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Budgeting in Chile
Santiago de Chile, 26 January 2005
Jón R. Blöndal
Deputy Head of Division
Budgeting and Management Division
OECD Country Reviews

One of the core activities of the OECD

Chile is observer at the OECD

Review conducted by the Secretariat in 2003

Examined at the 2004 OECD meeting of budget directors
Agenda
Sound public finances

Tumultuous political history

Private provision of traditional public services

Structural budget surplus rule

Bidding fund

Role of Ministry of Finance

Role of Parliament

Transparency

Sound public finances
Very low debt levels – circa 15% of GDP

Strong record of budget surpluses over time

Tumultuous political history

Economic malaise in the 1970’s used as a pretext by the
military for overthrowing the democratic government

Unstable political situation following return to
democracy

Experience of neighbouring countries
Private provision of
traditional public services


Headline expenditures ~ 20% of GDP
Private provision of “traditional” expenditure ~ 11% of
GDP

Mandatory pensions: 10% + 2-3% of pay
Mandatory health contributions: 7% of pay
Mandatory unemployment insurance: 1.6% of pay
Significant use of PPP’s

Contingent liabilities



Structural Budget Surplus Rule



To formalize fiscal prudence
To increase fiscal predictability
To operate counter-cyclical fiscal policy

1% of GDP
Independent panels
In-year adjustments to maintain it

Calculations of structural balance not considered an issue


Bidding Fund

Mechanism for financing new initiatives
– About 2½ percent of total spending
– Financed from critical review of existing programs and from growth in
economy

To improve quality of budget submissions
– Spending ministries rank their own bids
– Technical quality

Consistency with political priorities
Role of Ministry of Finance

Centralised budget process
– Strong Ministry of Finance
– Line-ministries not pro-active
– Risky ?

Attempt to change this are underway
– Ministries and agencies
Role of Parliament

Historically, a strong parliament
– Civil war fought over its role in the budget process in the late 1800’s
– Irresponsible fiscal behaviour

Today, a very weak parliament
– Constitutional restrictions
– No political will for stronger parliament
Transparency

No budgetary information made available during military rule
– A difficult legacy to overcome

Great progress has already been made and the government is
committed to further improvements
– Formal agreement between the executive and the Congress to
implement the OECD Best Practices for Budget Transparency
Conclusion

“An innovative and sophisticated budget process that is
focused on maintaining aggregate fiscal discipline.”
For further information

www.oecd.org/gov/budget

OECD Journal on Budgeting

[email protected]