Fiscal Reforms and the Fiscal Effects of Aid in Uganda

Author(s)
Bwire, T., Lloyd, T. & Morrissey, O.
Publication language
English
Pages
19pp
Date published
02 May 2017
Publisher
The Journal of Development Studies | Vol. 53 | Issue 7
Type
Articles
Keywords
Development & humanitarian aid, Funding and donors, National & regional actors
Countries
Uganda

Uganda implemented public expenditure and revenue management reforms from the early 1990s with specific aims of improving budget planning and aligning aid with fiscal priorities. The dynamic relationship between aid and domestic fiscal aggregates is analysed using a Cointegrated Vector Autoregressive model with annual data for 1972–2008 and quarterly data for 1997–2014. Aid has been a significant element of long-run fiscal equilibrium, associated with increased tax effort and public spending and reduced domestic borrowing. Fiscal reforms have improved aid and expenditure management, contributing to improved fiscal performance in Uganda, with lessons for other African countries.