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Public Expenditure Review Summary : Social Assistance Program and Public Expenditure Review 1

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collection.link.9
https://openknowledge.worldbank.org/handle/10986/2109
collection.name.9
Public Expenditure Review
dc.contributor.author
World Bank
dc.date.accessioned
2017-06-27T21:55:59Z
dc.date.available
2017-06-27T21:55:59Z
dc.date.issued
2012-02
dc.date.lastModified
2021-04-23T14:04:37Z
dc.description.abstract
Public expenditure on household-based social assistance (SA) in Indonesia has increased significantly since 2005. From a low base in the early 2000s, Indonesia's aggregate national public expenditures on SA permanently increased from 2005 after the central government allocated a portion of the savings from fuel subsidy reforms to a number of SA initiatives. In 2010, national expenditures on SA are estimated at Rp 29,709 billion (US$ 3.3 billion), equivalent to 2.6 percent of total national expenditures and 0.5 percent of gross domestic product (GDP). Indonesia's strong fiscal position leaves Indonesia well placed to further increase SA expenditures. Declining debt payments and subsidy reductions have opened up fiscal space over the past decade and supported a general increase in social sector and SA spending. With debt-to-GDP of just 25 percent in 2010, Indonesia could further increase expenditure on both items without raising debt levels. Nonetheless, current expenditures on SA are dwarfed by spending on regressive energy subsidies which in some years consume over 20 percent of total national expenditures. The increase in spending after 2005 primarily reflects greater central government investment in programs to protect poor households from fuel and food shocks as well as large health and education expenses. The central government is the dominant player in the SA sector, accounting for almost 90 percent of total expenditures. In years when the government has increased regulated fuel prices (2005-06 and 2008-09), the largest compensatory SA response has been an unconditional cash transfer program (BLT) to vulnerable households to help cushion them from the inflationary shock.
en
dc.identifier
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/146351468040728696/Public-expenditure-review-summary
dc.identifier.uri
http://hdl.handle.net/10986/27424
dc.language
English
dc.language.iso
en_US
dc.publisher
World Bank, Jakarta
dc.rights
CC BY 3.0 IGO
dc.rights.holder
World Bank
dc.rights.uri
http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/igo
dc.subject
FISCAL SPACE
dc.subject
FUEL AND FOOD SHOCKS
dc.subject
HEALTH AND EDUCATION EXPENSES
dc.subject
POOR HOUSEHOLDS
dc.subject
PUBLIC EXPENDITURE
dc.subject
SOCIAL ASSISTANCE
dc.title
Public Expenditure Review Summary
en
dc.title.subtitle
Social Assistance Program and Public Expenditure Review 1
en
dc.type
Report
en
okr.date.disclosure
2012-03-05
okr.doctype
Economic & Sector Work :: Public Expenditure Review
okr.doctype
Economic & Sector Work
okr.docurl
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/146351468040728696/Public-expenditure-review-summary
okr.googlescholar.linkpresent
yes
okr.identifier.externaldocumentum
000333038_20120306003400
okr.identifier.internaldocumentum
15893852
okr.identifier.report
67299
okr.imported
true
okr.language.supported
en
okr.pdfurl
http://documents.worldbank.org/curated/en/146351468040728696/pdf/672990WP00PUBL0Background0Paper0010.pdf
en
okr.region.administrative
East Asia and Pacific
okr.region.country
Indonesia
okr.topic
Macroeconomics and Economic Growth :: Subnational Economic Development
okr.topic
Poverty Reduction :: Rural Poverty Reduction
okr.topic
Public Sector Development :: Public Sector Expenditure Policy
okr.topic
Social Protections and Labor :: Social Protections & Assistance

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