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Wikipedia

Government spending

Government spending or expenditure includes all government consumption, investment, and transfer payments.[1][2] In national income accounting, the acquisition by governments of goods and services for current use, to directly satisfy the individual or collective needs of the community, is classed as government final consumption expenditure. Government acquisition of goods and services intended to create future benefits, such as infrastructure investment or research spending, is classed as government investment (government gross capital formation). These two types of government spending, on final consumption and on gross capital formation, together constitute one of the major components of gross domestic product.

Government spending can be financed by government borrowing, taxes, custom duties, the sale or lease of natural resources, and various fees like national park entry fees or licensing fees.[3] When Governments choose to borrow money, they have to pay interest on the money borrowed.[4] Changes in government spending is a major component of fiscal policy used to stabilize the macroeconomic business cycle.

Public expenditure is spending made by the government of a country on collective or individual needs and wants of public goods and public services, such as pension, healthcare, security, education subsidies, emergency services, infrastructure, etc.[5] Until the 19th century, public expenditure was limited due to laissez faire philosophies. In the 20th century, John Maynard Keynes argued that the role of public expenditure was pivotal in determining levels of income and distribution in the economy. Public expenditure plays an important role in the economy as it establishes fiscal policy and provides public goods and services for households and firms.

Theories of public expenditure edit

Several theories of taxation exist in public economics. Governments at all levels (national, regional and local) need to raise revenue from a variety of sources to finance public-sector expenditures. The details of taxation are guided by two principles: who will benefit, and who can pay. Public expenditure means the expenditure on the developmental and non-developmental activity such as construction of roadways and dams, and other activity.

Rules or principles that govern the expenditure policy of the government are called "canons of public expenditure". Economist George Findlay Shirras [6] laid down the following four canons of public expenditure:

  1. Canon of Benefit – public spending must be done in a manner that it brings greatest social benefits.
  2. Canon of Economy – it says that economy does not mean miserliness. Public expenditure must be made productively and efficiently.
  3. Canon of Sanction – public spending should not be made without sanction of an appropriate authority.
  4. Canon of Surplus – public revenue should exceed government expenditure, this avoiding a deficit. Government must prepare a budget to create a surplus.[7]

Three other canons are:

  1. Canon of elasticity- it says there should be enough scope in expenditure policy.government should be able to increase or decrease it according to the period.
  2. Canon of productivity- public expenditure should encourage production efficiency of the economy.
  3. Canon of equitable distribution - expenditure policy should minimize inequalities and it should be designed in a way to benefit poorer sections.[citation needed]

Principle of maximum social advantage edit

 
Dalton's Principle of Maximum Social Advantage. Graph showing point of Maximum Social Advantage at point "P"[8]

The criteria and pre-conditions for arriving at this solution are collectively referred to as the principle of maximum social advantage. Taxation (government revenue) and government expenditure are the two tools. Neither of excess is good for the society, it has to be balanced to achieve maximum social benefit. Dalton called this principle as “Maximum Social Advantage” and Pigou termed it as “Maximum Aggregate Welfare”.

Dalton’s Principle of Maximum Social Advantage – maximum satisfaction should be yield by striking a balance between public revenue and expenditure by the government. Economic welfare is achieved when marginal utility of expenditure = marginal disutility of taxation. He explains this principle with reference to

  • Maximum Social Benefit (MSB)
  • Maximum Social Sacrifice (MSS)[9]

It was introduced by Swedish Economist “Erik Lindahl in 1919”.[10] According to his theory, determination of public expenditure and taxation will happen on the basis of public preferences which they will reveal themselves. Cost of supplying a good will be taken up by the people. The tax that they will pay will be revealed by them according to their capacities.[11]

Macroeconomic fiscal policy edit

 
The Market for Capital (the Loanable Funds Market) and the Crowding Out Effect. An increase in government deficit spending "crowds out" private investment by increasing interest rates and lowering the quantity of capital available to the private sector.

Government spending can be a useful economic policy tool for governments. Fiscal policy can be defined as the use of government spending and/or taxation as a mechanism to influence an economy.[12][13] There are two types of fiscal policy: expansionary fiscal policy, and contractionary fiscal policy. Expansionary fiscal policy is an increase in government spending or a decrease in taxation, while contractionary fiscal policy is a decrease in government spending or an increase in taxes. Expansionary fiscal policy can be used by governments to stimulate the economy during a recession. For example, an increase in government spending directly increases demand for goods and services, which can help increase output and employment. On the other hand, contractionary fiscal policy can be used by governments to cool down the economy during an economic boom. A decrease in government spending can help check inflation.[12] During economic downturns, in the short run, government spending can be changed either via automatic stabilization or discretionary stabilization. Automatic stabilization is when existing policies automatically change government spending or taxes in response to economic changes, without the additional passage of laws.[14][12] A primary example of an automatic stabilizer is Unemployment Insurance, which provides financial assistance to unemployed workers. Discretionary stabilization is when a government takes actions to change government spending or taxes in direct response to changes in the economy. For instance, a government may decide to increase government spending as a result of a recession.[14] With discretionary stabilization, the government must pass a new law to make changes in government spending.[12]

John Maynard Keynes was one of the first economists to advocate for government deficit spending as part of the fiscal policy response to an economic contraction. According to Keynesian economics, increased government spending raises aggregate demand and increases consumption, which leads to increased production and faster recovery from recessions. Classical economists, on the other hand, believe that increased government spending exacerbates an economic contraction by shifting resources from the private sector, which they consider productive, to the public sector, which they consider unproductive.[15]

In economics, the potential "shifting" in resources from the private sector to the public sector as a result of an increase in government deficit spending is called crowding out.[12] The figure to the right depicts the market for capital, otherwise known as the market for loanable funds. The downward sloping demand curve D1 represents demand for private capital by firms and investors, and the upward sloping supply curve S1 represents savings by private individuals. The initial equilibrium in this market is represented by point A, where the equilibrium quantity of capital is K1 and the equilibrium interest rate is R1. If the government increases deficit spending, it will borrow money from the private capital market and reduce the supply of savings to S2. The new equilibrium is at point B, where the interest rate has increased to R2 and the quantity of capital available to the private sector has decreased to K2. The government has essentially made borrowing more expensive and has taken away savings from the market, which "crowds out" some private investment. The crowding out of private investment could limit the economic growth from the initial increase government spending.[14][13]

Composition edit

Public expenditure can be divided into COFOG (Classification of the Functions of Government) categories. Those categories are

pensions, subsidies for family and children, unemployment subsidies, R&D (Research and Development) on social protection.
public health services, medical products, medical appliances and equipment, hospital services, R&D on healthcare.
executive and legislative organs, financial and fiscal affairs, external affairs, foreign economic aid, public debt transactions, R&D related to general public services
pre-primary, primary, secondary, tertiary education, R&D on education etc.
  • Economic Affairs
general economic, agriculture, fuel and energy, commercial and labour affairs, forestry, fishing and hunting, mining, manufacturing, transport, communication etc.
police, fire-protection services, emergency medical services, law courts, prisons, etc.
military defence, civil defence, foreign military aid.
  • Recreation, culture and religion
Recreational and sporting services, cultural services, broadcasting and publishing services, religious services etc.
waste management, pollution abatement, protection of biodiversity and landscape etc.
housing development, community amenities, water supply, street lighting etc.[16]

Final consumption edit

Government spending on goods and services for current use to directly satisfy individual or collective needs of the members of the community is called government final consumption expenditure (GFCE.) It is a purchase from the national accounts "use of income account" for goods and services directly satisfying of individual needs (individual consumption) or collective needs of members of the community (collective consumption). GFCE consists of the value of the goods and services produced by the government itself other than own-account capital formation and sales and of purchases by the government of goods and services produced by market producers that are supplied to households—without any transformation—as "social transfers" in kind.[17]

Government spending or government expenditure can be divided into three primary groups, government consumption, transfer payments, and interest payments.[18]

  1. Government consumption are government purchases of goods and services. Examples include road and infrastructure repairs, national defence, schools, healthcare, and government workers’ salaries.
  2. Investments in sciences and strategic technological innovations to serve the public needs.[19]
  3. Transfer payments are government payments to individuals. Such payments are made without the exchange of good or services, for example Old Age Security payments, Employment Insurance benefits, veteran and civil service pensions, foreign aid, and social assistance payments. Subsidies to businesses are also included in this category.
  4. Interest payments are the interest paid to the holders of government bonds, such as Saving Bonds and Treasury Bills.

