Report No. 25969-MZ Mozambique Public Expenditure Review Phase 2: Sectoral Expenditures September 22, 2003 PREM 1, Africa Region Document of the World Bank CURRENCY EQUIVALENTS (as of September 2003) Currency Unit: Metical (Mt); plural: Meticais US$1= Mt 23,400 FISCAL YEAR January 1 to December 31 Vice President: Callisto Madavo Director: Darius Mans Sector Manager: Philippe Le Houerou Task Manager: Peter G. Moll CONTENTS EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .................................................................................................................... i CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION ................................................................................................... 17 CHAPTER 2 . MACROECONOMIC AND CROSS-CUTTING ISSUES ............................................. 18 A. The current macroeconomic context ............................................................................ 18 B. Poverty and the intersectoral allocation o f resources ................................................... 23 C. Update on the reform o f fiscal management ................................................................ 27 D. Cross-cutting issues in sectoral spending ..................................................................... 33 The policy process. expenditure prioritization. and outcomes Chronic sectoral underspending Civil service reform .................... Progress with decentralization .............................................................. 38 CHAPTER 3 . EDUCATION ......................................................................................................... 41 A. Introduction .................................................................................................................. 41 B. K e y education sector issues .......................................................................................... 42 C. Expenditure trends ........................................................................................................ 50 D. Poverty focus and incidence o f expenditures ............................................................... 57 E. Impact o f HIV/AIDS o n the education system ............................................................ 59 F. Policy priorities for the education sector ..................................................................... 60 CHAPTER 4 . HEALTH ............................................................................................................... 63 A. Introduction .................................................................................................................. 63 B. K e y health sector issues ............................................................................................... 63 C. Expenditure trends ........................................................................................................ 69 D. Impact o f HIV/AIDS o n the health system .................................................................. 76 E. Policy priorities for the health sector ........................................................................... 77 CHAPTER 5 ROADS. ................................................................................................................. 81 A. Introduction .................................................................................................................. 81 B. K e y roads sector issues ................................................................................................. 82 C. Expenditure trends ........................................................................................................ 83 D. Policy priorities for the roads sector ............................................................................. 88 CHAPTER 6 . WATER SUPPLY AND SANITATION ..................................................................... 90 A. Introduction .................................................................................................................. 90 B. K e y sector issues .......................................................................................................... 91 C. Trends in public expenditure in water supply and sanitation ....................................... 96 D. Policy priorities .......................................................................................................... 100 REFERENCES............................................................................................................................... 102 ANNEX1 . ACTION PLAN, AND MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS ................................. 108 ANNEX I1. DATA ..................................................................................................................... 111 Figures Figure 1. Percentage o f female teachers and girls drop.out. by province 2001 ......................... 46 Figure 2 . Recurrent Unit Costs by Program in 2000 ................................................................. 52 Figure 3 . Govemment unit recurrent expenditure by input in 2001 (in 1999 US$) ...................53 Figure 4 . Secondary teacher salaries in selected SSA countries ................................................ 54 Figure 5 . Distribution o f benefits from public spending in education by income decile ...........58 Figure 6. Distribution o f benefits from public spending in health by income decile .................74 Figure 7. Inequity in budget allocations across regions ........................................................... 112 Tables Table 1. Basic macroeconomic indicators ................................................................................. 19 Table 2. Govemment finance, 1997-2003 (percentage o f GDP) ............................................... 20 Table 3 . Macro framework, 1997-2005 ..................................................................................... 22 Table 4 . Feasible ceilings o n recurrent expenditures in selected sectors ................................... 23 Table 5 . Actual recurrent expenditure by functional classification, 1998-2002 ........................ 24 Table 6 . Recurrent and investment expenditure, by function, 2000 .......................................... 25 Table 7. Budgeted sectoral allocations (recurrent and capital accounts) relative to total spending for selected countries, 2000/01 .............................................................................. 25 Table 8. Summary o f Pressing Actions (was Table 7.1 in PEMR) ............................................ 28 Table 9 . Summary o f Priority Actions (was Table 7.2 in PEMR) ............................................. 30 Table 10. Summary o f Actions for the Medium Term (was table 7.3 in PEMR) ...................... 32 Table 11. Ratio o f private sector to public sector compensation ............................................... 36 Table 12. Completion rates ofEP1, EP2, ESGl and ESG2 in 2001 ......................................... 44 Table 13 . Efficiency indicators for education in 2001 ............................................................... 46 Table 14. Selected quality indicators by education subsector, 1997-2001 ................................ 48 Table 15. Government and external education recurrent and capital expenditure in 2000 (US$ Million) ................................................................................................................................. 50 Table 16. Education sector expenditures, 1995-200 1 (US$ Million) ........................................ 51 Table 17. Yearly teacher salary and teacher salary/GDP per capita in 2001 (US$) ..................54 Table 18. Regional distribution o f population and benefits from education spending (in thousand Mt.) ........................................................................................................................ 58 Table 19. Health expenditures and performance: a regional comparison .................................. 65 Table 20 . Total actual health expenditwe at current prices. 1997-2000 ................................... 70 Table 2 1. Source o f funding by economic classification. 1997 and 2000 ................................. 71 Table 22 . Health expenditure (actual) by economic classification ............................................ 72 Table 23 . Projected health spending up to 2010 ........................................................................ 73 Table 24 . Health service u n i t s per capita. selected provinces and regions ................................ 75 Table 25 . The cost o f HIV-related health services (percentage o f GDP). 2000-2010 ...............77 Table 26: Road sector budgets. 1996-2002 ................................................................................ 84 Table 27 . Expenditure on roads. by maintenance / investment. 1995 to 200 1 .......................... 85 Table 28: Funding sources (internal and external) for the road sector budget. 1996-2002 ....... 85 Table 29 . Budgeted vs. actual spending. by funding source. 1995 to 2001 ............................... 86 Table 30. Transmission o f Road Fund Fuel-Based Revenues ................................................... 87 Table 3 1. Water and sanitation sector expenditures (actual) ..................................................... 97 Table 32 . Water supply and sanitation spending in relation to the budget ................................ 97 Table 3 3 . Execution o f the Govemment investment budget. 1999-2001 .................................. 98 Table 34. Water sources o f urban people. 1997 (percent) ......................................................... 99 Table 35 . Prices paid for water in urban areas. by location and source ................................... 100 Table 36. Action plan............................................................................................................... 108 Table 37 . Mozambique’s progress towards the MillenniumDevelopment Goals ..................110 Table 3 8 . Functional classification o f expenditure (percentage o f GDP) ................................ 111 Table 39 . Health sector recurrent expenditures by level o f care (percentage) ......................... 112 ABBREVIATIONS AND ACRONYMS ADB African Development Bank ANE AdministraqZio Nacional das Estradas (National Road Administration) CFPP Centro de FonnaqZio de Professores Primarios: Teacher training system (grade 7 plus 3 years) CGE Conta Geral do Estado. See Republica de Moqambique, 2000- 2001. CPI Current Price Index CRA Conselho de RegulaqZo do Abastecimento de Agua (Regulatory Board for Water Supply) DfID Department for International Development DNA DirecqZio Nacional das Aguas (National Directorate for Water) DNCP DirecqZo Nacional de Contabilidade Publica DNPO DirecqZio Nacional do Plan0 e Orqamento (National Directorate for Planning and Budget) DPT Diphtheria, Pertussis and Tetanus ECMEP Empresa de ConstruqZio e de ManutenqZo de Estradas e Pontes, Enterprise for Construction and Maintenance o f Roads and Bridges EFA Education for All EP1 Primary school (lower level) EP2 Primary school (upper level) ESER Education Sector Expenditure Review (2002). See References. ESGl General Secondary School (lower level) ESG2 General Secondary School (upper level) ESRP Economic and Social Rehabilitation Program ESSP Education Sector Strategic Plan ETSDS Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey EU European Union FIPAG Fundo de Investimento e PatrimGnio do Abastecimento de Agua (Asset Holding and Investment Company for the five cities’ water systems) FRP Feeder Roads Program FTI Fast-Track Initiative FY Financial Year GDP Gross Domestic Product GER Gross Enrolment Rate HNMS Highway Network Management System HSER Health Sector Expenditure Review (2002). See References. IGF Inspectoria Geral das Finanqas (Finance Inspectorate General) IMF International Monetary Fund LCSP Low-Co st Sanitation Program MDGs Millennium Development Goals MPF Ministry o f Planning and Finance MTFF Medium Term Financial Framework NGO Non-Governmental Organization NHS National Health System o f the Ministry o f Health NWDP National Water Development Program ( Iand 11) (projects hnded by the World Bank) O&M Operation and management PARPA Action Plan for the Reduction o f Absolute Poverty (viz. PRSP). See Republic o f Mozambique, 2001. PEMR Public Expenditure Management Review, 2001, by the World Bank. The first phase o f the Public Expenditure Review, o f which this document is the second phase. See References. PES Plano Econamico e Social (Social and Economic Plan) PESS Plano EstratCgico do Sector da Sacde (Health Sector Strategic Plan) 2001-2005-2010. See References. PRSP Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper PSIA Poverty and Social Impact Analysis PTIP Plano Trienal de Investimento Pcblico (Triennial Public Investment Plan) PTR Pupil per Teacher Ratio RBMMP Roads and Bridges Management and Maintenance Program, sector-wide program, sometimes referred to as “Roads I II” ROADS I11 See RBMMP ROCS Roads and Coastal Shipping projects 1 and 2, with World Bank and donor participation RWS Rural water supply SDC Swiss Agency for Development Corporation (AgCncia Suiga para o Desenvolvimento e a Cooperagiio) SIP Sistema de Informaggo de Pessoal (personnel register o f the civil service) SISTAFE Sistema Integrado de Administrag2io Financeira do Estado (integrated financial management information system) SPS Small Piped Systems SSA Sub-Saharan Africa SWAP Sector-Wide Approach UIMO (Brigadas de) Us0 Intensivo de MZo de Obra (labor-intensive brigades, associated with road maintenance) UTRAFE Unidade TCcnica para a Reforma da L e i da Administrag50 Financeira do Estado (Technical Unit for Reform o f the Financial Management Law) UTRESP Unidade TCcnica para a Reforma do Sector Pcblico (Technical Unit for Reform o f the Public Sector) uws Urban Water Supply WB World Bank ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS This i s the final (Gray Cover) report o f the second phase o f the Public Expenditure Review undertaken by the World Bank and the Ministry o f Planning and Finance o f the Government o f Mozambique. Useful information and insight was provided by experts in many departments in the Ministry o f Planning and Finance. For the World Bank, the second phase o f the Public Expenditure Review was managed by Peter M o l l (AFTPl). The primary authors o f this report are Peter M o l l and Antonio Nucifora (AFTP 1); the team included Maria Teresa Benito-Spinetto (AFTPl), Abdelmoula Ghzala (AFTTR), Dipac Jaiantilal (AFTPl), Mary Mulusa (AFTHl), Catherine Revels (AFTUl), Alexandria Valerio (AFTHl) and Jane Walker (AFTUl). Contributions were made by the Bank consultants Chris Finney, Larry Herman, Eduardo Macuhcua, Estrela Pol6nia and Manolo Shchez. Part o f the funding for the consultants came from the Belgian Poverty Reduction Partnership Program Trust Fund. Assistance with editing, communication and budget management was providedby L i g i a Murphy (AFTPl) and Lurdes Malate (AFC02). On the Government side, the review was managed by Mr. JosC Sulemane, National Director o f Planning and Budget in the Ministry o f Planning and Finance. The team included Mr. Antonio Laice, the National Director o f Treasury, and Mr. Domingos Lambo, the Deputy National Director o f Planning and Budget, as well as Mr. SCrgio Dista and Ms. Lidia Cabral. The team also included staff from the sectoral ministries (Education, Health, Agriculture, Water and Roads), and especial reference should be made to the contributions o f Dr. Zefanias Muhate (Permanent Secretary, MINED), Mr. Virgilio Juvane (National Director o f Planning, MINED), Mr. Ant6nio Chambal (National Director o f Finance and Administration, MINED), Dr. Frederico Sitoe (Deputy National Director for Agrarian Economics, Ministry o f Agriculture), Dr. Humberto Cossa (National Director, Ministry o f Health), Dr. AmCrico Muianga (National Director o f Water, Ministry o f Public Works), Mr. Carlos Fragoso (Chairperson o f the Administrugio NucionuZ dus Estrudus), as well as that o f their staff. Further acknowledgements are cited in the constituent papers on health, education, roads, water and expenditure tracking. Some o f the work was done, under the direction o f the Ministry, by a syndicate o f consultant f i r m s entitled Fortulecimento du PZunzJicugio e Orgumento Sectoriuis (FoPOS), which included Oxford Policy Management, CESO Consultoria Intemacional and Austral Consultoria. The Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey (ETSDS) was done jointly by the Ministry o f Health and the Ministry o f Planning and Finance, with Oxford Policy Management and Austral Consultoria as implementing agencies, and with fbnding from DflD. Advice and comments were also received from a group o f donors involved in public finance, including N i c k Highton (DfTD), Anton Johnston (SIDA), JosC Carlos Nunes (EU), Martin Roland (Embassy o f the Kingdom o f the Netherlands), h i m Schwidrowski (IMF) and Thomas Thomsen (DANIDA). Their extensive knowledge o f public finance issues in Mozambique was extremely valuable. The peer reviewers, Shiyan Chao (AFTHl), Kenneth Gwilliam (consultant), Jeffrey Hammer (DECRG), Julie McLaughlin (AFTHl), Alex McPhail (AFTU2), Alain Mingat (AFTHD), h a n d Rajaram (PRMPS), Helen Saxenian (LCSHH), Vinaya Swaroop (SASPR), and Richard Verspyck (AFTU2), provided valuable comments and suggestions at different stages o f the report. The report was prepared under the supervision o f Philippe L e Houerou, Sector Manager for AFTP1. H e offered overall conceptual guidance, provided critical analytical advice and ensured quality control and management support. Darius Mans, Country Director, supported the process and provided the major guidelines. i EXECUTIVE SUMMARY 1. With careful economic management, substantial private capital inflows and support o f the intemational community, Mozambique has staged a dramatic recovery from the damage resulting from its long struggle for independence and its civil war. Since 1992, infrastructure has been brought back to pre-war levels and incomes have risen considerably. But the country remains poor; infrastructure i s inadequate, there are serious unmet education and health needs, and poverty issues need to be addressed directly. However, many o f the “first-generation” reforms associated with market liberalization have already been implemented. The country n o w faces the prospect o f tightening macroeconomic constraints and an increasing need for better prioritization and management o f public expenditures to eliminate absolute poverty. .. 11. This, the second phase o f the Public Expenditure Review (PER), covers aspects o f sectoral spending in four major sectors: education, health, roads and water. These sectors were selected because they account for the bulk o f government spending. Agriculture i s omitted because the background work had not been completed by the time o f going to press. ... 111. The principles underlying this evaluation are the standard ones o f economic analysis: efficiency, equity and implementability. Government intervention may raise efficiency by compensating for a market failure such as the inability to borrow (as in the standard rationale for subsidized education and health services), or the inability o f entrepreneurs to charge for service (as in the standard rationale for government provision o f roads). Equity i s considered from the points o f view o f poverty reduction, regional inequality and gender inequality. Implementability is a factor because there may be historical, political and sociological reasons why certain reforms are not adopted over long periods o f time. In addition, the policy maker must weigh up whether the market failure exceeds the possible “government failure” in implementation, stemming from a lack o f human capital or other sources. Since implementability i s a large subject in i t s o w n right, i t i s given only light treatment in this study, the details being left for further work. Nevertheless in this study a distinction is made between reforms which can be executed readily and those involving complexity, continued commitment and substantial technical resources (para. xlviii, p. xiv). ’ Even with the ambitious reforms proposed in t h i s Review, only one o f the MillenniumDevelopment Goals (MDGs) - that relating to clean water in rural areas - i s likely to be met by 2015 (see the summary o f the MDGs in Table 37, Annex I.) .. 11 The macroeconomic context iv. Mozambique’s recovery from the devastatingjloods o f 2000 is almost complete as the economy grew by 7.7 percent in 2002 and i s expected to grow by 7 percent in 2003, driven by investment in mega-projects and recovery o f agriculture. Small and medium enterprises, however, have been negatively affected by very high interest rates stemming from monetary difficulties in recent years. Due to an expansionary monetary policy, the inflation rate rose to 22 percent at end-2001, compared to the PARPA target o f annual inflation o f 5 to 7 percent. Following a tightening o f monetary policy, the inflation rate declined to 9 percent by the end o f 2002 and i s expected to decline further over the next few years. v. Government revenues have grown significantly, from I I . 3 percent o f GDP in I997 to 13.5percent o f GDP in 2002, exceeding the PARPA target o f 12.4percent. This, coupled with high levels o f donor support, allowed expenditures to expand from 23.5 percent o f GDP in 1997 to 32.2 percent in 2002. But even with high levels o f extemal grant and foreign net borrowing, domestic borrowing has swung from significantly negative to a positive 1.6 percent o f GDP in 2002. vi. The growth and current level o f expenditures is not sustainable and the Government now needs to improve the quality rather than expand the quantity o f its expenditures. I t will be increasingly difficult to raise revenues, domestic borrowing i s already too large, and some experts speculate that extemal assistance (grants) might gradually fall from their present level o f more than 10 percent o f GDP toward the sub- Saharan African average o f 4 percent. Progress in fiscal management vii. The Public Expenditure Management Review o f 20012 noted serious deficiencies in fiscal management, particularly in public accounting, cash management, and auditing. Public accounts omitted receitas prbprias (ministerial own receipts) and donor-funded expenditures. Cash management was inefficient and lacked transparency because large numbers o f Government accounts were not being tracked. Intemal auditing was ineffective due to a lack o f capacity for accounting. Progress was made as some o f the key recommendations o f the PEMR (2001) to improve fiscal management were implemented: A new Financial Management Law was issued in 2001 and its regulations were issued in 2002. The new Law provides for modernization o f the entire fiscal system and establishes the basis for an integrated financial management infomation system, SISTAFE (Sistema Integrado de Administrap70 Financeira do Estado), which is being gradually introduced. The PEMR (2001) was the first phase o f the Public Expenditure Review. The present document i s the second phase. ... . 111 A new budget classification system was introduced in 2001 that will permit more accurate tracking o f poverty-related expenditures. However, i t s implementation at the detailed level has been delayed until the introduction o f the SISTAFE in 2004/05. viii. Some recommendations o f the PEMR (2001) crucial to the reform process have not yet been implemented. Two o f these are indispensable for the proper functioning o f . the management information system (SISTAFE): Ministerial o w n receipts or “receitas prdprias”, and donor-funded expenditures, . are not being reported in full in the budget and budget execution reports. The hundreds o f accounts o f the Government with the central bank and commercial banks have not been inventoried or consolidated. T h e intersectoral allocation of resources ix. Budget allocations to poverty-oriented expenditures have risen. Current budget allocations to health and education rose from 4.1 percent o f GDP in 1998 to 6.3 percent by 2002, on top o f real GDP growth o f 35 percent during the period. These increases make Mozambique’s social sector allocations some o f the highest in the region. These intersectoral choices may well be appropriate in the light o f Mozambique’s very high levels o f poverty. x. Further reallocations in favor o f health may be called for,j?nanced by cuts in non-priority areas. In each o f the four sectors studied in detail - education, health, roads and water - there are needs for additional financing, without which the Government’s medium term goals for the sector will not be attained. Given the poor state o f monitoring (see below, para. xii), absorptive capacity is an issue in all the sectors, particularly in health, with i t s weak links between inputs and outputs, and water, where substantial under-execution i s the norm (see below, para. xiv). While the study did not quantify the marginal welfare impacts o f competing sectoral investments, it i s hard to avoid the conclusion that some further reallocations in favor o f health will be called for, merely in order to protect the gains made so far, since the health system’s resources will be increasingly captured by HIV/AIDS patients with opportunistic diseases. Consideration may be given to making cuts in the sectors defined by the PARPA as “non-priority”, and in particular in the rubrics o f defense, embassies, the “non-priority” component o f “security and public order”, and recreation, culture and religion. Common themes in sector spending xi. Many o f the key findings o f this review are specific to the four sectors involved - education, health,’roads and water - and may be consulted in the relevant sectors below. . However, the review i s unified by the following issues common to all the sectors: a problematic policy process, leading to poor monitoring and serious informational gaps; inadequate allocations and/or chronically l o w execution rates o f poverty-oriented expenditures; iv . . an urgent need for civil service reform; . the need for progress with decentralization; and the devastating impact o f HIV/AIDS. xii. Problems with the policy process lead to poor monitoring and serious informational gaps. Otherwise stated, there i s a lack o f government leadership and prioritization in expenditure management. In turn this i s linked with a lack o f focus on outcomes, as was stressed by the first annual progress report o n the PARPA (Republic o f Mozambique, 2003). The Government does not always have a detailed strategy for donor contributions to sector programs. Instead donors make proposals in a decentralized fashion and these tend to be accepted by the authorities. The result i s a mosaic o f programs based on different philosophies, o f differing quality, and with widely differing cost structures (e.g. in school construction, water point development). Although there are strategy documents in place in the key sectors, these often consist o f broadly expressed ideals, without detailed medium-termprograms. Therefore the link between expenditures, targets and outcomes i s not clear. xiii. The chronic lack of information on inputs, outputs, outcomes andflnancials makes assessment ofpublic expenditures difJult. The Government needs this information o n a regular basis to facilitate allocation decisions. The annual progress report on the PARPA (Republic o f Mozambique, 2003) identified this weakness in the . policy process. The Government intends to respond by more carefully defining and monitoring PARPA objectives and targets, . restricting attention to a smaller list o f key items for tracking; using the Plano EconGmico e Social and the budget execution reports as its chief instruments, for rational planning and monitoring o f the achievement o f . outcomes; mounting regular broad-based discussions o f these key monitoring documents in meetings termed the Poverty Observatory. . This Review further recommends that the cycle o f financial management incorporate regular elements o f expenditure review, partly by creating in-house capacity and partly by hiring in skills as needed. Indeed the Ministry o f Finance is seeking, through this Review, to . initiate this; the action plan o f the PEMR (2001) be completed, inter alia creating mechanisms for reporting information on donor contributions and properly . implementing the detailed functional classification which was adopted in 200 1; donors increase their contributions channeled through the budget. This would require further reforms o f public finance, including thoroughgoing procurement reform, improved accounting and auditing, and steady implementation o f the integrated financial management information system, the SISTAFE. V xiv. There has been chronically low budget execution in some priority sectors3, particularly water and health. Current expenditures in certain sectors (e.g. water, health) averaged considerably less than the budget allocations between 1999 and 2001. Among the causes, according to the ministries concemed, i s late arrival o f the first o f the duode‘cimos (or one-twelfths o f the annual allocations). Another appears to be a lack o f capacity to operate the duode‘cimo system for releasing revenues to ministries. This system provides for replenishment o f funds against documentation o f the use o f the funds in the previous month. Since documentation o f the past month’s expenditures i s often delayed or incomplete, allocations to ministries tend to lag, sometimes badly, leading to chronic under-spending. I t i s expected that the gradual implementation o f the SISTAFE system will change this, but in the meantime specific training i s needed in accounting and the requisite procedures. xv. I n a time of budget stringency it is possible to improve the quality of service delivery by rationalizing and reallocating spending. Some examples given in the main text are: to save resources by using local materials for construction in education; and fully . funding periodic road maintenance to reduce rehabilitation costs; to reallocate subsidized sewices to the poor, including shifting the implicit subsidy on urban piped water to rural and small-town and urban standpipe services, and further shifting expenditures away from large hospitals to rural and small-town facilities; and toprevent and treat HIV/AIDS and counteract its social and economic effects. xvi. The civil service is short of skilled, dedicated employees as it is d@?cult to attract high-quality, motivated civil service stafJ Salaries are well below comparators (equivalently skilled private sector workers, or civil servants in neighboring countries), particularly at the upper skill levels. For technical specialists the differential i s about 50 percent. Various “off-budget” revenues are sometimes used to supplement salaries. Such ministerial o w n receipts or receitasprdprias are large: in 1998 off-budget receipts o f the health ministry amounted to about 37 percent o f its current budget allocation. Thoroughgoing reform o f the civil service i s needed, including improved compensation and linking o f performance to promotion and pay. The Government i s embarking on a pilot reform in 2003 for the ministries o f education, health and agriculture entailing inter alia the introduction o f remuneration related to performance. Donor assistance may be called upon to fund the decompression in the initial years. xvii. The Government should continue to gradually decentralize administrative and jiscal responsibilities, and increase the amount o f training in public administration at local level. A gradualist approach has been followed so far regarding the extension o f responsibilities to provinces, districts and municipalities. This gradualist approach seems appropriate in light o f the dearth o f capacity in public administration outside Maputo. 3 The PARPA defined the “priority sectors” as education, health, infrastructure (including roads, energy, water), governance (including justice), agriculture, and macroeconomic management. vi The Government should act to expand the capacity and the role o f local administrations vis-&vis the central govemment, by introducing adequate training programs and gradually transferring fiscal and administrative responsibilities. In this context, it will be important to reform the current system o f dupla tutela o f provincial directorates, since this system i s not readily compatible with the process o f decentralization. xviii. The social and macroeconomic consequences of Mozambique’s 13.8percent HIV/AIDSprevalence rate are substantial. HIV/AIDS could reduce per capita GDP growth rates by as much as 1 percent annually in this decade (Amdt, 2003), negatively affecting revenue growth. HIV/AIDS also has implications for expenditures. In the education sector, HIV/AIDS results in absenteeism and deaths o f teachers, and the need to subsidize due to orphaned children. The number o f orphans in lower primary school can be expected to increase from the current 10 percent to 18 percent in 2015. The cost to the orphans’ guardians o f enrolling them was US$2.6 million in 2002, and could rise to US$4.6 million by 2006. I nthe health sector, the costs o f treating patients, carrying out prevention programs and replacing and training staff will be considerable. T o provide palliative care and treatment o f opportunistic diseases to 20-30 percent o f the population with HIV would absorb as much as h a l f o f total health expenditure; adding anti-retroviral therapy for 10 percent o f H I V / A I D S victims would cost more than another half. The Government i s carrying out a detailed study o f the likely costs to the health system o f the HIV/AIDS epidemic, but i t i s clear that the budgetary impact will be large. Education xix. Access to primary education has improved dramatically in recent years. The gross enrolment rate for the five years o f lower primary (EP1) has r i s e n from 56 percent in 1992 to 106 percent (95 percent for girls) in 2002. The increase in gross enrollment in the two years o f upper primary (EP2), from 13 percent to 28 percent over the same period, was less impressive, though important given their initial l o w base. The improvement at the primary level is partly due to an increase in domestic expenditures (recurrent and investment), from 1.9 percent in 1997 to 3.1 percent o f GDP in 2001, and an increase in the social demand for access to educational services. However this i s s t i l l below the 5.1 percent average in sub-Saharan Africa. Access to secondary schooling is lagging, with a gross enrolment rate o f only 8 percent. xx. The education system, however, remains highly inefficient. Driven by high repetition and dropout rates, the completion rate o f EP1 i s 36 percent, compared with an average o f 5 1 percent in Africa and 8 1 percent in all developing countries. I t takes 18 years o,f instruction to produce a primary graduate (EP1 and EP2) instead o f the nominal seven. xxi. School fees are a likely contributor to low completion rates. At the primary level, 18 percent o f the unit recurrent cost i s paid by parents. This amounts to 12 percent o f disposable household income o f the lowest-eaming decile. M u c h o f the money i s used for cleaning and security services, and for books. In the 1997 household survey, fees were cited frequently by parents in rural households as a primary reason for not sending children to school. Fees could be reduced at the primary level by a combination o f increased allocations to schools and improvement o f the exemption arrangements for vii students from needy households. In secondary education, since the benefits from public spending are not equitably distributed, the current high level o f cost recovery (about 30 percent) should be maintained, in parallel with making bursaries available to deserving students. xxii. The decline in the quality o f education needs to be reversed. The planned introduction o f a new curriculum will help to address some issues related to quality and efficiency. The magnitude o f the effect, however, will depend o n parallel programs to upgrade teacher subject knowledge, improve teaching practice, and ensure an adequate supply o f teaching guides and textbooks to support the new curriculum and upgrade school infrastructure. The trend towards hiring teachers without appropriate training qualifications should be reversed, and a priority placed on improving the supply and quality o f teacher pre- and in-service teacher education programs. Inthis context, it i s recommended that the Government improve the quality o f teacher education programs offered at CFPP centers to ensure that all new primary teachers have CFPP qualifications. Teacher education programs (length and curriculum) should be restructured significantly to increase the supply o f qualified teachers. The CFPP system should be reformed to adopt alternative training modalities aimed at reducing resident time and increasing practical training xxiii. Reallocations within the education budget could improve efficiency while remaining within an envelope consistent with the PARPA. Savings can be made by (i) reducing the number o f “ghost employees”, as teachers o n the EP 1 payroll outnumber those recorded by the schools by 20 percent; (ii) improving the use o f teachers’ time in EP2; (iii)reducing construction costs; and (iv) reducing the subsidy o n tertiary education. These savings would likely be sufficient to compensate for (i) increased training, ( ii) more teachers, ( iii) the proposed scholarships for AIDS orphans; and (iv) the proposed reduction in primary school fees. xxiv. I t i s unlikely that the Millennium Development Goal o f universal primary school completion will be attained unless drastic efficiency improvements are made. Projections indicate that important progress in raising completion rates in primary schooling could be made given the present budgetary allocations, but the goal o f universal primary school completion will likely not be attained unless additional resources are allocated for recurrent and capital expenses. I t may be necessary to consider modifications in the staffing profile and compensation structure o f primary and secondary school teachers to ensure the expansion is not only sustainable, but also fiscally affordable given the resource envelope. xxv. Merge the EPl and EP2 cycles into a single primary education cycle. The current distinction between EP1 and EP2 embodies various inefficiencies and can be eliminated without compromising the quality o f education. A merged primary school cycle would allow a substantial rationalization o f available resources across EP 1 and EP2 (notably teachers and classrooms), i t would homogenize teachers’ salaries and their qualifications across primary education (CFPP level), it would accelerate the school construction program, and i t would ultimately facilitate the expansion to universal primary education. ... VI11 xxvi. Improve cost efficiency in school construction and adopt a community based approach to primary school construction, particularly in rural and isolated