Mozambique : Public Expenditure Review, Phase 2. Sectoral Expenditures
This is the second (and final) phase of the Public Expenditure Review (PER) for Mozambique. The first phase, initiated in 2000 and completed in 2001 , and termed the Public Expenditure Management Review (PEMR), dealt with the financial management s...
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Format: | Public Expenditure Review |
Language: | English en_US |
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Washington, DC
2013
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/09/2523345/mozambique-public-expenditure-review-phase-2-sectoral-expenditures http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14638 |
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oai_dc |
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Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
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World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
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World Bank |
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English en_US |
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ACCOUNTING AGRICULTURE BORROWING BUDGET EXECUTION CASH MANAGEMENT CLEAN WATER CPI DECENTRALIZATION DIPHTHERIA DISEASES DOMESTIC BORROWING ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC EFFECTS ECONOMICS EDUCATION EXPENDITURES EXTENSION FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FISCAL MANAGEMENT GENDER GIRLS GOVERNMENT SPENDING GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HEALTH HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH STATUS HYGIENE INCOME INCOMES INFLATION INTERVENTION LIFE EXPECTANCY MALARIA MALNUTRITION MARKET LIBERALIZATION MUNICIPALITIES PALLIATIVE CARE PARASITES PATIENTS PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR COMPENSATION PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC WORKS QUALITY CONTROL REVENUE GROWTH ROADS SAVINGS SCHOOLS SERVICE DELIVERY TERTIARY EDUCATION TRANSPARENCY TREASURY VICTIMS WATER SUPPLY WORKERS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR HEALTH PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR PUBLIC WORKS GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY CIVIL SERVICE REFORMS PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY FISCAL MANAGEMENT ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES DISASTER RECOVERY PUBLIC REVENUES BUDGET MONITORING INFORMATION GAPS BUDGET IMPLEMENTATION WATER MANAGEMENT SERVICE QUALITY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEES DECENTRALIZATION IN GOVERNMENT STAFF TRAINING ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROME ACCESS TO EDUCATION EDUCATIONAL EFFICIENCY EDUCATIONAL FEES QUALITY OF EDUCATION PRIMARY EDUCATION HEALTH CARE QUALITY USER FEES ROAD CONSTRUCTION ROAD MAINTENANCE & REPAIR PRIVATIZATION ROAD FINANCE FEEDER ROADS WATER SUPPLY FINANCE ACCESS TO WATER SANITATION SERVICES HEALTH POLICY |
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ACCOUNTING AGRICULTURE BORROWING BUDGET EXECUTION CASH MANAGEMENT CLEAN WATER CPI DECENTRALIZATION DIPHTHERIA DISEASES DOMESTIC BORROWING ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC EFFECTS ECONOMICS EDUCATION EXPENDITURES EXTENSION FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FISCAL MANAGEMENT GENDER GIRLS GOVERNMENT SPENDING GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HEALTH HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH STATUS HYGIENE INCOME INCOMES INFLATION INTERVENTION LIFE EXPECTANCY MALARIA MALNUTRITION MARKET LIBERALIZATION MUNICIPALITIES PALLIATIVE CARE PARASITES PATIENTS PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR COMPENSATION PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC WORKS QUALITY CONTROL REVENUE GROWTH ROADS SAVINGS SCHOOLS SERVICE DELIVERY TERTIARY EDUCATION TRANSPARENCY TREASURY VICTIMS WATER SUPPLY WORKERS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR HEALTH PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR PUBLIC WORKS GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY CIVIL SERVICE REFORMS PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY FISCAL MANAGEMENT ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES DISASTER RECOVERY PUBLIC REVENUES BUDGET MONITORING INFORMATION GAPS BUDGET IMPLEMENTATION WATER MANAGEMENT SERVICE QUALITY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEES DECENTRALIZATION IN GOVERNMENT STAFF TRAINING ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROME ACCESS TO EDUCATION EDUCATIONAL EFFICIENCY EDUCATIONAL FEES QUALITY OF EDUCATION PRIMARY EDUCATION HEALTH CARE QUALITY USER FEES ROAD CONSTRUCTION ROAD MAINTENANCE & REPAIR PRIVATIZATION ROAD FINANCE FEEDER ROADS WATER SUPPLY FINANCE ACCESS TO WATER SANITATION SERVICES HEALTH POLICY World Bank Mozambique : Public Expenditure Review, Phase 2. Sectoral Expenditures |
geographic_facet |
Africa Mozambique |
relation |
Public expenditure review (PER); |
description |
This is the second (and final) phase of
the Public Expenditure Review (PER) for Mozambique. The
first phase, initiated in 2000 and completed in 2001 , and
termed the Public Expenditure Management Review (PEMR),
dealt with the financial management system (see report no.
