Uzbekistan : Second Agricultural Public Expenditure Review

Public expenditures matter a lot for agricultural growth, food and nutrition security, sustainable food systems, and other interlinked developmental outcomes. The level of agricultural public spending is important as small budgets can rarely delive...

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Main Authors: Zorya, Sergiy, Gautam, Madhur, Tesfaye, Teklu, Babaev, Sandjar, Nazarov, Parkhod
Format: Report
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/381251635752865696/Uzbekistan-Second-Agricultural-Public-Expenditure-Review
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36561
id okr-10986-36561
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-365612021-11-13T05:10:45Z Uzbekistan : Second Agricultural Public Expenditure Review Zorya, Sergiy Gautam, Madhur Tesfaye, Teklu Babaev, Sandjar Nazarov, Parkhod AGRICULTURAL PUBLIC EXPENDITURE AGRICULTURAL PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS IRRIGATION WATER AGRICULTURAL SUPPORT PRICE SUPPORT LIVESTOCK SUBSIDY Public expenditures matter a lot for agricultural growth, food and nutrition security, sustainable food systems, and other interlinked developmental outcomes. The level of agricultural public spending is important as small budgets can rarely deliver results, let alone drive any transformation of the sector. Yet, global experience clearly shows that although greater spending on agriculture is important, it does not always guarantee better outcomes unless: (i) funds are allocated to the ‘right’ programs and functions, which help address market failures and deliver public goods (i.e., allocative efficiency); (ii) the right programs are being implemented well (i.e. implementation efficiency); and (iii) public expenditures are supported by market-friendly agricultural policies (i.e., no agricultural price distortions). Spending more on agriculture without making progress on all the above-mentioned conditions is not recommended, because higher public spending without progress on agricultural development could result in fiscal, inflation, exchange rate, and other macroeconomic risks, which would backfire on the agriculture sector itself in the medium to long run. The quality of public spending is, therefore, an important issue, which has become even more urgent during and in the aftermath of the COVID-19 crisis. The crisis required Uzbekistan to make substantial unforeseen public expenditures, which resulted in the larger public borrowing and lower fiscal space in the future. This report presents a review of Uzbekistan’s AgPER to contribute to the policy dialogue on the repurposing of public expenditures and getting more value for money. This is the second AgPER for Uzbekistan prepared by the World Bank in the last three years. The first AgPER was completed in 2019. It fed into the Agricultural Strategy, which was being prepared at that time and later approved in October 2019. It set the 2016-2018 baseline of agricultural public expenditures for the Agricultural Strategy, underpinning Annex 4, which presented the direction of the major repurposing of agricultural public expenditures by 2030. The expenditure repurposing encompassed the phasing out of direct subsidies coupled with production conditions and a move toward more efficient farm support instruments, such as climate-smart direct farm support and investments in general support services to increase the developmental impact of public expenditures. The first AgPER presented global lessons about the impacts of various types of agricultural public expenditures (for example, their functional composition) on developmental outcomes in the agriculture sector, which were considered in preparation of Annex 4 of the Agricultural Strategy. 2021-11-12T21:11:05Z 2021-11-12T21:11:05Z 2021-11 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/381251635752865696/Uzbekistan-Second-Agricultural-Public-Expenditure-Review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36561 English CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review Europe and Central Asia Uzbekistan
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic AGRICULTURAL PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
AGRICULTURAL PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
IRRIGATION WATER
AGRICULTURAL SUPPORT
PRICE SUPPORT
LIVESTOCK SUBSIDY
spellingShingle AGRICULTURAL PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
AGRICULTURAL PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS
IRRIGATION WATER
AGRICULTURAL SUPPORT
PRICE SUPPORT
LIVESTOCK SUBSIDY
Zorya, Sergiy
Gautam, Madhur
Tesfaye, Teklu
Babaev, Sandjar
Nazarov, Parkhod
Uzbekistan : Second Agricultural Public Expenditure Review
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Uzbekistan
description Public expenditures matter a lot for agricultural growth, food and nutrition security, sustainable food systems, and other interlinked developmental outcomes. The level of agricultural public spending is important as small budgets can rarely deliver results, let alone drive any transformation of the sector. Yet, global experience clearly shows that although greater spending on agriculture is important, it does not always guarantee better outcomes unless: (i) funds are allocated to the ‘right’ programs and functions, which help address market failures and deliver public goods (i.e., allocative efficiency); (ii) the right programs are being implemented well (i.e. implementation efficiency); and (iii) public expenditures are supported by market-friendly agricultural policies (i.e., no agricultural price distortions). Spending more on agriculture without making progress on all the above-mentioned conditions is not recommended, because higher public spending without progress on agricultural development could result in fiscal, inflation, exchange rate, and other macroeconomic risks, which would backfire on the agriculture sector itself in the medium to long run. The quality of public spending is, therefore, an important issue, which has become even more urgent during and in the aftermath of the COVID-19 crisis. The crisis required Uzbekistan to make substantial unforeseen public expenditures, which resulted in the larger public borrowing and lower fiscal space in the future. This report presents a review of Uzbekistan’s AgPER to contribute to the policy dialogue on the repurposing of public expenditures and getting more value for money. This is the second AgPER for Uzbekistan prepared by the World Bank in the last three years. The first AgPER was completed in 2019. It fed into the Agricultural Strategy, which was being prepared at that time and later approved in October 2019. It set the 2016-2018 baseline of agricultural public expenditures for the Agricultural Strategy, underpinning Annex 4, which presented the direction of the major repurposing of agricultural public expenditures by 2030. The expenditure repurposing encompassed the phasing out of direct subsidies coupled with production conditions and a move toward more efficient farm support instruments, such as climate-smart direct farm support and investments in general support services to increase the developmental impact of public expenditures. The first AgPER presented global lessons about the impacts of various types of agricultural public expenditures (for example, their functional composition) on developmental outcomes in the agriculture sector, which were considered in preparation of Annex 4 of the Agricultural Strategy.
format Report
author Zorya, Sergiy
Gautam, Madhur
Tesfaye, Teklu
Babaev, Sandjar
Nazarov, Parkhod
author_facet Zorya, Sergiy
Gautam, Madhur
Tesfaye, Teklu
Babaev, Sandjar
Nazarov, Parkhod
author_sort Zorya, Sergiy
title Uzbekistan : Second Agricultural Public Expenditure Review
title_short Uzbekistan : Second Agricultural Public Expenditure Review
title_full Uzbekistan : Second Agricultural Public Expenditure Review
title_fullStr Uzbekistan : Second Agricultural Public Expenditure Review
title_full_unstemmed Uzbekistan : Second Agricultural Public Expenditure Review
title_sort uzbekistan : second agricultural public expenditure review
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2021
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/undefined/381251635752865696/Uzbekistan-Second-Agricultural-Public-Expenditure-Review
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/36561
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