Journal of
Development and Agricultural Economics

  • Abbreviation: J. Dev. Agric. Econ.
  • Language: English
  • ISSN: 2006-9774
  • DOI: 10.5897/JDAE
  • Start Year: 2009
  • Published Articles: 549

Full Length Research Paper

Methodological guidelines for tracking public agricultural expenditure with illustrations from Zambia

J. Govereh1, P. Chilonda2*, E. Malawo3, T. S. Jayne1 and L. Rugube4
1Food Security Research Project, Lusaka, Zambia. 2International Water Management Institute (IWMI) Southern Africa Office; 141 Cresswell Street, Private Bag X813, Silverton 0127, Pretoria, South Africa; 3Policy and Planning Department, Ministry of Agriculture and Cooperatives, Lusaka, Zambia. 4University of Pretoria, Post Graduate School of Agriculture and Rural Development, Pretoria 0002, South Africa.
Email: [email protected]

  •  Accepted: 02 March 2011
  •  Published: 31 March 2011

Abstract

The signing of the Maputo Declaration in 2003 by African Union member states requiring them to allocate 10% of national budget to agriculture, necessitates a framework or system that tracks how much is being spent, where it is being spent, what it is being spent on and for whom, and how it has changed over time in relation to the set targets. This paper provides such a framework and illustrates its use using data from Zambia. It provides a concept and practicalinformation to facilitate tracking of national public expenditure on agriculture. Data onpublic expenditure on agriculture are available from government budgetary records.Knowledge of the public agricultural system is argued to be an essential first step intracking expenditures. The paper identified actors, functions of actors andrelationships among actors within the public agricultural system. An additional proposed tool is a set of classifications of expenditures on agriculture enablegrouping of different expenditures into policy-relevant dimensions. Documentation ofall procedures and decisions made will help analysts employing similarmeasurements conduct comparisons over time and across boundaries and set thestage for sharing ideas and experiences, which eventually improve the standards ofmeasuring public expenditure on agriculture.

 

Key words: Methodological guidelines, public spending, tracking, Zambia.