Growth, poverty reduction, and social peace are all undermined when public expenditure management and taxation are weak and when the fiscal deficit and public debt are not managed successfully. And large-scale aid and debt relief cannot work without a good fiscal system. The macroeconomic frameworks of many poor countries are improving, but fiscal policy's full potential will not be realized until good and accountable expenditure and taxation systems are built. Good fiscal policy can raise economic growth through well-chosen public investments provided that the spending is large enough. Growth itself increases the tax base generating the potential for higher public spending on poverty reduction. Fiscal reform can be a tool for peace when an unfair distribution of spending and taxation generates grievances that turn violent. Overall, fiscal policy reveals more about the political priorities underpinning a country's development strategy than any other area of policymaking.
- Publisher:
-
UNU-WIDER
- Series:
- UNU Policy Brief
- Volume:
- 05/2006
- Title:
- Fiscal Policy for Poverty Reduction, Reconstruction, and Growth
- Authors:
- Tony Addison, Alan Roe, and Matthew Smith
- Publication date:
- June 2006
- ISSN Web:
- 1814-8026
- ISBN Printed:
- 928083018X
- ISBN Web:
- 9280830198
- ISBN 13 Print:
- 9789280830187
- ISBN 13 Web:
- 9789280830194
- Copyright holder:
- © UNU
- Copyright year:
- 2006
- Keywords:
- governance, taxation, aid, debt relief, poverty reduction, peace, fiscal policy, policy, growth
- JEL:
- E62, H30
- Project:
-
New Fiscal Policies for Growth and Poverty Reduction
- Sponsor:
- The governments of Denmark (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Finland (Ministry for Foreign Affairs), Norway (Royal Ministry of Foreign Affairs), Sweden (Swedish International Development Cooperation Agency-Sida) and the United Kingdom (Department for International Development).
- Format:
- online and printed copies
-
- Licensed under the Creative Commons Deed "Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5"