Equatorial Guinea : Public Investment Management Review
The chapter offers concise diagnostics of the public investment management (PIM) system in Equatorial Guinea. It provides specific examples of how underperforming institutions throughout the investment process raise the risk of selecting white elep...
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Format: | Public Investment Review |
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World Bank, Washington, DC
2014
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Online Access: | http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/01/23068415/equatorial-guinea-public-investment-management-review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21054 |
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okr-10986-210542021-04-23T14:04:00Z Equatorial Guinea : Public Investment Management Review Munoz Moreno, Rafael ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTANT ACCOUNTING AMOUNT OF CAPITAL ASSETS ASSURANCE AUDITING AUDITS BENEFICIARIES BIDDING BIDS BUDGET EXECUTION BUDGET SURPLUS BUDGETING CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL INVESTMENT CHECKS CURRENCY DISBURSEMENT DISBURSEMENTS DISCLOSURE EMPLOYMENT EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES FINANCES FIXED CAPITAL FRAUDS GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION HOUSING INFLATION INSTRUMENT INVESTING INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT LAWS LEGISLATION LIQUIDATION MIGRATION PIH PORTFOLIO PORTS PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC WORKS RESERVES RETURN ROADS SAVINGS SEWAGE STATEMENT STATEMENTS TAX TELECOMMUNICATIONS TENDERING TRADING TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TREASURY The chapter offers concise diagnostics of the public investment management (PIM) system in Equatorial Guinea. It provides specific examples of how underperforming institutions throughout the investment process raise the risk of selecting white elephants, reducing the value for money of investment projects and undermining the quality of completed projects. Politically compatible recommendations unlock the opportunities for overcoming the major institutional and procedural binding constraints to improve the country s PIM in a sequenced manner. The set of analysis and derived policy implications provides policy insights for countries in similar situations that need clear and pragmatic guidance on where to start building a better performing investment system in a challenging country context. Equatorial Guinea, one of the poorest countries in Africa prior to the discovery of hydrocarbons in the 1990s, has made a significant effort to transform this new wealth into public infrastructure. After a first phase focus on improving the dilapidated infrastructure and supply of capital in the country, the Government embarked on a second investment round to implement the National Development Plan, adopted in 2007 with the aim of diversifying the economy out of petroleum production and improving living standards. However, the country is ill equipped for such a massive investment effort, with oil comprising 22 percent of GDP in 2008. Public expenditure is thwarted by cumbersome administrative procedures encouraging informal shortcuts that render the rigorous capital budgeting both irrelevant and impossible. The absence of reliable budget data undermines the monitoring of budget implementation. As a result, the public budget fails as a tool for resource allocation and control. The country s business laws promote a liberalized economy but the overall business climate remains poor. Efforts to create an atmosphere conducive to investor interest have not been sufficient and application of the laws remains selective, corruption among officials is widespread, and business rules and institutions are nontransparent. The Government is attempting to create a more favorable investment climate to promote foreign investment, for example, by adding numerous incentives to its investment code for job creation, such as training, promotion of nontraditional exports, support of development projects and indigenous capital participation, freedom for repatriation of profits, exemption from certain taxes and capital, and other benefits. 2014-12-31T16:15:32Z 2014-12-31T16:15:32Z 2009 http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/01/23068415/equatorial-guinea-public-investment-management-review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21054 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo/ World Bank, Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Public Investment Review Africa Equatorial Guinea |
repository_type |
Digital Repository |
institution_category |
Foreign Institution |
institution |
Digital Repositories |
building |
World Bank Open Knowledge Repository |
collection |
World Bank |
language |
English en_US |
topic |
ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTANT ACCOUNTING AMOUNT OF CAPITAL ASSETS ASSURANCE AUDITING AUDITS BENEFICIARIES BIDDING BIDS BUDGET EXECUTION BUDGET SURPLUS BUDGETING CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL INVESTMENT CHECKS CURRENCY DISBURSEMENT DISBURSEMENTS DISCLOSURE EMPLOYMENT EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES FINANCES FIXED CAPITAL FRAUDS GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION HOUSING INFLATION INSTRUMENT INVESTING INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT LAWS LEGISLATION LIQUIDATION MIGRATION PIH PORTFOLIO PORTS PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC WORKS RESERVES RETURN ROADS SAVINGS SEWAGE STATEMENT STATEMENTS TAX TELECOMMUNICATIONS TENDERING TRADING TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TREASURY |
spellingShingle |
ACCOUNTABILITY ACCOUNTANT ACCOUNTING AMOUNT OF CAPITAL ASSETS ASSURANCE AUDITING AUDITS BENEFICIARIES BIDDING BIDS BUDGET EXECUTION BUDGET SURPLUS BUDGETING CAPITAL FORMATION CAPITAL INVESTMENT CHECKS CURRENCY DISBURSEMENT DISBURSEMENTS DISCLOSURE EMPLOYMENT EXPENDITURE EXPENDITURES FINANCES FIXED CAPITAL FRAUDS GROSS FIXED CAPITAL FORMATION HOUSING INFLATION INSTRUMENT INVESTING INVESTMENT MANAGEMENT LAWS LEGISLATION LIQUIDATION MIGRATION PIH PORTFOLIO PORTS PRODUCTIVITY PUBLIC PUBLIC INVESTMENT PUBLIC SPENDING PUBLIC WORKS RESERVES RETURN ROADS SAVINGS SEWAGE STATEMENT STATEMENTS TAX TELECOMMUNICATIONS TENDERING TRADING TRANSPARENCY TRANSPORT TREASURY Munoz Moreno, Rafael Equatorial Guinea : Public Investment Management Review |
geographic_facet |
Africa Equatorial Guinea |
description |
The chapter offers concise diagnostics
of the public investment management (PIM) system in
Equatorial Guinea. It provides specific examples of how
underperforming institutions throughout the investment
process raise the risk of selecting white elephants,
reducing the value for money of investment projects and
undermining the quality of completed projects. Politically
compatible recommendations unlock the opportunities for
overcoming the major institutional and procedural binding
constraints to improve the country s PIM in a sequenced
manner. The set of analysis and derived policy implications
provides policy insights for countries in similar situations
that need clear and pragmatic guidance on where to start
building a better performing investment system in a
challenging country context. Equatorial Guinea, one of the
poorest countries in Africa prior to the discovery of
hydrocarbons in the 1990s, has made a significant effort to
transform this new wealth into public infrastructure. After
a first phase focus on improving the dilapidated
infrastructure and supply of capital in the country, the
Government embarked on a second investment round to
implement the National Development Plan, adopted in 2007
with the aim of diversifying the economy out of petroleum
production and improving living standards. However, the
country is ill equipped for such a massive investment
effort, with oil comprising 22 percent of GDP in 2008.
Public expenditure is thwarted by cumbersome administrative
procedures encouraging informal shortcuts that render the
rigorous capital budgeting both irrelevant and impossible.
The absence of reliable budget data undermines the
monitoring of budget implementation. As a result, the public
budget fails as a tool for resource allocation and control.
The country s business laws promote a liberalized economy
but the overall business climate remains poor. Efforts to
create an atmosphere conducive to investor interest have not
been sufficient and application of the laws remains
selective, corruption among officials is widespread, and
business rules and institutions are nontransparent. The
Government is attempting to create a more favorable
investment climate to promote foreign investment, for
example, by adding numerous incentives to its investment
code for job creation, such as training, promotion of
nontraditional exports, support of development projects and
indigenous capital participation, freedom for repatriation
of profits, exemption from certain taxes and capital, and
other benefits. |
format |
Economic & Sector Work :: Public Investment Review |
author |
Munoz Moreno, Rafael |
author_facet |
Munoz Moreno, Rafael |
author_sort |
Munoz Moreno, Rafael |
title |
Equatorial Guinea : Public Investment Management Review |
title_short |
Equatorial Guinea : Public Investment Management Review |
title_full |
Equatorial Guinea : Public Investment Management Review |
title_fullStr |
Equatorial Guinea : Public Investment Management Review |
title_full_unstemmed |
Equatorial Guinea : Public Investment Management Review |
title_sort |
equatorial guinea : public investment management review |
publisher |
World Bank, Washington, DC |
publishDate |
2014 |
url |
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/2009/01/23068415/equatorial-guinea-public-investment-management-review http://hdl.handle.net/10986/21054 |
_version_ |
1764447633668046848 |