Islamic Republic of Mauritania Public Expenditure Review : Surfing the Wave - Public Spending during the Commodity Super-Cycle and Beyond

Mauritania’s economic growth has been largely driven by high commodity prices, leaving the country vulnerable to shocks. From 2009 to 2015, real gross domestic product (GDP) grew by an average of 4.2 percent a year, primarily driven by rising commo...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/531191496723783398/Mauritania-Public-expenditure-review-surfing-the-wave-public-spending-during-the-commodity-super-cycle-and-beyond
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27906
id okr-10986-27906
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-279062021-05-25T09:01:17Z Islamic Republic of Mauritania Public Expenditure Review : Surfing the Wave - Public Spending during the Commodity Super-Cycle and Beyond World Bank FISCAL TRENDS COMMODITY PRICES ECONOMIC SHOCKS PUBLIC INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT EDUCATION FINANCE HEALTH FINANCE FOOD SUBSIDIES ENERGY SUBSIDIES Mauritania’s economic growth has been largely driven by high commodity prices, leaving the country vulnerable to shocks. From 2009 to 2015, real gross domestic product (GDP) grew by an average of 4.2 percent a year, primarily driven by rising commodity prices. The value of its exports more than doubled between 2009 and 2013. The mining boom and extensive foreign investment in the sector have boosted growth in the construction, utilities, transport, and communications sectors while agriculture and fisheries have fallen behind. Budget execution has improved as actual spending has started to match budgeted amounts more closely in recent years. However, the overall figures disguise much greater discrepancies in individual line items, with significant variance even in relatively straightforward areas such as debt servicing. Public spending on social sectors remains below regional levels, health and social affairs grew, while the share of justice and sector ministries declined. However, a large share of expenditure remains discretionary and unidentified: 30 percent of total expenditures are reported as ‘unspecified expenses’ and are not classified by economic category, which greatly complicates public expenditure monitoring and proper expenditure recording. Mauritania should enhance the transparency and quality of its fiscal data by: (i) auditing the national oil fund, (ii) increase budget credibility and discipline by minimizing ‘unspecified expenses’ and by properly recording all expenditures (iii) reviewing public-sector staffing (iv) keeping its public financial database (BOOST) up to date to reflect its original and revised budgets, and (v) strengthening financial oversight of SOEs through regular performance monitoring and publication of annual financial audits. The government has become dependent on external assistance for investment, creating problems of planning, coordination and insufficient consideration of ongoing maintenance costs. A very small proportion of the investment has benefited rural electrification. Reforms of the sector should concentrate on: (a) urgently reducing SOMELEC technical and commercial losses, (b) reducing reliance on imported fuel oil by investing in alternative energy sources and pushing ahead with the Banda gas to power project, (c) revising SOMELEC’s tariff structure, (d) targeting subsidies to mitigate the impact of revised tariffs on the poor, (v) promoting rural electrification, (e) developing electricity networks particularly in the Senegal River Valley, (f) improving SOMELEC’s governance and management, and (g) encouraging public-private partnerships for investments in new infrastructure. 2017-08-16T22:07:29Z 2017-08-16T22:07:29Z 2016-10 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/531191496723783398/Mauritania-Public-expenditure-review-surfing-the-wave-public-spending-during-the-commodity-super-cycle-and-beyond http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27906 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review Economic & Sector Work Africa Mauritania
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
en_US
topic FISCAL TRENDS
COMMODITY PRICES
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
PUBLIC INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION FINANCE
HEALTH FINANCE
FOOD SUBSIDIES
ENERGY SUBSIDIES
spellingShingle FISCAL TRENDS
COMMODITY PRICES
ECONOMIC SHOCKS
PUBLIC INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT
EDUCATION FINANCE
HEALTH FINANCE
FOOD SUBSIDIES
ENERGY SUBSIDIES
World Bank
Islamic Republic of Mauritania Public Expenditure Review : Surfing the Wave - Public Spending during the Commodity Super-Cycle and Beyond
geographic_facet Africa
Mauritania
description Mauritania’s economic growth has been largely driven by high commodity prices, leaving the country vulnerable to shocks. From 2009 to 2015, real gross domestic product (GDP) grew by an average of 4.2 percent a year, primarily driven by rising commodity prices. The value of its exports more than doubled between 2009 and 2013. The mining boom and extensive foreign investment in the sector have boosted growth in the construction, utilities, transport, and communications sectors while agriculture and fisheries have fallen behind. Budget execution has improved as actual spending has started to match budgeted amounts more closely in recent years. However, the overall figures disguise much greater discrepancies in individual line items, with significant variance even in relatively straightforward areas such as debt servicing. Public spending on social sectors remains below regional levels, health and social affairs grew, while the share of justice and sector ministries declined. However, a large share of expenditure remains discretionary and unidentified: 30 percent of total expenditures are reported as ‘unspecified expenses’ and are not classified by economic category, which greatly complicates public expenditure monitoring and proper expenditure recording. Mauritania should enhance the transparency and quality of its fiscal data by: (i) auditing the national oil fund, (ii) increase budget credibility and discipline by minimizing ‘unspecified expenses’ and by properly recording all expenditures (iii) reviewing public-sector staffing (iv) keeping its public financial database (BOOST) up to date to reflect its original and revised budgets, and (v) strengthening financial oversight of SOEs through regular performance monitoring and publication of annual financial audits. The government has become dependent on external assistance for investment, creating problems of planning, coordination and insufficient consideration of ongoing maintenance costs. A very small proportion of the investment has benefited rural electrification. Reforms of the sector should concentrate on: (a) urgently reducing SOMELEC technical and commercial losses, (b) reducing reliance on imported fuel oil by investing in alternative energy sources and pushing ahead with the Banda gas to power project, (c) revising SOMELEC’s tariff structure, (d) targeting subsidies to mitigate the impact of revised tariffs on the poor, (v) promoting rural electrification, (e) developing electricity networks particularly in the Senegal River Valley, (f) improving SOMELEC’s governance and management, and (g) encouraging public-private partnerships for investments in new infrastructure.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Islamic Republic of Mauritania Public Expenditure Review : Surfing the Wave - Public Spending during the Commodity Super-Cycle and Beyond
title_short Islamic Republic of Mauritania Public Expenditure Review : Surfing the Wave - Public Spending during the Commodity Super-Cycle and Beyond
title_full Islamic Republic of Mauritania Public Expenditure Review : Surfing the Wave - Public Spending during the Commodity Super-Cycle and Beyond
title_fullStr Islamic Republic of Mauritania Public Expenditure Review : Surfing the Wave - Public Spending during the Commodity Super-Cycle and Beyond
title_full_unstemmed Islamic Republic of Mauritania Public Expenditure Review : Surfing the Wave - Public Spending during the Commodity Super-Cycle and Beyond
title_sort islamic republic of mauritania public expenditure review : surfing the wave - public spending during the commodity super-cycle and beyond
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/531191496723783398/Mauritania-Public-expenditure-review-surfing-the-wave-public-spending-during-the-commodity-super-cycle-and-beyond
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27906
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