Georgia: Improving Domestic Resource Mobilization for Inclusive Growth

Project Name Improving Domestic Resource Mobilization for Inclusive Growth
Project Number 48044-001
Country / Economy Georgia
Project Status Closed
Project Type / Modality of Assistance Loan
Source of Funding / Amount
Loan 3190-GEO: Improving Domestic Resource Mobilization for Inclusive Growth
Ordinary capital resources US$ 16.00 million
Loan 3191-GEO: Improving Domestic Resource Mobilization for Inclusive Growth
Asian Development Fund US$ 59.00 million
Strategic Agendas Inclusive economic growth
Drivers of Change Gender Equity and Mainstreaming
Governance and capacity development
Knowledge solutions
Partnerships
Private sector development
Sector / Subsector

Finance / Finance sector development - Insurance and contractual savings - Money and capital markets

Public sector management / Public expenditure and fiscal management

Gender Some gender elements
Description

The program will enhance inclusive growth options by opening up the fiscal space for the government to meet its planned significant funding of inclusive social and economic services. To achieve this, the program will support fiscal consolidation, improve revenue management, strengthen public expenditure management, enhance the generation of domestic savings, and increase private resource mobilization for investment opportunities, especially for micro, small, and medium-sized businesses.

The program impact will be citizens, particularly women, benefiting from higher living standards and more employment opportunities. The outcome will be the effective mobilization of domestic resources for increased public and private investment. The program will help enable improved fiscal space, better business opportunities and pension arrangements for women, more sustainable social service delivery, and a better environment for economic growth. The outputs are: (i) improved management of debt, cash and fiscal risk; (ii) strengthened revneue and public expendiutre management; (iii) enhanced generation of domestic savings; and (iv) increased mobilization of private resources for investment.

Project Rationale and Linkage to Country/Regional Strategy

The proposed program aims to improve domestic resource mobilization (DRM) to help achieve inclusive growth in Georgia. The program supports improved debt and fiscal risk management, more efficient revenue and public expenditure management, generation of domestic savings, and mobilization of private resources for investment. Inequality of income and opportunity will be addressed through the redistributive role of fiscal policy in tax and social protection measures. The programmatic approach and policy-based loan will finance three subprograms implemented from 2014- 2016.

Growth of the Georgian economy since the Rose Revolution in 2003 has averaged nearly 6% annually during 2004 2013, leading to an increase in per capita gross national income by three times in current US dollar terms. While Georgia advanced rapidly on the Doing Business rankings, growth stemmed mainly from capital inflows before the twin crises of 2008 (the global financial crisis and the conflict with the Russian Federation) and from high public capital spending thereafter. In 2008 the crises sharply reduced capital inflows, and private investment and growth contracted by 3.8% in 2009. The government launched countercyclical fiscal measures to spur growth, increasing public expenditure from 34.0% of gross domestic product (GDP) in 2007 to 38.4% in 2009. The fiscal stimulus paid off, with growth rebounding and averaging more than 5% during 2010 2013. The share of foreign direct investment in GDP declined from 7.7% in 2011 to 5.8% in 2012. However, by the first quarter of 2014 it had increased to 7.2%.

With the change in government in 2012, public finances came under pressure because of a large increase in social expenditure and limited scope to raise revenues, resulting in a fiscal deficit of 2.6% of GDP. The deficit is expected to widen to 3.7% in 2014 with a surge in social expenditures and lower revenues due to the slowing of growth in preceding years. The composition of central government expenditure will be changing over time with subsidies, transfers, compensation of employees, and interest payments taking up increasing budget shares at the expense of goods and services. In 2013 public capital expenditure, a significant driver of Georgia's economic growth during previous years, declined to below 6.0% of GDP from the 2008 2011 level of 7.5% 8.0% due to project implementation delays. Weaknesses have been identified in the selection, preparation, and appraisal of investment projects. Infrastructure investment needs, including those emerging from decentralization, will require a strong public investment management system to contain fiscal risks and maintain existing infrastructure.

Maintaining sound macroeconomic and prudent fiscal management is critical for inclusive growth, requiring the government to exercise expenditure restraint as well as to increase revenues. The planned increase in social expenditures in the medium term is consistent with the government's push for inclusive, equitable growth for all citizens, as well as for gender-equitable growth. In this situation, maintaining capital expenditure requires careful prioritization of spending and improved expenditure efficiency and effectiveness to ensure fiscal sustainability. The government plans to develop public private partnerships to leverage public resources and increase private participation, which can also strengthen its fiscal position.

The government confronts different types of fiscal risk macroeconomic, debt, and contingent liabilities as well as those risks arising from state-owned enterprise (SOE) operations and the finance sector. The present capacity to monitor and deal with these different risks is limited. Recent reviews have put particular emphasis on the risks associated with the quasi-fiscal operations of SOEs, as some implicit subsidies are not reflected in the budget and the accounts of the central government. The SOE sector in Georgia contributed to 7% of gross GDP in 2012, accounting for 24% of total corporate investment.

Total public debt amounted to 34.4% of GDP in 2013, of which 27.2% was denominated in foreign currency. Borrowing procedures are generally well developed, but external borrowing is poorly documented. A defined debt strategy is needed, as is more detailed analysis of external borrowing proposals. Operational risk management procedures are well developed but documentation to present a comprehensive snapshot is lacking. Presently, debt management and cash management in Georgia are two separate activities. Cash management is weak, since the government relies on a non-remunerated cash buffer in the National Bank of Georgia to ensure that payments can be made when due. In modern treasury management, these two functions are merged and managed by one single entity, using financial market instruments to meet the government's immediate and longer-term cash needs. To reach this stage, a two-pronged approach is required: developing the local financial markets, and establishing a modern treasury function in the Ministry of Finance (MOF).