areas. The Govemment should ensure that the construction cost per classroom does not normally exceed $10,000, including servicing and fumishing, and should revise the construction standards which have to be satisfied by contractors or communities. This would reduce the scope for rent seeking from school construction contracts and reduce the time i t takes to complete works. In addition, the government should decentralize the school construction program, especially at the primary school level, to the provincial or district level, so as to ensure that schools are located where they are most needed. Health xxvii. The health status o f Mozambicans continues to be poor, despite considerable improvement in some key outcome indicators. The causes o f the poor health status include poverty, malnutrition, an environment which fosters harmful pathogens and parasites, lack o f clean water, poor hygiene and inadequate health services. Malaria i s the leading reported cause o f death and H I V / A I D S i s becoming a critical problem. There has been little improvement in key health outcomes since the 1992 PER. In 1989, the infant mortality rate was 137-150 per 1000 live births (depending o n the source) and the under-5 rate was 203; in 2001 these were 129 and 200 respectively. The intra-hospital maternal mortality rate f e l l from 230 per 100,000 live births in 1993 to 160 in 2002. L i f e expectancy at birth was 43-49 years in 1989 but only 42 years in 2001. Part o f the decline was due to HIV/AIDS. xxviii. The Government’s objectivesfor primary health care include better quality and improved equity o f care. There has been remarkable progress in the coverage o f primary health care since the 1992 PER. The percent o f children fully immunized by two years o f age was 55 percent in 1995, reaching 82 percent in 2001. Deliveries attended by a trained provider rose from 28 percent in 1995 to 45 percent in 2002. The common pool for pharmaceutical purchases garners economies o f scale in procurement and ensures efficient delivery o f drugs, at least as far as the provincial level. The overall output o f the government health system - as measured by a composite indicator o f key outputs4 - rose creditably by 59 percent between 1993 and 2000. However, there continue to be serious problems. According to the Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey (ETSDS), 58 percent o f the clinics surveyed in 2002 lacked one or more essential drugs in stock at the time o f inquiry. Consultation time was inadequate, averaging only 4 minutes, when consultations o f 10-15 minutes are needed. Various measures o f equity (e.g. the distribution o f health service by province) show little improvement since the early 1990s. xxix. Health spending increasedfrom US$4.6per capita in 1997 to US $7.5 in 2000 and US $1 0.7 in 2002, but the resultant outputs were less than expected. The health sector accounts for the largest share o f donor financing (exceeding that o f education), having received 11 percent o f total grant funding between 1999 and 2002. However, the 4 n f the composite indicator, see footnote 62 on page 66. For the d e f ~ t i o o ix increased spending did not result in a substantial increase in output: the 66 percent increase in spending between 1997 and 2000 resulted in output (as measured by the composite indicator) rising by only 13 percent, o f which 7 percent was due to increased service delivered per staff member.5 It i s not clear that the additional funds were efficiently used, as indicated by a 53 percent increase in the unit cost o f service. xxx. The quality and quantity o f health services can be raised by resource reallocation; even so, hard choices about care for HIV/AIDS patients lie ahead. Savings can be made for the Government at the tertiary hospital level by (i) raising efficiency (note, for example, that the bed occupancy rate in 2000 was only 59 percent) and by (ii) charging higher rates for more complex services on the basis o f ability to pay. The amounts forthcoming will only be known once the “off-budgets’’ in the health system have been clarified and regularized. In addition, o n the assumption that health’s share o f tax revenues remains constant6, there will, given the growth o f GDP and taxes, arise sizeable amounts o f domestic resources which could be used for expansion o f service and quality improvements. These additional amounts are roughly $7 million in 2006, rising to $16 million in 2010. Yet these amounts are insufficient to provide both for (i) extension o f the reach o f the health system beyond the current half to two-thirds o f Mozambicans, and for (ii) even modest levels o f assistance for H I V / A I D S patients. Estimates indicate that it would cost $12 million to provide palliative care for 30 percent o f H N / A I D S patients and $43 million to provide clinical treatment o f opportunistic infections, even without antiretrovirals. Hence difficult choices lie ahead. At the margin donor funds could be found to assist but in the long run this would likely constitute a redistribution from other programs because aggregate grants are unlikely to exceed their current dollar level o f between $350-$450 million annually. I t i s hard to avoid the conclusion that further savings will need to be found in order to provide at least a modest response to the ravages o f HIVIAIDS, provided that the efficiency o f the use o f funds in the health sector can be raised. Suggestions as to where the needed savings could be found have been made above (para. x, p. iii). xxxi. The lack of detailedprioritization linking objectives to spending, and based on analysis ofpast spending, is a limitation on provision of health services and attainment of the Government’s goals. The various policy and strategy documents, including the PESS, need to be consolidated into a consistent planning instrument with clear prioritization linked to resources. Such detailed prioritization is not feasible when program spending data are absent (e.g. spending, outputs and outcomes o f the malaria vertical program are unavailable) and cannot be based upon analysis o f the effectiveness o f past spending when the detailed functional classification adopted in 2001 i s not applied system-wide. Given the lack o f prioritization, and with the tenuous link between Comparing the output increase o f 59 percent between 1993 and 2000 (see the previous paragraph), and the smaller increase of 13 percent between 1997 and 2000, it appears that the bulk o f the output improvement occurred inthe early nineties as the country was recovering f r o m the impact o f the war. Assumptions: (i) tax revenues allocated to health will riseparipassu with G D P growth, ( ii) maintaining current levels o f service will require increases in real spending p a r ipassu with population growth, and (iii) the salary bill accruing t o health increasesparipussu with GDP growth. Then the remaining funds are, in theory, available for deployment in new projects such as H I V / A I D S care and prevention. X the health service effort and some o f the key outcome indicators, it is unlikely that the Millennium Development Goals for matemal mortality and under-5 mortality can be attained under present circumstances. xxxii. The user fee system is inequitable and lacking in transparency, and needs a complete overhaul. Drug wastage i s common, overcharging i s widespread, health facilities charge widely differing rates, and the official exemptions for the needy are not consistently granted. The Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey (ETSDS, 2002) found that, although consultations are supposed to be gratis, 35 percent o f children were required to pay. This situation discourages the poorest from seeking care. A thoroughgoing review o f the entire policy and i t s implementation i s needed. The Government could also consider abolishing fees at L e v e l I facilities altogether, because the contribution they make to the district budgets i s quite small, and little is retained by the facilities themselves. Finally, all user fees should be reflected in the budget. Roads xxxiii. Progress has been made in the roadprogram since the 1992 PER, but road coverage i s still thin. Intensive rehabilitation has resulted in an increase in roads in good or fair condition from 10 percent to 55 percent o f the network. Most o f the rehabilitation was o f tertiary and unclassified roads. Routine maintenance was increased from 4,000 M y e a r in 1994 to 15,000 M y e a r at present. However, Mozambique’s 32 km o f roads per 1000 square km i s the lowest in the Southern Africa region where the median i s 90 km. In terms o f maintenance, too, Mozambique lags: 55 percent o f i t s roads are in good or fair condition, against the regional average o f 7 1 percent. xxxiv. The budget for road construction and maintenance constitutes 1 0percent o f the total national budget and 20percent o f the total investment budget. Roads spending comprises 36 percent o f the internally funded investment budget for the PARPA priority sectors, and has double the share o f the next highest sector (education). Donors contributed via successive multi-donor programs, the ROCS 1 and 2, the Feeder Roads Program, and most recently Roads I11(Roads and Bridges Maintenance Program, RBMMP). xxxv. Road maintenance expenditures have not increased in real terms since 1996 despite growing maintenance needs and a growing economy. Funding o f maintenance was inadequate because the real value o f the petroleum tax, which i s the major source o f . income for the Road Fund, fell by 40 percent between 1994 and 2000. Moreover, the authorities failed to transfer the portion of the tax that had been allocated by decree. In 2000, the total fuel tax was U S $36 million, but only U S $22 m i l l i o n was transferred to the Road Fund. This was below requirements. The Roads I11program will succeed only if the maintenance program (routine and periodic) i s funded, as the Government intends, by restoring the fuel tax to i t s real 1997 level or committing to alternative funding sources providing the same funds. xxxvi. Failure to carry out periodic maintenance i s undermining the roads program. Only 18 percent o f planned periodic maintenance, scheduled activities on larger assets, was executed during the 1990s. There are two reasons for this: only 57 percent o f the funding committed up to 1998 was actually provided; and periodic maintenance i s more xi difficult as i t requires complex design and a longer procurement process. The Government needs to adhere to i t s financial undertakings to fund maintenance, even if this requires temporarily cutting back on the rehabilitation program and new construction. xxxvii. Progress has been made in institutional development with the creation o f a semi-autonomous roads authority (ANE). Roads administration needs to be autonomous, in order to promote rational decision-making on the basis o f technical merit. The Road Fund should be separated from ANE, as planned, and the boards o f the ANE and the Road Fund should be structured to permit accountability. xxxviii. Theparastatal maintenance companies should be subjected to full competition, and beprivatized. The parastatal maintenance companies s t i l l do much o f their work on force account, protected from competition. Further private sector development in the form of open bidding and privatization should help to reduce maintenance costs. xxxix. The Feeder Roads Program and the provincial distribution of rehabilitation and maintenance have given the roads program a stronger poverty reduction orientation. However, not enough has been done to provide poorer districts with access to good-to-fair roads. The poverty reduction orientation should be strengthened by utilizing district-based poverty measures in ex ante social impact analyses when allocating investment and periodic maintenance budgets. xl. Roads expenditure data need a thorough overhaul. There i s a need for reliable, up-to-date data on actual externally f h d e d expenditures on roads, and reliable data are needed on unit costs o f rehabilitation and maintenance so as to permit policy-relevant comparisons. Water supply and sanitation xli. Water supply and sanitation are critical for poverty reduction, but Mozambique has low coverage levels - 60 percent for water supply and 43 percent for sanitation, including rural and urban areas - among the lowest in Sub-Saharan Africa. Spending in the sector has increased in recent years, due to donor assistance following the floods o f 2000. Total public expenditure on water was $15 million in 1999, $28 million in 2000 and $24 million in 2001. Annual expenditure from locally generated sources (viz. Government) has consistently been around $4.5 million, with the balance coming from donors. Water accounts for some 2.4 percent o f the government-funded component o f the investment budget, well behind roads (20 percent), education (13 percent) and health (1 1 percent). The sub-sectoral split is 56 percent o n rural water supply (including small piped systems in towns), 34 percent o n urban water supply and sanitation and 11 percent on water resources. xlii. Significantprogress has been made in improving water supply in rural areas: coverage has increased from around 10 percent in 1992 to around 35 percent in 2002. However, sustainability i s low, with over one third o f the installations reportedly not functioning. xliii. Urban water supply coverage has decreased, as investment failed to keep up with increased demand resulting from population growth and urbanization. The number o f xii households with direct access to piped systems has fallen by 4 percent over the past ten years and quality o f service has deteriorated, with frequent interruptions and only 19 percent o f standpipes (the source o f water for most city dwellers) h l l y functional. Over the past year, however, service has started to improve in the five largest cities operated by a private operator. Progress has also been slow in meeting the demand for improved sanitation facilities in both rural and urban areas and more needs to be done to promote hygienic practices. xliv. Thepolicy foundation for the sector is sound. The Government has made great strides in establishing the policy foundation and institutional arrangements necessary for improved efficiency, creating an enabling environment for leveraging public expenditures through greater participation by communities, users and the private sector in ways that will improve sustainability. Further work i s needed to bring down the costs o f investment required to improve coverage. xlv. To meet the PARPA goals, and the Millennium Development goals, increased public spending and increased efficiency are needed. For rural water supply, it i s highly likely that the PARPA target o f increasing coverage from the current level o f 35 percent to 41 percent by 2005 can be met if the demand responsive approach i s followed to ensure sustainability. However, it i s uncertain whether the PARPA targets o f increasing direct access to urban water supply from the 2001 level o f 44 to 50 percent and increasing sanitation coverage from 43 to 50 percent can be met by 2005.7 The M D G s seek to reduce by half the number o f people without access to improved water supply and sanitation by 2015. For this, the following reforms are needed: Rural water supply: an estimated 1400 rural water points would have to be installed each year, up from 900-1300 in recent years, backed up by the demand responsive approach for sustainability; an effective strategy should be developed for small piped systems; . investment costs must be brought down through increased competition; training in planning and monitoring should be given to provincial and district directorates responsible for water supply Urban water supply over 21,000 connections would need to be installed each year. However, the figure o f 10,000 connections may be more realistic given that the current level i s some 2,500 per year. In addition, investment and operating costs would need to . be reduced, and service levels improved through increased competition; tariffs should be phased up to full cost recovery levels by 2008; and ’With substantially increased investment it may be possible t o reach t h i s objective by 2007. xiii . service to the poor should be improved by privatizing standpost operation, allowing resale o f water by individuals and targeting subsidies to increase direct access by the poor. . Sanitation for urban communities, institutional arrangements need to be aligned so that planning for water supply and sanitation i s coordinated and service i s provided in . the most efficient manner; for rural and peri-urban communities the Government’s Low-Cost Sanitation Program should be scaled up with its focus o n improved latrines; the Government should support increased participation by the private sector in installation o f facilities and by NGOs in hygiene promotion. xlvi. Water resource management issues need urgent attention and adequate budgetav allocations. Water resource management was not a major focus o f this Public Expenditure Review, as to do this would have required a large separate study. Nevertheless, due to its overriding importance in Mozambique i t should be stressed here that substantial efforts will be required for strengthening o f water management capability. The Government is presently formulating an Integrated Water Resource Management Strategy. Since Mozambique needs to be well equipped to negotiate agreements concerning i t s river basins with adjoining countries, provision for negotiation costs should be included in future DNA budgets. Finally, in view o f the severe flooding experienced in 2000 and 2001, there i s an urgent need for the government to develop a practical flood forecasting, warning and management policy, strategy and program. The Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey (ETSDS) xlvii. The ETSDS o f 2002 was a pilot survey o f the primary health system to track the transfer o f hnds from the central government, to provinces, districts and health posts. The hypothesis was that delays in budget execution, as well as weak systems o f control, with consequent scope for leakages and discretion in the allocation o f resources, may adversely affect the quality and efficiency o f service delivery. In fact the ETSDS found that record-keeping was so poor that it was impossible to determine whether there was leakage o f funds between the different levels. I t did, however, turn up evidence o f leakage o f drugs between the provincial and the district level. A s mentioned above, the survey confirmed that the user charge system is inequitable, lacks transparency and creates scope for staff to pocket the moneys collected. Finally, the survey found that only 80 percent o f staff were actually in post at any one time. The survey, in sum, revealed important information about the system’s functioning and pointed the way to improvements. Several o f its recommendations have been cited above. Overall the ETSDS was a successful venture and should be repeated in the health ministry and other ministries as a means o f improving service quality. xiv Key recommendations xlviii. Here follows a very brief bullet-form summary o f selected key recommendations that emerge from the Public Expenditure review. (A detailed action plan, listing recommendations by sector, may be found in Table 36 in Annex I p. 108.) A distinction , i s made between reforms whose implementation i s relatively straightfonvard given the political will, and reforms involving complexity in implementation, requiring persistent commitment and technical assistance as well as political will. . Straightforward reforms This Public Expenditure Review should be disseminated with a view to strengthening the capacity o f Government staff to execute future PERs . themselves. Government accounts at the central bank and commercial banks should be . inventoried and consolidated. This will enable cash planning and save resources. The budget and the budget execution reports should reflect, in full, the receitas . prbprias in many ministries and all donor h d i n g . Completion rates at the primary school level should be raised using a combination o f programs, including curriculum reform, in-service teacher education programs, reduction o f school fees (formal or informal) at the primary level and decentralization o f several planning and resource allocation . responsibilities to the districts. The correspondence o f the payroll and the establishment (government employment roll) should be investigated to identify possible “ghost employees” . in education and elsewhere. In roads, full funding should be provided for periodic road maintenance, and . periodic maintenance should be given a suitable institutional home. The urban water supply and sanitation programs should be accelerated, and water tariffs should be raised gradually until full-cost pricing is reached in 2008. . Reforms involving complexity The spending cycle should be linked to objectives, and monitored using reliable data. Using the PARPA as the vehicle, all the key ministries should establish explicit l i n k s between expenditure and objectives, and between these and outcomes. The monitoring process should inform subsequent rounds o f spending in the context o f the medium term financial f’i-amework o f the PARPA. In this context, public expenditure reviews will become part o f the normal work o f the ministries. This would create a demand for reliable data on expenditures . and program outputs. Civil service reform i s urgently needed to raise productivity by strengthening the link between performance and compensation, and to reduce the dependence o f the ministries on side payments. In the case o f education, salary moderation i s called for, at least at the secondary level, in order to permit the system to expand. xv . Health policy documents should be consolidated in a single planning system with prioritization linked to resource allocation, and output monitoring should be strengthened. This would require completing the planned program classifier o f expenditures, and implementing the detailed functional classifier adopted by the Ministry o f Finance in 2001. 17 CHAPTER 1. INTRODUCTION 1. This i s the second (and final) phase of the Public Expenditure Review (PER) for Mozambique. The first phase, initiated in 2000 and completed in 2001, and termed the Public Expenditure Management Review (PEMR), dealt with the financial management system. I t developed a large agenda o f reform in all o f the parts o f the expenditure cycle: budgeting, execution, accounting, and auditing. Jointly with the Mozambican authorities, a final report was produced which included a time-bound action plan. 2. This, the second phase o f the PER, covers aspects o f sectoral spending in four major sectors: education, health, roads and water. These sectors were selected because they account for 5 1 percent o f government spending and for 56 percent o f the civil service, and are among the six “fundamental areas o f action” in the Action Plan for the Reduction o f Absolute Poverty (termed PARPA, viz. Mozambique’s Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper). This second phase o f the PER also provides an update to the reader about progress with the action plan o f the first phase, the PEMR. Finally, i t reports briefly o n a pilot expenditure tracking exercise carried out in the specific case o f health, the Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey’. The PER i s a joint product o f the Government and the Bank, each taking the lead in different sectors. 3. The main objectives o f the PER 2ndphase are to examine allocative efficiency and cost-effectiveness, as well as the poverty orientation o f spending. Among the yardsticks used for examining the rate o f service delivery are the targets set in the Government’s PARPA and also the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs). Although the PARPA (Republic of Mozambique, 2001) and the first annual progress report o n the PARPA (Republic o f Mozambique, 2003) did not take o n the MDGs as the Mozambican Government’s o w n goals, the MDGs can serve as a useful benchmark to permit comparison with other countries. The scope o f the in uiry i s limited. Agriculture i s omitted because, although 4. 3 some preparation was done , the full background paper by the Ministries o f Finance and o f Agriculture was still under preparation at the time o f going to press. Conceming HIV/AIDS, research was done on the disease in general, on its macroeconomic impact, and o n its impact in the educational sector, and some information was generated o n i t s impact in the health sector. But a major study o n H I V / A I D S and i t s impact o n the health sector, and measures to be taken, i s due to start during 2003, led by DNPO. I t was not possible to reflect the results o f this study in the PER. *One o f the objectives o f the first phase o f the PER was to do an expenditure tracking survey. This work, which was arranged by DNPO with DfID funding and execution by consultants, was substantially slowed down and i s therefore reported on in the 2”d phase o f the PER. See Finney (2003), and DNPO and DNEA (2003). 18 CHAPTER 2. MACROECONOMIC AND CROSS- CUTTING ISSUES A. THE CURRENT MACROECONOMIC CONTEXT 5. This section shows that Mozambique underwent a cycle o f swift monetary growth and inflation followed by traditional adjustment process o f demand restriction, the effects o f which are likely to beleaguer the economy for some time. On the fiscal side, the late 1990s saw a massive expansion in spending, but the perspective i s that spending be contained to 26 percent o f GDP by 2005. The major policy consequence o f this discussion i s that there will be a need for concentration on improving the quality o f expenditures. 6. Mozambique’s growth averaged a spectacular 9.4percentfrom 1997 to 2002 (Table l ) , driven by megaproject construction, investment from neighboring countries, buoyant donor support, and healthy agricultural growth. The 2000 floods reduced growth to 1.6 percent but the economy recovered quickly, growing at 13.8 percent the following year. There i s probably some overstatement in these numbers owing to the lack o f survey data in the agricultural value added estimates. Furthermore, there i s no room for complacency. Over the medium term, high growth rates, in particular in the agricultural sector, could be put at risk by constraints to further improvements in productivity, such as land rights, transportation costs and volatile international prices. 7. The country is experiencing thefall-out from the easy money o f the late 1990s. Reorganization o f the banking system in the mid-1990s, together with tight money, resulted in single-digit inflation up to 1999. Lax monetary policy (M2 growth o f 35 percent in 1999) induced a rush o f inflation o f 13 percent in 2000 and as the exchange rate weakened pari passu, inflation worsened to 17 percent in 2002. In response, monetary policy was steadily tightened by increasing reserve requirements and by raising the bank rate. Inflation finally fell to 9 percent by the end o f 2002, at the cost o f extremely high interest rates, e.g. prime o f over 35 percent at end-2002. The small and medium-sized firm sector i s in recession, while growth is driven by large f i r m s not dependent o n Mozambican financial markets. There i s an implication for government borrowing: further pressure arising from domestic financing at this time would arrest the recovery o f the small and medium-sized firm sector. 19 Table 1. Basic macroeconomic indicators I 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 , P e r c e n t a g e , unless o t h e r w i s e s t a t e d Real GDP growth rate a 11.1 12.6 7.5 1.6 13.8 9.9 7.0 Nominal GDP (Mt trillions) 40.5 46.9 51.9 56.9 73.9 92.8 107 'Nominal GDP (US$ billions) 3.51 3.96 4.09 3.63 3.57 3.92 4.19 Inflation (period average) 6.4 0.6 2.9 12.7 9.0 16.8 8.5 gross domestic savings/GDP 8.1 10.8 13.7 14.0 21.0 21.6 20.7 'InvestmentlGDP 20.6 24.2 36.7 36.4 37.0 45.7 49.5 Interest rate (commercial lending rate) 24.4 19.6 19.0 22.7 25.5 lCurrent account deficitlGDP (excl.grants) -17.7 -18.9 -28.2 -28.7 -23.1 -29.2 -34.8 Exchange rate (000 M t / US$) 11.5 11.9 12.7 15.7 20.7 23.7 25.5 NF'V external debvexports (percent) 709.2 549.1b 212.0b 194.4 116.7 99.8 96.3 Sources: Mozambican authorities; World Bank staff estimates and projections. "GDP in 2002 was M t 93 trillion or about $3.9 billion at the exchange rate o f M t 23,695 = $1. The sharp decreases in extemal debt in 1999-2001 were due to the Highly Indebted Poor Countries (HIPC) and Enhanced HIPC operations in those years. The massive reduction i s mainly a book entry because Mozambique was not servicing most o f its debt in the mid-1990s. The actual impact was a reduction in extemal debt service from about $100 million annually in the 1990s to $50 million after the Enhanced HIPC. 8. The exchange rate is fullyflexible. Nevertheless the real exchange rate overshot during 2001 owing to a loss o f confidence in the currency, arising partly from problems in the financial sector. As these problems were partially resolved, the Metical strengthened in real terms during 2002. 9. Mozambique has made important progress in trade policy. The top tariff rate was lowered to 25 percent during 2003. Rates on capital goods and intermediates are between five and 10 percent. Further reductions in tariffs will follow as the SADC trade protocol is implemented. Management o f customs has been contracted out, leading to increases in efficiency o f collection which have more than compensated for the decline in the tariff rates during the 1990s. 10. A new arsenal o f tax legislation is now ready." With a view to long-term fiscal sustainability, a value added tax was introduced in 1999. The value added tax is now the largest single taxation item (though the bulk o f i t falls o n imports). A large taxpayer unit was launched in 2001. A new income tax law was passed in 2002, rationalizing corporate and personal income taxes, reducing the corporate tax from 35 to 32 percent, and broadening the tax base. A new code o f fiscal incentives was passed, establishing standard concessions and transparent rules for foreign investors. 11. Dejkits after grants were relatively low until 2000, thanks to a prudent fiscal stance accompanied by substantial external assistance (see Table 2). Combined with a prudent monetary policy, especially in the period 1996 to 1998, and a program o f structural reforms based mainly o n privatization, tax and customs reform and trade liberalization, this resulted in l o w inflation, highprivate investment and high growth rates. At the same time, since 1998 there has been a shift in resources in favor o f health, education and agriculture, reflecting an increasing anti-poverty focus. Education, health loFor a thorough review o f tax in Mozambique, see Coelho et al. (2001). 20 and agriculture increased their combined share in total budgetary allocations from 29 percent in 1998 to 39 percent in 2001. Table 2. Government finance, 1997-2003 (percentage o f GDP) 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 _ _ _ _ A c t u a l - - - - Est. Proj. :otal revenue 11.3 11.4 12.0 13.1 13.0 13.5 14.4 'otal expenditure and net lending 23.5 21.6 24.7 29.4 31.4 32.2 28.6 Current expenditure 10.6 11.2 12.2 13.8 14.2 14.4 15.5 Compensation t o employees a 3.6 4.5 5.8 6.8 6.6 6.5 7.1 Goods and services 3.8 3.9 3.7 3.9 3.9 3.8 4.2 Interest o n public debt 1.3 1.o 0.6 0.2 0.6 1.2 1.1 Domestic 0.1 0.0 0.0 0.0 0.4 0.9 0.9 External 1.2 0.9 0.6 0.2 0.2 0.3 0.2 Transfer payments 1.9 1.9 2.1 2.9 3.0 3 .O 3.1 Capital expenditure 11.9 9.8 11.6 13.7 14.1 13.7 13.0 O f which: locally financed 1.8 2.1 3.4 4.4 4.6 3.5 3.5 Net lending 1.o 0.6 0.9 1.9 3.1 4.0 0.0 O f which: locally financed 0.9 -0.6 0.0 1.6 3.1 2.4 -0.2 h e r a l l balance before grants -11.7 -10.5 -13.2 -16.7 -18.0 -18.7 -14.2 ;rants received 9.1 8.1 11.7 12.0 13.0 10.9 10.4 Project 4.8 4.0 5.4 6.7 8.1 7.5 6.7 Nonproject 4.3 4.1 6.3 5.3 4.9 3.4 3.7 >vera11balance after grants -2.6 -2.4 -1.5 -4.6 -4.9 -7.8 -3.8 Jet external borrowing 5.7 4.6 1.8 2.9 2.4 5.7 4.2 Jet domestic fmancing -3.1 -2.3 -0.3 0.8 1.9 1.6 -0.7 'ransfer o f HIPC assistance 0.9 0.7 0.5 0.3 cfemorandum item: 3xpenditure & net lending (US$ mil.) 825 856 1010 1067 1121 1261 1198 lources: Mozambican authorities; World Bank staff estimates and projections. The figures for 1999 exclude, and those for 2000 include, wage outlays that were payable in 1999 but delayed until ,000 pending re-certification o f civil servants. Bank o f Mozambique transfer o f assistance under the original HIPC by multilateral donors. 12. However, fiscal policy continues to suffer from high deficits before grants, which rose from 11 percent o f GDP in 1998 to 17 percent in 2000 and 19 percent in 2002 (Table 2). Underpinning these results was a substantial increase in expenditures - which grew at 17 percent annually in real terms from 1997 to 2002 - and which was not matched by higher revenue. The sharp increase in 1999-2002 was due in large part to bailouts o f two banks which could have been avoided if the privatization process had been better prepared and executed, and if the state had h l l y divested from the banks and pursued appropriate banking supervision. I t was also due to an increase in the civil service wage bill o f 46 percent in real terms between 1999 and 200211, and to higher social spending made possible by HIPC debt relief. '' Thus the bill grew by 13 percent per year between 1999 and 2002, w e l l in excess o f GDP growth. 21 13. Thefiscal position of 2000-2002 cannot be maintained and, if not corrected, will threaten macroeconomic stability and growth. Until now, these deficit levels have only been possible because o f high levels o f foreign grants. External assistance i s likely to remain high in the short run, but in the very long run grants are likely to converge towards the average in Sub-Saharan Africa, which i s around 4 percent o f GDP (against 11 percent o f GDP in 2002 in the case o f Mozambique).12 Therefore, fiscal adjustment has become a priority o f Government policy. This effort will combine a relatively demanding revenue effort with measures to restrain expenditures. 14. The macro framework envisages important changes on the revenue and spending sides. Table 3 presents the most probable scenario, o n the basis o f reasonable assumptions o f economic growth, revenue capability (see paragraph 10 on page 19), and donor contributions (with grants averaging some US$350 million annually). The fluctuations in growth between 7 and 12 percent reflect the megaprojects (with their contributions rising during construction), as well as other direct foreign investment, continued donor support, and agricultural expansion. Revenue increased to 13.5 percent o f GDP in 2002 and i s programmed to reach 15.2 percent o f GDP in 2005. For sustainability, revenue should reach 16-17 percent by 2010. On the expenditure side, spending i s programmed to fall, in line with the medium term perspective o f the Government’s Action Plan for the Reduction o f Absolute Poverty (PARPA), from the very high level o f 32 percent o f GDP in 2002 to 29 percent in 2003,26 percent in 2005 and 24 percent in 2010. This represents a considerable reduction in percentage terms - two percentage points per year - but in real terms expenditures are still growing at 4 percent per year between 2002 and 2010. Hence i t i s not politically unrealistic. This should be accompanied by a re-focusing o f public expenditures in priority areas while improving the efficiency and poverty incidence o f public spending. l2Note that this PER has projections only as far as 2005, and does not attempt to make projections for the outer years on the basis o f this assumption. 22 Table 3. Macro framework, 1997-2005 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 - - A c t u a l - - Est. P r o j e c t e d loutput and prices Real GDP growth rate a 11.1 12.6 7.5 1.6 13.8 9.9 7.0 11.9 9.8 Inflation (period average) 6.4 0.6 2.9 12.7 9.0 16.8 8.5 6.0 5.0 Exchange rate (000 Mt/US$) 11.5 11.9 12.7 15.7 20.7 23.7 25.5 27.0 28.0 Money ( a s a p e r c e n t a g e o f G D P ) M o n e y and quasi-money 18.6 18.6 22.7 29.5 29.5 28.3 29.1 34.5 39.8 N e t foreign assets -2.2 -0.5 1.4 7.6 10.6 10.0 10.3 10.3 10.3 N e t domestic assets 2.5 2.4 6.0 10.9 13.1 13.0 13.7 18.7 24.9 Credit to the government -11.1 -12.0 -10.8 -9.0 -5.7 -3.6 -3.8 -1.6 1.5 Credit t o the rest o f the economy 13.6 14.3 16.8 19.9 18.9 16.5 17.5 20.3 23.4 Public Finance Total revenue 11.3 11.4 12.0 13.1 13.0 13.5 14.4 14.9 15.2 Total expenditure and net lending 23.5 21.6 24.7 29.4 31.4 32.2 28.6 26.6 25.9 Foreign financed dev. expenditures 10.0 7.6 8.2 9.3 9.5 10.2 9.5 8.9 8.5 Interest 1.3 1.0 0.6 0.2 0.6 1.2 1.1 0.8 0.7 Domestic non-interest expenditures 12.0 11.7 15.0 19.6 21.3 19.1 17.7 16.7 16.5 Overall balance before grants -11.7 -10.5 -13.2 -16.7 -18.0 -18.7 -14.2 -11.7 -10.7 Overall balance after grants -2.6 -2.4 -1.5 -4.6 -4.9 -7.8 -3.8 -3.6 -3.4 Financing Foreign financing 5.7 4.6 1.8 2.9 2.4 5.7 4.2 3.0 2.7 Domestic financing -3.1 -2.2 -0.3 0.8 1.9 1.6 -0.7 0.3 0.4 Transfer o f HIPC assistance 0.9 0.7 0.5 0.3 0.3 0.3 Sources: Mozambican authorities; World Bank staff estimates and projections. a GDP in 2002 was Mt 93 trillion or about $3.9 billion at the exchange rate o f Mt 23,695 = $1. Bank o f Mozambique transfer o f assistance under the original HIPC by multilateral donors. Fiscal sustainability 15. A key contribution o f this Review i s to determine whether the spending projections made by the respective sectors are feasible. The focus is on recurrent expenditures because ultimately these are limited by government revenue. Starting with the macro framework exposited in Table 3, the ceiling on spending in the six PARPA priority areas13 i s derived, taking into account the intended increase o f the priority sectors from 68-9 percent to 75 percent o f the total. Next the spending in the biggest sectors - education, health and roads - for the most recent historical year (2001) i s projected forward in such a way as to keep their share in total priority expenditures constant (Table 4). The conclusions are that the projections for roads in the background paper (Herman, 2002), which are consistent with those o f the Roads I11program, are realistic, and have been maintained in the table; l3 The PARPA defined the following as priority (or “fundamental”) areas: education, health, infrastructure (including roads, energy, water), governance (including justice), agriculture and macroeconomic management. 