National defense spending edit

The United States spends vastly more than other countries on national defense. For example, In 2019 the United States approved a budget of 686.1 billion in discretionary military spending,[20] China was second with an estimated 261 billion dollars in military spending.[21] The table below shows the top 10 countries with the largest military expenditures as of 2015, the most recent year with publicly available data. As the table suggests, the United States spent nearly 3 times as much on the military as China, the country with the next largest military spending. The U.S. military budget dwarfed spending by all other countries in the top 10, with 8 out of [8 out of how many? fix this!] countries spending less than $100 billion in 2016. In 2022, the omnibus spending package increased the military budget by another $42 billion further increasing the United States as the largest defense spenders.

List by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
2017 Fact Sheet (for 2016)[22]
SIPRI Military Expenditure Database[23]
Rank Country Spending
(US$ Bn.)
% of GDP
World total 1,686 2.2
01   United States 611.2 3.3
02   China, P.R.[24] 215.7 1.9
03   Russia 69.2 5.3
04   Saudi Arabia[24][25] 63.7 10
05   India 55.9 2.5
06   France 55.7 2.3
07   United Kingdom 48.3 1.8
08   Japan 46.1 1.0
09   Germany 41.1 1.2
10   South Korea 36.8 2.7

Healthcare and medical research edit

Research Australia[26] found 91% of Australians think 'improving hospitals and the health system' should be the Australian Government's first spending priority.

Crowding 'in' also[27] happens in university life science research Subsidies, funding and government business or projects like this are often justified on the basis of their positive return on investment. Life science crowding in contrasts with crowding out in public funding of research more widely:[28] "10% increase in government R&D funding reduced private R&D expenditure by 3%...In Australia, the average cost of public funds is estimated to be $1.20 and $1.30 for each dollar raised (Robson, 2005). The marginal cost is probably higher, but estimates differ widely depending on the tax that is increased".

In the US the total investment in medical and health research and development (R&D) in the US had grown by 27% over the five years from 2013 to 2017, and it is led by industry and the federal government. However, the industry accounted for 67% of total spending in 2017, followed by the federal government at 22%. According to the National Institute of Health (NIH) accounted for the lion's share of federal spending in medical and health research in 2017 was $32.4 billion or 82.1%.[29]

Also, academic and research institutions, this includes colleges, and universities, independent research (IRIs), and independent hospital medical research centres also increased spending, dedicating more than $14.2 billion of their own funds (endowment, donations etc.) to medical and health R&D in 2017. Although other funding sources – foundations, state and local government, voluntary health associations and professional societies – accounted for 3.7% of total medical and health R&D expenditure.

On the other hand, global health spending continues to increase and rise rapidly – to US$7.8 trillion in 2017 or about 10% of GDP and $1.80 per capita – up from US£7.6 trillion in 2016. In addition, about 605 of this spending was public and 40% private, with donor funding representing less than 0.2% of the total although the health spending in real terms has risen by 3.79% in a year while global GDP had grown by 3.0%.

According to the World Health Organisation (WHO), the increase in health spending in low-income countries, and it rose by 7.8% a year between 2000 and 2017 while their economy grew by 6.4%, it is explained in the figure. However, the middle-income economies health spending grew more than 6%, and average annual growth in high-income countries was 3.5%, which is about twice as fast as economic growth. In contrast, health spending by the high-income countries continues to represent to be the largest share of global spending, which is about 81%, despite it covers only 16% of world's population; although it down from 87% in 2000. The primary driver of this change in global spending on healthcare is India and China, which they moved to higher-income groups. Furthermore, just over 40% of the world population lived in low-income countries, which is now they dropped to 10%. Moreover, significant spending increment was in upper-middle-income economies population share has more than  doubled over the period of, and share of global health spending nearly also doubled due to China and India's vast population joining that group. Unfortunately, all other spending share income groups had declined.[30]

From the continent view, North America, Western Europe, and Oceanic countries have the highest levels of spending, and West Central Asia, and East Africa the lowest, which is followed closely by South Asia, it is explained in the figure.

It is also true that fast economic growth is associated with increased health spending and sustained rapid economic growth between 2000 and 2017. Even more, fast economic growth which is generally associated with the higher government revenues and health spending is mostly located in Asia such as China, India and Indonesia followed by the Middle East and Latin America. In these countries, the real health spending per capita grew by 2.2 times and increased by 0.6 percentage point as per a share of GDP from 2000 to 2017.

Gross fixed capital formation edit

Government acquisition intended to create future benefits, such as infrastructure investment or research spending, is called gross fixed capital formation, or government investment, which usually is the largest part of the government.[31] Acquisition of goods and services is made through production by the government (using the government's labour force, fixed assets and purchased goods and services for intermediate consumption) or through purchases of goods and services from market producers. In economic theory or in macroeconomics, investment is the amount purchased of goods which are not consumed but are to be used for future production (i.e. capital). Examples include railroad or factory construction.

Infrastructure spending is considered government investment because it will usually save money in the long run, and thereby reduce the net present value of government liabilities.

Spending on physical infrastructure in the U.S. returns an average of about $1.92 for each $1.00 spent on nonresidential construction because it is almost always less expensive to maintain than repair or replace once it has become unusable.[32]

Likewise, government spending on social infrastructure, such as preventative health care, can save several hundreds of billions of dollars per year in the U.S., because for example cancer patients are more likely to be diagnosed at Stage I where curative treatment is typically a few outpatient visits, instead of at Stage III or later in an emergency room where treatment can involve years of hospitalization and is often terminal.[33]

Per capita spending edit

In 2010 national governments spent an average of $2,376 per person, while the average for the world's 20 largest economies (in terms of GDP) was $16,110 per person. Norway and Sweden expended the most at $40,908 and $26,760 per capita respectively. The federal government of the United States spent $11,041 per person. Other large economy country spending figures include South Korea ($4,557), Brazil ($2,813), Russia ($2,458), China ($1,010), and India ($226).[34] The figures below of 42% of GDP spending and a GDP per capita of $54,629 for the U.S. indicate a total per person spending including national, state, and local governments was $22,726 in the U.S.

Percentage of GDP edit

 
Tax Burden as a Percentage of GDP (2014 Index of Economic Freedom).[35]
 
Public spending / GDP in Europe:
  >55%   50–55%   45–50%   40–45%   35–40%   30–35%
 
Government spending as percentage of GDP in different countries, 1890 to 2011

This is a list of countries by government spending as a percentage of gross domestic product (GDP) for the listed countries, according to the 2014 Index of Economic Freedom[35] by The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal. Tax revenue is included for comparison. These statistics use the United Nations' System of National Accounts (SNA), which measures the government sector differently than the U.S. Bureau of Economic Analysis (BEA). The SNA counts as government spending the gross cost of public services such as state universities and public hospitals. For example, the SNA counts the entire cost of running the public-university system, not just what legislators appropriate to supplement students' tuition payments. Those adjustments push up the SNA's measure of spending by roughly 4 percent of GDP compared with the standard measure tallied by the BEA.[36]

