48 resultados para Fiscal Decentralization
Resumo:
El presente trabajo busca hacer un análisis sobre los arreglos institucionales introducidos con la ley 100 de 1993 a las Empresas Sociales del Estado (ESE), y cómo estos han afectado la prestación del servicio de salud y la garantía del derecho; para lo cual se escoge como ejemplo el Hospital Simón Bolívar E.S.E de Bogotá durante los años 2002 a 2014. Se explica como con la implementación de la descentralización, el modelo de aseguramiento y la autonomía financiera se afectó la prestación del servicio de salud, teniendo en cuenta la introducción de un eslabón dentro del sistema de salud: las Empresas Promotoras de Salud (EPS).
Resumo:
We study the role of natural resource windfalls in explaining the efficiency of public expenditures. Using a rich dataset of expenditures and public good provision for 1,836 municipalities in Peru for period 2001-2010, we estimate a non-monotonic relationship between the efficiency of public good provision and the level of natural resource transfers. Local governments that were extremely favored by the boom of mineral prices were more efficient in using fiscal windfalls whereas those benefited with modest transfers were more inefficient. These results can be explained by the increase in political competition associated with the boom. However, the fact that increases in efficiency were related to reductions in public good provision casts doubts about the beneficial effects of political competition in promoting efficiency.
Resumo:
How do resource booms affect human capital accumulation? We exploit time and spatial variation generated by the commodity boom across local governments in Peru to measure the effect of natural resources on human capital formation. We explore the effect of both mining production and tax revenues on test scores, finding a substantial and statistically significant effect for the latter. Transfers to local governments from mining tax revenues are linked to an increase in math test scores of around 0.23 standard deviations. We find that the hiring of permanent teachers as well as the increases in parental employment and improvements in health outcomes of adults and children are plausible mechanisms for such large effect on learning. These findings suggest that redistributive policies could facilitate the accumulation of human capital in resource abundant developing countries as a way to avoid the natural resources curse.