|
Addis Ababa University Libraries Electronic Thesis and Dissertations: AAU-ETD! >
Faculty of Law >
Thesis - Law >
Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item:
http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2045
|
| Title: | INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL TRANSFERS IN ETHIOPIA: CHALLENGES AND SOME OPTIONS (A COMPARATIVE STUDY) |
| Authors: | Getachew, Mengeste |
| Advisors: | Dr. Solomon Nigusssie |
| Keywords: | INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL TRANSFERS |
| Copyright: | Nov-2011 |
| Date Added: | 2-May-2012 |
| Abstract: | It is a boldly held view that the revenue assignment problem in a federal set up is less
challenging than problems witnessed in intergovernmental fiscal transfers from the federal
to state governments. The issue of challenges to intergovernmental transfer system and
possible alternatives of avoiding them did not, however, attract much attention in Ethiopia as
they deserve. This paper is then especially targeted to fill the gap in that regard.
Intergovernmental fiscal transfer (in Ethiopia) involves two transfers. First, we have grants
(unconditional and conditional) that the federal government devolves to the states. Second,
there is revenue sharing where the federal government shares the revenues it has collected
from the concurrent jurisdictions envisaged under article 98 of the constitution.
Intergovernmental fiscal transfers is especially challenging in those countries where sub
national entities are substantially dependent on the federal government to cover the lion’s
share of their expenditures. Ethiopia is among such countries where one can observe huge
fiscal imbalance between the two tiers of government that left the states to expect federal
transfers for they could not cover more than 20% of their expenditure through their own
sources. After reviewing the existing literatures on fiscal transfers, exploring the experience of
three federal countries on the issue, and analyzing the tax assignment and fiscal transfer
provisions of the FDRE Constitution with the current practice, the paper would make it clear
that the 2007 and 2009 grant formulas, though appreciating in their attempt to rectify the
gap between revenue capacity and fiscal need of the states (as data allow), is problematic for
they do not employ variables comparable across units of governments and the role of the HOF
only commences after the federal government ruled on the share dispersed as a regional
subsidy, the organ currently entrusted by the HOF to prepare grant and revenue sharing
formula and modify the share of the state as circumstances change is not effective. The paper
argues that the prevalent vertical fiscal imbalance of the states in Ethiopia could not only be
rectified through fiscal transfers and we should sought some other options to empower the
fiscal capacity of the states such as bridging the gap between revenue potential and actual
revenue of the states, revisiting the FDRE constitution (including the concurrent jurisdiction)
to win more tax jurisdictions to the states, and enhancing their role at least in revenue
sources exclusively assigned to them. |
| URI: | http://hdl.handle.net/123456789/2045 |
| Appears in: | Thesis - Law
|
Items in the AAUL Digital Library are protected by copyright, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise indicated.
|