23 . the projections for health in the draft sector expenditure paper (HSER 2002) were overstated, with $187 million recurrent spending projected for 2005. . These projections cap the figure at $170 million; the draft education sector expenditure review (ESER 2002) did not present projections. The projections in Table 4 - with recurrent spending rising to $135 million by 2005 - are o n a path which i s well below that which would be required to put all children through primary school by 2015, the Millennium Development Goal. To achieve the MDG would require external finance for a considerable part o f recurrent expenditures. T a b l e 4. Feasible ceilings on recurrent expenditures in selected sectors 2002 2003 ~~ ~~~ ~~ 2004 2005 - - U S $ m i l l i o n s - - Current expenditures in PARPA priority sectors, v i ~edu-. cation, health, infrastructure (incl. roads, energy, water), governance, agriculture, macroeconomic 40 1 472 495 554 Feasible current expenditures in education, health and roads 269 312 332 373 Education 96 110 116 135 Primary 69 83 87 102 Secondary 26 27 29 33 Health 120 135 147 170 Roads 54 67 69 68 Memorandum items Current expenditures in education, health and roads as: a percentage o f PARPA priority sectors 67 67 67 67 total recurrent spending 48 48 49 51 Sources; See macro framework, Table 3. B. POVERTY AND THE INTERSECTORAL ALLOCATION OF RESOURCES 16. Despite Mozambique’s recent success, it remains one o f the poorest countries in the world. GDP per capita is $2 10 for Mozambique’s population o f 18 million. Some 69 percent o f Mozambicans were below the poverty line in 1997; projections suggest that this figure had fallen by 2001.14 The key determinants o f poverty are slow economic growth until the 1990s; poor educational levels, particularly among women; high dependency rates; l o w agricultural productivity; lack o f employment opportunities; and poor development o f basic infrastructure in rural areas. In the agricultural sector, where poverty rates are higher, fewer than ten percent o f households, poor and non-poor, sell surpluses o f maize, cassava or cotton. Poverty by non-income dimensions i s serious: the health service reaches only two-thirds o f the population; illiteracy i s 60 percent; only 35 percent o f rural people have access to a protected water source. The target eight percent growth rate o f the Poverty Reduction Strategy Paper (PARPA) would reduce the poverty l4See Simler and Harrower (2003). The projections were done using the household survey o f 199617 and the CWIQ survey o f 2001. 24 rate to 50 percent by 2010 and double the consumption level o f poor households in 12 years. 17. I t is hence appropriate that allocations to poverty-oriented expenditures have risen. Current budget allocations to health and education rose from 4.1 percent o f the GDP in 1998 to 6.3 percent in 2002 (Table 5) -this on top o f cumulative GDP growth o f 35 percent in real terms in the period. As is shown in subsequent chapters, with the exception o f upper secondary school and possibly tertiary health services, education and health benefits are distributed progressively compared to the distribution o f consumption. Further rises in “priority spending” (largely education and health) are anticipated in the PARPA - from 68-69 percent o f the total (current and investment) budget in 2001 to possibly as much as 75 percent in 2005. Table 5. Actual recurrent expenditure by functional classification, 1998-2002 Item 1998 1999 2000 200 1 2002 actual actual actual actual est. _ _ p e r c e n t a g e o f G D P - - T o t a l recurrent expenditures 11.2 12.2 13.8 14.2 14.4 General A d m i n i s t r a t i o n 2.3 2.6 2.2 1.8 1.8 Education a 2.0 2.5 3.2 3.0 2.8 Health 2.1 2.4 2.8 3.5 3.5 Agriculture 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2 Roads 0.7 0.7 1.o 0.7 1.4 Water 0.1 0.1 0.1 Residual, p l u s a l l other sectors 3.9 3.7 4.2 5.0 6. I Source: Extracted from Annex I ,Table 38. a Education includes primary, secondary and tertiary. The residual arises because the projected education, health, education, water and roads are subtracted from the ceiling recurrent expenditures. I t also includes all sectors other than General Administration, Education, Health, Agriculture, Roads and Water. T h e increase to 6.1 percent o f GDP in 2002 does not result from fiscal pressures in one or other o f the “non-priority” sectors but from the way the residual is computed. 18. The split between recurrent and investment expenditures is best examined for the year 2000 as for that year, and that year only, hllinformation on donor funding is available (Table 6). Donor funding accounts for 46 percent o f all spending on education, 70 percent in health, 75 percent in roads and 75 percent in water. M u c h o f this is o n the recurrent account, e.g. drugs in health, periodic maintenance in roads. 25 Table 6. Recurrent and investment expenditure, by function, 2000 ~ Recurrrent Investment Total - p e r c e n t a g e of G D P - - General Administration 2.2 1.7 3.9 Education a 3.2 1.8 5.0 Health 2.8 0.6 3.5 Agriculture 0.3 2.9 3.2 Roads 1.o 0.7 1.6 Water 0.1 0.7 0.8 Other 4.2 5.3 9.5 Total 13.8 13.7 27.5 Source: Extracted from Annex I .Table 38. a Education includes primary, secondary and tertiary. All sectors less General Administration, Education, Health, Agriculture, Roads and 19. Somefurther reallocation o f resources towards the health sector may be needed. As Table 7 shows, Mozambique’s education and health spending surpasses, and water spending falls short of, the relative levels o f countries at a similar level o f deve10pment.l~ Table 7. Budgeted sectoral allocations (recurrent and capital accounts) relative to total spending for selected countries, 2000/01 Malawi Mozambique Uganda - as a p e r c e i t a g e of t o t a l s p e n d i n g - Education 17.7 23.7 19.4 Health 9.8 11.4 10.8 Agriculture 11.1 4.0 4.4 Roads 3.8 5.2 13.7 Water 5.1 2.4 5.8 Sources: Budget books for Malawi, Mozambique and Uganda. Such intercountry comparisons must be taken with extreme caution because o f differences in measurement and in political, social and cultural factors. In this case the comparison might be taken to suggest that the reallocations towards the social sectors have gone beyond those o f other countries and that it may be time for an increased focus . o n infrastructure. More pertinently, the analysis in the sectoral chapters shows that: in education, reallocations within the sector, and efficiency improvements, will probably be sufficient to achieve the key reforms, but even so the goal o f universal primary school completion is unlikely to be attained by 2015 (para. . 104, p. 61); in health, reallocations within the sector will not be sufficient to provide even modest levels o f assistance to HIV/AIDS patients (para. 142, p. 76) ; l5I t was decided to use budgeted resources for this inter-country comparison rather than actuals. This i s because the data on actuals o f the other countries i s o f mixed quality, frequently not accounting fully for donor-funded spending. Whereas the budgets generally reflect donor fhding quite well. 26 . in roads, the desired program i s adequately funded barring one element: the Government will need to fund periodic maintenance fully, by making an appropriate budgetary allocation, which could be funded by raising the petroleum . tax to its previous level in real terms (para. 172, p. 86); in water, reallocations are called for, but these will not be sufficient to accomplish the Government’s goals in urban water (para. 200, p. 94) and in sanitation (para. 202, p. 94). the called-for civil service reform with a major salary decompression (para. 40, p. 36) can probably be attained within the projected budget envelope o f 7 percent o f GDP, so that no additional reallocations from Government (or donors) are needed. l6 20. The decision as to which o f the competing needs - education, health, roads, water - should receive additional resources is not an easy one, because all the sectors make important contributions to economic growth and to poverty reduction. This study has not sought to quantify the marginal welfare impacts o f competing sectoral investments. Given the poor state o f monitoring (para. 35, p. 33), absorptive capacity i s an issue in all the sectors, particularly in health, with i t s weak links between inputs and outputs (para. 115, p. 67), and water, where substantial under-execution o f the budget i s the norm (Table 33, p. 98). This said, it may be that spending will have to increase in the health area merely in order to protect the gains made hitherto, because the health posts and clinics will be increasingly beset by H N patients with opportunistic diseases. Whereas in the other three sectors the existing allocations will be sufficient to preserve existing gains and make modest progress, provided intra-sectoral reallocations are done and provided the increased fuel tax moneys are applied to the periodic maintenance o f roads. At the margin donor funds could be found to assist, but in the long run this would likely constitute a redistribution from other programs because aggregate grants are unlikely to exceed their current dollar level o f between $350-$450 million annually. I t is hard to avoid the conclusion that further savings will need to be found in order to provide at least a modest response to the ravages o f HIV/AIDS. 21. Further examination will be needed to determine where the additional savings should be found, as this Review did not seek to examine in detail any sectors other than education, health, roads, water and agriculture. Nevertheless some suggestions can be made as to potential candidates for expenditure cuts: l6Accurate costing for a significant salary decompression has n o t yet been done because the mode and the extent o f decompression have not yet been determined. However, it i s l i k e l y that the c i v i l service reform could be attained w i t h the projected budget envelope o f 7 percent o f GDP (the current figure), over the next four or five years, because (a) projected G D P growth o f about 7 percent (inreal terms) provides considerable r o o m for maneuver, (b) the c i v i l service program ought t o freeze salaries at their current real levels, so that a l l the growth in the compensation envelope can b e allocated t o salary increases as the reform process gets under way; (c) the c i v i l service reform process will entail substantial redeployment o f staff, reducing the cost o f separations, (d) given the presence o f H I V / A I D S , the attrition rate has increased, providing more openings for redeployments; (e) i t appears that substantial resources are going t o “ghost employees”, at least in one major sector, and that, if t h i s fiding i s confirmed, these resources could be redirected t o f h d the salary decompression. 27 (a) among the PARPA non-priority sectors, which encompass the remaining 40 percent o f the budget, the PARPA identified activities which, while not “fundamental” 17, are nevertheless “complementary activities” to the fundamentals, including policies for sustainable growth (transport and communications, technology, environmental management), social welfare programs, sectoral policies that contribute to income generation (business development, fisheries, mining, industry, tourism), and programs to reduce vulnerability to natural disasters. Consideration could be given to reducing spending on these “complementary activities” by, for instance, holding their allocations constant in real terms or applying a modest percentage decrease throughout in recognition o f the fact that these are not the key priorities; (b) outside o f the “fundamental” and “complementary” areas are some natural candidates which could be considered for reduced spending: defense (budgeted spending for 2002 was $35 million or 3.4 percent o f the overall budget), embassies (budget on the current account for 2002 was $20 million or 6 percent . o f the central government’s share o f the current budget) the “non-priority” part o f the rubric “security and public order” ($20 m i l l i o n or 2 . percent o f the overall budget)” recreation, culture and religion, some o f which might be turned over to the private sector ($13 million or 1.3 percent o f the overall budget). c. UPDATE ON THE REFORM OF FISCAL MANAGEMENT 22. Introduction. This, the 2”d phase o f the PER, i s focused primarily o n sectoral expenditures and i t will not attempt to re-examine these aspects in detail. Instead the aim i s to update the reader on the actions taken arising from the agreed-upon action plans in the PEMR (2001). This will be done by going through the action plan, briefly explaining the objective o f the action, and noting what has been done. The details o n the background to each o f the actions may be sought in the PEMR document (World Bank, 2001a). 23. The PEMR found that thefiscal management system bore serious deficiencies, particularly in public accounting, cash management and auditing. To name the k e y issues: Public accounting covered only a quarter o f Government spending, ignoring receitas prbprias (ministerial own receipts) and donor-funded expenditures. Cash management was inefficient and lacking in transparency because there were large l7The PARPA defined the “fundamental sectors” as education, health, infrastructure (including roads, energy, water), governance (including justice), agriculture, and macroeconomic management. ‘’The Orcamento do Estado Para o Ano 2002 (Maputo, Outubro 2001) has M t 1,807 bn for “Seguranqa e ordem publica” in the overall functional classification of the budget (Table 9, p. 20). I t has Mt 1,350 bn for the same rubric in the listing o f priority expenditures in Table 11 o n page 20. The difference i s Mt 456 bn or about $20 m, or 1.9 % o f total budget o f Mt 23,867 bn. 28 numbers o f Government accounts which were not being tracked. Internal auditing was ineffectual due to a lack o f capacity and funding. 24. The authorities moved boldly to modernize the system in 2001 by passing a new law, the Lei da Administrap70 Financeira do Estado, which in principle modernizes the entire fiscal management system. This bold step was taken in order to correct a set o f difficult legacies from the past: single-entry accounting; a multiplicity o f government accounts rendering cash management impossible; and limited budget coverage in that receitas prbprias (ministerial o w n receipts) were tolerated and donor-funded expenditures not recorded. The key reform o f the new law was to provide for an integrated financial management information system, entitled the Sistema Integrado de Administra@o Financeira do Estado (SISTAFE). In order to prepare the way for the SISTAFE, a three-phase program o f actions was agreed upon with the authorities: “pressing actions” (reproduced in Table 8 below) to be done during the course o f the preparatory work o f the PEMR, “priority actions” (Table 9) to be done during 2002, and medium t e r m actions for the period 2003-2005 (Table 10). 25. Most o f the short term ‘pressing actions were executed (Table 8). A new, more ” detailed functional classifier was introduced into the budget, consistent with UN guidelines, with a view to tracking poverty-related expenditures more accurately. However, its implementation was incomplete because only the broad categories were used. The detailed classifier, which will permit tracking o f poverty-related expenditures, was not implemented but i t i s expected that this will be done in the course o f the introduction o f the information management system SISTAFE. The budget, which previously had been done in real terms, owing to the very high rates o f inflation o f the early 1990s, i s n o w being done in nominal terms. The regulations o f the new financial management law were completed. Restrictions were introduced on banks accounts held by public institutions in that they had to be authorized by the Direcgiio Nacional do Tesouro as a co-holder, and they had to b e closed three months after the budget year to which they applied. Table 8. Summary o f Pressing Actions (was Table 7.1 in PEMR) Area Recommendations Time Status in Frame 2003 Budget formulation Submit 2002 budget using new budget functional End-2001 Partially classification. done (only broad, not the detailed, classifier) Formulate the budget in current prices, starting with the 2002 budget. Done Legal framework Draft the implementation regulations o f the new public March Done finance management l a w (Lei da AdministraGEo 2002 Financeira do Estado). Cash and asset Instructions o n bank accounts o f public institutions: End-2001 Done management authorized by DNT, DNT a co-holder, closed by DNT on March 3 1 o f next year Public accounting 2002 budget execution must be consistent with the I 2001 Partially new budget functional classification. I done. 29 26. Progress with the ‘priority actions ”for 2002 was good but is incomplete. These are dealt with in the following paragraphs. To take the first l i n e o f Table 9, a significant share o f receitas prdprias should have been included in the 2003 budget. Progress to date covers only about h a l f o f the receitas prbprias. An 11-strong list o f items in health and public works are s t i l l excluded, not to mention the education, agriculture and other m i n i ~ t r i e s ’ ~ . expenditures have not yet been included in the Tax Budget; these were to be included in the 2003 Budget (line 1 o f Table 9). 27. Budget execution reporting has improved, but most donor-funded expenditures are still excluded (line 2 o f Table 9). The quarterly budget execution reports now present all actual expenditures using the new budget h c t i o n a l classification, but only in broad categories; the detailed classifier was not implemented. However, the revised appropriation o f November 2002 was not reported in the budget execution report o f the first quarter o f 2003. A major step forward was made in the budget execution report o f the first h a l f o f 2002 when for the first time tables were presented reporting donor-funded expenditures on the investment account. Yet as o f late 2002 the reported executed expenditures were only 8 percent o f the budget plan. 28. Double entry accounting needs to be introduced (item 4 in Table 9). The “complementary period” after the end o f the fiscal year, during which payments may be made for commitments during the financial year, was reduced from three months to two. Some training in double entry accounting was done, but double entry has not yet been introduced throughout the system. The proposed shift from the duode‘cimo system o f replenishment to modified accrual accounting i s probably too ambitious for the time being. Until such time as the SISTAFE system is implemented, it would be more prudent to improve the replenishment system, through appropriate training, and make it more flexible. (See the further discussion at footnote 21, p. 31, and paragraph 39 o n page 36.) 29. Much remains to be done in cash management (item 5 in Table 9). The multiplicity o f Government accounts with the central bank and the commercial banks needs to be inventoried. Although “globalizing accounts” have been created with a view to moving to a single interlinked account arrangement, this has little meaning until such time as all the accounts are interlinked and the Ministry o f Finance i s able to read o f f in real time the amount o f cash held. l 9 Some progress was made in that the “receitas consignadas” in the Budget increased from Mt 48.3 bn in 2001 to Mt 67.6 bn in 2003 (inreal 1998 Mt), viz. an increase o f 40 percent. This amount ($6 m) would be increased by another $3m by adding injust the identified receitasprdprias in the ministries o f health and public works. O f a l i s t o f 11 receitas prdprias in these ministries, turned up by a Government-sponsored study (Austral Consultoria, 1999), none had been included in the 2003 budget. They are: 1. H C M Serviqo de clinica especial. 2. H C M Serviqo de atendimento especial. 3. DirecqHo Nacional da Saude: Venda de medicamentos pel0 Serviqo Nacional de Saude. 4. Centro Regional de Desenvolvimento Sanitaria: Alojamento e habitaqgo pagos pelos estudantes. 5. ProduqHo de material didactico. 6. ComissHo Central de AvaliaqHo e AlienaGHo de Imoveis de habitaqgo do estado. 7. Laboratorio de Engenharia de Maputo: Venda de ensaios laboratoriais. 8. Fundo de Foment0 de HabitaqHo (FFH): Percentagem na venda de imoveis do Estado. 9. FFH: Juros. 10. FFH: Venda de casas construidas com crkdito. 11. ARA-Sul Laboratorio de Engenharia de Moqambique: Venda de iguas brutas. Probably the other ministries would account for at least another $3m. 30 30. Much remains to be done in internal control and auditing (item 6 in Table 9). The internal audit department (IGF) was to have its own budget line, but this was not done. I t was also to be strengthened with new hiring but this i s s t i l l under consideration. The budgetary allocation for the Administrative Tribunal was increased by 10 percent in real terms between 2001 and 2003. I t was proposed that the Administrative Tribunal set up partnerships with private auditing f i r m s and twinning arrangements with foreign supreme audit institutions, but as o f 2003 such arrangements as had been made have had only a l o w level o f impact. Table 9. Summary o f Priority Actions (was Table 7.2 in PEMR) Area Status in 2003 1. Budget coverage Little ac- complished (see text) N o t done 2. Reporting (i) not done, (ii) not done, (iii) partially done Some partial reporting started 3. Legal framework Action plan & regs. done, regulations and according to a time-bound action plan. being imple- mented 4. Public accounting Done Some training launched 5. Cash and asset N o t completed management in commercial banks. Done Create globalizing bank accounts for revenue and N o t completed expenditures in BM. Done 6. Internal control N o t done and auditing reforms to raise IGF’s capacity. Increase budgetary allocation in favor o f the Done (1 0% in Administrative Tribunal (TA) real terms) Grant the TA the ability to set i t s own salary scale. N o t done N o t effectively done 31 3 1. The medium term program offiscal management reform needs to be addressed. The elements in the medium term reform program o f the PEMR (2001), reproduced in Table 10, are still valid and can be addressed while the SISTAFE i s being implemented. Few of them have been addressed so far. I t i s proposed that the authorities seek to adhere to the original timetable. Among the major elements here are: 0 the enhancement o f the role o f the Medium Term Financial Framework.20 Making the MTFF into an operational instrument will aid budgeting and execution in the sectors that are studied in this PER. As i s stressed in the subsequent chapters, the lack o f a medium-term perspective results in purely incremental budgeting (viz. X percent increase over last year’s) with no real link with activities or outputs or outcomes; 0 the introduction o f double-entry accounting, under the cash basis2’; 0 cash planning and budgeting are among the corner stones o f the conceptual business model underlying SISTAFE and an integral part o f the design o f the system. Introducing monthly and annual cash plans will enable more rational use o f resources, resulting in considerable savings because it will be possible to hold less (non-interest-earning) cash overall and resort less frequently to using treasury bills. This will be done while the SISTAFE is being installed. Once the SISTAFE i s running the development o f such plans will be strengthened; 0 reports on domestic and external debt, lending, cash flows, and tax expenditures alongside the Conta Geral do Estado will enable a comprehensive view o f state finances which i s one o f the ultimate objectives o f the new Financial Management Law22; 0 auditing the state accounts (Conta Geral do Estado) within 12 months o f the close of the financial year will enable Parliament to exercise closer control o f the expenditure process. Whereas presently the long delaysz3in issuance o f the documents render the documents irrelevant. 2o Note that the DirecqBo Nacional do Plano e Orqamento issued a study, “A experihcia com o Cenario Fiscal do MBdio Prazo e opq8es para seu futuro desenvolvimento” (2003). 21 A modified &basis o f accounting w i l l be applied with the implementation o f SISTAFE through the introduction o f a budget credit system against which commitments will be registered and accounted for when a transaction i s incurred. T h e release o f credits will serve as virtual cash allocations and w i l l determine and control the ceiling o f spending per budget line item. In the meantime, while the SISTAFE system i s being implemented, the replenishment (“duod&cimo”) system needs to be made more flexible and training should be given to enable the lowest level units to operate within it efficiently. See also the discussion at paragraph 39 o n page 36. 22 Note that under the cash basis o f accounting, as defined by the Public Sector Committee o f the International Federation o f Accountants (IFAC), it i s standard to include information about accruals, as memorandum items, not ledger entries. The following are normally reported: financial assets receivable, long term debt, contingent liabilities and guarantees, and other liabilities. 23 The Conta Geral do Estado for 2001 became available to the public in early 2003. 32 Table 10. Summary o f Actions for the Medium Term (was table 7.3 in PEMR) 4rea Recommendation rime Status in 2003 Frame Budget formulation Medium Term Financial Framework (MTFF): Reinforce 1003 !Jot yet done. the MTFF by (i) integrating it in the decree for the revised regulations o f the SISTAFE and ( ii)making i t a public document. Planning documents: (i) Eliminate the Three-Year Not yet done Investment Plan (PTIP) as a stand-alone document and treat investment expenditures w i t h the normal budget formulation process. (ii) Develop the Economic and Social Plan (PES) as the key instrument to monitor and program the implementation o f the PARPA. Public accounting Launch the introduction o f double-entry accounting. 2004 Now expected in 2004 Free the accounting department (DNCP) o f all activities 2003- Not yet done not related to accounting and reporting. 2004 Reporting Develop and make available on a regular basis, financial 2003- Now envisaged reports in addition to the Conta Geral do Estado, starting 2004 for a later phase with ( i ) a report on short and medium-term external and o f the domestic debt, ( ii) a report o n lending and on-lending, SISTAFE. ( iii) reports on cash flows and (iv) a report o n tax expenditures. Cash and asset Introduce a treasury single account simultaneously with Sept. management the new integrated financial management information 2003 system. Improve financial planning with the introduction o f 2004 Now expected annual cash plans, budget implementation plans and in 2004 monthly cash plans. Tax administration: (i) Extend the current mechanism o f Not yet done VAT collection through the banking system to other taxes after assessing i t s feasibility by banks operating in Mozambique. ( ii) Introduce, whenever possible, a single document (Documento Unico) for the collection o f all taxes. Internal control and Ensure that the state accounts (Conta Geral do Estado, 2004- To be done in auditing CGE) are audited within 12 months after the end o f the 2005 2004 fiscal year, starting with the 2003 CGE. Launch budget evaluation function. 32. An ambitious timetable has been set for the installation o f the SISTAFE. During 2001 and 2002, the technical unit for reform o f State Financial Management (UTRAFE, “Unidade Ttcnica para a Refonna da Administraqiio Financeira do Estado”) was set up and the regulations for the new law were prepared. At the same time planning was done for the installation o f the information management system SISTAFE. A budget o f $27 million was developed, and funding for the bulk o f it was secured from donors including the World Bank. The timetable (UTRAFE 2002, p.12, UTRAFE 2003, p. 2) anticipates procurement (viz. determination o f the I T architecture and account component package) in the second half o f 2003, roll-out o f the system in the Ministries o f Finance and Education in the last quarter o f 2003, and extension to the remaining sector ministries in 2004. The focus will initially be on the introduction o f a single treasury account in 2003 for all line ministries and the improvement o f accounting. After 2004 the focus will shift 33 to internal control, auditing, accounting for state property (PatrimBnio) and debt management. 33. During 2001 the IMF and the Bank engaged the government, in the context o f the HIPC, in an overall plan for public expenditure management reform which brings together the different elements - P E M R (2001), the SISTAFE, and items in the Fund’s Poverty Reduction and Growth Facility (PRGF). This was termed the Public Expenditure Management Country Assessment and Action Plan (Fiscal Affairs Department et al., 2002). I t developed 15 benchmarks o f the quality o f public expenditure management. A March 2002 Board paper reported that, as with most HIPC countries, Mozambique scored poorly, with 5 benchmarks met. I t i s not necessary to report the details here because the key problems were identified in the PEMR (2001) and the update above conveys the actions which the Government is taking to right the situation.24 D. CROSS-CUTTING ISSUES IN SECTORAL SPENDING 34. Several specific themes came up repeatedly during the work on the five sectors (education, health, roads, water, agriculture). I t i s economical to treat them all in a . consolidated fashion here: a policy process which underplays prioritization and monitoring o f outcomes, . . leading to poor statistics; chronic underspending in certain sectors; . the need for civil service reform; and the need for progress with decentralization. Another common theme i s the impact o f HIV/AIDS. Since there are differences in its causality and the extent o f its impact across sectors, this discussion i s placed in the sectoral chapters - in education sector on page 59, and in health on page 76. The policy process, expenditure prioritization, and outcomes 35. Problems with the policy process lead to poor monitoring and serious informational gaps. Mozambique faces the dual problems o f a lack o f government leadership and a lack o f prioritization in expenditures. In turn this is linked with a lack o f focus on outcomes, as was stressed by the f i r s t annual progress report o n the PARPA (Republic o f Mozambique, 2003). L i k e some other countries in receipt o f large amounts o f external finding, Government does not consistently direct expenditures in line with nationally determined objectives. The policy process does not always consist o f formulating a strategy and then having donors contribute to specified parts o f it. Instead donors make proposals and, in a decentralized fashion, projects are taken on. The result i s a mosaic o f programs based on different philosophies, o f differing quality, and with 24 In addition, DfID undertook a fiduciary r i s k assessment covering several o f these areas (Lernstrup, 2002). 34 widely differing cost structures (e.g. in school construction, waterpoint development). The symptoms o f this fundamental problem manifest themselves in several forms: I Outcomes are frequently not measured or reported, and in general have scant bearing on the policy process. I t is extremely difficult to obtain data on donor-funded expenditures, and particularly actuals. Hence it i s difficult to obtain information o n unit costs and it i s virtually impossible, without a dedicated PER-type o f exercise, to compare the relative efficiency o f differing approaches and programs. There are few data on programs. Basic information such as their geographical location, the intended beneficiaries, disbursements, measures o f their output and impact, etc. are hard to come by. This was true to a greater or lesser extent o f all the sectors studied - education, health, roads and water. The financial projections in the Medium Term Financial Framework (MTFF) and latterly the PARPA are only loosely related to actions undertaken. I Government strategies sometimes consist o f broadly expressed ideals and statements o f intention to produce precise analyses and recommendations (see esp. the PESS, Health Sector Strategic Plan). 36. Consequently the sector-wide programs failed in their informational aims. A sobering discovery o f this public expenditure review i s that none o f the sector-wide programs in education, health, roads or agriculture automatically provided data linking expenditures, outputs and outcomes. Similarly the review o f the policy process by Chichava et al. (2001) found that the mechanisms o f collection and dissemination o f data within government are insufficient. W h i l e most sectors produce vast amounts o f data, the key elements for public expenditures and for decision-making were often absent. Specialized and arduous efforts were required to obtain basic expenditure data (especially donor-funded expenditures) in these sectors (as w e l l as in ~ a t e r ) . There ~ a ~ ~ ’ ~was conspicuous lack o f data on ministerial own receipts (receitas prbprias) in education, health and agriculture. In health, there were no breakdowns o f spending by level (e.g. hospitals vs. health posts), location (capital, town, rural) or vertical program (e.g. malaria). 37. I t is proposed that the Government seek to correct the policy process by using the PARPA to prioritize and expand its leadership. The Government has already started this process by initiating work on more precisely defining the targets o f the PARPA and bringing the “priority ministries” closer to the process o f pursuing these goals. During 2003 the Government initiated a series o f “Poverty Observatories” at which the key documents - particularly the PARPA and the Annual Progress Report o n the PARPA - 25 Reliable data on donor-funded expenditures were not available for education for any recent year other than 2000; they were not available for health for 2001; those o n roads were made available, but are not reliable for any recent year. 26 For details o n sources, and the nature o f the gaps in information, the reader i s referred to Table 38 o n page 111. 35 would be discussed with the sectoral ministries and with key stakeholders outside the . Government. To support this process, the following could be added: An element o f public expenditure analysis and review should progressively be integrated into the cycle o f financial management. This may entail analyzing a handful o f sectors per year, and may incorporate the hiring-in o f the necessary skills. In time, such review could become a constitutive element o f the budget cycle, as has been done in some countries o f the region (see Moon, 2003), although this i s likely to require considerably more capacity than i s available at present. The review o f the policy process by Chichava et al. (2001) recom- mended the creation o f a cadre o f public policy analysts. The Ministry o f Finance i s seeking, through this PER, to create such in-house capacity, but much . remains to be done; The action plan o f the Public Expenditure Management Review (2001) should be completed, creating mechanisms for reporting information o n donors’ . contributions; Civil service reform i s needed, linking compensation to performance, and providing appropriate levels o f compensation (see p. 36). The present environment o f inadequate compensation creates undue incentives at the ministerial and sub-ministerial level for seeking donor-funded projects as these usually provide some level o f benefits to the operating units. This in turn becomes the driver o f project selection, rather than the desired “bird’s eye view” which determines the portfolio in the light o f the overall goals and outcomes. At the same time as civil service reform there should be a general tightening up o f the conditions for ministerial o w n receipts (receitas prbprias); for if there i s proper compensation there is no need for extra-budgetary transfers to support . hiring and staff retention. The donors should increase the share o f their contributions that i s channeled directly through the budget. In order to increase their confidence in the fiduciary system, the Government should pursue the program o f reform o f public finance - thoroughgoing procurement reform, improved accounting and auditing, and the establishment o f the information management system SISTAFE. Chronic sectoral underspending 38. Some sectors underspend regularly, especially the water and health sectors, and in some years in the roads sector. The water sector spent an average o f 63 percent o f i t s current budget allocation between 1999 and 2001. The health sector spent 86 percent o f i t s recurrent budget in 1999 and 80 percent in 200027. There are considerable intra- province differences in execution rates in the health sector, e.g. in ZambCzia, execution rates for the 1999 budget range from 98 percent to 52 percent (HSER 2002 p. 66). ’’See also the study by Harding (2003). 36 39. There were two main causes o f underspending: (a) the lack o f capacity to operate the duode‘cimo allocation system, which i s essentially one o f replenishment o f accounts against rendering o f accounts (viz. proof o f correct use o f the funds, orprestaqio de contas) in the previous month; and (b) the timing problem since late arrival o f the first duode‘cimos puts some sectors (e.g. education) in acute difficulties because their greatest needs arise at the beginning o f the year. In some ministries the first duode‘cimo arrived between five and seven months late in recent years. The replenishment arrangement - standard in the region - i s good because i t creates a powerful incentive for accountability, helping to limit overspending. Specific training is needed in accounting and the use o f the duode‘cimo system to make i t work without undue delays. The timing problem can readily be addressed by having the relevant sectoral ministries agree with the Ministry o f Finance to align the time pattern o f advances more closely to the time pattern o f expenditures. (Eventually this arrangement ought to change as coverage o f the SISTAFE increases, gradually including more operational units in the “single treasury account”: for under this arrangement no advances will be given, but operational u n i t s will make commitments, payments for which are executed by the central treasury.) Civil service reform 40. I n most sectors, salaries are well below comparators (equivalently skilled private sector workers, or civil servants in neighboring countries), particularly at the upper skill levels and for technical and professional staff. Doctors, for instance, are paid about 50 percent less than in Lesotho or Botswana (HSER, 2002). A study in 2002 revealed very large differentials between public sector and private sector compensation (Table 11). After taking into account subsidies and benefits, the private sector premium was 160 percent for nurses and 210 percent for professionals such as accountants. Numbers o f a similar magnitude were turned up by a study in 2000 (Sulemane and Kayizzi-Mugenva, 2001): 200 percent for senior managers, 280 percent for professionals, and 580 percent for unskilled workers. Differentials o f this magnitude are well in excess o f the non- monetary benefits conferred by public service such as security o f employment. Table 11. Ratio of private sector to public sector compensation Occupational group Ratio: private to public compensation a Nurses 2.6 Professionals 3.1 Source: Pesquisa Salarial(2002), Tables 5 and 6. a = salary + subsidies + benefits. Economists, managers, lawyers, auditors, accountants, engineers, I T experts. 