Republic of Moldova Public Finance Review : Towards More Efficient and More Sustainable Public Finances

This report argues that Moldova’s government could reduce fiscal risks to the economy by reducing the size of spending and improving its efficiency, making the tax system simpler, with fewer tax preferences, and strengthening the tax administration...

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Main Author: World Bank
Format: Report
Language:English
en_US
Published: Washington, DC 2017
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/862181500274376993/Moldova-Public-finance-review-towards-more-efficient-and-more-sustainable-public-finances
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28330
id okr-10986-28330
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-283302021-05-25T09:03:02Z Republic of Moldova Public Finance Review : Towards More Efficient and More Sustainable Public Finances World Bank PUBLIC FINANCE PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT FISCAL TRENDS FISCAL POLICY PUBLIC EXPENDITURE REVENUE MANAGEMENT TAX ADMINISTRATION This report argues that Moldova’s government could reduce fiscal risks to the economy by reducing the size of spending and improving its efficiency, making the tax system simpler, with fewer tax preferences, and strengthening the tax administration. After years of robust performance, in 2015–16 Moldova’s public finances came under pressure. Fraud in the banking sector and economic recession have pushed up public debt, reducing fiscal space and undermining investor confidence. Grants from donors have fallen. Less revenue has forced the government into an ad hoc spending adjustment, with an abrupt reversal of the recent welcome trend of higher capital spending. The government could address these challenges along three dimensions: fiscal stance and sustainability, spending, and revenues. First and foremost, nonetheless, it should concentrate on gradually reducing current spending. As experience in other countries has demonstrated, fiscal consolidation based on spending cuts in a context and circumstances similar to these in Moldova, may yield better results than one based on tax increases. The first dimension to consider is safeguarding fiscal sustainability. The second dimension is reducing the size and improving the efficiency of spending. The third dimension is making the tax system simpler. Moldova collects more revenues than peer countries but also depends on external grants. As in most other Eastern European countries, the revenue structure is skewed toward taxes on goods and services (indirect taxes). Moldova’s tax revenues have been declining as tax exemptions proliferated. While the tax administration has improved, continuing deficiencies in capacity and governance cannot deal with the problem of high informality. Moldova could make the tax system simpler, more efficient, and revenue-enhancing by reducing tax preferences, increasing the nontaxable amount of the personal income tax, improving property valuation, increasing excises, improving tax administration, reducing compliance costs, and simplifying the tax structure. Most importantly, the government needs to deal with tax expenditures, since tax initiatives over the last 15 years resulted in the adoption of a wide range of reduced tax rates and tax exemptions, with significant costs for the budget. In the short term, additional revenues might supplement expenditure cuts to safeguard fiscal sustainability. In the longer term, though, Moldova would need to find substitutes for external grants, so that they gradually become a relatively smaller source of revenues. 2017-09-13T16:25:28Z 2017-09-13T16:25:28Z 2016-08 Report http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/862181500274376993/Moldova-Public-finance-review-towards-more-efficient-and-more-sustainable-public-finances http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28330 English en_US CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank Washington, DC Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review Economic & Sector Work Europe and Central Asia Moldova
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 PUBLIC FINANCE
PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
FISCAL TRENDS
FISCAL POLICY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
REVENUE MANAGEMENT
TAX ADMINISTRATION
spellingShingle PUBLIC FINANCE
PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
FISCAL TRENDS
FISCAL POLICY
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
REVENUE MANAGEMENT
TAX ADMINISTRATION
World Bank
Republic of Moldova Public Finance Review : Towards More Efficient and More Sustainable Public Finances
geographic_facet Europe and Central Asia
Moldova
description This report argues that Moldova’s government could reduce fiscal risks to the economy by reducing the size of spending and improving its efficiency, making the tax system simpler, with fewer tax preferences, and strengthening the tax administration. After years of robust performance, in 2015–16 Moldova’s public finances came under pressure. Fraud in the banking sector and economic recession have pushed up public debt, reducing fiscal space and undermining investor confidence. Grants from donors have fallen. Less revenue has forced the government into an ad hoc spending adjustment, with an abrupt reversal of the recent welcome trend of higher capital spending. The government could address these challenges along three dimensions: fiscal stance and sustainability, spending, and revenues. First and foremost, nonetheless, it should concentrate on gradually reducing current spending. As experience in other countries has demonstrated, fiscal consolidation based on spending cuts in a context and circumstances similar to these in Moldova, may yield better results than one based on tax increases. The first dimension to consider is safeguarding fiscal sustainability. The second dimension is reducing the size and improving the efficiency of spending. The third dimension is making the tax system simpler. Moldova collects more revenues than peer countries but also depends on external grants. As in most other Eastern European countries, the revenue structure is skewed toward taxes on goods and services (indirect taxes). Moldova’s tax revenues have been declining as tax exemptions proliferated. While the tax administration has improved, continuing deficiencies in capacity and governance cannot deal with the problem of high informality. Moldova could make the tax system simpler, more efficient, and revenue-enhancing by reducing tax preferences, increasing the nontaxable amount of the personal income tax, improving property valuation, increasing excises, improving tax administration, reducing compliance costs, and simplifying the tax structure. Most importantly, the government needs to deal with tax expenditures, since tax initiatives over the last 15 years resulted in the adoption of a wide range of reduced tax rates and tax exemptions, with significant costs for the budget. In the short term, additional revenues might supplement expenditure cuts to safeguard fiscal sustainability. In the longer term, though, Moldova would need to find substitutes for external grants, so that they gradually become a relatively smaller source of revenues.
format Report
author World Bank
author_facet World Bank
author_sort World Bank
title Republic of Moldova Public Finance Review : Towards More Efficient and More Sustainable Public Finances
title_short Republic of Moldova Public Finance Review : Towards More Efficient and More Sustainable Public Finances
title_full Republic of Moldova Public Finance Review : Towards More Efficient and More Sustainable Public Finances
title_fullStr Republic of Moldova Public Finance Review : Towards More Efficient and More Sustainable Public Finances
title_full_unstemmed Republic of Moldova Public Finance Review : Towards More Efficient and More Sustainable Public Finances
title_sort republic of moldova public finance review : towards more efficient and more sustainable public finances
publisher Washington, DC
publishDate 2017
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/862181500274376993/Moldova-Public-finance-review-towards-more-efficient-and-more-sustainable-public-finances
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/28330
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