List of Countries as a % of GDP
Country Tax burden % GDP Govt. expend. % GDP
  Afghanistan 9 23
  Albania 23 28
  Algeria 10 40
  Angola 6 39
  Argentina 35 41
  Armenia 17 25
  Australia 26 35
  Austria 42 51
  Azerbaijan 13 34
  Bahamas 16 23
  Bahrain 3 31
  Bangladesh 10 16
  Barbados 27 41
  Belarus 25 36
  Belgium 44 53
  Belize 23 29
  Benin 16 22
  Bhutan 14 38
  Bolivia 22 35
  Bosnia and Herzegovina 39 49
  Botswana 28 32
  Brazil 35 39
  Bulgaria 26 34
  Burkina Faso 14 24
  Burma 4 19
  Burundi 14 40
  Cambodia 11 20
  Cameroon 11 22
  Canada 31 42
  Cape Verde 20 32
  Central African Republic 9 16
  Chad 5 26
  Chile 19 23
  China 19 24
  Colombia 15 29
  Comoros 12 22
  DR Congo 24 29
  Congo 8 26
  Costa Rica 22 18
  Ivory Coast 13 26
  Croatia 33 43
  Cuba 24 67
  Cyprus 27 46
  Czech Republic 35 43
  Denmark 48 58
  Djibouti 20 35
  Dominica 24 36
  Dominican Republic 13 16
  Ecuador 18 44
  Egypt 14 32
  El Salvador 15 22
  Equatorial Guinea 2 35
  Eritrea 50 34
  Estonia 33 38
  Ethiopia 11 18
  Fiji 23 28
  Finland 43 55
  France 44 56
  Gabon 10 25
  Gambia 13 26
  Georgia 25 32
  Germany 37 45
  Ghana 15 24
  Greece 31 52
  Guatemala 11 15
  Guinea 16 22
  Guinea-Bissau 9 21
  Guyana 21 31
  Haiti 13 34
  Honduras 16 26
  Hong Kong 14 19
  Hungary 36 49
  Iceland 36 47
  India 19 29 [37]
  Indonesia 12 19
  Iran 9 22
  Iraq 2 45
  Ireland 28 48
  Israel 33 45
  Italy 43 50
  Jamaica 23 32
  Japan 28 42
  Jordan 14 33
  Kazakhstan 15 22
  Kenya 20 29
  Kiribati 20 92
  North Korea N/A N/A
  South Korea 26 30
  Kuwait 1 39
  Kyrgyzstan 19 36
  Laos 14 21
  Latvia 27 39
  Lebanon 17 30
  Lesotho 38 63
  Liberia 20 31
  Libya 1 67
  Liechtenstein N/A N/A
  Lithuania 16 38
  Luxembourg 37 42
  Macau 35 17
  Madagascar 11 16
  Malawi 20 35
  Malaysia 15 29
  Maldives 16 43
  Mali 14 25
  Malta 34 42
  Mauritania 18 28
  Mauritius 18 25
  Mexico 11 27
  Micronesia 12 65
  Moldova 31 39
  Mongolia 33 45
  Montenegro 24 44
  Morocco 23 35
  Mozambique 20 34
  Namibia 28 37
    Nepal 13 19
  Netherlands 39 50
  New Zealand 32 48
  Nicaragua 18 26
  Niger 14 20
  Nigeria 5 29
  North Macedonia 26 31
  Norway 43 44
  Oman 2 38
  Pakistan 9 20
  Panama 18 27
  Papua New Guinea 26 29
  Paraguay 13 19
  Peru 17 19
  Philippines 12 16
  Poland 32 44
  Portugal 31 49
  Qatar 3 31
  Romania 28 37
  Russia 30 36
  Rwanda 13 27
  Saint Lucia 25 35
  Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 22 30
  Samoa 23 44
  São Tomé and Príncipe 17 49
  Saudi Arabia 4 35
  Senegal 19 29
  Serbia 35 45
  Seychelles 32 36
  Sierra Leone 12 22
  Singapore 14 17
  Slovakia 29 38
  Slovenia 37 51
  Solomon Islands 37 51
  South Africa 27 32
  Spain 32 45
  Sri Lanka 12 21
  Sudan 7 18
  Suriname 19 27
  Swaziland 23 31
  Sweden 45 51
   Switzerland 29 34
  Syria 10 N/A
  Taiwan 9 23
  Tajikistan 20 27
  Tanzania 15 27
  Thailand 16 23
  East Timor 61.5 51.2
  Togo 17 24
  Tonga 18 29
  Trinidad and Tobago 17 35
  Tunisia 21 35
  Turkey 25 35
  Turkmenistan 18 15
  Uganda 17 21
  Ukraine 38 46
  United Arab Emirates 6 24
  United Kingdom 36 49
  United States 25.1 41.6
  Uruguay 27 33
  Uzbekistan 20 31
  Vanuatu 16 25
  Venezuela 13 40
  Vietnam 21 31
  Yemen 5 29
  Zambia 19 24
  Zimbabwe 30 35
  Somalia N/A N/A
  Brunei 24 34

Public social spending by country edit

 
Government Expenditure as a Percentage of GDP (2014 Index of Economic Freedom).[35]

Public social spending comprises cash benefits, direct in-kind provision of goods and services, and tax breaks with social purposes provided by general government (that is central, state, and local governments, including social security funds).[38]

2015 Public social spending[38]
Country Public social spending
% of GDP
  France 31.7
  Finland 30.6
  Belgium 29.2
  Italy 28.9
  Denmark 28.8
  Austria 28.0
  Sweden 26.7
  Greece 26.4
  Spain 25.4
  Germany 25.0
  Portugal 24.1
  Norway 23.9
  Slovenia 22.4
  Netherlands 22.3
  Luxembourg 22.2
  Great Britain 21.5
OECD 21.0
  Hungary 20.7
  New Zealand 19.7
   Switzerland 19.6
  Czech Republic 19.5
  Poland 19.4
  Slovakia 19.4
  United States 19.0
  Australia 18.8
  Canada 17.2
  Estonia 17.0
  Ireland 17.0
  Israel 16.0
  Iceland 15.7
  Latvia 14.4
  Chile 11.2
  South Korea 10.1

European Union edit

Public expenditures represented 46.7 percent of total GDP of the European Union in 2018. Countries with the highest percentage of public expenditure were France and Finland with 56 and 53 percent, respectively. The lowest percentage had Ireland with only 25 percent of its GDP. Among the countries of the European Union, the most important function in public expenditure is social protection. Almost 20 percent of GDP of European Union went to social protection in 2018. The highest ratio had Finland and France, both around 24 percent of their GDPs. The country with least social protection expenditure as percent of its GDP was Ireland with 9 percent. The second largest function in public expenditure is expenditure on health. The general government expenditure on health in European Union was over 7 percent of GDP in 2018. The country with highest share of health expenditure in 2018 Denmark with 8.4 percent. The least percentage had Cyprus with 2.7 percent. General public services had 6 percent of total GDP of European Union in 2018, Education around 4.6 percent and all other categories had less than 4.5 percent of the GDP.[16][39]

Research, assessments and transparency edit

There is research into government spending such as their efficacies or effective design or comparisons to other options as well as research containing conclusions of public spending-related recommendations. Examples of such are studies outlining benefits of participation in bioeconomy innovation[40][41][42] or identifying potential "misallocations"[43] or "misalignments".[44] Often, such spending may be broad – indirect in terms of national interests – such as with human resources/education-related spending or establishments of novel reward systems. In some cases, various goals and expenditures are made public to various degrees, referred to "budget transparency" or "government spending transparency".[45][46][47][48][49]

Informed and optimized allocations edit

A study suggests "Greater attention to the development of methods and evidence to better inform the allocation of public sector spending between departments" may be needed and that decisions about public spending may miss opportunities to improve social welfare from existing budgets.[50]

Underlying drivers of spending alterations edit

A study investigated funding allocations for public investment in energy research, development and demonstration reported insights about past impacts of its drivers, that may be relevant to adjusting (or facilitating) "investment in clean energy" (see below) "to come close to achieving meaningful global decarbonization". The investigated drivers can be broadly described as crisis responses, cooperations and competitions.[51][52]

Principles and ethics edit

Studies and organizations have called for systematically applying principles to spending decisions or to take current issues and goals such as climate change mitigation into account in all such decisions. For example, scientists have suggested in Nature that governments should withstand various pressures and influences and "only support agriculture and food systems that deliver on the SDGs (in line with "public funds for public goods")".[53]

Similarly in regard to openness, a campaign by the Free Software Foundation Europe (FSFE) has called for a principle of "Public Money, Public Code" – that software created using taxpayers' money is developed as free and open source software,[54][55] and Plan S calls for a requirement for scientific publications that result from research funded by public grants being published as open access.[56][57][58]