22985). It developed a large agenda for reform in all of the
parts of the expenditure cycle: budgeting, execution,
accounting, and auditing. Jointly with the Mozambican
authorities, a final report was produced which included a
time-bound action plan. This, the second phase of the PER,
covers aspects of sectoral spending in four major sectors:
education, health, roads and water. These sectors were
selected because they account for 51 percent of government
spending and for 56 percent of the civil service, and are
among the six "fundamental areas of action" in the
Action Plan for the Reduction of Absolute Poverty (termed
PARPA, viz. Mozambique's Poverty Reduction Strategy
Paper-report no. 22664). This second phase of the PER also
provides an update about progress with the action plan of
the first phase, the PEMR. Finally, it reports briefly on a
pilot expenditure tracking exercise carried out in the
specific case of health, the Expenditure Tracking and
Service Delivery Survey'. The PER is a joint product of
the Government and the Bank, each taking the lead in
different sectors. The main objectives of the PER 2nd phase
are to examine allocative efficiency and cost-effectiveness,
as well as the poverty orientation of spending. Among the
yardsticks used for examining the rate of service delivery
are the targets set in the Government's PARPA and also
the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The scope of the
inquiry is limited. Agriculture is omitted. And concerning
HIV/AIDS, research was done on the disease in general, on
its macroeconomic impact, and on its impact in the
educational sector, and some information was generated on
its impact in the health sector. But a major study on
HIV/AIDS and its impact on the health sector, and measures
to be taken, is due to start during 2003. It was not
possible to reflect the results of this study in the PER. |
format |
Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review |
author |
World Bank |
author_facet |
World Bank |
author_sort |
World Bank |
title |
Mozambique : Public Expenditure Review, Phase 2. Sectoral Expenditures |
title_short |
Mozambique : Public Expenditure Review, Phase 2. Sectoral Expenditures |
title_full |
Mozambique : Public Expenditure Review, Phase 2. Sectoral Expenditures |
title_fullStr |
Mozambique : Public Expenditure Review, Phase 2. Sectoral Expenditures |
title_full_unstemmed |
Mozambique : Public Expenditure Review, Phase 2. Sectoral Expenditures |
title_sort |
mozambique : public expenditure review, phase 2. sectoral expenditures |
publisher |
Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2013 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/09/2523345/mozambique-public-expenditure-review-phase-2-sectoral-expenditures http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14638 |
_version_ |
1764428130941927424 |
spelling |
okr-10986-146382021-04-23T14:03:17Z Mozambique : Public Expenditure Review, Phase 2. Sectoral Expenditures World Bank ACCOUNTING AGRICULTURE BORROWING BUDGET EXECUTION CASH MANAGEMENT CLEAN WATER CPI DECENTRALIZATION DIPHTHERIA DISEASES DOMESTIC BORROWING ECONOMIC ANALYSIS ECONOMIC EFFECTS ECONOMICS EDUCATION EXPENDITURES EXTENSION FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FISCAL MANAGEMENT GENDER GIRLS GOVERNMENT SPENDING GROSS DOMESTIC PRODUCT HEALTH HEALTH SECTOR HEALTH SERVICES HEALTH STATUS HYGIENE INCOME INCOMES INFLATION INTERVENTION LIFE EXPECTANCY MALARIA MALNUTRITION MARKET LIBERALIZATION MUNICIPALITIES PALLIATIVE CARE PARASITES PATIENTS PRIMARY HEALTH CARE PRIVATE SECTOR PUBLIC EXPENDITURE PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVIEW PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SECTOR PUBLIC SECTOR COMPENSATION PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC WORKS QUALITY CONTROL REVENUE GROWTH ROADS SAVINGS SCHOOLS SERVICE DELIVERY TERTIARY EDUCATION TRANSPARENCY TREASURY VICTIMS WATER SUPPLY WORKERS PUBLIC EXPENDITURES PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR EDUCATION PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR HEALTH PUBLIC EXPENDITURES FOR PUBLIC WORKS GOVERNMENT SPENDING POLICY CIVIL SERVICE REFORMS PUBLIC SERVICE DELIVERY FISCAL MANAGEMENT ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES DISASTER RECOVERY PUBLIC REVENUES BUDGET MONITORING INFORMATION GAPS BUDGET IMPLEMENTATION WATER MANAGEMENT SERVICE QUALITY PROFESSIONAL EMPLOYEES DECENTRALIZATION IN GOVERNMENT STAFF TRAINING ACQUIRED IMMUNE DEFICIENCY SYNDROME ACCESS TO EDUCATION EDUCATIONAL EFFICIENCY EDUCATIONAL FEES QUALITY OF EDUCATION PRIMARY EDUCATION HEALTH CARE QUALITY USER FEES ROAD CONSTRUCTION ROAD MAINTENANCE & REPAIR PRIVATIZATION ROAD FINANCE FEEDER ROADS WATER SUPPLY FINANCE ACCESS TO WATER SANITATION SERVICES HEALTH POLICY This is the second (and final) phase of the Public Expenditure Review (PER) for Mozambique. The first phase, initiated in 2000 and completed in 2001 , and termed the Public Expenditure Management Review (PEMR), dealt with the financial management system (see report no. 22985). It developed a large agenda for reform in all of the parts of the expenditure cycle: budgeting, execution, accounting, and auditing. Jointly with the Mozambican authorities, a final report was produced which included a time-bound action plan. This, the second phase of the PER, covers aspects of sectoral spending in four major sectors: education, health, roads and water. These sectors were selected because they account for 51 percent of government spending and for 56 percent of the civil service, and are among the six "fundamental areas of action" in the Action Plan for the Reduction of Absolute Poverty (termed PARPA, viz. Mozambique's Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper-report no. 22664). This second phase of the PER also provides an update about progress with the action plan of the first phase, the PEMR. Finally, it reports briefly on a pilot expenditure tracking exercise carried out in the specific case of health, the Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey'. The PER is a joint product of the Government and the Bank, each taking the lead in different sectors. The main objectives of the PER 2nd phase are to examine allocative efficiency and cost-effectiveness, as well as the poverty orientation of spending. Among the yardsticks used for examining the rate of service delivery are the targets set in the Government's PARPA and also the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). The scope of the inquiry is limited. Agriculture is omitted. And concerning HIV/AIDS, research was done on the disease in general, on its macroeconomic impact, and on its impact in the educational sector, and some information was generated on its impact in the health sector. But a major study on HIV/AIDS and its impact on the health sector, and measures to be taken, is due to start during 2003. It was not possible to reflect the results of this study in the PER. 2013-07-29T19:33:37Z 2013-07-29T19:33:37Z 2003-09-22 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2003/09/2523345/mozambique-public-expenditure-review-phase-2-sectoral-expenditures http://hdl.handle.net/10986/14638 English en_US Public expenditure review (PER); CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review Economic & Sector Work Africa Mozambique |