and institutional capacities, and political context. While establishing new fiscal rules would not help to attenuate the immediate effects of this pandemic crisis, higher debt levels in the aftermath of COVID-19 will demand rebuilding better and stronger institutional frameworks of fiscal policy in LAC and emerging economies globally. Having stronger fiscal mechanisms that include fiscal rules can help countries prepare for the next crisis and should be on the front burner for policy makers in coming years. The findings and lessons discussed apply to economies of different sizes, with some differences under certain scenarios in terms of the technical design and criteria needed for implementation. In this book, policy makers will find that fiscal rules, if tailored to country characteristics, can work and be an essential fiscal tool for larger and particularly smaller economies.
format Online
Book
id wb-10986-34417
institution Banco Mundial
publishDate 2020
publisher Washington, DC: World Bank
record_format dspace
spelling wb-10986-344172025-04-15T11:37:27Z Fiscal Rules and Economic Size in Latin America and the Caribbean Blanco, Fernando Saavedra, Pablo Koehler-Geib, Friederike Skrok, Emilia FISCAL POLICY FISCAL RULES EXPENDITURE RULES PUBLIC EXPENDITURE COUNTERCYCLICAL POLICY BUDGET BALANCE FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY REVENUE MOBILIZATION OUTPUT SMOOTHING Following the collapse of commodity prices in Latin America and the Caribbean (LAC) in 2014-15, many countries in the region were unable to cushion the impact of the shock in order to experience a more gradual adjustment, to a large extent because they had not built adequate fiscal buffers during the commodities’ windfall from 2010-14. Many LAC countries entered 2020 and the COVID-19 crisis in an even more difficult position, with rising debt and limited fiscal space to smooth the negative impacts of the pandemic and adequately support their economies. Fiscal policy in most LAC countries has been procyclical. Public expenditure and debt levels have expanded in good times and contracted in severe downswings due to insufficient fiscal buffers, making crises deeper. Fiscal rules represent a promising policy option for these and other economies. If well-designed and implemented, they can help build buffers during periods of strong economic performance that will be available during rainy days to smooth economic shocks. This book—which was prepared before the COVID-19 crisis—reviews the performance and implementation of different fiscal rules in the region and world. It provides analytical and practical criteria for policy makers for the design, establishment, and feasible implementation of fiscal rules based on each country's business cycle features, external characteristics, type of shocks faced, initial fiscal conditions, technical and institutional capacities, and political context. While establishing new fiscal rules would not help to attenuate the immediate effects of this pandemic crisis, higher debt levels in the aftermath of COVID-19 will demand rebuilding better and stronger institutional frameworks of fiscal policy in LAC and emerging economies globally. Having stronger fiscal mechanisms that include fiscal rules can help countries prepare for the next crisis and should be on the front burner for policy makers in coming years. The findings and lessons discussed apply to economies of different sizes, with some differences under certain scenarios in terms of the technical design and criteria needed for implementation. In this book, policy makers will find that fiscal rules, if tailored to country characteristics, can work and be an essential fiscal tool for larger and particularly smaller economies. 2020-09-02T18:50:15Z 2020-09-02T18:50:15Z 2020-09-23 Book Livre Libro https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/935121618461168939/fiscal-rules-and-economic-size-in-latin-america-and-the-caribbean 978-1-4648-1382-5 https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34417 10.1596/978-1-4648-1382-5 https://doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1382-5 Latin American Development Forum; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank application/pdf Washington, DC: World Bank
spellingShingle FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL RULES
EXPENDITURE RULES
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
COUNTERCYCLICAL POLICY
BUDGET BALANCE
FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
OUTPUT SMOOTHING
Blanco, Fernando
Saavedra, Pablo
Koehler-Geib, Friederike
Skrok, Emilia
Fiscal Rules and Economic Size in Latin America and the Caribbean
title Fiscal Rules and Economic Size in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_full Fiscal Rules and Economic Size in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_fullStr Fiscal Rules and Economic Size in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_full_unstemmed Fiscal Rules and Economic Size in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_short Fiscal Rules and Economic Size in Latin America and the Caribbean
title_sort fiscal rules and economic size in latin america and the caribbean
topic FISCAL POLICY
FISCAL RULES
EXPENDITURE RULES
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
COUNTERCYCLICAL POLICY
BUDGET BALANCE
FISCAL SUSTAINABILITY
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
OUTPUT SMOOTHING
url https://documents.worldbank.org/en/publication/documents-reports/documentdetail/935121618461168939/fiscal-rules-and-economic-size-in-latin-america-and-the-caribbean
https://hdl.handle.net/10986/34417
https://doi.org/10.1596/978-1-4648-1382-5
work_keys_str_mv AT blancofernando fiscalrulesandeconomicsizeinlatinamericaandthecaribbean
AT saavedrapablo fiscalrulesandeconomicsizeinlatinamericaandthecaribbean
AT koehlergeibfriederike fiscalrulesandeconomicsizeinlatinamericaandthecaribbean
AT skrokemilia fiscalrulesandeconomicsizeinlatinamericaandthecaribbean