Public sector ethics may also concern government spending,[59][additional citation(s) needed] affecting the shares and intentions of government spending or their respective rationales (beyond ethical principles or implications of the contextual socioeconomic structures),[citation needed] as well as corruption or diversion of public funds.[60]

In 2012, following a United States presidential Campaign to Cut Waste, the Office of Management and Budget issued a memorandum to the heads of federal departments and agencies calling for the avoidance of wasteful expenditure, identifying "practical steps" and setting specific targets for reduction of expenditure on travel, conference attendance and expense, real property and fleet management.[61]

Other areas of spending edit

Science funding edit

Governments fund various research beyond healthcare and medical research (see above) and defense research (see above). Sometimes, relevant funding decision-making makes use of coordinative and prioritizing tools, data or methods, such as evaluated relevances to global issues or international goals (see also 2020#Global goals and issues) or national goals or major causes of human diseases and early deaths (health impacts).[44][additional citation(s) needed]

Energy infrastructure edit

 
Electrified transport and renewable energy are key areas of investment for the renewable energy transition.[62]
Fossil fuel funding and subsidies are a significant barrier to the energy transition.[63][64] Direct global fossil fuel subsidies were $319 billion in 2017. This rises to $5.2 trillion when indirect costs are priced in, like the effects of air pollution.[65] Ending these could lead to a 28% reduction in global carbon emissions and a 46% reduction in air pollution deaths.[66] Funding for clean energy has been largely unaffected by the COVID-19 pandemic, and pandemic-related economic stimulus packages offer possibilities for a green recovery.[67][68]

Travel edit

Although expenditure on ministerial, elected member and staff travel makes up only a small amount of central government expenditure, and the great majority of work trips by officials are undertaken at standard or economy class, the UK's National Audit Office has noted that this is an aspect of expenditure attracting high levels of public interest.[69]

History edit

Before World War I edit

At the end of the 19th century average public expenditure was around 10 percent of GDP. In US it was only 7 percent and in countries like United Kingdom, Germany or Netherlands it did not exceed amount of 10 percent. Australia, Italy, Switzerland and France had public expenditure over 12 percent of GDP. It was considered as a significant involvement of government in economy. This average share of public expenditure increased to almost 12 percent before the start of World War I. Due to the World War I anticipation, the share increased quickly in Austria, France, United Kingdom or Germany.[70]

Effect of World War I and interwar period edit

The World War I caused a global growth of the public expenditure share in GDP. In United Kingdom, Germany, Italy and France, which were affected a lot by the war, the share of public expenditure even exceeded 25 percent. In interwar period the average share of the public expenditure was still slightly increasing. The United States increased its public expenditure with the New Deal. Other governments also increased public expenditure in order to create more employment. The increase was accelerated by World War II anticipation in the second part of the 30s among European countries. In 1937 the amount of average public expenditure share was between 22 and 23 percent, twice as much as before World War I. However, it is fair to mention that part of this increase of public expenditure share was caused by GDP fall. Most of industrialized countries had its GDP over 15 percent before the World War II. Only Australia, Norway and Spain had less than 15 percent of GDP.[70]

World War II and post-war period edit

From the start of the World War I until 1960 the average share of public expenditure in GDP increased slowly from 22 to 28 percent. Most of this increase was given by growth of military spending caused by World War II. Spain, Switzerland and Japan had their public expenditure still below 20 percent of their GDPs.[70]

Second half of the 20th century. edit

The average public expenditure, as a share of GDP, increased rapidly between years 1960 and 1980 from around 28 to 43 percent. No industrial country had this share below 30 percent in 1980. In Belgium, Sweden and Netherlands it was even over 50 percent. In last two decades of 20th century share of public expenditure kept increasing, but the growth significantly slowed down. In 1996 the average public expenditure was around 45 percent, which is in comparison with 1960-1980 period slow increase from year 1980. During 1980-1996 period the public expenditure share even declined in many countries, for example United Kingdom, Belgium, Netherlands etc.[70]

Growth of public expenditure edit

There are several factors that have led to an enormous increase in public expenditure through the years

1) Defense expenditure due to modernization of defense equipment by the navy, army and air force to prepare the country for war or for prevention causes-for-growth-of-public-expenditure.

2) Population growth – It increases with the increase in population, more of investment is required to be done by government on law and order, education, infrastructure, etc. investment in different fields depending on the different age group is required.

3) Welfare activities – social welfare, pensions, etc.

  • Provision of public and utility services – provision of basic public goods given by government (their maintenance and installation) such as transportation.
  • Accelerating economic growth – in order to raise the standard of living of the people.
  • Price rise – higher price level compels the government to spend an increased amount on purchase of goods and services.[71]
  • Increase in public revenue – with the rise in public revenue government is bound to increase the public expenditure.
  • International obligation – maintenance of socio-economic obligation, cultural exchange etc. (these are indirect expenses of government)

4) Wars and social crises – fighting amongst people and communities, and prolonged drought or unemployment, earthquake, hurricanes or tornadoes may lead to an increase in public expenditure of a country. This is because it will involve governments to re-plan and allocate resources to finance the reconstruction.

5) Creation of super national organizations – E.g., the United Nations, NATO, European community and other multinational organizations that are responsible for the provision of public goods and services on an international basis, have to be financed out of funds subscribed by member states, thereby adding to their public expenditure.

6) Foreign aid – Acceptance by the richer industrialized countries of their responsibility to help the poor developing countries has channeled some of the increased public expenditure of the donor country into foreign aid programmes.

7) Inflation – This is the general rise in the price level of goods and services. It increases the cost of all activities of the public sector and thus a major factor in growth in money terms of public expenditure

Present edit

Since the late 1980s, the average public expenditure to GDP ratio is increasing slowly. The only industrialized countries that reduced significantly are New Zealand, Ireland and Norway. One of the reasons is growing skepticism about governmental intervention in the economy.[70]

See also edit

References edit

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Works cited edit

External links edit

  • OECD Government spending statistics
  • Canadian Governments Compared
  • Eurostat's government spending per sector

