Financing the Millennium Development Goals: Is More Public Spending the Best Way to Meet Poverty Reduction Targets?

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Date

2004-04

Authors

Brownbridge, Martin

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Publisher

Uganda Martyrs University, Department of Health Sciences

Abstract

The strategy for expanding public services through donor funding is flawed and is doomed to fail. Donor funding necessitates increased internal public expenditure. This shifts resources away from the export-oriented private sector, which would bring about economic growth and provide a basis for a more comprehensive poverty reduction. There are also absorptive limitations in the use of large donor aid. Donor funds distort Government’s budget allocation pattern, cohesion and stability. The funding gap envisaged under MDGs by donor aid advocates ranges between 6.4% to13.6% of Uganda’s GDP, which are enormous. Large donor aid will lead to contraction of the private sector, appreciation of the shilling and falling prices of agricultural produce. It would mean that the Government would have to depend on donors for over 60% of its budget. And yet donor funding is volatile and unpredictable. The strategy of achieving MDGs through large donor aid should be abandoned. Instead, as projected in the long-term expenditure framework, Uganda should concentrate on the current budget policy to increase economic growth. In 10 years, revenue will have increased by 150% and health expenditure will be about 15% of the Government expenditure.

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Keywords

Financing the MDGs, Millenium Developement Goals (MDGs), Public Spending, Dononr Funding

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