Lessons from Brazil's unsuccessful fiscal decentralization policy to fight COVID‐19

This manuscript investigates the unsuccessful case of the fiscal decentralization policy implemented by the Brazilian central government to help municipalities fight COVID‐19. Based on quantitative analyses of data available on governmental websites, we identified that the transfer policy had ignore...

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Published inPublic administration and development Vol. 43; no. 2; pp. 106 - 119
Main Authors Cardoso, Ricardo Lopes, Azevedo, Ricardo Rocha de, Pigatto, José Alexandre Magrini, Fajardo, Bernardo de Abreu Guelber, Cunha, Armando Santos Moreira da
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published England Wiley Periodicals Inc 01.05.2023
John Wiley and Sons Inc
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ISSN0271-2075
1099-162X
DOI10.1002/pad.1990

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Summary:This manuscript investigates the unsuccessful case of the fiscal decentralization policy implemented by the Brazilian central government to help municipalities fight COVID‐19. Based on quantitative analyses of data available on governmental websites, we identified that the transfer policy had ignored municipalities' risk patterns and income changes. It benefited municipalities regardless of their vulnerability and population infection risks, and many municipalities reduced healthcare expenditures funded by their revenues during the pandemic. Hence, some municipalities made a “pandemic surplus” in 2020 – a municipal electoral year. Indeed, COVID‐19 killed 663,694 people in Brazil until 4 May 2022. Lessons from an unsuccessful case of response to COVID‐19 help develop resilience for other crises by emerging market economies and developing countries. The findings have implications for policymakers and literature since they represent inadequate vertical coordination that followed a path dependence on traditional decentralization policies and took place in a year of municipal elections without clear spending and accountability rules.
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ISSN:0271-2075
1099-162X
DOI:10.1002/pad.1990