government, spending, public, purse, public, money, redirect, here, term, used, relation, british, monarchy, privy, purse, academic, journal, formerly, called, public, money, public, money, management, expenditure, includes, government, consumption, investment. Public Purse and Public money redirect here For the term used in relation to the British monarchy see Privy Purse For the academic journal formerly called Public Money see Public Money amp Management Government spending or expenditure includes all government consumption investment and transfer payments 1 2 In national income accounting the acquisition by governments of goods and services for current use to directly satisfy the individual or collective needs of the community is classed as government final consumption expenditure Government acquisition of goods and services intended to create future benefits such as infrastructure investment or research spending is classed as government investment government gross capital formation These two types of government spending on final consumption and on gross capital formation together constitute one of the major components of gross domestic product Government spending can be financed by government borrowing taxes custom duties the sale or lease of natural resources and various fees like national park entry fees or licensing fees 3 When Governments choose to borrow money they have to pay interest on the money borrowed 4 Changes in government spending is a major component of fiscal policy used to stabilize the macroeconomic business cycle Public expenditure is spending made by the government of a country on collective or individual needs and wants of public goods and public services such as pension healthcare security education subsidies emergency services infrastructure etc 5 Until the 19th century public expenditure was limited due to laissez faire philosophies In the 20th century John Maynard Keynes argued that the role of public expenditure was pivotal in determining levels of income and distribution in the economy Public expenditure plays an important role in the economy as it establishes fiscal policy and provides public goods and services for households and firms Contents 1 Theories of public expenditure 1 1 Principle of maximum social advantage 2 Macroeconomic fiscal policy 3 Composition 3 1 Final consumption 3 2 National defense spending 3 3 Healthcare and medical research 3 4 Gross fixed capital formation 4 Per capita spending 4 1 Percentage of GDP 5 Public social spending by country 5 1 European Union 6 Research assessments and transparency 6 1 Informed and optimized allocations 6 2 Underlying drivers of spending alterations 7 Principles and ethics 8 Other areas of spending 8 1 Science funding 8 2 Energy infrastructure 8 3 Travel 9 History 9 1 Before World War I 9 2 Effect of World War I and interwar period 9 3 World War II and post war period 9 4 Second half of the 20th century 9 5 Growth of public expenditure 9 6 Present 10 See also 11 References 11 1 Works cited 12 External linksTheories of public expenditure editMain article Theory of taxation Several theories of taxation exist in public economics Governments at all levels national regional and local need to raise revenue from a variety of sources to finance public sector expenditures The details of taxation are guided by two principles who will benefit and who can pay Public expenditure means the expenditure on the developmental and non developmental activity such as construction of roadways and dams and other activity Rules or principles that govern the expenditure policy of the government are called canons of public expenditure Economist George Findlay Shirras 6 laid down the following four canons of public expenditure Canon of Benefit public spending must be done in a manner that it brings greatest social benefits Canon of Economy it says that economy does not mean miserliness Public expenditure must be made productively and efficiently Canon of Sanction public spending should not be made without sanction of an appropriate authority Canon of Surplus public revenue should exceed government expenditure this avoiding a deficit Government must prepare a budget to create a surplus 7 Three other canons are Canon of elasticity it says there should be enough scope in expenditure policy government should be able to increase or decrease it according to the period Canon of productivity public expenditure should encourage production efficiency of the economy Canon of equitable distribution expenditure policy should minimize inequalities and it should be designed in a way to benefit poorer sections citation needed Principle of maximum social advantage edit nbsp Dalton s Principle of Maximum Social Advantage Graph showing point of Maximum Social Advantage at point P 8 The criteria and pre conditions for arriving at this solution are collectively referred to as the principle of maximum social advantage Taxation government revenue and government expenditure are the two tools Neither of excess is good for the society it has to be balanced to achieve maximum social benefit Dalton called this principle as Maximum Social Advantage and Pigou termed it as Maximum Aggregate Welfare Dalton s Principle of Maximum Social Advantage maximum satisfaction should be yield by striking a balance between public revenue and expenditure by the government Economic welfare is achieved when marginal utility of expenditure marginal disutility of taxation He explains this principle with reference to Maximum Social Benefit MSB Maximum Social Sacrifice MSS 9 It was introduced by Swedish Economist Erik Lindahl in 1919 10 According to his theory determination of public expenditure and taxation will happen on the basis of public preferences which they will reveal themselves Cost of supplying a good will be taken up by the people The tax that they will pay will be revealed by them according to their capacities 11 Macroeconomic fiscal policy editMain article fiscal policy nbsp The Market for Capital the Loanable Funds Market and the Crowding Out Effect An increase in government deficit spending crowds out private investment by increasing interest rates and lowering the quantity of capital available to the private sector Government spending can be a useful economic policy tool for governments Fiscal policy can be defined as the use of government spending and or taxation as a mechanism to influence an economy 12 13 There are two types of fiscal policy expansionary fiscal policy and contractionary fiscal policy Expansionary fiscal policy is an increase in government spending or a decrease in taxation while contractionary fiscal policy is a decrease in government spending or an increase in taxes Expansionary fiscal policy can be used by governments to stimulate the economy during a recession For example an increase in government spending directly increases demand for goods and services which can help increase output and employment On the other hand contractionary fiscal policy can be used by governments to cool down the economy during an economic boom A decrease in government spending can help check inflation 12 During economic downturns in the short run government spending can be changed either via automatic stabilization or discretionary stabilization Automatic stabilization is when existing policies automatically change government spending or taxes in response to economic changes without the additional passage of laws 14 12 A primary example of an automatic stabilizer is Unemployment Insurance which provides financial assistance to unemployed workers Discretionary stabilization is when a government takes actions to change government spending or taxes in direct response to changes in the economy For instance a government may decide to increase government spending as a result of a recession 14 With discretionary stabilization the government must pass a new law to make changes in government spending 12 John Maynard Keynes was one of the first economists to advocate for government deficit spending as part of the fiscal policy response to an economic contraction According to Keynesian economics increased government spending raises aggregate demand and increases consumption which leads to increased production and faster recovery from recessions Classical economists on the other hand believe that increased government spending exacerbates an economic contraction by shifting resources from the private sector which they consider productive to the public sector which they consider unproductive 15 In economics the potential shifting in resources from the private sector to the public sector as a result of an increase in government deficit spending is called crowding out 12 The figure to the right depicts the market for capital otherwise known as the market for loanable funds The downward sloping demand curve D1 represents demand for private capital by firms and investors and the upward sloping supply curve S1 represents savings by private individuals The initial equilibrium in this market is represented by point A where the equilibrium quantity of capital is K1 and the equilibrium interest rate is R1 If the government increases deficit spending it will borrow money from the private capital market and reduce the supply of savings to S2 The new equilibrium is at point B where the interest rate has increased to R2 and the quantity of capital available to the private sector has decreased to K2 The government has essentially made borrowing more expensive and has taken away savings from the market which crowds out some private investment The crowding out of private investment could limit the economic growth from the initial increase government spending 14 13 Composition editPublic expenditure can be divided into COFOG Classification of the Functions of Government categories Those categories are Social protectionpensions subsidies for family and children unemployment subsidies R amp D Research and Development on social protection Healthpublic health services medical products medical appliances and equipment hospital services R amp D on healthcare General Public Servicesexecutive and legislative organs financial and fiscal affairs external affairs foreign economic aid public