41. Poor remuneration undermines the civil service. I t i s difficult to attract high- quality motivated staff, and staff are induced to use various “off-budgets” or dual employment arrangements to supplement their salaries. For instance, some ministries operate funds to which clients contribute in exchange for services, but which are not recorded on the budget. A Government-commissioned study on off-budgets (Austral, 1999) found that substantial funds are not captured by the budget process and that many o f these lack a legal basis - the health ministry in 1998 collected $3.8 million (37 percent 37 o f i t s current budget allocation) and the public works ministry $0.8 million (107 percent o f i t s current budget allocation), in the form o f various fees. None o f this had been moved on-budget by 2002. Some part transferred to staff in the form o f vehicles, training courses and other rewards, as i s done also with the budget category “other goods and services” in health (see HSER 2002). Over-charging beyond the official user fees occurs in the health sector.28 Certain ministries pay under-cover subsidies o f 80-100 percent o f the base salary (Pesquisa Salarial, 2002, p. 3 1). 42. I n one sector - education - certain salaries are well above comparators. The salaries o f secondary school teachers are approximately double the salaries in comparable countries, in per capita GDP terms. Salary moderation may be needed to accomplish the expansion o f the system so as to achieve the poverty reduction and development objectives o f the PARPA. 43, An investigation is urgently needed of the correspondence o f salary payments and the personnel register. Evidence in the education sector suggests that about 15-20 percent o f employees are “ghost workers” (see the education chapter). C i v i l service compensation increased by 46 percent in real terms between 1999 and 200229, rising as a percentage o f GDP from 5.8 in 1999 to 6.5 in 2002. Civil service employment did not increase in anything like this measure. N o breakdown o f the increased pay is available - e.g. to explain the components o f salary increases, increases in death and disability payments due to HIV/AIDS, benefit changes, and increases in personnel. Indeed even the number o f civil servants i s not known with accuracy, estimates ranging from 106,500 (in the year 2001)30 to 121,562 (in the year 2000)31. The number o f workers in the personnel register (SIP, Sistema de Informaq5o de Pessoal) i s also not known with accuracy: it had 83,777 persons in 2001 according to MAE staff32, but 99,158 persons in 2001 according to UTRESP, (2002). Given the lack o f clear information, the deficiency o f the SIP compared to actual employment, the unexplained increases in remuneration, and the alleged ghost employees in certain ministries, it i s urgent that a thorough investigation be launched. I t could be that considerable savings could be made through checking the correspondence o f the personnel register and the salary bill. 44. Thepublic sector reform program w i l l introduce salary reform once the basic personnel reforms are done. The Public Sector Reform program, supported by the World Bank and other donors, got under way in 2002. Three ministries -health, education and agriculture -will serve as pilots for the reform process which will reorganize the ministries’ employment configuration in terms o f their fundamental objectives, and also link performance to remuneration. Once these building blocks are in place, the salary reform will be introduced. Since the costs will be considerable, it may b e that donor support will be sought initially, o n a decrementing basis until the government i s able to 28 See HSER, 2002, p. 73, and the discussion at paragraph 120 o n page 68. 29 See footnote 11. 30 UTRESP, 2002, p. 5. 31 Sulemane and Kayizzi-Mugenva, 2001, p. 9. 32 A breakdown o f SIP employees by “carreira” supplied to the Bank and the Fund in February 2001. 38 shoulder the burden itself; though if the investigation o f the personnel register called for above secures sufficient savings. The timing o f the reforms is uncertain, as i s the magnitude o f the salary adjustments and the component o f donor assistance, and so no attempt i s made here to reflect the salary increases in the fiscal projection^.^^ Progress with decentralization 45. The PEMR (2001) highlighted the important role o f decentralization and deconcentration for the improvement o f fiscal management and service delivery in a country as vast and diverse as Mozambique. So far, the strategy o f reform o f the state has been pursued both in terms o f decentralization in the urban zones (granting municipalities greater political, administrative and fiscal autonomy), and deconcentration in the rural zones (delegation o f some responsibilities, while retaining fiscal control, to provinces and districts). From a fiscal perspective, this seems an appropriate model in the specific case o f Mozambique as most “taxable” economic activities are concentrated in cities and towns. A very gradualist approach has been followed so far regarding the extension o f responsibilities to provinces and districts. This gradualist approach seems appropriate especially in light o f the dearth o f capacity in public administration that i s especially acute outside Maputo. However, the PEMR also argued in favor o f re-thinking and expanding the capacity and the role o f provinces and districts vis-&vis the central government. In this context, the PEMR underlined the importance o f reforming the current system o f dupla tutela o f provincial directorates both to their sectoral ministry and to the governors, since this system i s not readily compatible with the process o f decentralization. 46. Administratively, Mozambique is divided into 10 provinces and 128 districts. The only form o f elected local government i s the 33 urban municipalities. The municipalities enjoy a significant degree o f administrative and fiscal autonomy, and their mandate includes economic and social development, basic sanitation, public services, health, education, culture, leisure, and sport, policing, and urban infrastructure, construction, and housing. The legal framework provides for the gradual transfer o f functions and revenues over time as municipalities are ready to assume them. A s yet, however, most municipalities have come to exercise authority in only a limited number o f sectors, notably policing and sanitation. 47. I n practice, the administrative system remains highly centralized. Some progress has been made with deconcentration to the provincial and district levels in all o f the four sectors analyzed in this study, namely education, health, roads, and water and sanitation. Further, in the roads and the water and sanitation sectors, decentralization o f responsibilities to the provincial level has been approved. This remains o n paper, however, due to the lack o f capacity at the provincial level and the fact that funding has not yet been decentralized. Here follows a brief review on the current plans for deconcentration or decentralization in each sector. 33 See footnote 16, p. 26. 39 48. I n education, a certain amount o f deconcentration is already effective. The provincial directorates are responsible for managing some 25 percent o f the total number o f sectoral projects. N o provision has been made, however, to increase the autonomy o f provincial and district administrations, not even concerning simple responsibilities such as setting the school calendar to adapt to local needs. 49. I n the health sector, deconcentration at the provincial level is also fairly advanced, with the Provincial Directorates for Health playing a significant role in the intra-provincial allocation o f resources. An increase in the extent o f decentralization i s envisaged for the future. The Strategic Plan approved by the Council o f Ministers in 2001 advocates the intention to improve organizational performance through a gradual process o f decentralization o f resources, decision-making power, and planning and management functions within the Ministry o f Health to the provincial branches. I nthis framework, the Government will prepare a ‘Health Sector Decentralization Program’. In practice, however, this has not progressed beyond general discussions o f (i) the possible separation o f the Ministry o f Health as a funding and regulatory agency, and the N H S as a service provider; (ii) further decentralization o f budget management responsibility to the provinces; and, ( i ii) the extent o f autonomy o f large facilities, particularly the Maputo Central Hospital. 50. Efforts are being made to deconcentrate (and later decentralize) the operations of the water and sanitation sector. As from 2002, responsibility for National Directorate o f Water (DNA) local procurement and the payment o f contractors and suppliers has been transferred to the provinces. Public works capability at the district level i s being built up. This is, however, a slow process, due to shortages o f trained staff. Nevertheless, the DNA i s clearly moving in the right direction, to the eventual benefit o f rural water supply and sanitation service provision. 5 1. I n roads, much progress remains to be made in devolving responsibilities. The Government’s policy is to increasingly shift responsibilities to provincial, municipal and local authorities. Responsibilities for routine maintenance on all classified roads (including national roads), as well as responsibilities for periodic maintenance and rehabilitation on tertiary roads, have formally been devolved to the Provincial Departments o f Roads and Bridges (DEPs). These are organs o f provincial government, accountable to both provincial and central Ministry o f Public Works (MOPH) authorities. However, technical and management capacities at the provincial levels are weak and almost all provincial hnding for roads management i s still allocated via the Road Fund, which i s controlled by the National Roads Administration (ANE). A s a result, planning and contract management support continues to be provided through ANE regardless o f the formal separation o f authority. In addition, provincial or lower level (district, municipality or community) advisory road commissions are nonexistent, and there does not appear to be any effective provision for their establishment or operations. Although a variety o f donor-sponsored technical assistance programs are aimed at strengthening provincial capacities, i t would be unrealistic to expect that road-sector management will be effectively decentralized for some time to come. 52. The Government should continue to gradually decentralize administrative and fiscal responsibilities, and increase the amount of training in public administration at local level. The Government should act to expand the capacity and the role o f local 40 administrations vis-a-vis the central government, by introducing adequate training programs and gradually transferring fiscal and administrative responsibilities. In this context, it will be important to reform the current system o f dupla tutela o f provincial directorates, since this system i s not readily compatible with the process o f decentralization. 41 CHAPTER 3. EDUCATION A. INTRODUCTION 53. The Government’s objectives in the education sector are to provide universal primary schooling and to improve the efficiency and quality o f teaching.34 T o achieve these objectives expenditure on education has increased by 50 percent in real terms over the last 5 years. Both recurrent and capital expenditures have remained substantially skewed in favor o f primary education, although there has been a small increase in the percentage allocated to secondary and higher education.35The increase in expenditures has been matched by a doubling o f enrolment rates at all levels o f education, including most notably an increase fi-om 56 percent to over 100 percent between 1992 and 2001 in Gross Enrolment Rates (GER) for primary education. This increase reflects an extraordinary rate o f expansion in the provision o f education in Mozambique over the last few years. 54. Household education has a large positive impact o n the level o f consumption per capita. The importance o f ensuring that children from poorer households attend school i s underscored by the large role o f l o w educational attainment as a determinant o f poverty. OLS regressions using data fi-om the 1996/97 Household Survey indicate that households with better educated adults have significantly higher consumption per capita, and that in general this difference i s greater in urban areas than in rural areas (Handa et al., 1998). The average level o f consumption per capita o f urban households with some primary education i s higher by 7 percent compared to households with no education (10 percent for rural households). Consumption per capita i s higher by 27 percent if the highest level o f education in the household i s EP1 (16 percent in rural households). I t i s higher by 57 34These objectives are consistent with the Government’s Education Sector Strategic Program (ESSP), currently under implementation, and with the education Millennium Development Goals o f universal enrolment and completion o f primary education by 2015. 35 The education system in Mozambique i s structured as a 5-2-3-2 system: 5 years o f lower primary school (Ensino primhrio 1 or EP1, Grade 1-5), 2 years o f upper primary school (Ensino primhrio 2, or EP2, Grade 6-7), 3 years o f lower secondary school (Ensino secundirio geral 1, or ESG1, Grade 8-10) and 2 years o f upper secondary school (Ensino secundbrio geral2, or ESG2, Grade 11-12). Technical and vocational education i s structured into 3 tiers: elementary, basic and medium. Teacher training programs for primary school i s divided into 2 levels: basic (CFPP, for Grade 7 + 3 years o f training) and middle (IW, for Grade 10 + 2 years o f training). Secondary school teachers are trained at the Pedagogical University. The education system i s almost entirely public at the primary and secondary level (less than 2 percent o f primary schools and 4 percent o f secondary schools are private or semi-private) and therefore n o distinction i s made between private and public schools in the rest o f the chapter. Higher education institutions are under the tutelage o f the Ministry o f Higher Education and Technology. There are currently ten hgher education institutions in Mozambique, half o f which are public. 42 percent if the highest education level in the household EP2 (36 percent in rural households), and by 97 percent if the highest education level in the household is secondary or higher (57 percent in rural households). The results highlight that household education has a large positive impact on the level o f consumption per capita. The results also highlight the importance o f female education, particularly in rural areas, possibly due to the observation that women in Mozambique are responsible for much o f the agricultural work, which i s the primary source o f subsistence in Mozambique. 55. While significant progress has been attained towards universal access to primary education, little progress has been made in improving school completion rates which remain extremely low, particularly for girls and in poorer provinces. The education system remains very inefficient when compared to neighboring countries, with the average actual cost per primary student three times i t s expected level. Given that hrther increases in resources are not available, improvements in efficiency and significant reductions in unit costs will be necessary to finance the planned expansion to universal primary education enrollment and completion by 2015. Furthermore, even larger improvements in efficiency will be required in the future to allow the expansion o f upper primary and secondary education. Additional concerns arise from the wide gender gap in education (especially at the post-primary level), the regional disparity in public funding for education, the high share o f costs borne by households, and the increasing impact o f HIV/AIDS. 56. This chapter reviews the Mozambique education sector with a view to identifying the critical issues for the optimum use o f public expenditures. The chapter begins by discussing the key trends in access, performance, efficiency and quality. I t then discusses the allocation o f public expenditures, its impact on poverty, assesses the likely impact o f HIV/AIDS, and concludes by suggesting policy priorities. B. K E Y EDUCATION SECTOR ISSUES Studentflo ws: 57. I n spite of signijkant gains in access to primary education, enrolment in upper primary (EP2) and secondary education (ESGI and ESG2) remains limited. Gross enrolment rates (GER)36 have increased very rapidly at all levels o f education, with the biggest improvement for EP1 (from 56 percent in 1992 to over 100 percent in 2001). About one million children aged 6-1 1 (37 percent o f the age bracket) remain out o f school, h~wever.~’ EP2 enrolment rates doubled, from 13 percent in 1992 to 28 percent in 2001, but remain low. GER are also extremely l o w for secondary education, at 8 percent and 2 percent for E S G l and ESG2, respectively. The enormous gap between the 36 The GER is defined as total enrolment at a n educational level regardless o f age, expressed as a percentage o f the school-age population in a given school year; therefore, it i s sometimes higher than 100 percent. 37 I t should be noted that this number includes both children w h o never attended school and children w h o were at school but then dropped out prematurely after the first few years. As will be discussed below, the latter tends t o be the most serious problem for primary education in Mozambique at present. 43 enrollment rates for EP1 and EP2 implies that significant progress is needed to achieve the Government’s goal o f universal primary school completion (7 years) by 2015. 58. Geographical disparities in education access are large and continue to increase. There are great provincial variations in adult illiteracy, with higher average levels in the Northern provinces (72 percent in 1997) compared to the Central provinces (63 percent) and lowest in the Southern provinces (39 percent). The GER in EP1 varies substantially across provinces, ranging in 2001 from below 90 percent in several Central and Northern provinces to over 130 percent in Southern provinces. The GER for EP2 also varies substantially. Since recent growth in the GER has been highest in those provinces that already had higher GER, provincial inequalities have in fact been widening. Completion rates o f EP1 follow a similar pattern. 59. Significant gender differences in access to education persist. The literacy rate in 1997 was 57 percent for men and 26 percent for women. GER o f both sexes in primary education increased at about the same pace between 1997 and 2001, so the absolute gender gap in EP1 enrolment has remained about the same. On average, GER for girls are about 23 percent lower than for boys, but the gender gap in education differs substantially across provinces. The gender gap in enrolment rates i s about 10 percent in the Southern region, but reaches 35 percent in some Central and Northern provinces. Student repetition and completion rates: 60. School completion rates remain extremely low. The average repetition rate in primary education (EP1 and EP2) i s very high (25 percent) compared to neighboring countries such as Tanzania (2 percent), Zambia (3 percent), and Malawi (18 percent) (figures for 1995, UNESCO 2000). The average drop-out rate for primary education (EPI and EP2) i s also high, at around 13 percent. Such high repetition and drop-out rates result in extremely l o w completion rates. Despite improvements in recent years, only 36 percent o f students admitted to Grade 1 complete the EP1 cycle.38 This compares with 81 percent in Tanzania and 70 percent in Zimbabwe. The completion rate i s progressively smaller at higher levels o f education, with only 24 percent o f the student cohort graduating from EP2, and 1 percent graduating from ESG2 (Table 12). This compares with completion rates in Zambia o f 63 percent to Grade 7 (EP2 equivalent) and 18 percent to Grade 12 (ESG2 equivalent) (figures for 2000, Oxford Policy Management 2002). 38Completion rate i s defined as the number o f students passing the relevant grade divided by the number o f children o f official graduation age in the population. 44 Table 12. Completion rates o f EP1, EP2, ESGl and ESG2 in 2001 Average Girls EP 1 36% 32% EP2 24% 20% ESGl 9% 6% ESG2 1% 1% Source: Plano EstratCgico de EducagHo, Ministry o f Education, 2002. 6 1. Drop-out, repetition and completion rates vary significantly across provinces. Drop-out rates for primary education in Central and Northern provinces are roughly double those in Southern provinces. Similarly, gross repetition rates for primary school (EP1 and EP2) vary from 19 percent to 30 percent across provinces. 62. Signifwant gender differences also persist in drop-out and completion rates. The drop-out rate i s higher for girls compared to that o f boys, which results in a large gender gap by the end o f EP1 (Table 12).39The completion rate for EP1 i s approximately 40 percent for boys and 32 percent for girls. Similarly, the completion rate for EP2 i s 28 percent for boys and 20 percent for girls. The gender gap continues in secondary education. 63. Theprecise cause o f the high drop-out and low completion rates is unknown and needs to be investigated with an in-depth study. I t i s not clear to what extent high drop- out i s due to demand side factors (direct costs, opportunity costs, poverty, etc.) or to supply side factors (incomplete schools, distance to school, language o f instruction, quality o f services offered, gender o f the teacher, school calendar and hours o f instruction, etc.). The precise causes o f the l o w completion rates are multifaceted and are not well understood. These need to be investigated with an in-depth study. 64. On the demand side, the direct costs o f schooling are an important cause o f the high drop-out rate. The results o f the Questionbrio de Indicadores Basicos de Bem-Estar (QIBB) indicate that the three main reasons for school drop-out are that school i s too expensive (29 percent), that studying is not useful (29 percent), and that the school i s too distant (11 percent) (Instituto National de Estatistica, 2001).40 This finding i s in line with the results o f an ADB survey (African Development Bank, 2002), where household poverty was the main reason cited for not attending school: 38 percent o f the 6-12 year olds and 27 percent o f the 13-17 year olds not enrolled in school said school was "too expensive". Similarly, in the results o f the 1996/97 household survey fees were cited frequently by rural households as a primary reason for not sending children to school (Handa et al. 1998; also see the analysis presented in Section D below). These results suggest that one o f the main motives for l o w school enrolment rates and drop-out rates i s the high cost o f schooling related expenses (such as matriculation fees, school supplies, 39Note that the bulk o f the gender disparity i s concentrated in the f i r s t two classes o f EP1. 40A further reason explaining drop-out rates for girls i s teenage pregnancy and premature marriage, sometimes as early as age 12. 45 uniforms). The importance o f direct costs i s also suggested by the finding that at the vocational education level, dropouts usually obtain jobs and frequently return to school later (Austral Consultoria Lda, 2002). 65. On the supply side, the high average distance from the nearest school and the large number o f incomplete schools appear to be important. The extent to which high drop-out rates are also due to supply side factors i s not fully clear. As mentioned, the results o f the QIBB indicate that 11 percent o f drop-out students give the reason that the school is too distant (Instituto National de Estatistica, op.cit.). Information from the 1996/97 household survey indicates that the average distance to school i s 4.5 km and that the average time needed to reach an EP1 school often exceeds one hour. The large number o f incomplete schools i s also likely to play a significant role in the high level o f drop-outs. As many as 23 percent o f primary school pupils in 1998 attended schools which did not offer the complete cycle o f classes, and so it can be expected that many students only attend school for the available classes (Mingat et al., 2002). In addition, other factors are also likely to play an important role. The ‘quality’ o f the teaching (language o f instruction, curriculum content, dedication or behavior o f teachers) may not be perceived as relevant enough to the needs o f the locality. The school calendar m a y not match that o f agricultural activities in the community. In brief, the available information is not sufficient to determine which factors account for l o w retention rates in the various cycles o f study. A more rigorous analysis o f the impact o f the various demand and supply factors i s needed. 66. One reasonfor the higher drop-out and lower completion rates o f girls might be thefailure to hire enoughfemale teachers. Just 27 percent o f primary school teachers are women, ranging from only 9 percent in Cab0 Delgado to 62 percent in Maputo City. Recruitment o f female teachers has been shown to increase completion rates o f girls, with an elasticity o f completion o f girls with respect to the proportion o f female teachers o f about 0.4 for l o w income countries (Kengue and Mingat, 2002). In the context o f Mozambique, this implies that increasing the proportion o f female primary teachers from the current 27 percent to the African average o f 32.4 percent (in 1990), might increase the retention rate of girls from 32 percent to about 35 percent. Increasing the hiring o f female primary teachers from the current 27 percent to 50 percent might increase the retention rate o f girls to about 41 percent. The available observations by province support the possible negative correlation between the percentage o f female teachers and the drop- out rate o f girls (Figure l),although this correlation i s also likely to be a result o f different levels o f income. 46 Figure 1. Percentage of female teachers and girls drop-out, by province 2001 70 1 1 - E 60 50 2 a 4 40 m 91 -(u 30 m E LL 20 10 0 0 5 10 15 Girls drop-out (%) Source: Education Statistics 2001, Ministry o f Education. Efficiency of resource use: 67. The education system is exceedingly inefficient and wastes a large amount o f resources which could be used to expand the number o f graduates. Due to the high drop- out and repetition rates, i t takes an average 18 years o f resource inputs to produce one primary school graduate in Mozambique instead o f the prescribed 7 (Table 13). This compares with Zambia's 10 years o f resource inputs. Current survival rates imply that producing a primary school graduate costs US$6 13 instead o f the planned US$23241. To reduce this problem, the government i s considering some form o f semi-automatic promotion within cycles o f learning in primary schools, which would also help reduce the current practice o f repeatedly failing students to encourage better performance. Table 13. Efficiency indicators for education in 2001 Primarv (EP1 and EP2. made 1-7) Inpuh'output ratio (school years) 18 Theoretical cost per completer (US$) 232 Actual cost to produce one Grade 7 student (US$) 613 Primary and secondary (EP1, EP2, E S G l and ESG2, grade 1-12) , Input/output ratio 23 1 Theoretical cost per completer (US$) 1234 Actual cost to uroduce one Grade 12 student (US$) 23728 Source: Education Sector Expenditure Review 2002, Ministry o f Finance and Ministry o f Education. 4 1 The cost o f producing a primary graduate should be (US$24.6 per EP1 student times 5 years) + (US$54.6 per EP2 student times 2 years) = US$232 47 68. The allocation o f teachers across provinces and schools does not follow efficiency criteria and needs to be adjusted over time. There i s evidence that teacher deployment, both across provinces and across school within provinces, varies widely without reference to efficiency criteria, and that there is ample room for improvement in the allocation o f teachers in primary and secondary education alike (Mingat et al., op.cit.). This could b e done over time taking advantage o f the natural attrition and new recruitment o f teachers. In addition, the allocation o f teacher time between EP1 and EP2 also appears t o be inefficient. Teacher per class ratio for EP1 in 2001 was 0.7, indicating that double or triple shifts are not uncommon (Table 14). On the other hand, the teacher per class ratio in EP2 was 1.3, suggesting that teachers at this level do not spend all their time teaching. This raises questions about the efficiency o f teachers’ use within primary education (particularly given the significantly higher salaries o f EP2 teachers - see below). Using teachers more efficiently (i.e. ensuring that teacher time is utilized fblly) could decrease both the teacher per class ratios and the pupil per teacher ratios (PTR), without increasing unit costs. Quality of education: 69. The curriculum and the system o f student examination are out o f date and ineffective. The current curriculum is outdated and there i s a lack o f a national assessment system to monitor student learning. The Ministry o f Education will introduce a new primary level curriculum beginning in 2004. The new curriculum i s innovative in many respects. I t provides a space forlocally developed and relevant content, introduces bilingual education in key subjects in the early grades, increases the number o f hours o f instruction, introduces new pedagogical methodologies to improve teaching practice and strengthens school-based student assessment. Concrete plans to establish a learning assessment system that would serve to measure student learning rather as a mechanism to assign places in higher levels are not yet forthcoming, however. 70. The number o f teachers increased for all education levels between 1997 and 2001, but less forprimary education. In spite o f the recent gains, the number o f teachers in primary education remains below requirements, especially in EP1. In line with teacher numbers, the pupil-teacher ratio (PTR) for EP1 was 67 in 2001, up from 62 in 1999, and well above the recommended maximum o f 40-45 (Table 14)42.The relatively high and increasing PTR in EP1 suggests that the quality o f lower primary education has declined in recent years. In addition, the large variation in PTR within each province (e.g. between 42 and 120 in ZambCzia) may indicate wide variations in the quality o f education, and suggests that there are inefficiencies in the allocation o f teachers. 42 Compare also the ESSP goals in Ministerio da Educa@o, 1998, pp. 41-42. 48 T a b l e 14. Selected quality indicators by education subsector, 1997-2001 Percentage increase Percentage untrained Pupils p e r Teacher per Pupils per in teachers teachers teacher class class 1997-2001 1997 2001 200 1 2001 2001 EP 1 31 30 39 67 0.7 48 EP2 67 21 35 40 1.3 51 ESGl 111 18 33 35 1.5 50 ESG2 84 8 24 25 1.8 46 Source: Education Sector Expenditure Review 2002, M i n i s t r y o f Finance and M i n i s t r y o f Education. 7 1. The recent increase in the number o f teachers has been accompanied by a decrease in the proportion of trained teachers. O n average, the current teacher supply covers less than 50 percent o f the demand for teachers in the country. The increased demand for teachers has been met by hiring teachers without appropriate training or qualifications. The proportion o f teachers without pedagogical training has increased from 30 percent in 1997 to 39 percent in 2001 in EP1 and from 21 percent to 35 percent in EP2 (Table 14). The provision o f adequate in-service training, particularly for those teachers who lack pedagogical training, have weak knowledge o f the subject, or do not have appropriate teaching qualifications, i s therefore crucial to prevent a reduction in the quality o f education. The need for in-service training will become even more important to ensure the proper implementation o f the new curriculum. 72. There is a need to increase the output o f p r i m a y education teachers with at least minimal qualzfzcation. Since the expansion in education i s intended to accelerate, there i s a need for innovative approaches to teachers’ training. The current policy o f adopting the I M A P certification (Grade 10 plus 2 years training) as the standard for EP1 teachers in unlikely to be attained (due to the small number o f Grade 10 graduates). It i s also not likely to be sustainable given the current teacher salary structure for M A P graduates. The Government should therefore concentrate i t s efforts o n restructuring and introducing innovative ways to expand the CFPP system (Grade 7 plus 3 years training), which already provides the bulk o f the supply o f new teachers. This would increase the annual supply o f teachers with at least minimal pedagogical qualifications and with a more affordable salary cost and n o significant reduction in quality.43 73. Poor infrastructure and the lack o f books and teaching materials are the major sources o f dissatisfaction for those attending school. The results o f the QIE3B suggest that more than half o f the primary education students (57 percent) are not satisfied with the level o f service they receive (Instituto National de Estatistica, op.cit.). The extent o f dissatisfaction varies widely across provinces, from 27 percent in Niassa t o 90 percent in Inhambane. The major causes o f complaint relate to poor infrastructure (64 percent), especially in rural areas, and lack o f books and materials (53 percent), especially in urban areas. The extent o f dissatisfaction in secondary school i s smaller (41 percent) and again 43 The available evidence f r o m Mozambique, albeit limited, shows that the gains in EP1 students’ performance when a n E P 2 (IMAP) teacher teaches them are not v e r y significant. 49 i t i s mainly due to the lack o f books and teaching materials (57 percent), and poor infrastructure (33 percent). These findings indicate that the challenge o f expanding the education sector are not limited to ensuring an adequate supply o f qualified teachers, but also include improving the quality o f schooling infrastructure and the availability o f books and materials. Tertiary Education 74. This PER does not go into detail about the higher education system. The bulk o f public expenditure on education in Mozambique i s dedicated to primary and secondary education. However, there are significant disparities in access to tertiary education, and efficiency and quality remain poor. These issues are addressed in the Higher Education Policy, which is currently under implementation with substantive financial support from the World Bank. 75. Access to higher education has expanded, but remains very limited. Over the past decade the number o f Higher Education Institutions (HEIs) has increased from three to ten, and this has resulted in a subsequent increase in total student enrollment from 3,750 in 1990 to over 12,000 in 2001.44 This trend indicates that a high social demand for post- secondary education exists in the country. Despite the increase in enrollments over the last decade, the GER in tertiary education in Mozambique i s s t i l l l o w at about 1 percent. However, this i s comparable to the tertiary GER for the majority o f countries with similar levels o f GNP not only in Sub-Saharan Africa, but also in other parts o f the world. In addition, there i s a great disparity in access to higher education among those with different geographic, gender and economic backgrounds, which i s exacerbated by inequities that prevail at lower levels o f education. Only 40 percent o f the students in HEIs are from the Northem and Central provinces, which represent 75 percent o f the total .~~ p ~ p u l a t i o nSimilarly, the proportion o f female students enrolled in public HEIs has remained constant at around 25 percent since 1993. 76. The higher education system has become increasingly inefficient. The intemal efficiency o f the higher education system can be estimated by looking at admissions as a proportion o f enrollment. The admission to total enrollment ratio declined from nearly 20 percent in 1992 to 16 percent in 1999, indicating a decline in the efficiency o f the system (students are taking more and more years to complete their studies). One o f the key factors is the high level o f student repetition. Similarly, the percentage o f students who graduate within the prescribed time was between 7 percent and 10 percent for public HEIs in 1999. This situation suggests that there is a need to re-evaluate and perhaps restructure the current degree requirements to increase the proportion o f students who 44 Although public HEIs still account for the bulk o f student enrollment (76 percent), private HEIs are gaining ground and the Government has supported policies aimed at increasing private sector investment in lugher education, whether by encouraging public-private partnerships or by providing a conducive environment for new private HEIs to flourish, especially in disadvantaged regions o f the country though the provincial scholarship program. 45 The high concentration o f students from the far South and Maputo City can be explained by the geographical concentration o f HEIs in the Southern region coupled and the limited availability o f scholarships and boarding facilities for students from distant provinces. 50 complete all degree requirements in time. This i s being done under the higher education project with a view to boosting graduation rates, increase the internal efficiency o f the system and reduce unit costs. 77. Courses are often outdated and o f low quality. Many courses and programs offered at public HEIs are outdated, o f limited relevance and quality and do not respond to the demands o f a fast growing economy, the specific needs in individual provinces, or emerging sectors. Furthermore, the style o f learning i s often rote learning, but problem solving and innovative skills are required by employers (The 100 Biggest Companies in Mozambique, KPMG, 2000). c. EXPENDITURE TRENDS 78. A signijkant share of the education budget is externallyfinanced, but data are not readily available. A breakdown o f data on external financing is available only for the year 2000 and indicates that about US$41 m i l l i o n (26 percent) o f the total education budget o f US$153 million was externally financed (Table 15). Total recurrent expenditure was about US$119 million (15 percent from external sources), and the balance o f US$34 million was capital expenditure (64 percent from external sources). However, these numbers do not include receitas prbprias, which in 1997 amounted to a considerable 6 percent o f recurrent cost for EP1 (results o f 1997 household survey; mainly o w n fees collections by schools). The lack o f accurate data o n fees collections imposes a serious constraint on the analysis carried out in this chapter. Table 15. Government and external education recurrent and capital expenditure in 2000 (US$ Million) Tech. Teach Literacy Primary Secondary Education education and other Total Percent Recurrent expenditures Government 70.6 16.1 8.1 5.0 1.0 100.8 85 External assistance 8.7 3.5 2.8 2.4 1.1 18.4 15 Total recurrent 79.3 19.6 10.8 7.5 2.1 119.2 100 Percentage 66 16 9 6 2 100 Capital expenditures Government 8.4 1.8 0.7 0.9 0.0 11.8 36 External assistance 18.0 0.6 1.9 1.5 0.3 22.2 64 Total capital 26.6 2.6 2.7 2.4 0.3 34.0 100 Percentage 77 8 8 7 1 100 Total expenditures Government 78.9 18.1 8.7 5.9 1.0 112.6 74 External assistance 26.7 4.0 4.7 3.9 1.4 40.7 26 Total 106.0 22.2 13.5 9.8 2.4 153.2 100 Percentage 69 14 9 6 2 100 Source: Conta Geral do Estado, Ministry o f Finance, and Ministry o f Education. 