Simen
Bjornerud
Observing the
development in the Government’s incomes and expenditures gives rise to
concerns, of which some are briefly discussed below.
One concern is the frontloading of capital expenditures in
which the Government aims to make big investments today in order to achieve
strong growth and hopefully broad-based prosperity in the future. Although the
idea intuitively seems reasonable, caveats in the implementation abound. One
crucial condition for success is that you have the necessary administrative and
institutional capacity to make sure every dollar is well spent. I note that
appropriations of fresh money to the budget item “development capital” have
come down quite a bit since the peak in 2012. I assume this has to do with declining
execution rates and transfer of piled-up cash to the next budget year. Banging
against the administrative constraint like this, I fear an increased likelihood
of waste and poor projects.
Another, and maybe
greater, concern is the acceleration of recurrent
expenditures. Figures 1 and 2 show how these expenditures have ballooned
compared with domestically collected revenues. Many recurrent expenditures are
well justified, some are not. But that is not really the point. The point is
that the development cannot be sustained. It is not affordable. These
expenditures need to come down.
Nationals with super
high salaries have been the topic of some hot discussions lately. Figure 1
shows that expenditures to wages have increased, but the increase appears less
dramatic than the increase in goods and services and public transfers. Still,
super high salaries to a selected group of people could be seen as a symptom, a
visible sign, of the wider lack of budgetary discipline.
In addition to
contributing to the financing gap, the relatively weak development in domestic revenues also represents the lack of a
“social contract” between the Government and the people. In a society where the
citizens generally pay taxes, they will to a greater extent hold their
Government to account. In Timor-Leste, relatively few people pay taxes and most
of the budget is financed by oil money. The people of Timor-Leste probably
feels less ownership to oil money than if it was his or her “own” hard earned
tax contribution. That suggests that the Government to a greater degree can do
as it pleases without being scrutinized by their constituencies.
In conclusion, there
are clear signs that Timor-Leste is
living above its means. Over time the Government’s budget constraint is
defined by domestic revenues and the ESI from the Petroleum Fund. The
Government has been spending much more than that for a while, the rationale
being to “kick-start” the economy. Lately, the high spending has to a greater
extent been driven by accelerating recurrent spending. As opposed to the
frontloading strategy, it is hard to find a reasonable rationale behind this
development. Be careful, if not dealt with, it could become nasty.