debt transactions R amp D related to general public servicesEducationpre primary primary secondary tertiary education R amp D on education etc Economic Affairsgeneral economic agriculture fuel and energy commercial and labour affairs forestry fishing and hunting mining manufacturing transport communication etc Public order and safety emergency servicespolice fire protection services emergency medical services law courts prisons etc Defencemilitary defence civil defence foreign military aid Recreation culture and religionRecreational and sporting services cultural services broadcasting and publishing services religious services etc Environmental protectionwaste management pollution abatement protection of biodiversity and landscape etc Housing and community serviceshousing development community amenities water supply street lighting etc 16 Final consumption edit Main article Government final consumption expenditure Government spending on goods and services for current use to directly satisfy individual or collective needs of the members of the community is called government final consumption expenditure GFCE It is a purchase from the national accounts use of income account for goods and services directly satisfying of individual needs individual consumption or collective needs of members of the community collective consumption GFCE consists of the value of the goods and services produced by the government itself other than own account capital formation and sales and of purchases by the government of goods and services produced by market producers that are supplied to households without any transformation as social transfers in kind 17 Government spending or government expenditure can be divided into three primary groups government consumption transfer payments and interest payments 18 Government consumption are government purchases of goods and services Examples include road and infrastructure repairs national defence schools healthcare and government workers salaries Investments in sciences and strategic technological innovations to serve the public needs 19 Transfer payments are government payments to individuals Such payments are made without the exchange of good or services for example Old Age Security payments Employment Insurance benefits veteran and civil service pensions foreign aid and social assistance payments Subsidies to businesses are also included in this category Interest payments are the interest paid to the holders of government bonds such as Saving Bonds and Treasury Bills National defense spending edit See also Military budget and List of countries by military expenditures The United States spends vastly more than other countries on national defense For example In 2019 the United States approved a budget of 686 1 billion in discretionary military spending 20 China was second with an estimated 261 billion dollars in military spending 21 The table below shows the top 10 countries with the largest military expenditures as of 2015 the most recent year with publicly available data As the table suggests the United States spent nearly 3 times as much on the military as China the country with the next largest military spending The U S military budget dwarfed spending by all other countries in the top 10 with 8 out of 8 out of how many fix this countries spending less than 100 billion in 2016 In 2022 the omnibus spending package increased the military budget by another 42 billion further increasing the United States as the largest defense spenders List by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute2017 Fact Sheet for 2016 22 SIPRI Military Expenditure Database 23 Rank Country Spending US Bn of GDPWorld total 1 686 2 20 1 nbsp United States 611 2 3 30 2 nbsp China P R 24 215 7 1 90 3 nbsp Russia 69 2 5 30 4 nbsp Saudi Arabia 24 25 63 7 100 5 nbsp India 55 9 2 50 6 nbsp France 55 7 2 30 7 nbsp United Kingdom 48 3 1 80 8 nbsp Japan 46 1 1 00 9 nbsp Germany 41 1 1 210 nbsp South Korea 36 8 2 7Healthcare and medical research edit Research Australia 26 found 91 of Australians think improving hospitals and the health system should be the Australian Government s first spending priority Crowding in also 27 happens in university life science research Subsidies funding and government business or projects like this are often justified on the basis of their positive return on investment Life science crowding in contrasts with crowding out in public funding of research more widely 28 10 increase in government R amp D funding reduced private R amp D expenditure by 3 In Australia the average cost of public funds is estimated to be 1 20 and 1 30 for each dollar raised Robson 2005 The marginal cost is probably higher but estimates differ widely depending on the tax that is increased In the US the total investment in medical and health research and development R amp D in the US had grown by 27 over the five years from 2013 to 2017 and it is led by industry and the federal government However the industry accounted for 67 of total spending in 2017 followed by the federal government at 22 According to the National Institute of Health NIH accounted for the lion s share of federal spending in medical and health research in 2017 was 32 4 billion or 82 1 29 Also academic and research institutions this includes colleges and universities independent research IRIs and independent hospital medical research centres also increased spending dedicating more than 14 2 billion of their own funds endowment donations etc to medical and health R amp D in 2017 Although other funding sources foundations state and local government voluntary health associations and professional societies accounted for 3 7 of total medical and health R amp D expenditure On the other hand global health spending continues to increase and rise rapidly to US 7 8 trillion in 2017 or about 10 of GDP and 1 80 per capita up from US 7 6 trillion in 2016 In addition about 605 of this spending was public and 40 private with donor funding representing less than 0 2 of the total although the health spending in real terms has risen by 3 79 in a year while global GDP had grown by 3 0 According to the World Health Organisation WHO the increase in health spending in low income countries and it rose by 7 8 a year between 2000 and 2017 while their economy grew by 6 4 it is explained in the figure However the middle income economies health spending grew more than 6 and average annual growth in high income countries was 3 5 which is about twice as fast as economic growth In contrast health spending by the high income countries continues to represent to be the largest share of global spending which is about 81 despite it covers only 16 of world s population although it down from 87 in 2000 The primary driver of this change in global spending on healthcare is India and China which they moved to higher income groups Furthermore just over 40 of the world population lived in low income countries which is now they dropped to 10 Moreover significant spending increment was in upper middle income economies population share has more than doubled over the period of and share of global health spending nearly also doubled due to China and India s vast population joining that group Unfortunately all other spending share income groups had declined 30 From the continent view North America Western Europe and Oceanic countries have the highest levels of spending and West Central Asia and East Africa the lowest which is followed closely by South Asia it is explained in the figure It is also true that fast economic growth is associated with increased health spending and sustained rapid economic growth between 2000 and 2017 Even more fast economic growth which is generally associated with the higher government revenues and health spending is mostly located in Asia such as China India and Indonesia followed by the Middle East and Latin America In these countries the real health spending per capita grew by 2 2 times and increased by 0 6 percentage point as per a share of GDP from 2000 to 2017 Gross fixed capital formation edit Main article Gross fixed capital formation Further information Investment In economics or macroeconomics Government acquisition intended to create future benefits such as infrastructure investment or research spending is called gross fixed capital formation or government investment which usually is the largest part of the government 31 Acquisition of goods and services is made through production by the government using the government s labour force fixed assets and purchased goods and services for intermediate consumption or through purchases of goods and services from market producers In economic theory or in macroeconomics investment is the amount purchased of goods which are not consumed but are to be used for future production i e capital Examples include railroad or factory construction Infrastructure spending is considered government investment because it will usually save money in the long run and thereby reduce the net present value of government liabilities Spending on physical infrastructure in the U S returns an average of about 1 92 for each 1 00 spent on nonresidential construction because it is almost always less expensive to maintain than repair or replace once it has become unusable 32 Likewise government spending on social infrastructure such as preventative health care can save several hundreds of billions of dollars per year in the U S because for example cancer patients are more likely to be diagnosed at Stage I where curative treatment is typically a few outpatient visits instead of at Stage III or later in an emergency room where treatment can involve years of hospitalization and is often terminal 33 Per capita spending editIn 2010 national governments spent an average of 2 376 per person while the average for the world s 20 largest economies in terms of GDP was 16 110 per person Norway and Sweden expended the most at 40 908 and 26 760 per capita respectively The federal government of the United States spent 11 041 per person Other large economy country spending figures include South Korea 4 557 Brazil 2 813 Russia 2 458 China 1 010 and India 226 34 The figures below of 42 of GDP spending and a GDP per