51 79. Total education expenditure has increased substantially in recent years, rising from 3.9 to 5.8percent o f GDP between 1997 and 2001. Education expenditure has increased by over 50 percent in real terms in the last five years, raising total per capita education expenditure from US$4.1 to US$6.3. This is the result o f both higher donor funding and increased government-funded spending. I t i s important to highlight, however, that while Government-funded education spending increased from 1.9 to 3.1 percent o f GDP between 1997 and 2001 (Table 16), it remains below the SSA regional average o f about 4 percent o f GDP and below the international benchmark o f 3.5 as stipulated by the Education For All Fast Track Initiative (data for 1998-2000, Bruns, et al., 2003). Table 16. Education sector expenditures, 1995-2001 (US$ Million) 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Total Government recurrent expenditures 246.1 272.4 370.0 444.6 498.1 497.8 436.8 Ministry of Education 89.9 115.1 114.5 123.9 n.a. 153.2 195.1 Government-finded expenditure 30.1 43.0 56.1 73.8 97.6 112.6 98.5 Recurrent account 28.0 39.0 50.5 67.3 86.9 100.8 92.9 Capital account 2.1 4.0 5.6 6.5 10.8 11.8 5.6 Donor-funded expenditure 59.7 72.1 58.4 50.0 n.a. 40.7 96.6 Ministry of Higher Education n.a. n.a. 20.5 33.8 n.a. n.a. n.a. Government-funded expenditure 7.3 9.7 10.7 13.8 18.2 19.0 15.0 Recurrent account n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 14.9 16.5 13.1 Capital account n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. 3.4 2.6 1.9 Donor-funded expenditure n.a. n.a. 9.9 20.0 n.a. n.a. n.a. Total domestically-funded expenditure o n 37.5 52.7 66.8 87.6 115.8 131.6 113.5 education Total externally-funded expenditure o n 59.7 72.1 68.2 70.0 n.a. 40.7 96.6 education Total expenditure o n education (domestically- 97.2 124.8 135.0 157.6 115.8 172.3 210.1 funded + externally-funded) Recurrent domestically-funded spending o n education in total Government recurrent 14.4 16.4 15.4 17.6 20.4 23.6 24.3 spending (%) Domestically-funded spending o n education as .6 .9 ,9 2.2 2.x 3.5 3. % o f GDP Total Expenditure o n education as % o f G D P 4.1 4.4 3.9 4.0 n.a. 4.6 5.8 GDP (IMF 2002 data) 2392 2842 3438 3893 4090 3750 3610 Exchange rate (Meticais/US$) 8890 11294 11546 11850 12691 15689 20707 Source: Conta Geral do Estado, Ministry o f Finance, and Ministry o f Education, and Mingat et al. 2002 52 Recu rren t expenditures: 80. The allocation o f government recurrent expenditures across education levels has remained fairly stable in recent years. The share o f recurrent resources going to primary education has remained constant between 1999 and 2001 at about 61 percent. However, within primary education, resources have been reallocated towards EP2, which has increased from 11 to 13 percent o f total recurrent expenditures. The share o f secondary education (ESG1 and ESG2) has increased from 13 to 16 percent. The recent increase in funding has not benefited teacher training, with the proportion o f recurrent funding for training primary school teachers remaining constant at 3.3 percent. 8 1. Recurrent unit costs are high compared to international standards, especially for upperprimary and secondary education. In terms o f GDP per capita, Mozambique’s education is more expensive than in neighboring countries. While spending on lower primary students (EP1) is somewhat below the SSA average o f 13 percent (Colclough and Al-Samarrai, 2000), spending on upper primary school students (EP2) i s much higher at 23 percent o f GDP per capita. Similarly, spending per student o n secondary education corresponds to 88 percent o f GNP per capita, which compares to 27 percent in Malawi, 11 percent in Zambia and 32 percent in Zimbabwe. Figure 2. Recurrent Unit Costs by Program in 2000 E I 900 1 1 800 0 Private fees & books 700 E 500 = 0 0 600 . (r) 400 3 300 200 ZOO 0 EPI EP2 ESGl ESG2 Tech. Teacher educ. educ. Source: Education Sector Expenditure Review 2002, Ministry o f Finance and Ministry o f Education. Notes: 1. Private costs estimates based on 1997 household survey. 2. Administrative expenditures allocated proportionally across programs. 82. The breakdown o f government recurrent expenditures by education level highlights large cost differences in teacher salaries and in non-teacher salaries at different education levels. Most o f the differences in recurrent unit costs stem from considerable differences in the teacher salary costs per student. For instance, the four-fold increase in unit expenditures from EP1 to ESGl i s associated with an increase in the teacher salary costs per student from US$32 to US$111 per student. The proportion o f non-teacher salaries also appears to be much larger in EP2 (16 percent) as compared to EP1 (5 percent). Expenditure on non-teacher salaries is even higher in secondary 53 education (20 percent) and teacher education (32 percent). I t i s questionable whether such a mark up in spending on non-teaching staff i s necessary. Figure 3. Government unit recurrent expenditure by input in 2001 (in 1999 US$) Administration Source: Education Sector Expenditure Review 2002, Ministry o f Finance and M i n i s t r y o f Education. 83. The pay differential between teachers at different education levels is excessive, with upper primary and secondary school salaries well above regional averages. Salaries o f EP1 teachers are about 4.4 times GDP per capita, above the average 3.6 times o f GDP per capita in SSA (Table 17). The differential between EP1 and EP2 i s 109 percent, between EP1 and ESGl i s 426 percent and the differential between EP1 and ESG2 is as much as 562 percent. This compares with a pay differential between primary and secondary school teachers not exceeding 100 percent in most SSA countries. 46 Secondary school salaries, which are double the regional average in per capita terms (Figure 4), are unsustainably high and are an impediment to the expansion o f secondary education. 46I t i s o f interest that evidence f r o m many African countries suggests that setting primary education teachers’ salaries at around 3.5 times per capita GDP provides a good balance between recruiting and maintaining teachers with adequate credentials and morale while allowing the universal coverage o f basic education without overburdening public finances (Mingat, 2002). 54 Table 17. Yearly teacher salary and teacher salary/GDP per capita in 2001 (US$) EP1 (min. salary) 870 Teacher salary/ GDPper capita 4.4 EP2 (min. salary) 1820 Teacher salary/ GDPper capita 9.2 E S G l (min. salary + 30% bonus) 4574 Teacher salary/ GDPper capita 23.2 ESG2 (min. salary + 40% bonus) 5757 Teacher salary/ GDP per capita 29.2 Source: Education Sector Expenditure Review 2002, Min. o f Finance and Min. o f Education. Figure 4. Secondary teacher salaries in selected SSA countries4' 2 30- a Mozambique 8 25 2 % 2 a20 $; C r 3 15 A g s 10 E .a r; 5- 4 4 4 4 t w 4 84. Large differences exist between the number o f teachers in the government payroll and those reported by schools. The number o f teachers recorded on the payroll i s as much as 20 percent higher than those reported by schools in the year 2000 and 14 percent in 2001. This discrepancy suggests the need for an in-depth study and may indicate the opportunity to make easy and significant cost savings. Capital expenditures: 85. The allocation o f capital expenditures is concentrated on primary education, and school construction in particular. Capital expenditure i s heavily concentrated on primary education (80 percent in 2000), with most o f the fbnding originating f i o m external financing (about three-quarters in 2000). Capital spending o n secondary education i s about 6 percent, technical education about 8 percent and teacher education about 7 47 Benin, Burkina Faso, Cameroon, CGte-d'Ivoire, Madagascar, Mauritania, Mozambique, Niger, Rwanda, Tanzania, Togo 55 percent. Extemal capital fbnding i s very heavily skewed towards primary education. Government capital expenditures also focus on primary education, but to a lesser extent than in the case o f external financing.48 Over the last three years government capital expenditure has been reallocated from primary and secondary to technical education. In terms o f activities, the breakdown o f government capital expenditures indicates that the majority (62 percent in 2000) was spent o n construction and rehabilitation o f schools. The other major category in the capital budget is equipment. 86. The cost of school construction varies by as much as four hundredpercent, without apparent reason. The cost o f building a classroom using permanent materials (cement and varies from US$5,000 to US$20,000, partly as a result o f different models o f donor assistance and partly because o f limited competition in school construction contracts. I t has been shown that excellent facilities can be built for a cost o f about US$lO,OOO per classroom (including furniture, water and sanitation and auxiliary facilities). This amount should be viewed as a ceiling for construction costs, and should be implemented jointly with a revised set o f construction standards. 87. There is a need to accelerate the school construction program and to optimize the location of future schools. W e l l targeted construction o f new schools will be critical to sustain the expansion o f enrollment rates (Handa and Simler, 2000). As many as 3800 new classrooms per year will have to be built over the next 15 years in order to sustain the expansion in primary education (EP1 and EP2). This expansion rate i s far beyond the current capacity o f the central Government o f less than 2000 classrooms per year. A possible approach, used in virtually all neighboring countries, would be to encourage active participation by the communities, and allow the location, construction and maintenance o f new facilities to be decided at the local level (regional or district authority), on the basis o f the funds allocated by the Ministry o f Education.” Villages might be required to pick up part o f the cost, through the use o f labor for construction and maintenance. Fiscal framework andjhancing of higher education 88. The share ofpublic spending on higher education should be reducedfurther by reducing unit costs per graduate student and increasing the extent o f cost recovery for those who can afford it. Allocation o f public expenditure to tertiary education has been decreasing from about 20 percent in 1995 to current levels o f about 14 percent (Table 16). Therefore, although less than 1 percent o f the total population is enrolled in tertiary education, higher education i s consuming almost one sixth o f overall public spending for education in Mozambique. Barring a few exceptions, tuition fees in public institutions are very l o w (below US$lOO per year) while students in private institutions contribute, at 48 However, in terms o f expenditure per student (i.e. Government unit capital expenditure) the allocation o f Government expenditure remains heavily skewed towards technical education and teacher training, w h i c h are as m u c h as 30 and 169 times the unit expenditures for primary school students. 49 L o c a l materials are generally cheaper than using ‘permanent’ material (cement and bricks), but they are o f lower quality and durability, and require more maintenance. 50 The Government should set centrally the quality standards for the construction o f n e w schooling facilities and provide technical assistance, however. 56 a minimum, ten times more. Given the inequitable distribution o f higher education expenditures, and the high returns facing individuals who invest into a higher education degree (in terms o f higher salaries), the Government should increase the level o f fees to cover most o f the recurrent costs o f tertiary education. Existing constraints in credit markets in Mozambique, however, imply that poor students may be unable to borrow the resources required to finance their studies. To overcome these constraints the Government should expand current provisions for student loans, in parallel with making bursaries available for deserving students. The public higher education institutions already operate several student scholarship schemes (partly supported by IDA) that provide financial assistance to needy students, and these schemes should b e expanded to ensure that deserving students can attend tertiary education. Planned expenditures: 89. Achieving universal primary education by 2015 w i l l require significant additional expenditures, reductions in costs and improvements in eficiency. The Government’s objectives o f achieving universal primary schooling, and o f improving the efficiency and quality o f the education system will require significant resources in terms o f additional teachers and schools. For instance, the number o f EP1 teachers and EP1 classrooms would have to almost double, and the number o f EP2 teachers and EP2 classrooms would have to increase almost four-fold. Preliminary calculations based on conservative assumptions5’ indicate that the amount o f resources required would amount to an additional 2 percent o f GDP annually, raising the domestically fwnded contribution to education expenditure from 3 percent o f GDP (see Table 16) to 5 percent. Such an expansion would require that the share o f education in Government expenditure increase from the current 21 percent to about 35 percent o f the Government budget, at the expense o f other sectors; obviously this i s not a realistic scenario. According to the projections made under the Education for A l l Fast Track Initiative (EFA FTI), even when assuming significant efficiency improvements and an increase in external assistance, the financing gap would remain extremely large.52 I t i s clear, therefore, that sharp improvements in the efficiency o f the education sector will be imperative to ensure a significant reductions in unit costs, but not sufficient to achieve the Government goals (and the education MDGs). 5 1 Average real GDP growth rate o f 6 percent p.a.; education sector will continue to receive about 21 percent o f the budget (or about 3 percent o f GDP); about 60 percent o f the education budget will continue t o be spent o n primary education; constant teacher salaries in real terms; planned improvements in GER, completion rates and PTR. 52 Mozambique i s one o f the 18 countries eligible t o participate within the framework o f the Education for All Fast Track Initiative (EFA FTI), w h i c h was adopted by the international community in 2002 t o help countries mobilize the resources necessary for an acceleration o f progress towards the EFA and the education Millennium Development Goals. The Government i s currently finalizing its proposal t o the FTI financing agencies and expects t o begin i t s implementation in 2004. The Government’s FTI proposal includes the introduction o f a n e w curriculum for basic education in 2004, the development o f a teacher education strategy, the emphasis o n gender equity, community support for education and the prevention and mitigation o f H I V / A I D S . A central feature o f the proposal are strategies designed t o progressively reduce student repetition and drop-out t o a minimum, ensure regular student progress in learning and achieve universal completion, while ensuring fiscal and institutional sustainability. 57 90. The merger o f E P l and EP2 cycles into a single primary education cycle would allow a substantial rationalization o f available resources. At present there are several differences between the EP1 and EP2 cycles. At the EP1 level, teachers normally have at least Grade 7 plus 3 years o f training (CPFF) and they are multi-discipline teachers (one per class) with an average salary o f 4.4 times o f per capita GDP. Teachers with 7 years o f education or less and no training receive an average salary o f 2.8 times per capita GDP. About h a l f o f the EP1 teaching force i s in the unqualified category, an issue that merits immediate attention and remedy. Currently the Government policy i s to upgrade the entry qualifications for primary school teachers from 7 to 10 years o f education and offer a 2-year instead o f a 3-year program. The new polisy i s being implemented at the IMAP centers, which have been receiving the bulk o f expenditure in the last 5 years. There are two issues o f concern with the current policy. First, the Ministry statistics show that despite a growing supply o f IMAP graduates, few graduates enter the teaching profession and when they do, they tend to chose positions in post EP1 levels. This has negative implications for the supply o f new teachers in EP1 schools, particularly since little new investments are being made in CFPP centers. Second, the M AP graduates have teach only 2 or 3 subjects (there are several teachers per class) and have an average salary o f 9.2 times per capita GDP, which i s more than doubled o f the average o f 4.4 for CFPP graduates. W h i l e there is no comparative information in Mozambique on the relative effects o f different types o f qualifications (CFPP and IMAP) on student learning, evidence from other countries indicates marginal gains when primary school teachers go beyond 11 years o f education. While i t i s clear that the current policy to ensure primary school teachers have IMAP level qualifications i s costing the Government twice as much, i t i s less clear what the additional effect i s o n student learning I t would be more more efficient and fiscally affordable to switch to a single primary school system with multi- subject teachers throughout the 7-year cycle. D. POVERTY FOCUS AND INCIDENCE OF EXPENDITURES 9 1. The regional distribution ofpublic expenditures in education perpetuates the regional differences in literacy rates. The distribution o f education resources (monetary benefits) across regions i s heavily skewed, with Maputo City with only 6 percent o f the population receiving almost a third o f the total benefits (Heltberg et al., 2001). This result i s caused in large part by higher enrollment in secondary education in Maputo City, compared to anywhere else in the country. However, while the rest o f the Southern region (i.e. excluding Maputo City) also receives a share o f benefits slightly higher than i t s proportion o f population, the Northern region and especially the Central region are significantly under-served in terms o f per capita benefits. 58 Table 18. Regional distribution o f population and benefits from education spending (in thousand Mt.) Share (“h) North Center South Maputo city (excluding Maputo) Population (% households) 32.5 42.6 18.8 6.1 Education benefits (“h) 18.8 26.2 22.7 32.2 Source: Heltberg, Simler and Tarp, 2001, based on 1996197 household survey. 92. Education spending is equitably distributed at lower levels o f education, but is very inequitable at higher levels. The distribution o f EP1 benefits almost overlaps with the 45-degree line, indicating that the distribution o f spending o n EP1 i s very equitable (Heltberg et al., op.cit.). The benefits from EP2 spending are less evenly distributed, with the poorest half o f the population receiving about 35 percent o f the benefits. At higher levels o f education, the distribution o f spending gets progressively less equitable, with the poorest 50 percent only receiving about 5 percent o f the benefits at ESG2 level (Figure 5). Figure 5. Distribution o f benefits from public spending in education by income decile 0 0.1 0.2 0.3 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.7 0.8 0.9 1 Proportion of population, poorest to richest . Source: Heltberg et al. (2001), Figure 6. 93. Students and parents pay a signijkant proportion o f the recurrent costs at all f education, includingprimary school. As much as 18 percent o f EP1 and 23 levels o percent o f EP2 recurrent unit costs are covered by parents (school fees and books; data from 1996/97 household survey). In the case o f EP1, this corresponds to 12 percent o f household consumption expenditures o f the lowest-earning decile per child, and 10 percent o f household consumption expenditures o f the second-lowest earning decile. For EP2, this cost becomes prohibitively high, corresponding to 34 percent and 29 percent o f household consumption expenditures per child for the lowest and second-lowest income deciles, respectively. This suggests that the high level o f costs borne directly by the household acts as a serious disincentive towards sending children from poorest 59 households to primary school. In addition, the level o f fees varies widely from one village to another, but there is only a very weak correlation between income levels o f municipalities and school payments. This implies that school fees and other school expenditures are often a deterrent to sending children to school in poorer provinces. E. IMPACT OF HIV/AIDS ON THE EDUCATION SYSTEM 94. One o f the major constraints to the achievement o f universal enrolment and completion is the impact o f the HIV/AIDSpandemic on the education sector. Further investments in the sector will need to consider the impact o f H I V / A I D S o n the teaching force and on the student populations by accounting for teacher absenteeism and attrition, the need for further teacher training to offset these losses, as well as the cost o f enrolling orphans. 95. Costs of absenteeism due to HIV/AIDS are incurred when HIV-related illness in infected teachers keeps them from their teaching duties. Combining the information on the typical impact o f the illness with the salary levels, it i s possible to estimate these costs at US$1 million in 2002, increasing to US$1.5 million in 2006. It i s estimated that total teacher attrition will be about 7,450 between 2002 and 2006. O f these, about 2,700 teachers will be lost to HIV/AIDS.53 The unit cost o f teacher training implies that the additional costs o f teacher attrition due to HIV/AIDS can be estimated at about US$2.3 million in 2002, rising to US$2.7 million in 2006. 96. I t is also estimated that HIV/AIDS w i l l have a direct impact on the number of orphans. The number o f orphans i s expected to increase fkom the current 10 percent in EP1 and 11 percent in EP2, to 18 percent and 25 percent in 2010, respectively. The cost to enrol and maintain this number o f students under bursary or other programs to reach orphans and vulnerable children (estimated by the Government at US$8 per student year)54, i s calculated at US$2.6 million in 2002, rising to US$3.6 m i l l i o n in 2004 and US$4.6 million in 2006. 97. The total cost of HIV/AIDS on the education sector is estimated at US$7m in 2006, equivalent to a 5 percent increase in total education spending. Incorporating the cost o f teacher absenteeism, attrition and training, as well as the cost o f enrolling orphans and vulnerable children, the total cost amounts to US$4 million in 2002, increasing to US$7 million in 2006. Given the magnitude o f these costs, a comprehensive education sector response to mitigate the impact o f HIV/AIDS among school children, youth, teachers and administrative staff will need to be operationalized as a matter o f priority. The Ministry o f Education has started this process by launching the ‘Strategic Plan for HIV/AIDS’ that sets out a timetable to develop and implement policies to (i) provide 53 For simplicity it i s assumed that the AIDS prevalence among teachers i s the same as for the rest o f the population. 54 This estimate i s likely t o b e far too low, however, since it only just covers the average level o f school fees. In practice orphans will have t o benefit f r o m bursaries t o support living expenses as w e l l t o b e able to attend school. 60 support and care for education sector staff, ( ii) provide substitutes for teachers who are absent through illness, ( iii) ensure that orphans and vulnerable children have access to education, and (iv) address H I V / A I D S prevention in the new curriculum together with extra curricular activities to support prevention in a l l EP1 and EP2 schools. F. POLICY PRIORITIES FOR THE EDUCATION SECTOR 98. This chapter has highlighted several weaknesses in the performance o f the education sector and has identified eight critical areas for policy improvement. 99. Investigate the causes o f the low completion rates. The evidence available o n the general causes o f the l o w completion rates in Mozambique is scant and there i s a need for a further in-depth study. In the meantime, i t is recommended that the authorities move ahead vigorously with the implementation o f the new curriculum which plans to intoroduce three learning cycles withautomatic promotion within cycles. The implementation o f the curriculum will begin to address internal efficiency issues evident in the high repetition and drop-out rates. Available international evidence suggests that the girl drop-out rates are negatively correlated with the proportion o f female teachers. Therefore, given the extent o f the existing gender gap in primary education, the hiring o f female teachers should be pursued and i s likely to lead to improvements in girls’ retention and completion rates. 100. Merge the EPl and EP2 cycles into a singleprimary education cycle. The current distinction between EP1 and EP2 embodies various inefficiencies and can be eliminated without compromising the quality o f education. This reform would allow a substantial rationalization o f available resources across EP1 and EP2 (notably teachers and classrooms), it w o u l d homogenize teachers’ salaries and their qualifications across primary education, it would accelerate the school construction program, by eliminating the need to have separate schools for lower and upper primary school cycles, and i t would ultimately facilitate the expansion to universal primary education. 101. Improve cost efficiency in school construction and adopt a community based approach to school Construction. The Government should ensure that the construction cost per primary school classroom does not normally exceed $10,000 (inclusive o f furniture, water and sanitation, and auxiliary facilities), and should revise the construction standards which have to be satisfied by contractors and communities. This would reduce the scope for rent seeking from school construction contracts and reduce the time it takes to complete works. In addition, the government should expand the capacity to build new schools by decentralizing the school construction program to the regional or district level and involves the community in the construction, rehabilitation and maintenance o f schools, particularly in the primary level and in rural and isolated areas. This would also ensure that the location o f new schools occurs where i s most needed (demand driven), and that the scarce available funds are used efficiently. 102. Improve the equity o f education spending. The high level o f private costs bome by the household reduces the school enrollment o f the poorest children and i s a contributing factor for high drop-out rates and poor completion rates. The official or unofficial use o f school fees in primary education needs to be studied in order to ensure it i s reduced and 61 restructured in such a way that i t does not hinder the access o f the poor to education. This could be done through a combination o f increased allocations to schools and improvement o f the exemption arrangements for students from needy households. At the same time, the distribution o f benefits from public spending in secondary education i s highly inequitable, and the share o f the education budget going to secondary education should be reduced further, in favor o f primary education. The level o f cost recovery in secondary education should be maintained, in parallel with making bursaries available to deserving students. 103. Reverse the decline in the quality of education by introducing the new curriculum and expanding the CFPP teachers training. Extending access to education should not be at the expense o f education quality, and several measures can respond to weaknesses identified in this report. The planned introduction o f a new curriculum will help to address some issues related to quality and efficiency. The magnitude o f the effect, however, will depend on parallel programs to upgrade teacher subject knowledge, improve teaching practice, ensure an adequate supply o f teaching guides and textbooks to support the new curriculum and upgrade school infrastructure. The trend towards hiring teachers without appropriate training qualifications should be reversed, and a priority placed o n improving the supply and quality o f pre- and in-service teacher education programs. In this context, it is recommended that the Government improves the quality o f teacher education programs offered at CFPP centers to ensure that all new primary teachers have CFPP qualifications. Teacher education programs (length and cuniculum) should be restructured significantly to increase the supply o f qualified teachers. The CFPP system should be reformed to adopt alternative training modalities aimed at reducing resident time and increasing practical training. This would allow an increase in the annual supply o f teachers with at least minimal pedagogical qualifications and a more affordable salary cost. The recommendation above to improve efficiencies in teacher allocation will also help improve quality by reducing PTRs. 104. Reallocations within the education budget could improve eficiency while remaining within an envelope consistent with the PARPA. Savings can be made by (i) identifying and removing all any “ghost teachers” from the payroll, as teachers o n the EP1 payroll outnumber those recorded by the schools by 20 percent; (ii) rationalizing the deployment o f teachers across provinces and schools, improving the use o f teachers’ time in EP2, and reallocating teachers from EP2 towards EP1; ( iii) reducing construction costs; and (iv) reducing the subsidy o n tertiary education. These savings would likely be sufficient to compensate for the proposed scholarships for AIDS orphans and the proposed reduction in primary school fees. 105. Develop a comprehensive education sector action plan on HIV/AIDS. The HIV/AIDS epidemic will have wide implications for the education sector, mainly as a result o f the large number o f orphaned children. The Government needs to operationalize i t s ‘Strategic Plan for HIV/AIDS’ into a comprehensive education sector response to mitigate the impact o f HIV/AIDS crisis. 106. Improve data collection on education spending. Although the availability o f data o n indicators o f access, performance and quality o f the education sector i s very good, the reporting on external financing, other donor funding made available directly to the education sector (off-budget aid from donors), and particularly o n the collection o f local 62 fees (receitus prbprius), i s weak. This lack o f comprehensive expenditure data imposes serious limitations on the analysis o f education expenditures and needs to be resolved. 63 CHAPTER 4. HEALTH A. INTRODUCTION 107. Despite progress in medical coverage in recent years, Mozambique’s k e y health indicators show a mixed picture against the findings o f the last PER in 1992. Infant mortality and under-5 mortality - usually emblematic o f the state o f health in general - have improved slightly or stagnated, depending o n the source. In 1989, the infant mortality rate was some 137-15055per 1000 live births, falling to 129 by 2001 (at best a 14 percent improvement in 12 years). The under-5 mortality rate was 203-21956 in 1989 and 200 in 2001 (at most a 9.5 percent improvement in 12 years). Some indicators have improved markedly, e.g. the intra-hospital maternal mortality rate fell from 230 per 100,000 live births in 1993 to 160 in 2002. Yet others deteriorated: in 1989 life expectancy at birth was 43-49 years5’; in 2001 i t was 42 years, some o f the reduction being due to HIV/AIDS. Mozambique’s indicators also continue to lag behind those o f i t s neighbors. Malaria i s the leading cause of death. HIV/AIDS prevalence was 13.8 percent in 2002 and has become one o f the main causes o f death for the working age group. These poor indicators cannot be attributed entirely to l o w health spending levels because these have been above 2.5 percent o f GDP in most years since 1992. Neighboring countries with similar levels o f spending exhibit better health indicators (Table 19 on page 65). This chapter o f the PER will, among other things, investigate the various factors that influence the outcome indicators and check to what extent there i s a link between health spending and outcomes. I t has been observed in other countries that there i s only a tenuous link between health spending and health status (Filmer et al., 2000). 108. This chapter first describes the background to Mozambique’s “lost decade” in health outcomes. I t proceeds to examine the allocation and effectiveness o f public expenditure in health. It concludes by proposing further reprioritization and a series o f reallocations in accordance with the efficiency and equity goals o f the Government’s health strategy. B. K E Y HEALTH SECTOR ISSUES 109. Health care is overwhelmingly provided by the public sector, organized under the title National Health System (NHS). I t has 1,224 facilities and 16,098 beds and a staff o f 17,890 workers (Human Resource Directorate Annual Report). O f the medical staff, 60 55 137 from World Bank (1992); 150 from WDI. See similar numbers in INE-DHS (1998). 56 203 from World Bank (1992); 219 from DHS-INE (1997). 57 L i f e expectancy: 49 in World Bank (1992); 43 in WDI for 1990. 64 percent are trained. In the past decade, private care provision has expanded, mainly in the major cities; the services are priced for middle-class customers. As o f 1997, the Ministry o f Health accounted for 70 percent o f health spending, NGOs for 23 percent and for-profit private operators 7 percent. Non-profit care is provided increasingly by NGOs, some with donor backing, but their contributions are significant only in Maputo City and Nampula, where 3 1 were identified in a survey in 2001.58 110. There are two further sets o f providers: the network o f community facilities and the traditional healers. The former i s managed by community financed village health workers, who receive technical support and drugs from the National Health System. The volunteer workers (socorristas) are not paid. Due to very limited training and access to only a restricted set o f drugs, they are not very effective health care providers. The communities apparently know this, and frequently bypass the community facilities. To convey an idea o f their relative importance, some 3 percent o f clients at rural N H S clinics had previously visited a community health post, and h l l y 76 percent had visited a traditional healer. On the other hand, a beneficiary assessment (Swiss Agency for Development Cooperation, 2000) found that only 3 percent o f households surveyed went to traditional healers, though in Nampula province the figure rose to 6 percent. Due to the lack o f information about these two sets o f providers, this PER does not focus on them other than to reinforce the plea o f the Health Expenditure Review (Yates and Zorzi, 2000, p. 4) that their role be assessed formally and that ways o f expanding their role in the health care process be investigated. 111. The health status o f Mozambicans is extremely poor, due to poverty, lack o f clean water, poor hygiene standards, malnutrition, an environment which fosters harmful pathogens and parasites, the after-effects o f war, environmental disasters5’ and inadequate health services. As in many sub-Saharan African countries, the disease burden arises mainly from infectious and parasitic diseases, particularly malaria, pneumonia, measles, tetanus, tuberculosis, gastrointestinal illnesses and HIV/AIDS. Malaria i s s t i l l the dominant cause o f morbidity: according to a survey o f well-being, the QlBB (Questionho de Indicadores Bisicos de Bem-Estar), 18 percent o f the population had been i llin the fortnight preceding the survey, o f whom 46 percent had malaria and 13 percent diarrhea (Instituto Nacional de Estatistica, 2001). Table 19 shows that Mozambique’s infant and under-5 mortality rates, and maternal mortality rates, exceed those o f Malawi, Tanzania and Zambia and the sub-Saharan African averages. ’*O n the role o f NGOs, see also Pfeiffer (2003) and AgQncia Suiqa para o Desenvolvimento e a Cooperaqiio (2001). ’’From 1965 to 2001, 14 major floods, nine major droughts and four major disasters from typhoon landfalls occurred. Most were associated with outbreaks o f cholera and diarrheal diseases. 65 Table 19. Health expenditures and performance: a regional comparison Mozam- Malawi Tanzania Zambia Sub-Sa- bique haran Africa Public health expenditure as a % o f GDP 3.4 2.8 1.3 3.6 2.4 Malnutrition (wt. for age, % under 5 years) 26 25 29 24 n.a. Population per physician 43,583 45,737 n.a. 10,917 21,970 L i f e expectancy at birth (years) 42 39 44 38 47 Infant mortality rate per 1000 live births 129 103 93 115 91 Mortality rate under 5 per 1000 live births 200 193 149 187 162 Maternal mortality rate (/lOO,OOO live births) 1,083 620 (PESS) - 649 (PESS) - (PESS) Sources: W o r l d Bank, World Development Indicators, unless otherwise indicated. “PESS” i s the Plano Estratdgico do Sector du Suzide (Health Sector Strategic Plan) 2001-2005-2010 (see Republica de Mogambique, Council o f Ministers, 2001). M o s t o f the indicators refer t o the year 2000, this being the latest year for which data are available. As remarked above, infant mortality has fallen only a little in the past decade. There are also large geographical variations in infant mortality rates, from 60 per 1000 in Maputo City to 180 in ZambCzia. M u c h o f this i s associated with malnutrition. Almost one in every two children in rural areas is malnourished. Global studies indicate that malnutrition i s implicated in around 50 percent o f childhood illnesses. W h i l e food availability i s a necessary condition to reduce malnutrition, there are more important causal factors: lack o f knowledge about appropriate feeding practices, poor maternal health and nutrition, and lack o f diet diversity. Primary health care can potentially make an important difference even without significant changes in incomes and food output. The fact that there has been but little improvement in the infant and the under-5 mortality rates prompts the question whether the primary health care services have had the needed impact in changing behavior in appropriate ways. 112. The causes o f the key health outcomes, as remarked above, are multi-factorial. In Mozambique’s case, the key factors have generally improved: (i) Food availability has improved by some 3 1 percent o n a country-wide basis in the past decade, and most o f this i s due to increased output o f cereals by smallholders6’; (ii) Poverty has declined in both urban and in rural areas, as emerges from comparisons o f the household survey o f 1996/7 with the CWIQ survey o f 2001 (Simler and Harrower, 2003). The number o f household owning a radio rose from 27 percent in 1996 to 49 percent in 2001, and the number owning a bicycle rose from 12 percent in 1996 to 27 percent in 2001. (iii) Access to clean water has improved considerably in rural areas - from about 10 percent in 1992 to 35 percent in 2001 (see chapter 6 o f this PER). The impact on health o f other factors such as natural disasters are harder to evaluate, and i t may be that the floods o f 2000 had a large negative impact o n outcomes; but on the 6o Agriculture value added grew 4.9 percent per annum 1990-2000, while population grew 2.2 percent pea., making an increase o f 3 1 percent in food availability. 