ADB Assists Tuvalu with $2.35 Million Grant
ADB Assists Tuvalu with $2.35 Million Grant to Help Improve Fiscal Management
MANILA, PHILIPPINES (23 November
2012) – The Asian Development Bank (ADB) has approved a
$2.35 million grant to help the Government of Tuvalu improve
its capacity to manage revenue and public spending, as well
as the performance of its public enterprises.
The Strengthened Public Financial Management Program will assist the government to implement its multiyear policy reform matrix. The matrix, which was developed by the government in collaboration with ADB, the Governments of Australia and New Zealand, and the World Bank, will help improve state management of the economy and public finances.
“Tuvalu has no known mineral resources and few
exports, so it’s almost entirely dependent on external
sources of revenue and public sector spending, which
generate around 88% of economic activity,” said Laisasa
Tora, ADB country economist for Tuvalu. “Given the
government’s dominant role, sound management of public
finance is essential to Tuvalu’s economic
performance.”
Tuvalu’s economy has recovered
slowly from the effects of the 2008 global economic crisis
and its growth outlook remains modest. Revenues come mainly
from the development partner-financed Tuvalu Trust Fund,
fishing license fees, licensing royalties for the commercial
use of the country’s top-level internet domain (.tv), and
grants.
To help the government maintain an adequate
level of funds to finance its public expenditure programs,
strong measures are needed to boost revenue and reduce low
priority spending. To achieve this, the ADB-assisted program
aims to help the government improve its policies and
processes for setting multi-year budget targets, boosting
revenues, strengthening budgeting, procurement, reporting,
debt management and spending controls.
The program
also supports the government’s efforts to advance its
public enterprise reform plans through the partial
privatization of the government-owned Vaiaku Lagi Hotel and
the merger of the Tuvalu Philatelic Bureau, the Tuvalu Post
Office, and the Tuvalu Travel Office, which are all retail
operations.
ADB, based in Manila, is
dedicated to reducing poverty in Asia and the Pacific
through inclusive economic growth, environmentally
sustainable growth, and regional integration. Established in
1966, it is owned by 67 members – 48 from the region. In
2011, ADB approvals including co-financing totaled $21.7
billion.
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