capita of 54 629 for the U S indicate a total per person spending including national state and local governments was 22 726 in the U S Percentage of GDP edit See also List of countries by government spending as percentage of GDP nbsp Tax Burden as a Percentage of GDP 2014 Index of Economic Freedom 35 nbsp Public spending GDP in Europe gt 55 50 55 45 50 40 45 35 40 30 35 nbsp Government spending as percentage of GDP in different countries 1890 to 2011This is a list of countries by government spending as a percentage of gross domestic product GDP for the listed countries according to the 2014 Index of Economic Freedom 35 by The Heritage Foundation and The Wall Street Journal Tax revenue is included for comparison These statistics use the United Nations System of National Accounts SNA which measures the government sector differently than the U S Bureau of Economic Analysis BEA The SNA counts as government spending the gross cost of public services such as state universities and public hospitals For example the SNA counts the entire cost of running the public university system not just what legislators appropriate to supplement students tuition payments Those adjustments push up the SNA s measure of spending by roughly 4 percent of GDP compared with the standard measure tallied by the BEA 36 List of Countries as a of GDP Country Tax burden GDP Govt expend GDP nbsp Afghanistan 9 23 nbsp Albania 23 28 nbsp Algeria 10 40 nbsp Angola 6 39 nbsp Argentina 35 41 nbsp Armenia 17 25 nbsp Australia 26 35 nbsp Austria 42 51 nbsp Azerbaijan 13 34 nbsp Bahamas 16 23 nbsp Bahrain 3 31 nbsp Bangladesh 10 16 nbsp Barbados 27 41 nbsp Belarus 25 36 nbsp Belgium 44 53 nbsp Belize 23 29 nbsp Benin 16 22 nbsp Bhutan 14 38 nbsp Bolivia 22 35 nbsp Bosnia and Herzegovina 39 49 nbsp Botswana 28 32 nbsp Brazil 35 39 nbsp Bulgaria 26 34 nbsp Burkina Faso 14 24 nbsp Burma 4 19 nbsp Burundi 14 40 nbsp Cambodia 11 20 nbsp Cameroon 11 22 nbsp Canada 31 42 nbsp Cape Verde 20 32 nbsp Central African Republic 9 16 nbsp Chad 5 26 nbsp Chile 19 23 nbsp China 19 24 nbsp Colombia 15 29 nbsp Comoros 12 22 nbsp DR Congo 24 29 nbsp Congo 8 26 nbsp Costa Rica 22 18 nbsp Ivory Coast 13 26 nbsp Croatia 33 43 nbsp Cuba 24 67 nbsp Cyprus 27 46 nbsp Czech Republic 35 43 nbsp Denmark 48 58 nbsp Djibouti 20 35 nbsp Dominica 24 36 nbsp Dominican Republic 13 16 nbsp Ecuador 18 44 nbsp Egypt 14 32 nbsp El Salvador 15 22 nbsp Equatorial Guinea 2 35 nbsp Eritrea 50 34 nbsp Estonia 33 38 nbsp Ethiopia 11 18 nbsp Fiji 23 28 nbsp Finland 43 55 nbsp France 44 56 nbsp Gabon 10 25 nbsp Gambia 13 26 nbsp Georgia 25 32 nbsp Germany 37 45 nbsp Ghana 15 24 nbsp Greece 31 52 nbsp Guatemala 11 15 nbsp Guinea 16 22 nbsp Guinea Bissau 9 21 nbsp Guyana 21 31 nbsp Haiti 13 34 nbsp Honduras 16 26 nbsp Hong Kong 14 19 nbsp Hungary 36 49 nbsp Iceland 36 47 nbsp India 19 29 37 nbsp Indonesia 12 19 nbsp Iran 9 22 nbsp Iraq 2 45 nbsp Ireland 28 48 nbsp Israel 33 45 nbsp Italy 43 50 nbsp Jamaica 23 32 nbsp Japan 28 42 nbsp Jordan 14 33 nbsp Kazakhstan 15 22 nbsp Kenya 20 29 nbsp Kiribati 20 92 nbsp North Korea N A N A nbsp South Korea 26 30 nbsp Kuwait 1 39 nbsp Kyrgyzstan 19 36 nbsp Laos 14 21 nbsp Latvia 27 39 nbsp Lebanon 17 30 nbsp Lesotho 38 63 nbsp Liberia 20 31 nbsp Libya 1 67 nbsp Liechtenstein N A N A nbsp Lithuania 16 38 nbsp Luxembourg 37 42 nbsp Macau 35 17 nbsp Madagascar 11 16 nbsp Malawi 20 35 nbsp Malaysia 15 29 nbsp Maldives 16 43 nbsp Mali 14 25 nbsp Malta 34 42 nbsp Mauritania 18 28 nbsp Mauritius 18 25 nbsp Mexico 11 27 nbsp Micronesia 12 65 nbsp Moldova 31 39 nbsp Mongolia 33 45 nbsp Montenegro 24 44 nbsp Morocco 23 35 nbsp Mozambique 20 34 nbsp Namibia 28 37 nbsp Nepal 13 19 nbsp Netherlands 39 50 nbsp New Zealand 32 48 nbsp Nicaragua 18 26 nbsp Niger 14 20 nbsp Nigeria 5 29 nbsp North Macedonia 26 31 nbsp Norway 43 44 nbsp Oman 2 38 nbsp Pakistan 9 20 nbsp Panama 18 27 nbsp Papua New Guinea 26 29 nbsp Paraguay 13 19 nbsp Peru 17 19 nbsp Philippines 12 16 nbsp Poland 32 44 nbsp Portugal 31 49 nbsp Qatar 3 31 nbsp Romania 28 37 nbsp Russia 30 36 nbsp Rwanda 13 27 nbsp Saint Lucia 25 35 nbsp Saint Vincent and the Grenadines 22 30 nbsp Samoa 23 44 nbsp Sao Tome and Principe 17 49 nbsp Saudi Arabia 4 35 nbsp Senegal 19 29 nbsp Serbia 35 45 nbsp Seychelles 32 36 nbsp Sierra Leone 12 22 nbsp Singapore 14 17 nbsp Slovakia 29 38 nbsp Slovenia 37 51 nbsp Solomon Islands 37 51 nbsp South Africa 27 32 nbsp Spain 32 45 nbsp Sri Lanka 12 21 nbsp Sudan 7 18 nbsp Suriname 19 27 nbsp Swaziland 23 31 nbsp Sweden 45 51 nbsp Switzerland 29 34 nbsp Syria 10 N A nbsp Taiwan 9 23 nbsp Tajikistan 20 27 nbsp Tanzania 15 27 nbsp Thailand 16 23 nbsp East Timor 61 5 51 2 nbsp Togo 17 24 nbsp Tonga 18 29 nbsp Trinidad and Tobago 17 35 nbsp Tunisia 21 35 nbsp Turkey 25 35 nbsp Turkmenistan 18 15 nbsp Uganda 17 21 nbsp Ukraine 38 46 nbsp United Arab Emirates 6 24 nbsp United Kingdom 36 49 nbsp United States 25 1 41 6 nbsp Uruguay 27 33 nbsp Uzbekistan 20 31 nbsp Vanuatu 16 25 nbsp Venezuela 13 40 nbsp Vietnam 21 31 nbsp Yemen 5 29 nbsp Zambia 19 24 nbsp Zimbabwe 30 35 nbsp Somalia N A N A nbsp Brunei 24 34Public social spending by country edit nbsp Government Expenditure as a Percentage of GDP 2014 Index of Economic Freedom 35 Public social spending comprises cash benefits direct in kind provision of goods and services and tax breaks with social purposes provided by general government that is central state and local governments including social security funds 38 2015 Public social spending 38 Country Public social spending of GDP nbsp France 31 7 nbsp Finland 30 6 nbsp Belgium 29 2 nbsp Italy 28 9 nbsp Denmark 28 8 nbsp Austria 28 0 nbsp Sweden 26 7 nbsp Greece 26 4 nbsp Spain 25 4 nbsp Germany 25 0 nbsp Portugal 24 1 nbsp Norway 23 9 nbsp Slovenia 22 4 nbsp Netherlands 22 3 nbsp Luxembourg 22 2 nbsp Great Britain 21 5OECD 21 0 nbsp Hungary 20 7 nbsp New Zealand 19 7 nbsp Switzerland 19 6 nbsp Czech Republic 19 5 nbsp Poland 19 4 nbsp Slovakia 19 4 nbsp United States 19 0 nbsp Australia 18 8 nbsp Canada 17 2 nbsp Estonia 17 0 nbsp Ireland 17 0 nbsp Israel 16 0 nbsp Iceland 15 7 nbsp Latvia 14 4 nbsp Chile 11 2 nbsp South Korea 10 1European Union edit Public expenditures represented 46 7 percent of total GDP of the European Union in 2018 Countries with the highest percentage of public expenditure were France and Finland with 56 and 53 percent respectively The lowest percentage had Ireland with only 25 percent of its GDP Among the countries of the European Union the most important function in public expenditure is social protection Almost 20 percent of GDP of European Union went to social protection in 2018 The highest ratio had Finland and France both around 24 percent of their GDPs The country with least social protection expenditure as percent of its GDP was Ireland with 9 percent The second largest function in public expenditure is expenditure on health The general government expenditure on health in European Union was over 7 percent of GDP in 2018 The country with highest share of health expenditure in 2018 Denmark with 8 4 percent The least percentage had Cyprus with 2 7 percent General public services had 6 percent of total GDP of European Union in 2018 Education around 4 6 percent and all other categories had less than 4 5 percent of the GDP 16 39 Research assessments and transparency editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2022 See also Good governance and Strategic planning There is research into government spending such as their efficacies or effective design or comparisons to other options as well as research containing conclusions of public spending related recommendations Examples of such are studies outlining benefits of participation in bioeconomy innovation 40 41 42 or identifying potential misallocations 43 or misalignments 44 Often such spending may be broad indirect in terms of national interests such as with human resources education related spending or establishments of novel reward systems In some cases various goals and expenditures are made public to various degrees referred to budget transparency or government spending transparency 45 46 47 48 49 Informed and optimized allocations edit A study suggests Greater attention to the development of methods and evidence to better inform the allocation of public sector spending between departments may be needed and that decisions about public spending may miss opportunities to improve social welfare from existing budgets 50 Underlying drivers of spending alterations edit A study investigated funding allocations for public investment in energy research development and demonstration reported insights about past impacts of its drivers that may be relevant to adjusting or facilitating investment in clean energy see below to come close to achieving meaningful global decarbonization The investigated drivers can be broadly described as crisis responses cooperations and competitions 51 52 Principles and ethics editStudies and organizations have called for systematically applying principles to spending decisions or to take current issues and goals such as climate change mitigation into account in all such decisions For example scientists have suggested in Nature that governments should withstand various pressures and influences and only support agriculture and food systems that deliver on the SDGs in line with public funds for public goods 53 Similarly in regard to openness a campaign by the Free Software Foundation Europe FSFE has called for a principle of Public Money Public Code that software created using taxpayers money is developed as free and open source software 54 55 and Plan S calls for a requirement for scientific publications that result from research funded by public grants being published as open access 56 57 58 Public sector ethics may also concern government spending 59 additional citation s needed affecting the shares and intentions of government spending or their respective rationales beyond ethical principles or implications of the contextual socioeconomic structures citation needed as well as corruption or diversion of public funds 60 In 2012 following a United States presidential Campaign to Cut Waste the Office of Management and Budget issued a memorandum to the