66 other hand, Mozambique has suffered many natural disasters in the past, such as droughts. and i t i s not clear that the recent ones have been more damaging than those o f a decade ago. The puzzle, then, i s why, despite the improvements in several health- relevant factors, as well as the increased effort by the health services, the headline health outcomes improved so slowly. O n this point this chapter o f the PER i s deliberately agnostic, owing to the complexity o f the subject. In the remainder o f this chapter, an attempt is made to evaluate some aspects o f the health service to see whether there are inefficiencies that could be rectified so that the health service has a greater impact o n outcomes in the future. Note that this chapter o f the PER does not argue that the health services are to blame for the disappointing health outcomes. Rather the point i s that the link between health outcomes and health services i s tenuous, and that i t consequently behooves the authorities to seek efficiency improvements so as to have a greater impact in the future. 113. There has been a substantial increase in the coverage ofprimary health services. The percent o f children fully immunized by two years o f age was 55 percent in 1995, rising to 82 percent in 2001. Immunization rates improved - with measles coverage rising from 39 percent in 1980-85 to 57 percent in 2000, and DPT coverage rising from 29 percent in 1980-85 to 61 percent in 20006’. Deliveries attended by a trained provider rose from 26 percent in 1993 to 45 percent in 2002. Consultations per inhabitant more than doubled, rising from 0.36 in 1993 to 0.77 in 1999. Taking all the efforts together (consultations, pre- and post-natal care, etc.), the overall output o f the government health system rose by 59 percent between 1993 and 2000, particularly in the northern region, owing to large investments and redeployment o f health staff. On a per inhabitant basis, “standard delivery units” (using a set o f coefficients to weight the s u m o f the different types o f care) 62 increased from 2.4 in 1993 to 3.3 in 1999, or a 37 percent increase. 114. The common fund for drugprocurement has proven a success. A common fund, financed by 8 donors, was started in 1997 to rationalize pharmaceutical procurement. Expenditures run to $15-20 million annually, o f which the Government shoulders a small ($3-4 million) but growing share. Using international tendering, the pool attains economies o f scale. The central health authorities have administered it competently, with assistance fi-om the Swiss Development Corporation, which has provided the added benefit o f relatively good data sets on many aspects o f health delivery. The bulk o f the drugs are distributedvia the “classical route” o f requisitions by the hospitals, whence they are distributed to the clinics; about one-tenth are distributed in the form o f drug “kits”, as part o f the Essential Drug Program, direct to clinics and health posts. A cost recovery system has been in place since the 1970s. Officially, an average o f some 2.5 percent o f the cost i s recovered. However, the administration o f the cost recovery setup, with i t s well-intentioned exemptions, i s widely perceived as unfair and prejudicial to the poor (see below in paragraphs 119 and 120 o n page 68). There will be a need in the 61 There may be an issue o f definition. By Ministerial records, D P T coverage was 82 percent by 2001 (HSRP Indicators, 2002). By World Development Indicators records, DPT coverage was 6 1 percent. 62 The formula is: S D U = 12*deliveries + 9* bed occupancy days + 0.5* immunizations + external consultations + mother & c h i l d consultations. 67 future to “indigenize” the management o f the common fund and the data collection that accompanies it. 115. But the increased coverage and health care effort has not, in general, had the anticipated impact. Three distinct groups o f linkages can be identified: 0 In a few areas, there i s a clear link between the care effort and the outcome. An example i s the increased rate o f clinic-attended births, which contributed to the sharply reduced maternal mortality rate. 0 In a few other areas, one would not expect the increased care effort to have had much impact, e.g. the reduction in life expectancy stemming from H I V I A I D S (because o f the prohibitively high cost o f anti-retrovirals). 0 Overall, as pointed out above, the link between the care effort and expenditure o n the one hand, and health outcomes o n the other, i s tenuous. The improved vaccinations and immunizations, and the overall increased effort (consultations, pre- and post-natal care, etc.) did not do much for the infant and under-5 mortality rates. This may be partially due to the impact o f HIV/AIDS on infant and under- 5 mortality (many babies born with A I D S die early, and families afflicted with AIDS provide poorer care for children). The following paragraphs suggest some clues about factors diminishing the quality o f care and limiting access63,and which may contribute to the explanation for the tenuous link between the increased health effort and the disappointing outcomes. These include: the distance from health facilities, l o w staff qualifications and general lack of staff, poor morale and staff remuneration, lack of drugs, and inappropriate use of user fees. 116. There continue to be problems o f access due to distance, the cost o f transport, and the lack o f access roads. The SDC-funded beneficiary assessment was revealing o n this point64. W h e n asked about difficulties in using the health facilities, between 13 percent and 57 percent o f respondents said the high cost was a problem, between 2 percent and 32 percent referred to bad treatment, between 14 percent and 80 percent referred to transport difficulties, and between 2 percent (Tete) and 30 percent (Maputo City) referred to “lack o f medicines”. 18 percent o f Tete respondents, 15 percent o f Inhambane respondents and 13 percent o f Nampula respondents took more than three hours to reach the health facility (ibid, p. 72). Further progress with the road rehabilitation program could be one o f the key health interventions o f the future. 117. Staffqualijkations and numbers do not match the caseload. As o f 2002 there were 17,890 public health sector staff (Human Resource Directorate Annual Report), their number having increased by 4 percent since 1998. There are 43,584 inhabitants per 63 The beneficiary assessment by SDC (Swiss Agency for Development Cooperation, 2000) examined a large number o f potential barriers and found, using a logit model (p. SS), that socio-economic status, educational status, distance from health facility, and province (possibly proxying for illegal user fees) were statistically significant in determining access. 64 Swiss Agency for Development Cooperation, 2000, p. 68, Table 3.14. I t should be noted that the survey has limited representativeness as it covered only four provinces. 68 doctor, similar to Malawi’s 45,737 but greatly in excess o f Zambia’s 10,971 or sub- Saharan Africa’s 21,970 (see Table 19 on page 65). Surveys indicate that consultation times were very short (average 4 minutes), that triage practice was poor, that health worker compliance with protocols was poor, and that diagnosis and treatment was were Although not always a p p r ~ p r i a t e ~ ~. the SDC beneficiary assessment found (p. 12) that 87 percent o f respondents were satisfied with the care that they received, staff shortages proved to be a great concem, e.g. over half o f the users o f health posts in Inhambane raised this as a serious concem @. 11). When asked what improvements were needed, 36 percent overall referred to availability o f staff (p. 69). 118. Staffsalaries, especially at the senior level, are low. Particularly at the senior levels, salaries are l o w compared with border wage rates. A hospital doctor in Mozambique i s paid $3,850, compared with $9,000 in Lesotho, Botswana and Zimbabwe (HSER, 2002, p. 73). A senior health manager i s paid $3,800, compared with $10,500 over the border. With markets for physicians and registered nurses rapidly becoming integrated Africa-wide, this i s an unsustainable situation. The l o w wage rates are neither conducive to attracting the top level skills, nor to improving staff productivity or the quality o f care. 119. Drug availability continues to be aproblem. There have been improvements in the adequacy and predictability o f medical supplies due to the allocation o f a significant share o f a growing budget to pharmaceuticals. However, there is considerable evidence that drug availability did not improve at the rate planned. Christie and Ferrara’s (1999) survey inquired why respondents who were i lldid not seek health care at a facility. 38 percent responded that the facility was too far, 35 percent said they lacked the money, and 6 percent said the facility lacked the drugs. A beneficiary assessment (Swiss Agency for Development Cooperation, 2000) documented a poor state o f drug availability in many health centers; approximately two-thirds o f the surveyed health facility users identified the availability o f medicines as the area needing the greatest improvement and attention. The Rational Drug Study by SDC (200 1) found problems with availability o f antibiotics, and noted that the availability o f drugs was no better than in 1996 when comparable data had been collected. I nthe QIBB/CWIQ survey in 2001, respondents were asked whether they went for a medical consultation in the past fortnight. 11 percent did (INE 2001, p.36), but o f these, 39 percent complained o f the long wait, 35 percent o f a lack o f drugs, and 19 percent o f the cost. Inthe Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey (see para. 136), 58 percent o f the clinics surveyed had suffered a stockout o f at least one essential drug in the previous six months, and only 66-76 percent had all essential drugs in stock at the time o f asking. 120. Irregular use o f user charges is a disincentive to receiving adequate care. There i s a need for a transparent cost recovery system and rules o f exemption. There i s much anecdotal evidence o f illegal drug selling. This i s illustrated by a quote from the SDC beneficiary assessment (p. 76): “As one focus group participant in Maxixe District, 65URC study o f the management o f quality (1998), Rational drug study by SDC (2001), Baseline survey for evaluation o f I M C I (2001). 69 Inhambane stated it, ” q y o u pay 1000 Mts. there are no drugs, [but] $you have 40- 50,000 Mts, drugs appear immediately”. Perturbingi s that while users say they are forced to pay, health workers believe that they provide free care as needed (SDC beneficiary assessment p. 80): in 22 out o f the 30 health facilities examined, where health workers indicated that patients get treatment even if they do not have money, it was found that at least 20 percent o f users o f those facilities indicated that they were refused treatment. There is a perception that there “are no free services”. Fee information i s not readily available, making way for negotiation over the price. Widely differing prices are charged. While child consultations are supposed to be free, rates o f 500-1000 Meticais are often quoted, and sometimes rates significantly higher than these are quoted66. The ETSDS found in 2002 that, although consultations are supposed to be gratis, 35 percent o f children were required to pay. More surprise inspections o f facilities may b e called for, as well as clear posting o f price and exemption schedules at all facilities. 121. I t is unlikely that the Millennium Development Goals w i l l be attained. The MDG for matemal mortality i s that it fall by % by 2015, viz. from 1083 per 100,000 live births to 271, This i s unlikely under existing circumstances: even if overall matemal mortality were to fall at the same rate as intra-hospital maternal mortality, this would bring it down to only 644 by 2015. Another MDG i s that under-5 mortality fall by two-thirds, viz. from 200 in 2001 to 67 in 2015. Taking the “best” rate o f reduction between 1989 and 2001 as a guide, projecting current trends delivers an under-5 mortality rate o f 180 in 2015. Even this i s optimistic due to the possible intensification o f AIDS. c. EXPENDITURE TRENDS 122. Health expenditure has risen sharply. As i s shown in Table 20, total public expenditure on health, domestically and externally financed, grew by 21 percent annually in real terms between 1997 and 2000, rising from 2.3 percent o f GDP in 1997 to 3.4 percent in 2000. Otherwise expressed, it was the equivalent o f US$5.0 per capita per annum in 1997 to $7.5 in 2000, and is estimated at $10.7 in 2002. 123. Health expenditure is largely externallyfinanced. This considerable increase in spending was financed by increases in the government budget allocation from about 7.7 percent o f domestically financed expenditure in 1997 to 8.8 percent in 2000, as w e l l as by increases in aid - grants, loans, and the health component o f general budget support. The domestically and extemally financed contributions grew at roughly the same rate, such that external funding remained between 69 percent and 70 percent throughout the period. Expenditures are projected to rise to $15.9 in 2005 and to $21.3 in 2010. 124. A study carried out by Minist6rio da Saude e SDC (2001) managed to obtain information from 18 bilateral donor agencies, 5 development banks and 4 U N agencies supporting the health sector. O f these, the largest supporters were USAID, the World Bank, Switzerland, Norway, the Netherlands, Denmark, the European U n i o n and the UK. 66 SDC beneficiary assessment (p. 13). 70 Disbursements by all donors in the health field totalled some US$ 80 million in 2000, o f which three-quarters took the form o f grants. Table 20. Total actual health expenditure at current prices, 1997-2000 Item 1997 1998 1999 2000 Total public expenditure in the health sector Nominal (Mt bn) 929 1,141 1,476 1,974 Real (constant 2000 M t bn) 1,117 1,312 1,649 1,974 in percent o f GDP 2.3% 2.4% 2.8% 3.4% Contribution from different sources of finance in billion Meticais State budget, viz. &om tax revenues 258 316 40 1 571 Aid General budget support, t h ” state budget 73 90 220 345 Grants and loans to health sector a 5 74 708 817 1007 Household contributions 24 28 37 51 as percent of total expenditures in health State budget, viz. from tax revenues 28% 28% 27% 29% Aid 69.7% 69.9% 70.3% 68.5% General budget support, thru’ state budget 7.9% 7.9% 14.9% 17.5% Grants and loans to health sector 61.8% 62.0% 55.4% 51.0% Household contributions 2.5% 2.4% 2.5% 2.6% 100% 100% 100% 100% Per capita total expenditure in the health sector In current Meticais 57,793 69,384 87,636 114,502 In U S dollars 5 .O 5.9 6.9 7.5 Share of domestic state budget allocated to health 7.7% 6.5% 7.7% . .. 8.8% Source: HSER 2002 Tables 4.1 and 4.2, unless otherwise stated. a Source: MinistCrio da Saude e SDC, 2001. Source: from estimates o f recorded user fees and charges in Austral e MinistCrio do Plano e Finanqas (1999). These are probably understated. 125. The contribution o f external funds to capital expenditures declined from 82 percent in 1997 to 61 percent in 2000 (see Table 21). This reflects a shift in donor support from post-war reconstruction towards a greater emphasis o n consolidating health infrastructure and improving the volume, coverage and quality o f health services. 126. Recurrent cost implications o f capital spending are now high on the agenda. The Ministry has produced a draft investment plan (2002) which proposes restrictions o n new investments to the most under-served areas and to facility upgrades where there are clear efficiency gains to be achieved. The recurrent cost implications have been assessed and included in the Cenririo de Despesas e Financiamento do Sector Saude de Me‘dio Prazo 2001a). 2001-2005 (MinistCrio da S a ~ d e 71 Table 21. Source o f funding by economic classification, 1997 and 2000 1 Item State budget 1997 Extemal funds a State budget 2000 Extemal funds a Total public health sector expenditure (current Mt bn) 33 1 486 917 864 Recurrent expenditure 301 353 793 668 Salaries and personnel-related costs 137 107 373 196 Pharmaceuticals 17 155 62 265 Other goods & services and recurrent costs 147 92 358 207 Capital expenditure 30 132 124 196 Contribution from main sources of finance (%) Recurrent expenditure 46% 54% 54% 46% Salaries and personnel-related costs 56% 44% 66% 35% Pharmaceuticals 10% 90% 19% 81% Other goods & services and recurrent costs 62% 39% 63% 37% Capital expenditure 18% 82% 39% 61% Source: H S E R (2002) Table 4.3, in turn f r o m CGE (1998-2000), Ministry o f Health and Management Sciences for Health (1999) and MinistQio da Saude e S D C (2001). nthe State budget. a Excluding health’s share o f general budget support implicit i 127. Thefastest growing recurrent spending category, “other goods and services”, is being diverted into staffbenefits. Between 1997 and 2000 this category grew by 97 percent in real terms (see Table 22). Anecdotal evidence suggests that much o f this constitutes transfers in the form o f vehicles, training courses, seminars, workshops, inland or abroad, and other rewards. As noted in the chapter on cross-cutting issues, higher and middle level health sector workers are paid well below their market value. Under these circumstances dual employment arrangements, illicit fee charging and a failure to exempt indigent patients from charges are inevitable. The extent o f the resultant inefficiencies may be considerable because o f the extent to which expenditures o n fuel, utilities, transportation and maintenance related to priority service delivery are being compromised. 128. The share o f pharmaceuticals in expenditure declined from 26-30 percent in 1997/8 to 22 percent in 2000 (see Table 22). Nevertheless real spending o n pharmaceuticals increased by 58 percent over the period 1997-2000. 72 Table 22. Health expenditure (actual) by economic classification Item 1997 1998 1999 2000 Growth 1997- in billions of current Meticais: Total expenditure 817 1028 1,331 1,78 1 Recurrent expenditure 654 876 1,112 1,461 Salaries and personnel-related costs 244 353 461 569 Pharmaceuticals 172 261 267 327 Other goods & services and recurrent costs 239 262 3 84 565 Capital expenditure 162 152 219 320 in billions of constant 2000 Meticais: Total expenditure 982 1,182 1,487 1,781 81% Recurrent expenditure 787 1,006 1,242 1,461 86% Salaries and personnel-related costs 293 405 515 569 94% Pharmaceuticals 207 300 299 327 58% Other goods & services and recurrent costs 287 301 429 565 97% Capital expenditure 195 176 245 320 64% Comvosition of recurrent expenditure: Salaries and personnel-related costs 37% 42% 39% Pharmaceuticals 26% 24% 22% - Other goods & services and recurrent costs 37% 35% 39% 100% 100% 100% 100% Source: H S E R 2002, Tables 4.4 and 4.5, in tum from CGE 1998-200; Ministtrio das Finanqas e SDC (2001) and others 129. The share o f staff costs in recurrent expenditures is fairly low, at 40percent (see Table 22). In large part, this reflects the wage compression referred to above. The increase in staff between 1997 and 2000 was 3 percent, so that nearly all o f the increase o f spending o n this item (94 percent, in real terms, between 1997 and 2000) went into compensation - salaries, benefits and training. C i v i l service wage scales were decompressed to some extent in 1999 and this explains the bulk o f the increased compensation. Despite the increase in wages, as o f 2000 the staff cost per worker was only $20067per month all told. L o w salaries have often tempted professional health workers to engage in secondary income generating activities, and this may help explain the lack o f impact o f the salary reform o n productivity. 130. The salary decompression o f 1997-2000failed to induce signiJicant productivity gains in terms o f quantity or quality. Between 1997 and 2000, health service provision rose by 13 percent, while service quality appears to have remained low. Services delivered per staff member rose by 7 percent (or just over 2 percent per year) while remuneration rose by 87 percent. The unit cost o f service rose by 53 percent. From the point o f view o f civil service reform, the major increase in spending was not a success, in that by using the increased salary bill to reward the competent and by reassigning the incompetent, greater productivity increases could have been obtained, either in the form o f increased outputs or improved quality. In the next round o f civil service reform - in 67 Source: H S E R 2002, Table 4.6. 73 which the health ministry is one o f the pilot ministries - it should b e ensured that salary reform i s more effective. 13 1. Further expansions o f health spending are planned. The projections in Table 23 are mostly from the Health Sector Expenditure Review (HSER, 2002), which are based on (i)increasing resources for the health sector, consistent with the PARPA; ( ii) increasing external financing as forecasted by the sector’s medium term expenditure framework (MinistCrio da Sahde, 2001a); and ( iii) GDP growth o f 8 percent. This scenario leaves Mozambique almost as dependent upon foreign assistance as currently (66 percent in 2010 versus 69-70 percent currently). By 2010 spending would be about $20 per capita. 132. However, these projections are inconsistent with the recurrent budget ceilings developed by this Review. The methodology and rationale for determining ceilings on recurrent budget items was explained in paragraph 15 o n page 22 (Table 4). In the case o f health, this recurrent budget ceiling i s reproduced in line 7 o f Table 23. The implication is that the medium-term projections o f Table 23 will have to be reduced by about 9 percent - unless additional donor assistance can be found and applied to the recurrent budget. Table 23. Projected health spending up to 2010 Item 2000 2001 2002 2005 2010 actual est. est. proj. proj. 1 Total public expenditure in the health sector 2 Nominal (Mt bn) 1,974 2,782 3,458 6,389 12,342 3 Real (constant 2000 Mt bn) 1,974 2,588 2,945 4,701 7,116 4 in percent o f GDP 3.4% 3.8% 4.0% 5.1% 5.2% 5 Total recurrent expenditure 6 from HSER 2002 (US$ m) 93 110 120 185 7 feasible ceiling from Table 4 (US$ m) 93 110 120 I70 8 Contribution from different sources of finance 9 as percent of total exDenditures in health 10 State budget, viz. from tax revenues 29% 27% 29% 31% 32% 11 Aid 12 General budget support 18% 19% 18% 9% 5% 13 Grants and loans to health sector a 51% 52% 52% 58% 61% 14 Household contributions 2.6% 2.1% 2.2% 2.2% 2.2% 15 Per capita total expenditure in the health sector 16 In current Meticais (‘000) 114 158 191 328 620 17 In U S dollars 7.5 7.6 7.8 11.4 20.3 18 Share of health in domestic state budget 8.8% 9.7% 9.9% 11% 13% Source: HSER 2002 Tables 4.10 and 4.11, unless otherwise stated. aSource: Ministerio da Saude e SDC, 2001 (for 2000 and 2001). Source: fi-om estimates of recorded user fees and charges in Austral e MinistCrio do Plan0 e FinanCas (1 999). These are probably understated. 133. For those in receipt o f health care, health service use is fairly equitably distributed, particularly for preventative health care. A benefit incidence study using the 1997 household survey showed that the distribution o f services from preventative health care (both vaccinations and antenatal care) are very close to the 45-degree line, indicating that service use is highly equitable in the case o f vaccinations (Figure 6 reproduced from 74 Heltberg et al., 2001). The benefits from curative health care6* are less evenly distributed, with the poorest half o f the population receiving about 35-40 percent o f hospital and health center usage.69 Figure 6. Distribution of benefits from public spending in health by income decile i Consumption per capita Vaccination participation Antenatal participati a 0 Proportion of population, poorest to richest 1 134. Equity o f access to basic services improved modestly, but much remains to be done. A measure o f equity i s to compare the amount o f services7’ per inhabitant o n a provincial basis (Table 24). In the northem provinces these grew at generally faster rates than in the initially better-served southem provinces, so that the high/low ratio fell from 7.7 to 5.9 between 1993 and 2000, indicating a modest i m ~ r o v e m e n t . ~ ~ 68 All individuals who accessed health services (hospital, health center, or other medical facility) during the month preceding the interview. 69 In most countries consumption i s more evenly distributed than hospital usage. Figure 6 indicates the opposite for Mozambique. This anomaly stems from: (i) respondents’ conksion among “health post”, “clinic” and “hospital”, and ( ii) focus o f the survey question onpublic facilities, omitting private the hospital use by the better off. 70 See the definition o f the composite indicator o f output at footnote 62 o n page 66. 71 The 1992 PER noted that the Government’s objective was to increase the share o f recurrent expenditures at Levels I and I1(primary care) and thus improve the equity o f the system. This share fell, however, from 64 percent in 1982 to 44 percent i n 1989 and to 42 percent in 2001 (for details see Annex 1 1, Table 39, p. 112). In preparatory work for the PESS i t was assumed that the ratio could be raised to 47 percent by 2005 (MinistCrio da Saude, 2001b, table 6). The tertiary hospitals in 2000 consumed 45 percent o f the finding for goods and services. Another measure o f equity i s the ratio o f the goods and services budget per capita for the most favored (Maputo City) and the least favored (Zambkzia) provincehegion. This ratio fluctuated without trend between 3.92 and 9.51 between 1994 and 2001 - see Annex 1 1, Table 39 on page 112. 75 Table 24. Health service units per capita, selected provinces and regions Health service unitsaper capita 1993 2000 increase (YO) C. Delgado (lowest in 2000) 1.6 2.4 45 Zambtzia (lowest in 1993) 1.5 2.5 70 Maputo province + city + H C M (hlghest in 1993) 11.4 13.9 29 Mozambique 2.7 3.6 35 Ratio: lughest / lowest 7.7 5.9 Source: HSER 2002, Table 5.5. a Weighted su m o f a l i s t o f identified services (e.g. consultations). See footnote 62, p. 66. Maputo City and the Hospital Central de Maputo are included. Excluding them gives a similar quantitative result. Detailed data in HSER 2002. More comprehensive measures o f inequality (e.g. coefficient o f variation, using data for all provinces) delivered similar qualitative results. This improvement notwithstanding, the territorial distribution o f facilities improved only slightly between 1992 and 2002, with the total number o f functioning facilities increasing from 1,140 to 1,22472. One speculates that the aim o f equity o f access to basic services might have been reached at lower cost by increasing further the number o f rural facilities (with appropriate staffing and resources) in the under-served northern provinces; and that one o f the explanations for the weakness o f the link between the care effort and health outcomes may be that many needy people have not yet been reached. 135. Key financial information on programs and other important aspects is unavailable. The new hnctional classification, established in 200 1 in accordance with UN standards, does not automatically contain detail about health intervention programs. These need to be created for each country’s specific situation. Since this has not yet been done, it was not possible to identify h o w much expenditure was directed at important programs: Pharmaceuticals Support, Integrated Human Resource Development, Malaria Control, the ExtendedProgram o f Immunisation, Maternal & Child Health, Tuberculosis Control, and H I V - A I D S control. The ministry i s currently working on such a detailed classification and it i s anticipated that this will be introduced at least as soon as the SISTAFE i s implemented. Another shortcoming i s the tracking o f the ministry’s equity objectives: the standard budget execution reports have no breakdown by facility level ( I to N). 136. Tracking surveys should become a standard instrument to improve expenditure quality and cut wastage. The Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey (ETSDS, Lindelow et al., 2003) in the health service was a pilot effort to obtain survey data to track the transfer o f funds from the central government, to provinces, districts and health posts. It attempted to link measures o f the effectiveness the funds transfer mechanisms to the effectiveness o f spending at the local level. The ultimate objective o f the survey was to examine and improve accountability. The premise o f the ETSDS was that delays in budget execution, as w e l l as weak systems o f control, with consequent 72 There were 1195 health posts in 1992, o f which 255 had been damaged by the war, and 225 centers, o f which 15 had been damaged (1992 PER, p. 105) - for a total o f 1140 fhctioning facilities. In 2002 there were 1,224 facilities (Human Resource Directorate Annual Report). 76 scope for leakages and discretion in the allocation o f resources, m a y adversely affect quality and efficiency o f service delivery. 137. In fact the ETSDS found that record-keeping was so poor that it was impossible to determine whether there was leakage o f funds between the different levels. It did, however, turn up evidence o f leakage o f drugs between the provincial and the district level. A s mentioned above (para. 120), the survey confirmed that the user charge system is inequitable, lacks transparency and creates scope for staff to pocket the moneys collected. 138. Concerning drug administration, serious failings were found. As pointed out (para. 119), 58 percent o f the clinics surveyed had suffered a stockout o f at least one essential drug in the previous six months. The average stockout time was 6-7 weeks (Lindelow et al. 2003, p. 42). Only between 66 and 76 percent o f all facilities had all essential (“EPI”) vaccines in stock at the time o f asking (ibid., p. 44). 139. The ETSDS found that only 80 percent o f staff were actually in post at any one time. Rural areas were particularly likely to have poorly qualified staff, and there are high levels o f turnover and l o w levels o f satisfaction o f staff in rural areas. The whole question o f staff incentives needs to be reexamined. It i s not only a matter o f salary, for rural staff complained o f the lack o f access to public services, access to training and career advancement. 140. The survey, in sum, revealed important information about the system’s functioning and pointed the way to improvements. Several o f its recommendations have been cited above. Overall the ETSDS was a successful venture and should be re eated in the health ministry and other ministries as a means o f improving service quality. R D. IMPACT OF HIV/AIDS ON THE HEALTH SYSTEM 141. Mozambique is one o f the African countries hit hardest by the H I V epidemic. In 2002 about 1.1 million Mozambican adults and children were living with HIV/AIDS, with an adult prevalence o f 13.8 percent. The impact o f the epidemic i s likely to grow more serious during the next decade (Ministry o f Health et al., 2002), with prevalence o f HIV/AIDS among adults increasing to 16.3 percent by 2010. The number o f AIDS- related deaths i s projected to double by 2010. By 2010 life expectancy at birth is expected to drop from 43 to 36 years, rather than increasing to 50 years. Similarly, by 2010 infant mortality i s expected to be at least 25 percent higher than it would have been in the absence o f HIVIAIDS. By 2010, an estimated 1.13 million Mozambican children will have lost one or both parents to AIDS. 142. The demandfor health services w i l l increase substantially as a result o f the HIV/AIDSpandemic. H I V / A I D S affects the health sector both by increasing the demand for health services and taking its t o l l o n health personnel. Some o f these increasing costs 73In addition, it would be even better if the routine data system were improved so that detailed data on spending were collected as a matter o f course. 77 are already being bome by the system in the form o f treatments for opportunistic diseases; an estimated 30 percent o f hospital beds are occupied by HIV patients (Haacker, 2001a). The likely cost o f treatment in the future depends on the government’s decisions on coverage and nature o f care. To provide palliative care and treatment o f opportunistic diseases to 20-30 percent o f the population with HIV would absorb h a l f o f total health expenditure; adding anti-retroviral therapy for 10 percent o f H I V / A I D S victims would cost more than another half (Table 25). The total would be 3.0 percent o f GDP, compared with the 2.8 percent o f GDP spent o n health currently. These costs would double by 20 10. Table 25. The cost o f HIV-related health services (percentage o f GDP), 2000-2010 2000 2010 Total HIV-related health services, for the assumed rates o f coverage 3.0 5.9 O f which: Palliative care and prevention o f opportunistic infections 0.3 0.5 Clinical treatment o f opportunistic infections 1.1 1.8 Costs o f highly active antiretroviral treatments (HAARTs) 1.7 3.6 Note: 1. Assumptions: coverage of 30 percent for palliative care and prevention of opportunistic diseases, 20 percent for clinical treatment of opportunistic infections, and 10 percent for HAARTs. The assumed coverage rates are not intended a s statements o f desirable coverage, and simply reflect the fact that access to health services i s limited. Source: Haacker, M. (2001a), Tables 6 and 7. 143. The costs o f the loss ofprofessionals in the health sector is also substantial. Training o f doctors and nurses will have to be expanded by at least 25 percent over the 2000-2010 period just to keep the number o f doctors and nurses constant (Haacker, 2001a). At a rough estimate o f $10,000 (Pavignani 2002) for training a new professional, and assuming realistically a death rate o f some 100 per year, the incremental training cost would be $1 million annually. This rough estimate does not account for the costs o f absenteeism due to HIV/AIDS. 144. The authorities are studying thefinancial implications o f HIV as a part of the continued public expenditure review process. N o attempt is made here to incorporate these rough estimates o f the costs o f H I V / A I D S in the financial projections, because (i) the study has not yet been done, and (ii) decisions o n coverage and nature o f care have not been taken. However, given the magnitude o f the costs, it is self-evident that a comprehensive response to prevent and mitigate the impact o f H I V / A I D S needs to be operationalized as a matter o f priority. In the meanwhile, attempts at prevention are clearly essential, and the Government’s strategy in this regard should be pursued vigorously. E. POLICY PRIORITIES FOR THE HEALTH SECTOR 145. The Government is makingprogress with prioritization but there is still much to do. The Plano Estratkgico do Sector da Satide (PESS - Republic o f Mozambique, 2001), despite i t s name, consists to a large extent o f a listing o f areas where strategizing i s needed, but does not actually lay out concrete strategies to address several o f the key problems. An example is Mozambique’s very high matemal mortality rate (1,083 per 100,000 live births, w e l l in excess o f regional averages): although this problem i s cited several times, the PESS contains n o clear policy directions to reduce the rate. Another 78 example i s the lack o f spending, output and outcome data o n the major cause o f mortality, namely malaria. The Government recognizes that the PESS - a living document - should be improved and adjusted to the rapidly changing environment, and i s undertaking steps in this direction: a revision o f the PESS i s expected in the near future; an Investment Plan was completed in 2002; specific health development plans for major urban areas will be developed; several studies o f gender aspects o f health are envisaged; under-served areas have been defined; and an attempt is being made to create a common donor fund. I t is urgent that these plans be brought to fruition, and that there be detailed prioritization linked to spending numbers and based on sound analyses and monitoring, so as to pursue the difficult objectives o f increased equity and the expansion o f the network to include the under- and unserved. 146. Spending and output data for monitoring and evaluation o f the vertical programs such as malaria control are needed for monitoring and assessment. A program-based classifier i s being developed so that the budget execution reports can report health expenditures more effectively; in addition, the detailed functional classifier which was formally adopted in 2001 needs to be implemented so as to be able to track poverty- relevant expenditures. 147. The various policy and strategy documents need to be consolidated in a consistent planning instrument with clear prioritization linked to resources. This consolidation should include the Plano Estratigico do Sector da Sazide (PESS). This can and should be done regardless o f the type o f strategy the donors adopt for conveying financial aid - Fundo Comum, budgetary support, or a continued project approach under strengthened Government leadership. 148. In this regard, a quote from the 1992 PER i s instructive: “This fragmented organizational structure i s not w e l l suited to the acute scarcity o f qualified personnel ... Overlapping responsibilities and a lack o f coordination between units are commonplace., N o single unit within the Ministry has a precise overview o f all the ongoing and planned projects for a complete picture o f extemal assistance to the health sector.. . This lack o f coordination severely limits the Ministry’s ability to ensure that health expenditures are in line with overall national priorities.” (World Bank, 1992, p. 102). Regrettably some o f these statements are still true in 2003. The underlying causes o f this apparent stasis were explored in Chapter 2 (p. 33): fragmentation associated with multiple competing donors, limited managerial capacity, and civil service incentive problems. The solutions proposed were an increased focus on outcomes using the PARPA, progressive incorporation o f expenditure analysis in the budget cycle, the progressive replacement o f projects by budget support, together with civil service reform, and the pursuit o f budget comprehensiveness. 