Type | Report |
Title | Country Report: Local Government Borrowing in Macedonia |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2006 |
URL | http://www.cea.org.mk/documents/studii/CR_ANG_WEB.pdf#page=65 |
Abstract | The overall objective of this study on local government1 borrowing is to accomplish an all-encompassing review that systematically captures the entirety of the fiscal decentralization processes with an emphasis to the local government borrowing in each of the three transition countries: Romania, Bulgaria and Macedonia. As part of this larger study, the main purpose of this country report is to provide an overview of the progress in the process of decentralization after July 2005 when the process started and an overview of issues with the local government borrowing in Macedonia. This study is neither a credit rating analysis nor does it cover specific aspects of local government borrowing in detail. Rather the study provides an overview of each of the building blocks of intergovernmental fiscal relations (structure of the government sector, delineation of responsibilities for expenditure, assignment of revenue sources, intergovernmental transfers, financial management issues, subnational borrowing legislation, infrastructure and the financing side of the subnational budget and the municipal debt characteristics). The study also considers the technical nature of the strengths and weaknesses of the decentralization process, with a special emphasis on experiences in local government borrowing and recommendations for further development. Macedonia is in a position to develop the legal and policy framework first, in anticipation of the future development of a municipality credit market. Macedonia can learn from the experience in Romania and Bulgaria2 and from the risks that have become clear in other countries. Excessive borrowing by sub-national government or debt issuance in the absence of an adequate legal framework (one that clarifies critical issues like the status of guarantees and the remedies available to lenders in the event of a municipality's non-payment) has exacerbated national economic crises. Premature borrowing, before a municipality has established its creditworthiness and identified clear investment priorities, is likely to drain local budget resources and to add risk to the fiscal system. The potential benefit of soundly based local borrowing is great, but the risks involved in badly prepared borrowing also are large. Stakeholders (LGU, national government, banks, and potential investors in municipal debt) share an interest in ensuring that the policy issues surrounding credit market development are well understood and that an appropriate legal framework is in place before the market actually opens. |
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