heads of federal departments and agencies calling for the avoidance of wasteful expenditure identifying practical steps and setting specific targets for reduction of expenditure on travel conference attendance and expense real property and fleet management 61 Other areas of spending editThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2022 Science funding edit Main article Public research and development Governments fund various research beyond healthcare and medical research see above and defense research see above Sometimes relevant funding decision making makes use of coordinative and prioritizing tools data or methods such as evaluated relevances to global issues or international goals see also 2020 Global goals and issues or national goals or major causes of human diseases and early deaths health impacts 44 additional citation s needed Energy infrastructure edit This section is an excerpt from Sustainable energy Finance edit nbsp Electrified transport and renewable energy are key areas of investment for the renewable energy transition 62 Fossil fuel funding and subsidies are a significant barrier to the energy transition 63 64 Direct global fossil fuel subsidies were 319 billion in 2017 This rises to 5 2 trillion when indirect costs are priced in like the effects of air pollution 65 Ending these could lead to a 28 reduction in global carbon emissions and a 46 reduction in air pollution deaths 66 Funding for clean energy has been largely unaffected by the COVID 19 pandemic and pandemic related economic stimulus packages offer possibilities for a green recovery 67 68 Travel edit Although expenditure on ministerial elected member and staff travel makes up only a small amount of central government expenditure and the great majority of work trips by officials are undertaken at standard or economy class the UK s National Audit Office has noted that this is an aspect of expenditure attracting high levels of public interest 69 History editBefore World War I edit At the end of the 19th century average public expenditure was around 10 percent of GDP In US it was only 7 percent and in countries like United Kingdom Germany or Netherlands it did not exceed amount of 10 percent Australia Italy Switzerland and France had public expenditure over 12 percent of GDP It was considered as a significant involvement of government in economy This average share of public expenditure increased to almost 12 percent before the start of World War I Due to the World War I anticipation the share increased quickly in Austria France United Kingdom or Germany 70 Effect of World War I and interwar period edit The World War I caused a global growth of the public expenditure share in GDP In United Kingdom Germany Italy and France which were affected a lot by the war the share of public expenditure even exceeded 25 percent In interwar period the average share of the public expenditure was still slightly increasing The United States increased its public expenditure with the New Deal Other governments also increased public expenditure in order to create more employment The increase was accelerated by World War II anticipation in the second part of the 30s among European countries In 1937 the amount of average public expenditure share was between 22 and 23 percent twice as much as before World War I However it is fair to mention that part of this increase of public expenditure share was caused by GDP fall Most of industrialized countries had its GDP over 15 percent before the World War II Only Australia Norway and Spain had less than 15 percent of GDP 70 World War II and post war period edit From the start of the World War I until 1960 the average share of public expenditure in GDP increased slowly from 22 to 28 percent Most of this increase was given by growth of military spending caused by World War II Spain Switzerland and Japan had their public expenditure still below 20 percent of their GDPs 70 Second half of the 20th century edit The average public expenditure as a share of GDP increased rapidly between years 1960 and 1980 from around 28 to 43 percent No industrial country had this share below 30 percent in 1980 In Belgium Sweden and Netherlands it was even over 50 percent In last two decades of 20th century share of public expenditure kept increasing but the growth significantly slowed down In 1996 the average public expenditure was around 45 percent which is in comparison with 1960 1980 period slow increase from year 1980 During 1980 1996 period the public expenditure share even declined in many countries for example United Kingdom Belgium Netherlands etc 70 Growth of public expenditure edit There are several factors that have led to an enormous increase in public expenditure through the years1 Defense expenditure due to modernization of defense equipment by the navy army and air force to prepare the country for war or for prevention causes for growth of public expenditure 2 Population growth It increases with the increase in population more of investment is required to be done by government on law and order education infrastructure etc investment in different fields depending on the different age group is required 3 Welfare activities social welfare pensions etc Provision of public and utility services provision of basic public goods given by government their maintenance and installation such as transportation Accelerating economic growth in order to raise the standard of living of the people Price rise higher price level compels the government to spend an increased amount on purchase of goods and services 71 Increase in public revenue with the rise in public revenue government is bound to increase the public expenditure International obligation maintenance of socio economic obligation cultural exchange etc these are indirect expenses of government 4 Wars and social crises fighting amongst people and communities and prolonged drought or unemployment earthquake hurricanes or tornadoes may lead to an increase in public expenditure of a country This is because it will involve governments to re plan and allocate resources to finance the reconstruction 5 Creation of super national organizations E g the United Nations NATO European community and other multinational organizations that are responsible for the provision of public goods and services on an international basis have to be financed out of funds subscribed by member states thereby adding to their public expenditure 6 Foreign aid Acceptance by the richer industrialized countries of their responsibility to help the poor developing countries has channeled some of the increased public expenditure of the donor country into foreign aid programmes 7 Inflation This is the general rise in the price level of goods and services It increases the cost of all activities of the public sector and thus a major factor in growth in money terms of public expenditure Present edit Since the late 1980s the average public expenditure to GDP ratio is increasing slowly The only industrialized countries that reduced significantly are New Zealand Ireland and Norway One of the reasons is growing skepticism about governmental intervention in the economy 70 See also editRahn curve Open government Government operations Public expenditure Public finance Government budget Government waste Fiscal policy Fiscal council Sovereign wealth fund Tax Mandatory spending Taxpayers unions Eurostat Government spending in the United Kingdom Government spending in the United States List of countries by government spending as percentage of GDP Expenditure incidenceReferences edit Government U S Bureau of Economic Analysis BEA Archived from the original on 26 August 2018 Retrieved 9 November 2020 Robert Barro and Vittorio Grilli 1994 European Macroeconomics Ch 15 16 Macmillan ISBN 0 333 57764 7 Sources of Federal Government Revenue U S Treasury Data Lab datalab usaspending gov Archived from the original on 3 August 2021 Retrieved 3 August 2021 Borrowing and the Federal Debt Archived from the original on 15 May 2012 Retrieved 8 November 2020 Akrani Gaurav Meaning of Public Expenditure Retrieved 15 February 2012 Cambridge University Libraries Shirras George Findlay 1885 1955 economist accessed 4 June 2023 Muley Ritika 29 January 2016 Public Expenditure Causes Principles and Importance EconomicsDiscussion net Retrieved 25 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j techfore 2017 05 021 ISSN 0040 1625 Watts N Amann M Arnell N Ayeb Karlsson S et al 2019 The 2019 report of The Lancet Countdown on health and climate change ensuring that the health of a child born today is not defined by a changing climate PDF The Lancet 394 10211 1836 1878 doi 10 1016 S0140 6736 19 32596 6 PMID 31733928 S2CID 207976337 Retrieved 3 November 2021 United Nations Development Programme 2020 p 10 Kuzemko Caroline Bradshaw Michael Bridge Gavin Goldthau Andreas et al 2020 Covid 19 and the politics of sustainable energy transitions Energy Research amp Social Science 68 101685 doi 10 1016 j erss 2020 101685 ISSN 2214 6296 PMC 7330551 PMID 32839704 IRENA 2021 p 5 National Audit Office Investigation into government travel expenditure Archived 26 June 2023 at the Wayback Machine published 11 March 2015 accessed 26 June 2023 a b c d e Public Spending in the 20th Century 2000 ISBN 0521662915 Causes for Growth of public expenditure Retrieved 20 February 2012 Works cited edit IRENA 2021 World Energy Transitions Outlook 1 5 C Pathway PDF ISBN 978 92 9260 334 2 Archived PDF from the original on 11 June 2021 United Nations Development Programme 2020 Human Development Report 2020 The Next Frontier Human Development and the Anthropocene PDF Report ISBN 978 92 1 126442 5 Archived PDF from the original on 15 December 2020 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Government Spending nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Public expenditure nbsp Wikiquote has quotations related to Government spending OECD Government spending statistics Canadian Governments Compared Eurostat s government spending per sector Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Government spending amp oldid 1188897067, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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