Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability (PEFA) Part 1

A complete history (abridged)

Posted by Bill Dorotinsky

J0408832 The term 'PEFA' is rapidly entering the international public financial management lexicon, but there is still some confusion over the term and its application. This post provides some of the background and origins of the approach.

In a December 10, 2007, blog post, we wrote about the HIPC expenditure tracking initiative, which illustrated that an indicator-based tool could track PFM system performance over time. The result of this work by the IMF and World Bank also clearly illustrated that many country PFM systems were weak, despite many years of technical assistance. The Boards of the two institutions asked staff the right question -- What is wrong with PFM reform and capacity-building? Why has there not been more progress?

This set in motion some work by the IMF, World Bank, and other development partners to try to identify barriers to PFM reform and the lessons of successful reform. The post cited above listed some of the lessons that emerged from the HIPC work. The work on identifying cases and lessons is an on-going process, and focuses on several dimensions: country incentives; development partner and international financial institution (IFI) behavior; and technical approaches to PFM system improvement.

Responding to the need to improve PFM systems as a critical element for economic growth and development, several institutions came together in 2001 to form the Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability (PEFA) initiative -- a multi-donor effort composed of the European Commission, the UK's Department for International Development, the Swiss State Secretariat for Economic Affairs, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Royal Norwegian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund and the Strategic Partnership with Africa.

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