Power Point SDC Fiscal Decentralisation Course
SDC/DDLGN Course, 3-6 December 2018, conducted by IDS and HSLU in Lucerne, Switzerland
Course: Fiscal decentralization made effective GROUPWORK ON THE ALLOCATION OF FUNCTIONS
Rationale, core elements and theoretical concepts
Lecture by Roland Fischer (Institute of Management & Economics IBR) on "Reform of Fiscal Equalization and Functional Allocation in Switzerland"
SDC/DDLGN Course, 3-6 December 2018
Revenue sharing case study about Bolivia
Revenue sharing case study: Mongolia
Financing of Sub-national Governments in Tanzania: Sources of main revenues and their shares
Finances of Sub-national governments of Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan –Sources of Main Revenues and their Sources-post 2001
Decentralisation trends in OECD countries: a comparative perspective for Ukraine
Local incomes case of Serbia
Fiscal Decentralisation and Beyond: Norms, Linkages and Basic Reform Challenges. SDC/DDLGN Course, 3-6 December 2018, conducted by IDS and HSLU in Lucerne, Switzerland
Lecture on "Fiscal Decentralisation: Neglected Challenges and Constraints"
Training on Fiscal Decentralization
Assignment On Political Economy of Fiscal Decentralisation Reform: Bangladesh Context
This presentation focuses exclusively on the property tax reform as a part of fiscal decentralisation efforts in Serbia
Fiscal Decentralisation - Strategically Implementing Decentralisation and Intergovernmental Reform
Strategy and organization of decentralization reform by PhD. Valbona Karakaçi. SDC Project Strong Municpalities implemented from Helvetas Swiss Intercooperation
PowerPointPresentation on Fisical Equalization in Switzerland
Tax Autonomy and Tax Competition - A practitioners perspective
"Fiscal decentralisation realities in participant’s countries" - Assignment for participants
Further Readings Fiscal decentralisation course
Short course participant evaluation questionnaire
Fiscal decentralisation made effective - List of participants and detailed program
This publication shares the experiences of UNCDF and others in designing and implementing performance-based grants. The piloting of performance-based grant systems demonstrates how local catalytic capital can be deployed to bring about real improvements in local development and poverty reduction by encouraging local governments to improve their capacity and focus on results.
This paper presents conceptual and practical underpinnings of grant designs that could further simplicity, objectivity, and local autonomy objectives while furthering citizen-centric results-based accountability. The paper further highlights a few notable recent initiatives in both industrial and developing countries that embrace such directions for reform. The paper concludes that results-based intergovernmental finance offers significant potential to minimize tradeoffs between local autonomy and accountability while furthering access to merit goods.
Suggested Literature for Fiscal decentralisation course