Tax policy and administration reforms serve as part of wider improvements of the business and investment climate. Total taxes in Georgia amount to 24.8% of GDP, of which indirect taxes make up 13.6% and direct taxes 11.2% in 2013. A notable feature is the constitutional ban on increasing various tax rates. The Georgia Revenue Service is responsible for collecting taxes for both levels of government as well as customs duties. High levels of old arrears impair the smooth functioning of tax administration. Selective writing-off of tax arrears is needed, with improved capacity for risk analysis to guide audit targeting and current controls.

Pensions constitute the largest social spending item in the state budget, accounting for 18% of public expenditure in 2013 and 4% of GDP. This cost is likely to increase over time because of population aging. Social security is presently noncontributory. The current pension system needs revision to ensure both fiscal sustainability and adequate pension levels over the medium term. More expansive and efficient capital markets will be necessary to absorb pension inflows and allow pension funds to responsibly invest in equities. Capital markets, including money markets, can also provide funding for banks and nonbank financial institutions in Georgia through equity raising and bond issuance. In the design of a new pension system it is essential to take gender issues into account, as women are less likely to work in formal sectors, generally earn lower wages, and may perform other nonpaid labor. The current pension eligibility age is 65 for men and 60 for women, and is paid to all citizens regardless of marital status.

The small and medium-sized enterprise sector represents nearly 96% of registered businesses and employs 42.0% of the workforce in Georgia, but accounted for only 17.7% of business turnover in 2013. Firms cite high interest rates, risk-averse bank lending policies, and absence of venture capital as major constraints on growth. Small businesses currently rely on owner resources or on retained earnings for investment. Poor development of securities and capital markets and long-term financial instruments, and reliance on a fully publicly funded pension scheme, prevent higher savings rates and limit the funds available for lending. Increasing access to finance, especially for small businesses managed by women, is an important policy consideration. Limited support for and use of innovation and technology also hampers small business development, with Georgia ranking 73 out of 142 on the World Economic Forum's Global Innovation Index.

The program is consistent with the country assistance to Georgia from the Asian Development Bank (ADB) and with government policy.

Impact Citizens, particularly women, benefit from higher living standards and more employment opportunities.
Project Outcome
Description of Outcome Effective mobilization of domestic resources for increased public and private investment
Progress Toward Outcome
Implementation Progress
Description of Project Outputs

1. Debt, cash, and fiscal risk management improved

4. Mobilization of private resources for investment increased

3. Generation of domestic savings enhanced

2. Revenue and public expenditure management strengthened

Status of Implementation Progress (Outputs, Activities, and Issues)
Geographical Location
Safeguard Categories
Environment C
Involuntary Resettlement C
Indigenous Peoples C
Summary of Environmental and Social Aspects
Environmental Aspects
Involuntary Resettlement
Indigenous Peoples
Stakeholder Communication, Participation, and Consultation
During Project Design Stakeholders including relevant government departments, private sector, banks, insurance companies are being consulted.
During Project Implementation The same set of stakeholders will be consulted during implementation.
Business Opportunities
Consulting Services not applicable
Procurement not applicable
Responsible ADB Officer Song, Dai Chang
Responsible ADB Department Central and West Asia Department
Responsible ADB Division Public Management, Financial Sector and Trade Division, CWRD
Executing Agencies
Ministry of Finance
Nodar Khaduri
16 Gorgasali St., 0114
Tbilisi
Georgia
Timetable
Concept Clearance 24 Jul 2014
Fact Finding 07 Jul 2014 to 18 Jul 2014
MRM 10 Sep 2014
Approval 21 Nov 2014
Last Review Mission -
Last PDS Update 25 Jul 2014

LoanĀ 3190-GEO

Milestones
Approval Signing Date Effectivity Date Closing
Original Revised Actual
21 Nov 2014 21 Nov 2014 15 Dec 2014 31 Dec 2014 - 05 Jan 2015
Financing Plan Loan Utilization
Total (Amount in US$ million) Date ADB Others Net Percentage
Project Cost 16.00 Cumulative Contract Awards
ADB 16.00 17 Jun 2022 16.00 0.00 100%
Counterpart 0.00 Cumulative Disbursements
Cofinancing 0.00 17 Jun 2022 16.00 0.00 100%

LoanĀ 3191-GEO

Milestones
Approval Signing Date Effectivity Date Closing
Original Revised Actual
21 Nov 2014 21 Nov 2014 15 Dec 2014 31 Dec 2014 - 05 Jan 2015
Financing Plan Loan Utilization
Total (Amount in US$ million) Date ADB Others Net Percentage
Project Cost 59.00 Cumulative Contract Awards
ADB 59.00 17 Jun 2022 57.50 0.00 100%
Counterpart 0.00 Cumulative Disbursements
Cofinancing 0.00 17 Jun 2022 57.50 0.00 100%

ADB provides the information contained in this project data sheet (PDS) solely as a resource for its users without any form of assurance. Whilst ADB tries to provide high quality content, the information are provided "as is" without warranty of any kind, either express or implied, including without limitation warranties of merchantability, fitness for a particular purpose, and non-infringement. ADB specifically does not make any warranties or representations as to the accuracy or completeness of any such information.

Source URL: https://www.adb.org/projects/48044-001/main