Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
From Line-Item Budgeting to Per Student Funding Formulas. Successes and Failures from the Experience of Post Soviet Countries Jan Herczyński Baku, April 21, 2014 Movement towards formulas • Accross transition countries there is movement towards using per student allocation formulas in the education sector • The formulas have many different forms and applications • Some countries which have not moved towards per student formulas have instead implemented repeated pilot projects Jan Herczyński 2 Movement towards formulas 2 • Historically, school budgets were defined separately for each budget line (salaries, heating, etc.), on the basis of budgets of previous years and negotiating incremental changes • Per student formulas give hope of much simpler approach to set school budgets • However the movement is not easy Jan Herczyński 3 Movement towards formulas 3 • Successful countries have used the formula as an instrument supporting decentralization efforts – Poland, Macedonia, Georgia, Bulgaria • Less successful countries used the formula as a purely technical tool to achieve rationalization of education finance – Romania, Ukraine Jan Herczyński 4 Example 1: Georgia • „Rose revolution” in 2004 led to establishment of strong reformist government • Fight against corruption was one of dominant motivations • In education, this led to complete removal of local governments from management and finance, in contrast to historical experience • The Ministry of Education needed a formula to finance all Georgian schools Jan Herczyński 5 Georgia 2 • Georgian schools became autonomous institutions with legal persona and own budgets • In each school, the School Board oversees the school operations and selects the school director • National Government sets minimum teacher salaries Jan Herczyński 6 Georgia 3 • National formula determines only the overall volume of funds for each school – School vouchers of three levels (city, rural, mountain) • Detail line budget is set by school director and approved by the school board • The same applies to budget execution report • Extensive support from Education Support Centers managed by the Ministry Jan Herczyński 7 Georgia 4 Results: • School operations uninterrupted – Frequent updating of budgets – Only few conflicts between directors and School Boards • Increased transparency and openess of schools • Significant reduction of corruption in the sector Jan Herczyński 8 Georgia 5 Results: • About one third of schools are deficit schools – No real budgeting procedures – Monthly additional transfer above vouchers • Large schools became successful budgetary operations, especially in the cities – Large schools have ample budgets and little motivation to economize Jan Herczyński 9 Example 2: Romania • No real motivation for decentralization • Education strictly controlled by judet (oblast) level administrations subordinated to the Ministry • No clearly defined financial transfers for education from the central budget to judet budgets, and from judet budgets to schools Jan Herczyński 10 Romania 2 • Deep fragmentation of education finance – Employment levels and salaries in every school set and stricly controlled by the Ministry – Maintenance costs uncontrolled and quite differentiated in different municipalities • Administrative and not political responsibility for education Jan Herczyński 11 Romania 3 • Many attempts to define and implemented per student formula for school finance • National Council for Financing of PreUniversity Education was established in order to achieve this objective • The council developed a series of complex formulas and published several books Jan Herczyński 12 Romania 4 • Repeated pilot projects which remained purely formal (only on paper), in part because they contradicted existing legislation • The pilot projects were not related to other reforms of school management • No formula was finally implemented Jan Herczyński 13 Example 3: Bulgaria • System of delegated budgets gave budgetary autonomy to schools • Beginning with a few pilot municipalities , gradually extended to the whole country • In 2007, a national formula implemented for transfers from central budgets to municipalities • An obligation to use local formulas for schools Jan Herczyński 14 Bulgaria 2 • National formula used 4 values of per student amount depending on the municipality • Pure per student formula from central budget to municipal budgets • Local formulas have to be based on student numbers: – 80% allocated on a pure per student basis (no coefficients) – 20% allocated according to additional standards Jan Herczyński 15 Bulgaria 3 • Initially, great opposition from teachers and municipalities – Long strike by teachers, which the teachers lost – Many municipalities used pure voucher formulas in gesture of protest • School directors supported the reform – More autonomy of directors over budget – More school discretion over teacher salaries Jan Herczyński 16 Bulgaria 4 • Over time, opposition to the reforms was decreasing • School directors implemented necessary cuts in school expenditures to adapt to new allocation levels • Education efficiency was increased accross the system – Increased class sizes – More efficient use of funds Jan Herczyński 17 Conclusions • Per student formula should be applied to a specific and legally well defined flow of funds between different levels of governance – From the central budget to local budgets – From the local budget to schools • Formula should be a part of the budgeting process • Formula must be public Jan Herczyński 18 Conclusions 2 • Formula is an instrument of communication: – It communicates the priorities of the institution setting the formula and sending funds – It should be used for dialogue between the sender and receivers of funds • Therefore formula should be comprehensible – All details necessary to understand the formula must be publicly available – Receivers of funds should be able to verify whether the formula was applied correctly Jan Herczyński 19 Conclusions 3 • Simple formulas are easier to implement than complex formulas which nobody can understand – Bulgaria, Georgia used very simple formulas – Formulas developed in Romania were very complex • Simple formulas are much easier to maintain and change (adapt) over time Jan Herczyński 20 Conclusions 4 • Success depends on creating a real independent actor with strong competencies who will implement the reforms locally – In Poland, Macedonia: local governments – In Bulgaria, Georgia: schools • Vigorous activities of that actor are necessary for the reform to benefit students Jan Herczyński 21