Design, reporting, and broader impact: COVID-19 budgeting in Singapore

IF 3.1 Q1 PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION
Chang Yee Kwan
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引用次数: 0

Abstract

Abstract As governments undertake extraordinary policy measures in response to the COVID-19 pandemic, prevailing institutional factors can potentially compromise implementation success and subsequent outcomes. This paper illustrates this issue by examining Singapore’s budgetary response to COVID-19. The analysis reveals the fiscal response of the Singapore government to be a near-exemplification of crisis budgeting which, at the same time, entails a considerable drawdown from the country’s national reserves to finance the forecasted budget deficit. However, a revision of the budget balances vis-à-vis international reporting standards finds that: (i) the budget deficit is substantially smaller; and (ii) the influence of the fiscal injections on the economy – the multiplier effect – is likely smaller than what official estimates imply. The primary emphasis here is that policymakers need to be conscious of the contemporaneous influence of prevailing institutional factors on policy effectiveness. This takes on greater significance for effective crisis-management and recovery amidst the continued uncertainty about COVID-19 and developments in international trade and resource flows in the medium-term.
设计、报告和更广泛的影响:新加坡新冠肺炎预算
摘要随着各国政府为应对新冠肺炎大流行而采取非常政策措施,普遍的体制因素可能会影响实施成功和随后的结果。本文通过研究新加坡应对新冠肺炎的预算来说明这一问题。分析显示,新加坡政府的财政反应几乎是危机预算的一个例证,同时,危机预算需要从该国的国家储备中大幅削减,以资助预测的预算赤字。然而,根据国际报告标准对预算余额进行的修订发现:(一)预算赤字大大减少;以及(ii)财政注入对经济的影响——乘数效应——可能比官方估计的要小。这里的主要重点是,政策制定者需要意识到现行制度因素对政策有效性的同期影响。在新冠肺炎的持续不确定性以及中期国际贸易和资源流动的发展的情况下,这对有效的危机管理和复苏具有更大的意义。
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来源期刊
Policy Design and Practice
Policy Design and Practice PUBLIC ADMINISTRATION-
CiteScore
10.30
自引率
4.30%
发文量
19
审稿时长
13 weeks
期刊介绍:
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