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ISP Working Paper Number 00-9
Making Decentralization
Work: The Case of Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan
(391 KB)
Era Dabla-Norris, Jorge Martinez-Vazquez, and John Norregaard, October
2000
Note:
- This document is available in PDF format by clicking the title above.
- You can request a hardcopy of this paper from our librarian, Gardner
Neely.
Abstract:
Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan have all carried-out comprehensive
reforms of their inter-governmental fiscal systems in the decade since
the inception of transition; and all three countries are in the process
of considering or implementing far-reaching “second-generation” reforms
in this area. In retrospect, the combination of efforts aimed at consolidating
macroeconomic stabilization during the early years of the transition,
together with the fundamental structural changes in the economy, in
some cases strong centrifugal forces, and political and ethnic conflicts,
created an extremely complex setting for fiscal decentralization.
This goes a long way in explaining why the fiscal decentralization
process in the three countries has been rapid, haphazard and largely
non-transparent, with the emerging system of federalism having important
implications for budgetary developments.
The objectives of this paper are to discuss key
aspects of the ongoing decentralization process in three important
transition economies, Russia, Ukraine, and Kazakhstan; to identify
areas where the present systems have clear adverse impacts on efficiency
and—potentially—macroeconomic performance; and to offer a roadmap
for future reform.
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