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East Asia Decentralizes

June 2005

Making Local Government Work in East Asia

decentralization report

More than ever, the future of East Asian countries depends on the capacity and performance of local and provincial governments, according to the World Bank report, East Asia Decentralizes.

This decentralization has also unleashed local initiative and energy, with new ways to deliver services to people. With great potential for continued improvement and innovation, finds the report, it is essential that decentralization is done right.

The report, which focuses on six countries, notes the differences in the approach to decentralizing government in Cambodia, China, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, and Vietnam. Despite encouraging progress, fundamental problems remain. Across the region, local governments lack the resources and power to fulfill their new responsibilities, and they have few incentives to improve their performance.

Country Overviews

  Cambodia
  China
  Indonesia
 

Philippines

  Thailand
  Vietnam

Resources

  Watch a Video Seminar on Decentralization in East Asia 

  Bank Homepage: Governance and Public-Sector Reform

  Administrative and Civil Service Reform

   Decentralization in other Regions:
   
Africa
    Europe and Central Asia
    Latin America
    Middle East and Northern Africa
    South Asia

The report suggests that while decentralizing countries need policies and strategies that are appropriate to their specific environments, policy makers can usefully focus on three key challenges.

  • Improving the organization of the intergovernmental system: Subnational governments now have substantial responsibilities, but basic weaknesses in the systems that link the central, regional, and local governments limit their ability to fulfill these responsibilities.
  • Strengthening local and intergovernmental fiscal and financial structures: Progress in this area has been the greatest in increasing the transfers from the central government to the local governments which make up most local government revenue. But these funds are not always distributed fairly, and local governments have few ways of raising money and even less control over funds they do raise.
  • Developing the functional and accountability systems that make local governments work: Local governments often have flawed functional and financial management systems. Audits are rare, and central control over local staffing, budgets, and pay undermines attempts to devolve authority.

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Download the Report
Decentralization ReportFull Report (2.4mb pdf)
Overview  (174kb pdf)
News Release

Download the Chapters:
1)East Asia Decentralizes 
  (205 kb pdf)
2)  Decentralization Frameworks
and Processes (215kb pdf)
3)  Achieving Fiscal 
Sustainability (125kb pdf)
4)  Fiscal Disparities in East 
Asia (925kb pdf)
5)   Effective Management
by Subnational Governments
 (190kb pdf)
6)  Subnational Own-Source
Revenue (192kb pdf)
7)  Managing Human Resources
(225kb pdf)
8)Decentralizing Health
(215kb pdf)
9)  Education Reforms in East
Asia  (266kb pdf)
10)Decentralizing Basic 
Infrastructure Services
(247kb pdf)
11)  Does Decentralization 
Improve Accountability?
(169kb pdf)
12)  Decentralization
Accountability Challenge
(154kb pdf)
 

 





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