149. The “Fundo Comum ”is an attempt to correct budgetary fragmentation, but is not the only option. Similar to the PRO-AGRI in agriculture, the hope i s that the Fundo Comum will enable a common platform for the donor community to engage the authorities in policy debate, to provide funds jointly, to ensure common procurement rules, and to monitor effectively. The aims are laudable. Reducing the total number o f projects probably does reduce the Government’s bureaucratic burden. However, as the experience in roads and in agriculture showed, the negotiation involved in setting up and running sector-wide instruments is extremely time-intensive for both Government and 79 donors, and in neither case did this result in effective monitoring o f the impact o f expenditures o n outputs and outcomes. Hence i t should not be assumed that this i s the only solution. There are two alternatives. One is for the donor community to move an increasing share o f i t s funding into budget support and to rely o n the Government’s procurement setup, which in turn would require more focus on the overall fiduciary framework; given that project funds are in any case fungible, the gains in control over a small segment o f Government spending are lost if the overall fiduciary quality i s low. Another solution - a short term stopgap expedient only - i s that the Government adopt stronger leadership, take on fewer and larger projects, and seek to upgrade its policy capability, i t s output and outcome monitoring, and its financial information. 150. Extension o f the health service to under- and unserved areas should be a priority. Only about h a l f o f the population i s reasonably served by the health system (vide hospital births o f 45 percent, immunization 57-61 percent). An extension i s needed o f the primary health system to cover the remainder who are often in areas distant from large towns. Travel times to medical assistance should come down, qualified staff should be placed in sufficient numbers, and drugs should be available consistently. Equality o f access to health services i s already a key objective o f the Government’s strategy and the health system is already seeking to attain these objectives. This expansion could a key aspect o f the Government’s pro-poor orientation. In addition -based on evidence in other countries about roads and health - extended road rehabilitation in areas difficult o f access could be an effective health intervention. 15 1. Pursuit o f basic health w i l l require reallocations and cutting waste. Improvements are needed in the use o f drugs, as explained above. Efficiency gains in hospital spending need to be made, starting with the l o w bed occupancy rates. There should be full cost recovery for services beyond the basic health service package, at least at the level I11and I V institutions. 152. Consideration should be given to extending the roles o f for-profits, non-profits, community health workers and o f traditional healers, so as to cover the under-sewed. As private sector health activity increases (especially in the cities) the National Health Service could increasingly target its efforts at those unable to pay. The role o f the NGOs has increased in recent years and could be encouraged further. The PESS suggests, but does not develop a clear strategy for, extended collaboration with community health agents (e.g. midwives). The PESS notes that current health policy i s in favor o f collaborating with the traditional medicine sector, but that in practice little has been done. Since a significant number o f Mozambicans use these services, either exclusively or in conjunction with the National Health service, collaboration could be cost-effective. 153. The next round o f civil service reform in health should learn from the lessons of the past. An increase in output per staff o f 2 percent per annum for three years, in exchange for an increase in remuneration o f 87 percent cannot be pronounced a success. Effective methods o f linking pay and promotion to performance, and o f properly remunerating health care professionals, must be found so that the next round o f civil service reform i s fruitful. 154. The user fee system needs a complete overhaul. The user fee schedules lack transparency and vary hugely by facility. Overcharging i s common and exemptions are 80 not consistently granted, discouraging the poorest from seeking care. As the Expenditure Tracking and Service Delivery Survey found, it is often the case that the amounts charged are not duly remitted through the official channels.74 Among the elements in the needed reform are: civil service reform so that all staff are appropriately rewarded; a requirement that all units advertise the user fee schedules and exemptions in user-friendly ways; unannounced inspections to penalize non-compliance; and regular beneficiary surveys and expenditure tracking surveys to assess the extent o f non-compliance. The Government could also consider abolishing fees at Level I facilities altogether, because the contribution the fees make to the district budgets i s quite small, and little i s retained by the facilities themselves. Finally, all user fees should be reflected in the budget. 155. The authorities could consider contracting out the management ofparts o f the health sewice, e.g. certain o f the hospitals. This may be a way to attract highly competent management, permit greater freedom in the selection o f staff, and lighten the administrative burden for the Government. The Government has already considered such a reform, and has done a costing study o f the Maputo l4 Central Hospital w i t h this in mind. 81 CHAPTER 5. ROADS A. INTRODUCTION 156. W h i l e Mozambique s t i l l has one o f the least developed road networks in the southern African region, it can boast o f remarkable achievements in network rehabilitation. The classified road network consists o f 25,000 km o f roads, o f which 4,275 km are primary, 7,880 km secondary and the remainder tertiary. Some 5,000 km are paved. The country i s extremely sparsely served, with 32 km o f road per 1000 square kilometers, lowest in the southern Africa region whose average i s 135 km and median i s 90 km.75Only 57 percent o f the classified network is maintainable, i.e. in good or fair condition, again one o f the least developed in the region, whose average was 7 1 in 1997 percent. Rural roads comprise 53 percent o f the network, not far o f f the median in the southern African region o f 59 percent. 157. In 1992, Mozambique was emerging from a prolonged conflict that l e f t the road network in extremely poor condition and road management institutions lacking in capacity to plan or execute the civil works to rehabilitate and maintain the network. At the same time, it was acknowledged that transport policies had been biased toward the major east-west, port-rail transit corridors, and had led to a neglect o f road infrastructure to serve the domestic and export economy. 158. The main objectives were to restore serviceability to the 1973 level by 1998 through road rehabilitation, bridge replacement and recurrent and routine maintenance. This was to be achieved through: (a) policy reforms, including private sector involvement in civil works, cost recovery in financing road maintenance, and decentralized decision making; (b) institutional development, through training engineers and technicians to plan and implement civil works; and (c) rationalizing investments, by balancing maintenance and rehabilitation, meeting the transport needs o f the agriculture sector, and alleviating poverty. The donor community contributed to the effort in various ways, including the Roads and Coastal Shipping (ROCS) Programs 1 and 2 (1994-2002), and Roads I11which began in 2002. 159. The overall performance o f the sector against the objectives and benchmarks established in 1992 was fair, barring one serious reservation, namely periodic . maintenance: Institutions. Substantial progress was made with institutional capacity building, developing the execution capacity o f local road networks, with the training o f technicians and engineers, and with private sector involvement in road rehabilitation and maintenance. ’’ Similarly, road density per million inhabitants i s 1,440 km, again the lowest i n the region, whose average i s 6,393. 82 . Rehabilitation. Roads in good or fair condition rose from 10 percent to 57 percent o f the classified network under the two donor- and Bank-supported roads programs, the Roads and Coastal Shipping (ROCS) 1 and 2. Impassable roads . decreased from 50 percent to only 8 percent. Regional roads: Between 1992 and 2000 some 6,630 km o f tertiary and unclassified roads were rehabilitated, most o f it in Manica, Zambezia, Cab0 . Delgado and Nampula. Routine maintenance made considerable progress. Less than 4000 km were given routine maintenance in 1994; this rose to 15,000 km annually by 1998, . achieving 80 percent o f the target. Periodic maintenance f e l l well short o f expectation. The plan was for 3000 Myr, but only an average o f 434 M y r was done, or 18 percent o f plan. The cumulative maintenance backlog o f over 16,000 km exceeds the size o f the maintainable road network. Considering that a maintenance backlog already existed, it i s clear that the failure to perform the required level o f periodic maintenance undermined some o f the positive impacts o n road condition from the program o f road rehabilitation. The reasons for this massive failure are examined below. B. K E Y ROADS SECTOR ISSUES 160. Autonomy o f roads management: much done, much to be done. Autonomy i s called for in order to maximize efficiency in allocation o f investment resources for the national road network. An important step was the creation in 1999 o f the National Roads Administration (ANE),to replace the National Directorate o f Roads and Bridges. The ANE i s responsible for the administration o f national and regional roads, and for road financing through the Road Fund. ANE i s an autonomous public institution subordinate to the Minister o f Public Works and Housing. The management o f ANE reports to a Board o f Directors which includes both private and public sector representation. 161. With the objective o f achieving objectivity in resource allocation and a concomitant separation o f local political influence from national road allocation decisions, a second phase o f road sector reforms calls for the separation o f the Road Fund from ANE, each with its o w n board comprising both public- and private-sector representation, the creation o f a National Roads Council with responsibility for road policy, and more effective decentralization o f road planning management responsibilities. 162. Little decentralization has been achieved. Very little planning, policy or management capacity exists at the provincial level. The desired devolution o f decision- making and management to provincial and local authorities who are best able to assess local needs will not succeed until such time as such capacities are in place. The Roads I11 program contains substantial resources to this end. 163. Upgrading the analytical capacity o f the road administration system i s an urgent task. The statistical and monitoring capacity o f the ANE i s deficient, and in particular there i s no regular monitoring o f donor-funded expenditures. The upgrading should be 83 sufficient to permit expost analysis, to guide planning, to permit effective monitoring, to monitor donor-funded expenditures and to permit further improvements in efficiency. 164. More progress with developing private contractors is needed. Routine maintenance shifted from being entirely state-run o n force account to being split among the parastatal road maintenance companies (Empresas de Construqiio e de Manutenqiio de Estradas e Pontes) or ECMEPs (40 percent), labor-intensive brigades76(20 percent) attached to the latter, three large private contractors (25 percent) and several small companies (15 percent). The ECMEPs were originally formed in the ten provinces to execute road works for the Government. Suffering from severe bureaucratic inefficiencies, they were reorganized into three regional companies which were to operate o n a commercial basis, and eventually to be privatized. They obtained financial autonomy in 2000. However, they are still in charge, without bidding, o f a significant part o f maintenance services in the provinces. Repeated efforts to privatize the ECMEPs have so far failed and this remains as one o f the main tasks o f the Roads 111. A s a step thereto, there should be a formal requirement that all contracts be subjected to competitive tender, which would induce the ECMEPs to restructure and possibly even provide them with an incentive to seek privatization. Also, a timetable for privatization should be established. c. EXPENDITURE TRENDS 165. The roads sector is the highest-spending sector on the investment account and third highest in total, after education and health. All roads expenditures are recorded, for historical reasons, as being on the investment account, even if they take the form o f recurrent expenditures such as routine maintenance. In the 2002 Budget, for example, roads were allocated Mt 700 bn (23 percent) on the internal investment account and Mt 1,476 bn (19 percent) on the external (donor-funded) investment account, totalling Mt 2,176 bn, or 20 percent o f the total investment account. This exceeds planned investment account spending in health o f Mt 2,074 bn. Summing recurrent and investment accounts, education was the largest planned spender at Mt 4,448 bn, health the second largest at Mt 3,573 bn and roads the third at Mt 2,176 bn. The roads sector accounts for about 14 percent o f planned spending o f the PARPA “priority sectors”77 and 9 percent o f total spending. Roads spending i s around 2.3 percent o f GDP, similar to that o f Malawi o f 2.4 percent in 2001. 166. Data o n actual donor-funded expenditures are being collected from the donors at the time o f writing (May 2003). These will be reported when they become available, and will be compared with budgeted donor-hnded expenditures. 76 Termed (Brigadas de) Us0 Intensivo de M9o de Obra (UIMOs). F r o m 1992 to 1998, the UIMOs rehabilitated 4000 km o f tertiary roads. There are over 40 brigades operative in a l l ten provinces. 77 Priority sectors: see footnote 3, p. v. 84 167. Rehabilitation and maintenance are moving towards a better balance. 78 As may be seen from a summary o f budget allocations in Table 26, rehabilitation (including district and rural roads) used to account for as much as three times the spending on maintenance in the mid-1990s when the post-war rehabilitation program had just begun. Since then the ratio has settled at a level closer to 2 or 2% to 1. Table 26: Road sector budgets, 1996-2002 Item 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 Average Current Mt lo9 Rehabilitation 590 551 456 390 332 716 870 558 Maintenance 146 310 459 405 246 332 536 348 District-Rural Roads 68 558 283 387 305 465 333 343 Institutional Costs 191 249 129 78 131 168 436 198 Total 995 1,668 1,327 1,260 1,014 1,681 2,176 1,446 Constant 2000 M t 1,233 1,942 1,536 1,414 1,014 1,570 1,861 1,510 U S $ (millions) 88.1 144.5 112.0 99.3 64.6 81.6 91.2 97.3 Share Of 14.7% 17.5% 13.1% 9.8% 6.1% 11.2% expenditures Rehab+Dist-Rur. I 4,5 3.6 1.6 1.9 2.6 3.6 2.2 2.8 Maintenance Institutional costs as 19% 15% 10% 6% 13% 10% 20% 14% % o f total - 168. Maintenance expenditures have leveled out in real terms since 1996 despite growing maintenance needs and a growing economy. As Table 27 shows, maintenance spending was $24 m i l l i o n in 1996 and despite some fluctuations, stood at $25 m i l l i o n in 2001-notwithstanding the fact that the amount o f maintainable roads increased from 2,500 km in 1993 to about 13,000 km in 2002. Also, the Mozambican economy grew 48 percent in real terms between 1996 and 2001. The upshot o f the failure to expand maintenance expenditures i s that periodic maintenance has been increasingly neglected (whereas routine maintenance has fulfilled targets to the extent o f 80 percent, as mentioned above). The best performance against target in periodic maintenance was in 1994 when 42 percent o f what was required was done, and the second best was in 1996 with 20 percent. In 1998 the amount was 5 percent and in 1999 12 percent. 78 There i s virtually no new road construction as the costs o f rehabilitation o f existing roads are much lower. 85 Table 27. Expenditure on roads, by maintenance / investment, 1995 to 2001 1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Billions o f Meticais a a a Total n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. Maintenance (reported by Road Fund) 125 266 334 347 345 541 513 a a a Investment (viz. rehabilitation) n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. As reported by Road Fund 546 653 284 536 302 371 421 a a a Other donor-funded expenditures n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. The equivalent in US$ millions a a a Total n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. Maintenance (reported by Road Fund)d 13.9 23.6 28.9 29.3 27.2 34.5 24.8 a a a Investment (viz. rehabilitation) n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. As reported by Road Fund 60.5 57.8 24.6 45.2 23.8 23.6 20.4 a a a Other donor-funded exDenditures n.a. n.a. n.a. n.a. Memo: M W S $ 9,022 11,294 11,546 11,850 12,689 15,689 20,670 Source: Road Fund data; see Herman (Jan. 2003, Table 38). Note: a Donor-fundedexpenditures not recorded by the Road Fund have to do with rehabilitation. The data were not yet available at the time o f going to press. bNo importanceshould be attached to the apparent decline in rehabilitation spending. There i s probably a problem with coverage by the Road Fund data sets. T h i s i s being corrected by obtaining data from MPF and donors directly. These data were not yet available at the time of going to press. Most maintenance i s intemally funded - see Table 28. 169. Donors contribute to all areas o f roads expenditure, including maintenance. The objective o f the Road Fund is to finance recurrent expenditures, using chiefly the proceeds o f the fuel tax. Nevertheless donors have contributed in all areas, as i s shown in Table 29. Donors are responsible for nearly all the funding o f rehabilitation (91 percent), as this i s a capital item, and most o f district and rural roads (70 percent) and periodic maintenance (76 percent). Table 28: Funding sources (internal and external) c for the road sector budget, 1996-2002 Budget I t e m Internal Extemal Total Rehabilitation 9% 91% 100% Routine Maintenance 98% 100% Periodic Maintenance 24% 76% 100% District-Rural Roads 30% 70% 100% Institutional Costs 16% 84% 100% Total 25% 75% 100% ISource: Orgamento do Estado. 170. Budgeted and actual spending show wide variation. The figures in Table 29 should be regarded with the utmost caution because in some cases the annual budgets were changed during the year but the changes were not published, and because until 2000 budgets were done in real terms, and high intra-year inflation would result in an apparent budget execution rate in excess o f 100 percent (e.g. as much as 164 percent in the mid- 1990s). In addition, the data are from different sources (MPF, Road Fund, and donors). With these caveats in mind, i t i s clear from Table 29 that planned and actuals are often far 86 apart. In 2000 and 2001, execution o f the government-funded component o f the budget was only fairly low, at 87 percent and 72 percent respectively. Table 29. Budgeted vs. actual spending, by funding source, 1995 to 2001 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 Billions of Meticais Domesticallv generated (fuel tax and govt. budget) Budgeted 148 181 252 263 389 581 Actual 93 244 294 323 339 417 Actual as % o f budgeted 63% 135% 117% 123% 87% 72% Externallv funded (donors) Budgeted 847 1,487 1,075 996 625 1,100 I a a a a a Actual (total) As reDorted bv the Road Fund 826 374 589 324 573 517 a a a a Othe; donor &ding a a Source: Orpmento do Estado, Road Fund data. a Donor-fundedexpenditures not recorded by the Road Fund have to do with rehabilitation. The data were being assembled at the time of going to press. 171. Execution rates w i l l need to rise in order to justifi the appealsfor further transfers to the Road Fund. Road Fund revenues from road taxes and tolls was in excess o f Mt 555 billion in 2001, close to the budget o f Mt 581 billion. Yet spending o f these revenues was only Mt 417 billion, an execution rate o f 72 percent. As pointed out above, maintenance activity needs to be increased and more budget will be required, but a necessary step to get there i s that the roads authorities succeed in executing a significantly higher share o f the budget than 72 percent in order to justify larger allocations. 172. Inadequatefunding contributed to the massivefailure in periodic maintenance. In 1994 the Government decided to earmark the petroleum tax for the Road Fund in order to provide a predictable level o f funding for routine and periodic maintenance to support the rehabilitation efforts o f ROCS 1 and 2. However, only 57 percent o f the planned Government financing for the Road Fund between 1994 and 1998 was actually provided”. This was part o f the reason for the massive under-performance o f periodic maintenance cited above. 173. Funding for maintenance was inadequate because the real value o f the petroleum tax f e l l 40 percent between 1994 and 2000. The levy on regular fuel was kept at Mt 671Aitre from 1995 to 2001, resulting in a decline from $0.078 to $0.036. Furthermore, the authorities failed to transfer to the Road Fund even the portion o f the tax that had been promised. As Table 30 shows, the total f u e l tax in 2000 was $36 million, o f which $22 million was transferred to the Road Fund, but this was well below the Government commitment (as o f 1998) o f $42 million, and also below the estimated maintenance requirements o f $45 million. The persistent failure o f the authorities to provision properly for maintenance obliged the donors, in Roads 1 11, to foot a substantial portion o f the periodic maintenance bill, on a decreasing basis, over a 10-year period, at the end o f 79 The data for the period 1996 to 1998 are presented in Table 30 o n page 110. 87 which time the authorities would be wholly responsible for it. This i s an unsatisfactory situation since it flies in the face o f the principle o f sustainability, viz. the principle that the authorities should not seek investments that they are not prepared to maintain. Table 30. Transmission o f Road Fund Fuel-Based Revenues Item 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 Total Fuel Tax $22.9 $36.9 $39.3 $38.7 $35.8 Transferred t o Road Fund $16.4 $19.5 $21.6 $19.6 $22.4 Percent Transferred 72% 53% 55% 51% 63% Government Commitment $34.0 $40.0 $42.0 n.a. n.a. Routine Maintenance Requirements $8.1 $8.5 $8.8 $9.2 $9.6 Periodic Maintenance Requirements $19.4 $23.5 $27.6 $3 1.7 $35.8 Total Est. Maintenance Requirements $27.4 $31.9 $36.4 $40.9 $45.4 Source: Road Fund. 174. Poor organization also contributed to the massivefailure in periodic maintenance. Periodic maintenance is more difficult than routine maintenance, as it requires a more complex procurement process and design, whereas routine maintenance was readily assigned to the parastatal maintenance companies. In addition, periodic maintenance lacked an institutional advocate within the Direcqgo Nacional de Estradas e Pontes and later ANE, whereas other areas o f work had their champions: routine maintenance fell under the Department o f Maintenance, rural and feeder roads fell under the Directorate o f Rural Roads, and rehabilitation programs enjoyed donor attention. Consequently when allocations to the Road Fund were below budgeted amounts, periodic maintenance was cut back. I t will be essential to reorganize the periodic maintenance arrangements. 175. Looking forward, the Roads I11program will succeed if the maintenance program i s funded, as the Government intends, by restoring the fuel tax to its real 1997 level or committing to alternative funding sources providing the same funds. Every effort should be made to ensure full funding o f maintenance. 176. Rural road efforts are evidence o f the authorities ’ drivefor poverty reduction. Rehabilitation efforts between 1992 and 2002 focused more o n the tertiary and rural road network (6,630 km) than o n primary and secondary roads. The Feeder Roads Program (FRP), h d e d by the ILO and a variety o f donors including ASDI, DFID, and USAID, operates in all provinces, but particularly in Zambezia and Nampula. I t has been effective in promoting labor-based techniques, thereby reducing unit costs and expanding employment. These techniques should be considered for application to civil works o n the national network. 177. Roads expenditure allocation choices have stressed poverty reduction but have not gone far enough. Spending has been reasonably equally distributed by province, giving access to rural people and people in small towns (whereas, for promotion purely o f industry, or middle class interests, efforts might have been directed at the two main cities and their links with the exterior). As mentioned above, district and rural roads have formed a large (24 percent) part of total spending. But at the district level there i s a 88 negative correlation o f poverty incidence and road density (viz. good-to-fair roads per unit area)", implying that poor people have to go further to get to a good-to-fair road. This i s a result o f the poor being concentrated in sparsely populated rural areas, which raises the unit costs o f road services. I t might not be efficient to seek to compensate fully for their isolation by seeking to provide equal access to roads to all, irrespective o f relative cost. But some compensation i s surely appropriate. Poverty indices should be explicitly be taken into account and significantly weighted when decisions on rehabilitation and maintenance are taken. A greater effort could be made with rural roads. I t was stressed in the Mozambique Agricultural Sector Memorandum (World Bank, 1997) that one o f the best government interventions on behalf o f smallholders would be to strengthen the road system and improve district roads and even rural tracks to market locations. 178. The Government's new program (Roads III)w i l l incorporate equity considerations prominently. A positive aspect o f the Government's road sector policy and strategy i s the recognition o f the tradeoffs, in road investment, between the competing objectives o f alleviating poverty and promoting economic growth. Although the PARPA prioritizes road investments in those areas o f the country that have the greatest economic potential and largest populations as well as the highest levels o f poverty, the Road Sector Strategy recognizes that these objectives may not always be in accord. The Road Sector Strategy and Roads I11include a provision for allocating the investment and periodic maintenance budgets through the use o f multi-criteria analysis which incorporates both economic feasibility and a measure o f equity. This process should be strengthened by utilizing district-based poverty measures in the ex ante social impact analysis and by incorporating the expost socio-economic impact assessments into the process; and by improving the economic analysis o f projects through improved application o f A N E ' s Highway Network Management System (HNMS). D. POLICY PRIORITIES FOR THE ROADS SECTOR 179. Continued strengthening of institutional reforms is key to progress in the roads sector. The management o f ANE should become more goal-based and focus more effectively on achieving instituional efficiencies and meeting its targets. The performance indicators that are part o f the Roads I11program should be used as a management tool to that end. 180. Roads administration needs to be autonomous. The Road Fund should be separated from ANE, as planned, and the Road Fund should be strengthened to better forecast fimding needs, managing revenues, coordinating and auditing road sector budgets and expenditures, and ensuring transparency and accountability in its operations. The simple correlation coefficient ( r ) i s -0.18. There i s n o correlation between poverty incidence and the rehabilitation and maintenance effort, o r road density, at the provincial level. But this means only that the provinces are so large that they incorporate districts that are vastly different, so that n o correlation would be expected. 89 The restructured ANE and Road Fund boards should include private sector representation capable o f requiring accountability o f management. 18 1. Fundingfor maintenance must be adequate. If sufficient maintenance finding cannot be assured, the size o f rehabilitation projects should be reduced. The Roads I11 program, supported by the World Bank through the Roads and Bridges Management and Maintenance Project (RBMMP) will be reviewed at mid-term and cut if adequate funding for maintenance has not been provided. 182. Restructuring and reorganization is needed in order to ensure adequate periodic maintenance. Periodic maintenance needs an institutional champion. Increases o f funding alone will not be sufficient. 183. The level o f the petroleum tax should be raised substantially. Raising it to the real level o f 1997 would be sufficient to ensure full funding o f the pluri-annual maintenance program for 2003. The conclusion o f the Poverty and Social Impact Analysis (Nicholson, 2002) was that raising the tax would have a minor impact on the welfare o f the poor. 184. I n order to reduce maintenance costs, the parastatal maintenance companies (ECMEPs) should be subjected to full competition and privatized. All contracts should be subjected to competitive tender, which would compel the ECMEPs to restructure and possibly even provide them with an incentive to seek privatization. 185. The equity orientation of road rehabilitation should be improved through incorporating district-based poverty measures into the multi-criteria analysis called for in the Roads Sector Strategy. 186. Roads expenditure data need a thorough overhaul. Analysis o f actual expenditures i s complicated by the fact that neither the Ministry o f Finance nor ANE maintain systematic data on actual externally funded expenditures on roads. The data available from the Conta Geral do Estado do not reflect the detailed budget lines in the Budget, do not distinguish consistently between external and internal financing for road sector expenditures, and are not always consistent with data provided by the Road Fund. Road Fund data on revenues distinguish among sources o f finds, permitting calculation o f internally financed expenditures, but they do not report the vast majority o f externally financed expenditures. A unified accounting system for all road sector expenditures should be put in place. I t i s hoped that A N E ’ s new Financial Management System will solve this problem. Furthermore, reliable data are needed on unit costs o f rehabilitation and maintenance so as to permit policy-relevant comparisons over time and over space. 90 CHAPTER 6. WATER SUPPLY AND SANITATION A. INTRODUCTION 187. Water supply and sanitation are o f prime importance in the PER because o f their complementary role” in preventing disease. Access to improved water supply and sanitation, accompanied by effective hygiene educationg2, can b e expected to improve both health and productivity, reduce drudgery, improve quality o f life and provide increased opportunities for education and employment, especially for women and girls. 188. As o f 1992, around ten percent o f rural dwellers had regular access to safe water. n 1997 about 12 percent o f rural people had safe water according to the household I surveyg3. Although the PER o f 1992 enunciated the ambitious goal o f raising access to 35 percentg4by 1995, this target was in fact reached only in 2001, when there were 12,490 waterpoints, o f which 8,098 were functioning, serving a rural population o f 12.6 million. Mozambique’s coverage still lags behind Malawi (44 percent), Zambia (48 percent), Tanzania (42 percent) and Uganda (46 percent). 189. Access to household piped water in urban areasg5was 29 percent in 1992. The goal cited in the PER o f 1992 was 50 percent by 1995, but the subsequent decade saw n o progress, and with urban growth, coverage had fallen to 25 percent by 200286. I nthis respect Mozambique lags behind its neighbors - Madagascar (35 percent), Uganda (35- 40 percent)87. Adding in people with access to clean water via standpipes and vendors (legal kiosks and illegal resellers), coverage i s estimated to be some 70 percent in urban areasg8,rising to some 90 percent in Maputo City. On the other hand, World ” e.g. Esrey’s (1996) survey o f African and other countries found that benefits from improved water occurred only when sanitation was improved. See also the summary by Wagstaff et al. (2002). 82 For example, Jalan and Ravallion (2003) study in India shows that the health gains o f piped water largely by-pass children in poor families, particularly when the mother i s poorly educated. See also Varley and Tarvid et al. (1998). 83 Ministry o f Planning and Finance et al. (1998), Table 2.47. Access to safe water in the Poverty Assessment was defined as access to piped water (inside o w outside dwelling) or a public tap. 84 Note that the 35% coverage figure includes people with access to Small Piped Systems (towns), which account for four percentage points. 85 Urban areas are here defined as the 2 1 largest cities, whose total population i s 4.3 million. (The population o f Mozambique i s 16.9 million.) Smaller cities/towns fall in the category o f Small Piped Systems which for convenience are grouped under “rural” water access. 86 In 1997 about 27% o f urban people had piped water either in-house or ouside the house (Ministry o f Planning and Finance et al., 1998, table 2.42), but the true figure might be lower because some o f the outside-of-house access may reflect purchases from neighbors. ” World Bank staff estimates. In 1997 about 54% o f urban people had safe water according to the household survey (Ministry o f Planning and Finance et al., 1998, table 2.47). Also in 1997, 92% o f dwellers in Maputo City had access to 91 Development Indicators reports that access to clean water (including standpipes and vendors) i s 85 percent, which i s s t i l l behind Malawi (95 percent) and Zambia (88 percent) but higher than Tanzania (80 percent). 190. Total urban and peri-urban sanitation coverage i s probably over 35 percent. This represents a considerable improvement over 1993 when the figure was closer to 10 percent. 19 1. Water resource management i s a crucially important function for the Government to play, particularly in the light o f Mozambique’s vulnerability to floods and droughts. For reasons o f cost, it was decided not to include water resources a major focus o f this PER, because a thorough examination o f Mozambique’s water resource management issues would have required a large separate study. Nevertheless the key aspects are cited this report and the importance o f appropriate investments and budgetary allocations i s emphasized. 192. This chapter starts by providing the context behind Mozambique’s mix o f (modest) progress and regress. I t then discusses the allocation and effectiveness o f public expenditure in the water supply and sanitation sector. It then proposes a shift o f priorities in several key respects. B. K E Y SECTOR I S S U E S 193. The most urgent sector issue i s the inadequacy o f rural and urban water supplies, in terms o f both coverage and quality o f service, despite the decade o f economic growth since the end o f the war in 1992. The lack o f regular supplies o f safe water i s particularly acute in urban areas, on account o f the health risks involved. 194. Poor physical sustainability of rural waterpoints. O f the country’s 12,490 rural waterpoints (mainly boreholes with handpumps), some 35 percent are broken, though in some parts the percentage i s higher.89This i s due to the lack o f spare parts and the lack o f human capacity for maintenance, in turn stemming from a lack o f community involvement and commitment. At least 10 donors are involved in funding rural waterpoint installation, and varying degrees o f attention have been given to sustainability, community involvement and “ownership”. Since the authorities’ adoption o f the Demand Driven Approach in 1999, requiring a payment by the community o f between 2 percent and 5 percent o f the installation cost, i t i s expected that the breakdown rate will fall. In addition, training in planning and monitoring should be given to the provincial and district directorates responsible for water supply, and community training programs in the operation and management o f waterpoints should be extended. 195. Rural waterpoint installation is expensive. Sinking a borehole costs $10,000 in Mozambique, versus $5-7000 in Malawi, Tanzania, Zambia and Ghana. Some o f the piped water (in house, outside house, o r public tap), whereas the average for Beira, Nampula and Matola was 61%, and other cities’ access was 41% (ibid., Table 4.15, p. 251). 89 In Cab0 Delgado province, where reliable data does n o t exist, at least 60% o f rural waterpoints were n o t working as o f 2002 (African Development Bank, 2002, i ii). 