Mobilizing and Managing Public Forestry Revenue

This paper considers the potential for improvements in forestry revenue management to complement other efforts toward sustainable forest management and to strengthen domestic resource mobilization. It describes forestry management as an extreme ver...

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Main Authors: Verhoeven, Marijn, Magrath, William, Robbins, Amanda, Kallaur, Emily
Format: Working Paper
Language:English
Published: World Bank, Washington, DC 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/878131576561576531/Mobilizing-and-Managing-Public-Forestry-Revenue
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33086
id okr-10986-33086
recordtype oai_dc
spelling okr-10986-330862021-05-25T09:30:59Z Mobilizing and Managing Public Forestry Revenue Verhoeven, Marijn Magrath, William Robbins, Amanda Kallaur, Emily REVENUE AUTHORITY REVENUE MANAGEMENT REVENUE MOBILIZATION FORESTRY PUBLIC FOREST MANAGEMENT REVENUE SHARING ANTICORRUPTION TRANSPARENCY STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT TAX ADMINISTRATION This paper considers the potential for improvements in forestry revenue management to complement other efforts toward sustainable forest management and to strengthen domestic resource mobilization. It describes forestry management as an extreme version of a classic principal-agent problem, which manifests itself in high levels of corruption, illegality, and revenue leakage at the country level. To address these challenges, the paper proposes that governments adopt a three-tiered sectoral planning process with an appropriately long time horizon, reflecting the length of forest life cycles and the uniqueness of the sector given forests’ status as a renewable natural resource providing essential public goods. Building on a sound planning process, the paper recommends mainstreaming attention to revenue-related issues throughout sectoral management by improving data availability, increasing transparency and stakeholder engagement, and implementing a robust revenue management system. It suggests a set of key revenue management components and institutional principles that can be applied to the local context as appropriate, with the aid of a questionnaire developed to help governments assess current strengths and weaknesses. These approaches may enable governments to improve decision making on land use, protect financial and physical resources that rightfully belong to the citizenry, and strengthen the rule of law in a sector often plagued by its abuse. 2019-12-23T21:55:33Z 2019-12-23T21:55:33Z 2019-10 Working Paper http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/878131576561576531/Mobilizing-and-Managing-Public-Forestry-Revenue http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33086 English Governance Discussion Paper,No. 1; CC BY 3.0 IGO http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo World Bank World Bank, Washington, DC Publications & Research Publications & Research :: Working Paper
repository_type Digital Repository
institution_category Foreign Institution
institution Digital Repositories
building World Bank Open Knowledge Repository
collection World Bank
language English
topic REVENUE AUTHORITY
REVENUE MANAGEMENT
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
FORESTRY
PUBLIC FOREST MANAGEMENT
REVENUE SHARING
ANTICORRUPTION
TRANSPARENCY
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT
TAX ADMINISTRATION
spellingShingle REVENUE AUTHORITY
REVENUE MANAGEMENT
REVENUE MOBILIZATION
FORESTRY
PUBLIC FOREST MANAGEMENT
REVENUE SHARING
ANTICORRUPTION
TRANSPARENCY
STAKEHOLDER ENGAGEMENT
TAX ADMINISTRATION
Verhoeven, Marijn
Magrath, William
Robbins, Amanda
Kallaur, Emily
Mobilizing and Managing Public Forestry Revenue
relation Governance Discussion Paper,No. 1;
description This paper considers the potential for improvements in forestry revenue management to complement other efforts toward sustainable forest management and to strengthen domestic resource mobilization. It describes forestry management as an extreme version of a classic principal-agent problem, which manifests itself in high levels of corruption, illegality, and revenue leakage at the country level. To address these challenges, the paper proposes that governments adopt a three-tiered sectoral planning process with an appropriately long time horizon, reflecting the length of forest life cycles and the uniqueness of the sector given forests’ status as a renewable natural resource providing essential public goods. Building on a sound planning process, the paper recommends mainstreaming attention to revenue-related issues throughout sectoral management by improving data availability, increasing transparency and stakeholder engagement, and implementing a robust revenue management system. It suggests a set of key revenue management components and institutional principles that can be applied to the local context as appropriate, with the aid of a questionnaire developed to help governments assess current strengths and weaknesses. These approaches may enable governments to improve decision making on land use, protect financial and physical resources that rightfully belong to the citizenry, and strengthen the rule of law in a sector often plagued by its abuse.
format Working Paper
author Verhoeven, Marijn
Magrath, William
Robbins, Amanda
Kallaur, Emily
author_facet Verhoeven, Marijn
Magrath, William
Robbins, Amanda
Kallaur, Emily
author_sort Verhoeven, Marijn
title Mobilizing and Managing Public Forestry Revenue
title_short Mobilizing and Managing Public Forestry Revenue
title_full Mobilizing and Managing Public Forestry Revenue
title_fullStr Mobilizing and Managing Public Forestry Revenue
title_full_unstemmed Mobilizing and Managing Public Forestry Revenue
title_sort mobilizing and managing public forestry revenue
publisher World Bank, Washington, DC
publishDate 2019
url http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/878131576561576531/Mobilizing-and-Managing-Public-Forestry-Revenue
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/33086
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