Gilbert Hughley

Posted by Aliona Cebotari

Risk On June 16, 2008, the Executive Board of the International Monetary Fund (IMF) held a seminar on “Fiscal Risks—Sources, Disclosure, and Management”. The topic has gained importance in many IMF member countries, as interest in promoting fiscal sustainability and transparency grows. The staff paper on which the discussion was based reviews the experience with fiscal risks in a wide range of countries and provides practical advice on risk identification, disclosure and management. This includes a set of Guidelines for Fiscal Risk Disclosure and Management, and a possible Statement of Fiscal Risks.

The staff paper defines fiscal risks as deviations of fiscal outcomes from what was expected at the time of the budget or other forecast. On this basis, it explores the sources of fiscal risks—their nature and relative importance—which vary with country economic structure and level of development.

The most significant sources of risk include unexpected changes in macroeconomic variables (such as exchange rate depreciations or changes in commodity prices) and the realization of contingent liabilities (such as government guarantees, especially those linked to public-private partnerships, and liabilities in the banking system, state-owned enterprises, or subnational governments). While acknowledging that sound macroeconomic and public financial management policies are the first line of defense against fiscal risks, the paper focuses on the appropriate framework for identifying, managing and disclosing risks. Lessons drawn from the review of the international experience in these areas include:

J0434910 Finally, the paper proposes Guidelines for Fiscal Risk Disclosure and Management as a tool to help policymakers identify potential improvements to existing frameworks and to inform the IMF staff’s analysis of fiscal risks. The proposed guidelines are a work in progress and feedback from fiscal agencies and outside experts will no doubt help refine them. Once finalized, the guidelines could be a helpful complement to the IMF’s Code and Manual of Good Practices on Fiscal Transparency and the Government Finance Statistics Manual. In applying the guidelines, specific measures will need to be designed to suit individual country circumstances, priorities and constraints.

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