92 differential has been attributed to reasons beyond the control o f the authorities, such as aquifer conditions, the small size o f the Mozambique market which limits the gains from economies o f scale, poor roads, large distances, inadequate infrastructure and services, and a high level o f business risk associated with high interest rates. However, since several countries in the region also face these problems. Hence a deeper investigation o f this very specific issue may be called for in order to see whether there are additional factors that explain Mozambique’s higher cost structure, and to identify opportunities for reducing the cost. 196. Slow implementation in urban piped water access. Unlike rural water supply, urban piped water supply requires major policy, regulatory and procurement interventions. Urban piped water access registered little progress in the decade after the 1992 peace agreement because the National Water Policy was formulated only in 1995. The policy o f delegated management for urban water supply was innovative and one o f the most forward looking in the region. The implementation o f the policy began in late 1998 when FIPAG, a newly created asset holding body, signed a lease contract and a management contract with a private sector consortium, Aguas de Moqambique (AdM), to manage the water supply o f the five largest cities (Maputo, Beira, Nampula, Quelimane and Pemba). These five cities make up 70 percent o f the total urban population. The delegated management process has been supported by the National Water Development I1project (NWDP 11). Five donors are involved in the sub-sector, the African Development Bank, the World Bank, the European Union, Netherlands and the French Agency for Development. Since then, with the setback o f the floods o f 2000, difficulties were experienced with the contract, necessitating a change o f operators, explaining why little progress has been made to date. I t i s hoped that as the NWDP I1picks up, coverage o f household connections will rise, in the five major cities, from 33 percent in 2002 to 40 percent by 2005, though it i s doubtful that the installation rate can be increased as quickly as thisgo.Nevertheless, progress had been made in policy formulation and institutional development, including with the regulatory function. The Conselho de Regulaqgo do Abastecimento de Agua (CRA, Regulatory Board for Water Supply) has been established as an independent regulatory body responsible for regulating private operator water supply and setting tariffs for municipal water supply entities. 197. Access to water through standpipes in urban areas is one o f several ways that water utilities w i l l provide water to unserved customers. The provision o f the service will depend on affordability, water supply availability and the costs o f providing service and what users are willing to pay. Rolling out o f individual connections will continue as densification increases and i s the most cost effective way to provide water services. However, 11-29 percent o f urban dwellers rely on standposts for lack o f money for an individual connection or because o f land tenure issues. Since standpost services are cross subsidized by the utility from other consumers, a strong utility is a k e y to providing these services on a sustainable basis. Standpost service provided by the public utilities has been poor and usually a reflection o f the financially viability o f the utility. Data shows Extrapolating this rate o f expansion, coverage o f household connections in the five major cities would rise to 76 percent by 2015. 93 that only 19 percent o f standposts are functional. The cost o f water purchased at publicly operated standposts is l o w at about $0.15/m3, but pressure i s often low and water stoppages common. A successful standpost or kiosk model i s one that sells water at a price that reflects the market and provides a sustainable service.” An example i s that o f Angoche, which sells water to private individual managers, who in turn on-sell at prices determined by competition. The price i s much higher ($0.77), but quality i s better and people have been willing to pay for a more reliable service. At least 25 percent o f urban dwellers rely o n resale o f water from those with connections. Officially, resale by individuals with connections i s legally prohibited, but this law should be repealed, in part because the law i s not enforceable, but primarily because allowing the sale o f water to neighbors encourages more individual connections to the system, increasing competition, and bringing down the cost o f water for those without their own connection. 198. The Small Piped Systems (SPS) are a major development challenge because o f the large number involved (270), their poor state o f repair (38 percent fully operational), and their generally poor financial situation. The number o f domestic connections in the SPSs varies from 5 to 170, and in addition most SPSs have three or four standpipes. The number o f people served by the SPSs varies from 2,500 to 19,400. Due to a lack o f economies o f scale, unit costs o f service are high, but currently cost recovery i s low. The complexity o f SPSs i s also a challenge for operation by community organizations. Currently the only donor involved with SPSs i s the World Bank. Models o f financially sustainable SPSs are presently being developed. It may b e that the Government will need, in the meantime, to shoulder some o f the burden o f the capital and rehabilitation costs o f SPSs, while bringing the standard o f SPS service up to acceptable levels, rationalizing and strengthening management, and improving cost recovery. 199. The PARPA goals and the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) in rural water are achievable. The PARPA goal o f 40 percent rural coverage by 2005 i s attainable on present projections, from a coverage level o f 35 percent in 2002 and o n the assumption o f continuation o f the rate o f 1,300 new connections per year, even without reducing the breakdown rate. To achieve the MDG o f 67 percent coverage by 2015 can be achieved Hence the MDG i s likely to be with the planned rate o f installation o f 1,400 per year.92193 attained. 91 In addition, a model o f standpipe management involving communities, local authorities, NGOs and the water utility i s being tested. A contract for water supply through standpipes will be set up between the water utility and the vendors that will pay for water based on the approved tariff and resell water at a price agreed with the communities. The O & M costs o f the standpipe will be paid by the standpipe users. 92 Assumptions o f the model: 35% breakdown rate; total population growth o f 2.3%; urban population growth o f 5%; implicly, growth o f the rural population o f 1.1%. This assumes that the problem o f l o w execution of already allocated government funds (see Table 33) can be overcome. 93 Further examination o f the definitions o f coverage i s called for. In Mozambique the coverage estimate uses 500 people per water point. More conventional estimates in other countries are between 250 and 280 persons per water point. The water directorate had a study done o f usage in 2003, and found that some waterpoints were used by 800 to 1200 people per time period. I t was not possible to review t h i s paper thoroughly i n time for the issuance o f this PER. The matter w i l l be further examined by a national study to 94 200. The PARPA and MDG goals in urban water may not be achievable. The PARPA goal o f 50 percent coverage o f household iped water by 2005 m a y not be achievable on the present projections o f the NWDP IL94,95 The MDG refers to piped household water excluding standpipe^.^^ The target i s to reduce the unserved population by h a l f by 2015, viz. to raise coverage from 25 to 62.5 percent. This i s possible only if the NWDP I1 expands service continually at the ambitious rate planned for the period 2002-200597, and the projects funded by the ADB and others in the remaining cities expand at similar rates. . A s matters stand at present it is unclear whether the MDG will be attained. 201. Otherfactors influencing water supply. Other factors involved in the prospects for water supply are the limited public sector institutional capacity, coupled with the inadequate water sector information base and data collection and monitoring system. As mentioned above, there i s an urgent need for reinforcing the training programs for provincial and district-level ministerial staff, as well as training in management for local communities. 202. Sanitation has received less attention than water supply. There i s a need for improved sanitation, especially in urban and peri-urban areas, as i s demonstrated by frequent outbreaks o f faecal-borne diseases. To date, public investment for sanitation has been less than 10 percent o f that for water supply. The under-funding i s partly due to the lack o f a strategy for the sub-sector, as w e l l as to unclear responsibilities o f the various actors involved. According to the National Water Policy, DNA i s responsible for sanitation, but it has only recently formed a department for sanitation. In Maputo and Beira, the only cities with sewerage systems, the municipalities are responsible for operating the sewerage systems, not FPAG and the private sector operator. At a minimum, coordinated planning is needed for water supply, hygiene promotion and sanitation, as noted in the 1999-2003 Rural and Peri-Urban Sanitation Strategy. At the Johannesburg 2002 Summit i t was agreed to adopt the objective o f reducing the proportion o f the population without access to sanitation by h a l f by 2015. 203. Decisions need to be taken on the appropriate mix o f sanitation instruments. The forthcoming Strategic Sanitation Planning Study for seven major cities will indicate the most appropriate mix o f sanitation ‘technologies’ and the likely costs involved. Maputo and Beira are the only cities with piped sewerage systems and these serve only a small proportion o f the urban population in the more developed city centers. Other residents b e undertaken by the Centro EstratCgico e de Desenvolvimento do Sector de Aguas (CEDESA) and the Water Sanitation Program o f the W o r l d Bank. 94 The target o f 50 percent may, however, b e feasible by 2007, given the expansion o f the network, n e w construction and construction o f standpipes. 95 The PARPA goal i s stated as raising urban coverage from 44 percent in 2001 to 50 percent by 2005 (see the matrix in the operational annex). Note that the definition o f coverage here includes n o t o n l y piped water supply but also standpipe usage. 96 N o t e that the MDG does n o t distinguish between rural and urban water supply. Y e t for convenience here it i s split mallurban, enabling a more precise focus which i s useful because expectations for expansion in the t w o sub-sectors are radically different. 97 See footnote 90. 95 rely on septic tanks and improved latrines. A relatively successful Low-Cost Sanitation Program (LCSP) has been in operation since 1980, focusing on improved latrines. Some 33% o f the target population o f 3.61 million in the urban centers included in the LCSP currently have access to improved latrines at a cost o f about $4 per capita. The ADB’s Four District Centers (South) study proposed a mix o f septic tanks in town centers and improved latrines in the peripheral areas, combined with urban drainage, at a cost o f $15 per head. An additional policy suggestion i s to allow house connections to the piped water system only for households that are connected to the sewerage system or have installed a septic tank (Others could have yard taps). Such a policy would limit the amount o f wastewater generated and reduce adverse health impacts that can result from increasing water supply without corresponding wastewater removal. 204. Expensive sewerage systems are unlikely to be the solution for theforeseeable future. Piped sewerage is much more expensive than LCSP, rising to over $100 per capita. There are numerous examples in African countries o f expensive sewerage nsome systems that stand idle due to lack o f funds for operation and maintenance. I cases, sewerage is collected, but not properly treated before being discharged to waterways. While the cost o f collecting and treating sewerage is higher than the cost o f supplying water, customers are typically much less willing to pay connection fees and monthly charges. I ndeveloped countries, governments often subsidize the cost o f investment and cross-subsidize running costs from water tariffs or from tax revenues, arguing that the environmental benefits justify the subsidies. I nMozambique, the Government i s unlikely to be able to afford such subsidies for the foreseeable future. The strategy should then be the continuation o f the LCSP for peripheral areas, combined with the requirement that households with in-house connections in the central areas o f cities connect to the existing system or, where that option i s not available, install a septic tank at their own expense. Regulation o f septic tank haulers will also be necessary to ensure proper disposal. In this regard, DNA has adopted a strategy o f decentralization o f responsibility for sanitation to the municipal level, and o f introducing a sanitation tariff. 205. I n rural communities the focus should be on hygiene education, sanitation promotion and facilitation of the entry of small scale private contractors to meet the demand for latrine construction. The Government has developed materials for such education and promotion in rural communities and has trained staff in some districts and provinces in their use. Education and promotion about hygiene and sanitation should become an integral part o f community preparation in all rural water supply programs. Further investments will be needed to achieve these objectives, including investments in research for appropriate technologies. 206. Water resource management issues need urgent attention and adequate budgetary allocutions. Concerning strategy development, the Ministry o f Public Works and Housing is formulating an Integrated Water Resource Management (IWRM) Strategy with NWDP I funding. Mozambique needs to be well equipped to negotiate agreements concerning i t s river basins with adjoining countries. Provision for the costs o f negotiation (e.g. over the Incomati-Maputo basin) should be included in future DNA budgets, and consideration should be given to obtaining contributions to the costs from the donor community. Finally, in view o f the severe flooding experienced in 2000 and 2001, there i s an urgent need for the government to develop a practical flood forecasting, warning 96 and management policy, strategy and program. A flood risk analysis study i s due to be carried out during 2003. e. TRENDS IN PUBLIC EXPENDITURE IN WATER SUPPLY AND SANITATION 207. Water supply expenditures are mostly donor-funded. In the last “normal” (viz. pre-flood) year for which data were available, 1999, total expenditures in the water sector, including both water resource management and water supply, were some $1 5 million, o f which the Government funded $4.9 million and donors the remainder (Table 3 1). There was a large increase in donor-funded expenditure (though not o f Government- funded expenditure) in 2000 and 2001 on account o f the floods: in 2001 total expenditure on water rose to $24.5 million, o f which donors contributed $19.7 million. Nearly 90 percent o f water sector expenditures in Mozambique go to water supply and sanitation, and the remainder to water resource management. 208. The distinction between recurrent and capital account is not meaningful in the water and sanitation sector. The recurrent account i s devoted almost entirely to salaries (98 percent). Salaries o f project staff are paid out o f the investment budget, as are expenses for goods and services. 97 Table 31. Water and sanitation sector expenditures (actual) 1999 2000 2001 U S $ mil. Mt bil. Mt bil. U S $ mil. Mt bil. U S $ mil. 3 D P (IMF 2002 data) 4,090 3,750 3,610 rota1 Water and Sanitation Sector Expenditure (including water resources) rota1 (Govt. + donor-funded) n.a. 15.3 n.a. 28.3 n.a. 24.5 Government-funded expenditure 62.1 4.88 68.5 4.37 100.0 4.84 Recurrent account 2.4 0.19 2.6 0.17 3.8 0.19 Capital account 59.7 4.70 65.9 4.20 96.2 4.65 "Recurrent" costs 24.2 1.91 27.8 1.77 39.6 1.91 Salaries 9.0 0.71 11.6 0.74 16.9 0.82 Materials 15.2 1.20 16.2 1.03 22.7 1.10 "Capital" costs 35.5 2.80 38.2 2.43 56.6 2.73 Donor-funded expenditure n.a. 10.4 n.a. 23.9 n.a. 19.7 Wem. item: Total exp. as % o f G D P 0.37 0.75 0.67 Water Supply and Sanitation Sub-sector Expenditure rota1 (Govt.+ donor-funded) n.a. 13.7 n.a. 27.3 n.a. 20.3 Government-funded expenditures 57.8 4.56 63.9 4.1 92.6 4.5 Recurrent account 2.2 0.18 2.5 0.16 3.6 0.17 Capital account 55.6 4.38 61.4 3.91 89.0 4.30 "Recurrent" costs 20.6 1.62 23.5 1.50 33.0 1.59 Salaries 8.1 0.64 10.1 0. 65 13.6 0.66 Materials 12.5 0.99 13.4 0.86 19.4 0.94 "Capital" costs 35.0 2.76 37.8 2.41 56.0 2.71 U r b a n water supply & sanit. 13.3 1,05 18.9 1.20 25.8 1.24 Rural water supply & sanit. 21.7 1.71 18.9 1.21 30.3 1.46 Donor-funded expenditures n.a. 9.13 n.a. 23.2 n.a. 15.8 Wem. item: Total exDend. as % o f G D P 0.33 0.72 0.56 Sources: Conta Geral do Estado, Ministry o f Finance, and DNA. Votes: (1) 98% o f the recurrent budget goes o n salaries. Hence n o breakdown i s given. (2) Exchange rate mumptions: $1 = Mt 12,691 (1999), Mt 15,689 (2000), 20,707 (2001). (3) U W S S = urban water supply and sanitation (WSS) and R W S S = rural WSS. (4) With the data available it i s n o t possible t o separate donor :xpenditure into U W S S expenditure and R W S S expenditure. 209. Mozambique's expenditure levels are similar to those o f comparable countries. Mozambique's proportion of public hnding allocated to water supply and sanitation i s not dissimilar to that o f comparable African countries, as i s seen in Table 32. Government-funded spending in Mozambique i s 2.4 percent o f budget, close to that o f Tanzania (2.5 percent) and Zambia (2.6 percent). Table 32. Water supply and sanitation spending in relation to the budget Percentage o f Government budget Mozambique (1999-01) 2.4 Tanzania 2.5 Uganda 5.0 Zambia 2.6 98 210. Budget execution in the water supply and sanitation sector is low. Table 33 shows that in 2001 the National Directorate for Water (DNA) succeeded in spending only 54 percent o f the investment budget allocated to it. The average for the period 1999-2001 was 63 percent. Year Total spent (Mt Equivalent in U S $ % o f GOM billion) million Investment Budget 1999 52,936 4.19 77.2 2000 57,699 3.73 56.4 2001 84,607 4.13 54.1 The under-spending i s due partly to late arrival o f DNA’s first duodkcimo allocation (as much as 8 months in some years) and partly to the complexity o f the bureaucratic process involved in the replenishment system, as noted in an earlier chapter. 2 11. The rate o f execution in donor-funded projects i s not high. Actual donor-funded water sector expenditures in 1999 to 2001 as percentages o f the pledged amounts in each year averaged 70 percent. One o f the largest projects, NWDP I i s particularly behind , schedule. Among the causes i s the slow release o f the GOM counterpart funds from the Investment Budget, as w e l l as the concentration o f institutional effort on the complex procurement and legislative process for the privatization o f the management o f the five largest cities.98 212. Budgeting and goal-setting need to be improved. Budget proposals by DNA for future years are unrealistically optimistic. Projections submitted in 2002 for FY 2003 anticipate an increase in spending from the $24 million actually spent in 2001 to no less than $88 million. O f this, the Government-funded component rises from $4.5 million to $8.7m, which i s vastly in excess o f what could realistically be executed. The donor- funded component o f the projections envisages a rise from previous levels o f $10m to $23m to an improbable $79.8m. Although increases can be anticipated in 2003 and 2004, as the NWDP I and I1programs take hold, the increases suggested here are not feasible. Preparation o f a new, realistic program for 2003-06 i s called for. 2 13. The quality o f urban water service is poor, though not unlike that o f countries at a similar level o f development. While the costs o f operation and maintenance, at $0.10- 0.1 5/m3, are within the range o f comparable countries, the continuity o f supply (11 hours/day as o f 2002) i s below the average for developing countries (20 hourdday). Furthermore, unaccounted-for-water percentages are high (54 % for Maputo and Beira) though similar to those in comparable African countries. Staffing ratios are high (24/1000 connections, vs. 17/1000 for East and Central Africa and 19/1000 for South Asia). Collection rations in Maputo and Beira are 76 percent but average about 50 ncontrast, in Tete, where the management capacity o f the percent in the smaller cities. I 98Another factor i s the degree o f management decentralization granted to their Mozambique offices by the donors. The July 2002 NWDP I Bi-Annual Report quotes the slow approval process o f b o t h the Government and the W o r l d Bank as a cause o f the NWDP I delays. 99 local water authority has been strengthened, the collection rate is 90 percent. The overall picture i s one o f l o w expenditure efficiency. Thus far, it appears that the introduction o f private sector management in the five major cities three years ago has not yet solved the long-standing problems o f service delivery. In part this i s the result o f poor infrastructure coupled with poor accountability and an absence o f appropriate incentives. (In addition, at least a year was lost in implementation o f private management because o f contract difficulties at the start.) Efficiency improvements are a major objective o f the NWDP II’five cities program and other urban water supply projects. 214. Connections coverage is a function o f thepoverty level. In 1997, according to the household survey, 10 percent o f urban households had in-house piped water (Table 34, line 1); 1.9 percent o f the ultra-poor, 4.2 percent o f the poor and 2 1 percent o f the non-poor had in-house piped water. In addition, some households had piped water from sources outside the house (Table 34, line 2) but the data are ambiguous because some o f these may include purchases o f tap water from neighbors. But even adding in out-of- house piped water, the contrast i s marked: the ultra-poor at 16 percent, the poor at 19 percent and the non-poor at 42 percent. Table 34. Water sources o f urban people, 1997 (percent) Source o f water Ultra-poor Poor Non-poor All 1. Piped (inhouse) 1.9 4.2 21 10 2. Piped (outside o f house) 14 15 21 17 3. Piped (public tap) 28 28 23 26 4. Own well 11 13 9.0 11 5. Public well 27 24 11 19 6. River or lake 8.3 5.3 1.5 3.9 7. Other sources 10 11 13 12 Source: Ministry o f Planning and Finance et al., 1998, Table 2.42. In turn using data o f the Household Survey o f 1997. Note: Some households have more than one water source, so that the totals sum to more than 100. 215. F u l l cost recovery is feasible, over time, in urban areas. The Government’s policy i s to phase in full cost recovery tariffs in urban areas. This will help ensure sustainability o f urban network water supply systems. The full cost o f water in Maputo i s $0.60/m3. The average charge for household connections in Maputo in 2001 was $0.26/m3, so that full cost recovery would imply a real increase o f 131 percent. Other cities’ charges are mostly lower but fall in the range o f $0.15-0.37/m3. As prices rise, i t i s likely that consumption will drop so the key to expand individual connections to encourage an increased volume o f sales. The planned series o f tariff increases will pay for O&M by 2005 and for all costs by 2008. 216. The percentage o f income paid for water is key to understanding expected sustainability. It i s typical that urban consumers with connections pay significantly less per cubic meter than those who rely on private vendors or private standpipes, as emerges from Table 35. Consumers o f water from venders, stand posts, etc. use considerably less water than those on individual connections though the share o f their income going to water may be the same. The regional average i s 4 to 6 percent o f income. The Beneficiary Survey in the major cities in 2001 established that the majority o f 100 respondents would be willing to pay for a household or a yard connection given that water from other sources i s more expensive. Table 35. Prices paid for water in urban areas, by location and source U S cents per m3 Household connections: Average charge, Maputo, 2001 (Finney 2003, p. 38, from FIPAG data) 0.26 Average charge, Beira, 2001 (Beneficiary Assessment Summary) 0.30 Standpipes: Maputo, 2001 (Beneficiary Assessment Summary, Sustem) 0.53 Beira, 2001 (Beneficiary Assessment Summary, Sustem) 0.53 Purchased fiom neighborshendors 30.53 The norm applied is that a household should generally not pay more than 4 percent o f two minimum salaries for water. Currently this would imply a payment o f just under $3 per month per connection, which i s w e l l above the current minimum tariff charge o f $1.80 per month. To cover the f ill supply cost, however, the minimum charge would need to be raised to just over $4 per month or 5.5 percent o f two minimum salaries. However, a survey in 2001 showed that 59 percent o f households in Beira and Maputo were paying more than the 4 percent o f two minimum salaries for water, because o f the high price o f unofficial water purchases. This suggests that the limit o f 4 percent o f two minimum wages i s too conservative. It appears that f ill cost recovery i s attainable and would be socially acceptable. In the case o f the five biggest cities, the present plan i s that tariffs will be raised steadily until full costing i s attained in 2008. D. POLICY PRIORITIES 2 17. The previous discussion leads to a thoroughgoing restructuring o f the water supply sector. A key requirement i s full-cost pricing for urban piped water, coupled with a major improvement in thepresent low service standards which should arise from improved management in the context o f the contracting-out procedures presently under way. 2 18. Urban stand posts w i l l continue to be part o f the landscape for theforeseeable future, given the capital cost o f installation o f household connections for resource stretched utilities. Serious consideration should be given to licensing privately operated kiosks as i s common in many African cities because o f the reliably o f such services and improved access. Additionally, community management o f standpipes should be tested (see footnote 91). Removal o f the prohibition on neighborhood vending would also promote competition and also increase access as the piped network expands; currently the prohibition i s not being enforced in any case. 2 19. The authorities should forge ahead with the Demand-responsive Approach to rural water so as to reduce the 35 percent waterpoint breakdown rate. 220. Theprovincial allocation o f rural water supply efforts should take into account poverty and assessed needs. The provinces that will benefit most from the 2002-03 rural 101 water supply (RWS) programme are Inhambane, Zambezia and, to a lesser degree, the three other northern provinces. This is appropriate, since these are generally the poorest. However, Nampula, despite being densely populated and having the lowest RWS coverage (17 percent), is programmed to receive only 3 17 new waterpoints in 2002/03, as compared with 671 in Zambkzia (whose coverage i s 23 percent), 444 in Inhambane (whose coverage i s 29 percent), and 235-240 each in the less populous Niassa and Cab0 Delgado. Poverty reduction would be better served by allocating more to Nampula. The new AfDB project i s expected to be based in Niassa and Nampula, leading to significant increases in investment in these provinces. 221. Water sector statistics need drastic improvement. These should include an improved water sector information base, including the status and performance o f urban water supply systems including the SPSs, and a regular rural waterpoint inventory system. FIPAG has already started the process o f establishing a data base for the five biggest cities. In addition there i s a need for regular information about donor disbursements, and regular information about the outputs o f donor-funded programs. 222. M o r e attention needs to be given to urban sanitation. The present approach by DNA, based o n the Low-Cost Sanitation Program in the peri-urban and urban areas and health promotion and other ‘soft’ measures in both urban and rural areas, i s sound and should be continued. The on-going Strategic Sanitation Plans Study i s expected to provide recommendations for improving sanitation in urban areas through a combination o f affordable options. At a minimum, institutional arrangements need to be clarified and more coordinated planning needs to be done so that improvements to sanitation and hygiene promotion are carried out in conjunction with water supply improvement. 102 ANNEX I. ACTION PLAN, AND MILLENNIUMDEVELOPMENT GOALS 223. This suggested action plan i s a summary o f what i s already contained in the sections “Policy Priorities” in each chapter o f the main text. I t introduces no new information beyond what i s contained in the main text. I t may serve as a convenient checklist to monitor progress. Table 36. Action plan Area/Objective Reform Measures Timetable Fiscal manage- Disseminatethis PER (Public Expenditure Review) in Government and 2003 4 3 ment: increase civil society with workshops transparency Integrate public expenditure review in a systematic way into the budget cycle and the allocation decision-making process: Identify a narrow set o f targets for specific monitoring in the 2003 PARPA process Strengthen the statistical capacity of staff in the PARPA priority 2003-2005 ministries so that there are real-time data available o n spending and o n targets Develop systems for reporting systematically and regularly o n 2003-2004 achievement o f output and outcome objectives, and on all funds including donor-funded expenditures Clean-up o f Government accounts: complete inventory o f Government accounts at central banks and 2003 Q1 commercial banks close all accounts not linked with the 2003 financial year 2003 4 2 Address the problem o f chronic under-spendingby increasing the amount Continuous o f training in accounting and in the budgetary process Improve internal auditing by substantial new hiring o f qualified staff 2003-2005 (originally planned for 2002) Introduce the integrated financial management information system (SISTAFE) by: rolling out to Education and Finance ministries 2003 rolling out to the remaining ministries 2004 Cross-cutting areas Civil service reform: follow the Public Sector Reform program, with the sequence (i) 2003-2006 restructuring, ( iilinking pay with performance, ( ) iii) reviewing pay scales [note: this will be a combination of raisingpay and moderating pay, depending on the sector and occupation] investigate the alleged 20 percent “ghost employees” in primary education, and also investigate other sectors for HIV/AIDS: do the planned “sector expenditure review” study o f the 2003 4 2 - 4 3 implications o f HIV/AIDS for Government expenditures Education Raise completion rates in lower primary (EP1) from 30% (2001) to 60% (2008) by: curriculum reform including near-automatic promotion within 2004 cycles reducing school fees at primary level 2004 103 increasing recruitment o f women teachers, especially in provinces Continuous where there are few women teachers, until balanced (50%) Eliminate “ghost teachers” by: investigating the 20% “ghost teachers” in lower primary 2003 eliminating “ghost teachers” from the payroll 2004 Merge the EP 1 and EP2 cycles into a single primary education cycle 2005 Increase funding for CFPP teacher training and revise curriculum to one- 2005 year basic training to increase annual output o f primary teachers Introduce ceiling for cost o f classroom construction (US$lO,OOO, including 2004 servicing and furnishing) and decentralize school construction program to local authorities Health Consolidate the strategy and policy documents i n a single planning system 2003-2004 with prioritization linked to resource allocation. The user fee system: 2003 Thoroughly review the system, so as to reduce over-charging and grant exemptions consistently O n the basis o f the review, introduce reforms which may include: 2004 posting readable information about fees and exemptions at all clinics and health posts; improving remuneration levels in the context o f the civil service reform program, linking performance with compensation; conducting regular beneficiary assessments; introducing more unannounced inspections Reflect all user fees and other funds on budget 2003 Roads Separate Road Fund from Administraqlo Nacional das Estradas 2003 Restore f u e l tax to i t s real 1997 level 2003 Provide full funding for routine and periodic maintenance 2003-2005 Create a suitable institutional “home” for periodic maintenance Start in 2003 Subject all to competitive bidding all routine and periodic mainenance Start in 2003 contracts for parastatal maintenance companies Privatize the parastatal maintenance companies (ECMEPs), raising the share 2003-2008 o f privately executed maintenance from 40% (2002) to -% by -[target to be set by authorities] Reorganize the periodic maintenance arrangements to raise maintenance 2003-2005 from 434 krdyr (1995-2001) to -W y r by -[target to be set by authorities] Water supply Urban water supply: increase rate o f household connection installation from 2,50O/yr 2003-2015 (1999-2001) to 21,8OO/yr (NWDP I1plan for 2002-2005) 0 apply full-cost tariffs by 2008 2003 - 2008 improve urban standpipe service quality, by adopting the private 2003-2005 standpipe operator approach scrap rules against resale o f water 2003 Rural water supply: raise waterpoint development rate from 900-1300/yr (1999-2002) to Start in 2003 1400/yr 0 reduce the % o f non-functioning waterpoints (currently 35%) and continue application o f the Demand Driven Approach 104 Table 37. Mozambique's progress towards the Millennium Development Goals 99 Millennium Development Goal Will the goal Comments be met? Extreme poverty: halve the proportion o f unknown Results o f the 2ndhousehold survey - people living in extreme poverty between 1990- expected in late 2003 - will w i l l enable an 2015, vu. from about 69% to 33.5% assessment o f the prospects HIV/AIDS: Halt and reverse the spread o f unknown Impact o f the Government's new strategy, HIV/AIDS by 2015 backed up by a the WB-financed HIV/AIDS Response Project, could be examined in 2004 which would permit an assessment Hunger: Halve the proportion o f people who unknown Results o f the 2"d household survey - suffer from hunger by 20 15 expected in late 2003 - will w i l l enable an assessment o f the prospects Access to safe water: Halve the proportion o f Rural: yes See chapter o n water supply people without safe drinking water by 2015 Urban: (vu. rural: raise access from 35% to 67%, uncertain urban: from 25% to 62.5%) Education: Universal completion o f primary Unlikely Unlikely to be met despite Education For All . education by 2015 due to constraints o n recurrent expenditure Gender equality: Eliminate gender disparity in: primary education by 2005 Yes Access: Aclueved w.r.t. primary by 2002. . (Completion: likely date unknown; depends o n efforts to recruit female teachers.) . secondary education by 2005 unknown Access: likely date unknown. (Completion: likely date unknown.) all levels o f education by 2015 unknown Access at tertiary: likely date unknown. (Completion: likely date unknown). Child mortality: reduce under-5 mortality by Unlikely Optimistically projecting recent 2/3 by 2015, v u . from 200/1000 to 67/1000 improvements, the rate i s 180 by 2015. Maternal health: reduce maternal mortality by Unlikely Ministry lacks an analysis o f the causes o f % b y 2015, vu. from 1083/105 live births to matemal mortality, or a specific plan for 271/105 reducing it. Optimistically projecting recent improvements, the rate i s 644 by 2015. Malaria: Have halted by 2015, and begun to Unlikely N o evidence that the actions taken hitherto reverse, the incidence o f malaria have reduced incidence Environment: Integrate the principles o f Potentially n.a. sustainable development into country policies and programs and reduce the loss o f environmental resources 99 For general information about the MDGs, see see http://www.undp.org/mdg/countryreports.html. 105 ANNEX 11. DATA Table 38. Functional classification of expenditure (percentage o f GDP) 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 actual actual actual actual est. - - Bolded italics indicate the i n c l u s i o n of a l l f o r e i g n f i n a n c i n g - - - - romans i n d i c a t e possible exclusion of f o r e i g n f i n a n c i n g - - Total expenditures 21.0 23.8 27.5 28.3 28.2 General A h n i s t r a t i o n 3.0 4.1 3.9 2.2 2.2 Education a 2.5 2.9 5.0 4.6 3.1 Health 2.4 2.8 3.5 3.8 3.7 Agriculture 0.4 0.4 3.2 0.3 0.4 Roads 1.9 1.2 1.6 1.3 Water 0.4 0.8 0.7 Other including residual 10.7 12.0 9.5 15.4 18.8 Total recurrent expenditures 11.2 12.2 13.8 14.2 14.4 General Administration 2.3 2.6 2.2 1.8 1.8 Education a 2.0 2.5 3.2 3.0 2.8 Health 2.1 2.4 2.8 3.5 3.5 Agriculture 0.2 0.3 0.3 0.2 0.2 Roads 0.7 0.7 I.0 0.7 1.4 Water 0. I 0. I 0. I Other including residual 3.9 3.7 4.2 5.0 6.1 Total investment expenditures 9.8 11.6 13.7 14.1 13.7 General Administration 0.7 1.5 1.7 0.4 0.3 Education a 0.5 0.3 1.8 1.7 0.2 Health 0.4 0.5 0.6 0.3 0.3 Agriculture 0.2 0.1 2.9 0.1 0.2 Roads 1.1 0.6 0.7 0.6 Water 0.3 0.7 0.6 Other including residual e 6.9 8.2 5.3 10.4 12.7 Memo item: Total expenditures in Contas Geral do Estado 13.8 15.6 28.0 15.6 16.4 and Relat6rios de Execuggo e Sources: Conta Geral do Estudo for 1998,1999 and 2000; Relatdrios de Excecupio for 2000,2002 and 2001 (to September, but annualized in the table); water from Finney (2002); roads from Herman (2002); health from HSER (2002), education from e-mail sent by Mafalda Duarte to Alex Valerio on 03/24/03, File Annex “Exec 2001“. Note: Data for General Administration, Education and Agriculture are from the Contas Geruis do Estudo (CGE) and Relatdrios de ExecuFZo (RE). Data for Education in 2001 include extemal financing from Mafalda Duarte’s e-mail. Data for Roads, Health and Water are from the correspondent sectoral PER papers. Data from CGE excludes most extemally financed expenditures, except for the year 2000, which includes it. The Relatdrios de ExecuGZo also exclude most extemally financed expenditures. Data for total expenditures, total recurrent expenditures and total investment expenditures correspond to data in the consolidatedCentral Govemment accounts as presented in Table 2, “Govemment finance, 1997-2003 (percentage of GDP)” on page 20. These data includes most extemally financed expenditures. a Includes primary, secondary and tertiary education. Health and Water are the only sectors for which the whole series includes extemally financed expenditures. Between 1998 and 2001, roads includes a small proportion o f extemally financed expenditure.. T h i s category i s the residual between the total and the sectoral information. I t includes missing sectors and non-accounted-forextemal financing. e The difference between the information in this memo item and the total expenditures i s the external financing that i s not included in the Contas Gerais do Estado and Relatdrios de ExecuqZo. 106 T a b l e 39. Health sector recurrent expenditures by level o f care (percentage) Level 1982 1989 2001 I and I1(health posts / centers) 64 44 42 I11and I V (rural / general hospitals) 36 56 58 Total 100 100 100 Sources: World Bank (1992), Table IV.9, p. 105; and MinistCrio da Sahde (2001b), table 6. Figure 7. Inequity in budget allocations across regions"' " I I . Source: loo Serviqo Nacional de Saude (1999) and HSRP Indicators (2002). 107 REFERENCES African Development Bank, 2002. Mozambique: Water and Sanitation Sector Review. Volume 1. Main Report. M a y 2002. Prepared by SEED, Lda. Agencia Suiqa para o Desenvolvimento e a Cooperaqgo (SDC), 2001. 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