Spatial Fiscal Interactions in Colombian Municipalities: Evidence from Oil Price Shocks
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Decentralization and Fiscal Trends in Colombian Municipalities
2.1. Decentralization in Colombia
2.2. Colombian Municipalities’ Revenue Sources
2.3. Sub-National Spending and Debt
3. Data
4. Empirical Strategy
4.1. Fiscal Interaction Model
4.2. Commodity Price Shocks as Exogenous Variation in Fiscal Variables
5. Empirical Results
5.1. Empirical Results Based on the Quasi-Experimental Instrument
5.2. Using Quasi Maximum Likelihood Approaches
5.3. Robustness Checks
6. Conclusions
Funding
Conflicts of Interest
1 | According to Faguet and Sanchez (2014) the decentralization has made Colombian mayors more accountable. |
2 | According to (Meyer 1995) quasi-experimental econometrics is used to mimic random assignment either by controlling for the variation of the treatment variable or by controlling for the assignment mechanism itself. Instrumental variable (IV), Difference-in-Difference (DID), the propensity score matching (PSM), and Regression discontinuity (RD) are frequently used quasi-experimental econometrics tools. |
3 | Municipalities endowments with oil resources were measured during 1990–1999. |
4 | In this study, 1093 municipalities were considered out of 1122, 20 units are dropped when they maintain a special territorial status different from that of municipalities situated in remote and sparsely populated areas, four municipalities were dropped which were established after 2007, and five municipalities who do not have direct neighbors were dropped. |
5 | There are no systematic trends of missing values in the data set. I used linear interpolation to impute missing values that are recorded less with than 3% of the observations. |
6 | Law 358, 1997. |
7 | Law 617, 2001. |
8 | If liquidity is less than 40% and solvency is less than 80%, those municipalities will have a “green light” status, and are allowed to borrow without federal intervention. If liquidity is between 40% and 60% and solvency is less than 80%, those municipalities will have a “yellow light” status, meaning they can negotiate debt contracts but need authorization from the Ministry of Finance. If liquidity is greater than 60% and solvency is greater than 80%, those municipalities will have a “red light” status, and are not allowed to borrow. |
9 | It is often said that 60% of all kidnappings in the world take place in Colombia. About half of the abductions are attributed to leftist guerrillas, and this proportion may be much higher. |
10 | Colombia is a primarily urban country. According to 2005, 45% of the country’s population lives in the 20 largest cities. |
11 | The Colombian civil war started in the 1960s and was severe during 1990–2000. Internal conflicts can influence spending patterns, tax revenue, and budget balance at a local level. |
12 | Inverse Hyperbolic Sine Transformation (IHS): For any random variable x, the IHS is Defined by archsinh(x) = ln(x + sqrt(x^2 + 1)). |
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Period | Rational | Explanation |
---|---|---|
1983 | New Federalism | Mayors of municipalities were elected for the first time |
1991 | Extended discussion by National Constitution Assembly | The National Constitutional Assembly defined the functions of the different levels of government and established a new transfer system. There are three important guides to decentralization.
|
1997 | Macroeconomic management at all levels of government “Traffic Light” | To control subnational borrowing, the “Traffic Light” Law 358 of 1997 was introduced, which provides a rating system based on the ratio of interest to budgetary current account saving and debt to the current revenue. |
2001 | Law 617 of 2001 |
|
2003 | Law 819 of 2003 | Law 819 of 2003 introduced a new medium-term budgetary framework system for subnational governments with new fiscal management and transparency rules, including mandatory credit risk analysis before borrowing. Law 819 requires both the central administration and local government to present a 10-yearmacroeconomic framework each year. |
Variable | Mean | SD |
---|---|---|
Total Expenditure | 507.92 | 441.15 |
Tax revenue | 65.52 | 85.50 |
Budget balance | −16.36 | 265.44 |
Federal transfer | 390 | 268.46 |
Population in thousand inhabitants | 39.08 | 214.278 |
Share of Rural population | 58.22 | 23.61 |
Conflict | 2.23 | 10.93 |
Oil production status (Dummy-1990-1999) | 0.06 | 0.24 |
Oil price (International) | 55.361 | 18.917 |
Number of Observations | 12,023 | |
Number of municipalities | 1093 |
Budget Balance | Public Spending | Tax Revenue | |
---|---|---|---|
W_y | 0.261 | −0.198 | 1.018 * |
(0.658) | (0.564) | (0.595) | |
Oil extraction x oil price | 0.733 * | 0.265 * | 0.191 |
(0.432) | (0.081) | (0.134) | |
Population | 458.64 | 5.153 ** | −16.968 *** |
(457.84) | (2.353) | (6.30) | |
Population squared | −0.081 | −2.528 * | 7.751 *** |
(0.136) | (1.090) | (2.937) | |
Share of rural population | −169.59 | −0.549 *** | 0.110 |
(209.12) | (0.138) | (0.279) | |
Federal transfer | 0.412 *** | 0.028 *** | 0.718 *** |
(0.078) | (0.002) | (0.010) | |
Conflict | 0.577 *** | −3.206 *** | 0.005 *** |
(0.277) | (0.801) | (0.001) | |
W_population | −279.76 | −0.772 | 13.08 |
(864.10) | (5.559) | (12.94) | |
W_population squared | 0.001 | 0.648 | −6.03 |
(0.081) | (2.569) | (5.994) | |
W_share of rural population | 0.105 | −0.477 | −0.239 |
(312.32) | (0.435) | (0.613) | |
W_transfer | −0.156 | 0.012 | −0.723 * |
(0.250) | (0.020) | (0.026) | |
W_cconflict | −0.016 | −3.741 | −0.002 |
(0.819) | (2.47) | (0.004) | |
Observa1tions | 12,023 | 12,023 | 12,023 |
Number of municipalities | 1093 | 1093 | 1093 |
Municipality FE | YES | YES | YES |
Department-year FE | YES | YES | YES |
First stage F-statistics | 9.74 | 14.38 | 10.71 |
W_budget | W_Spending | W_tax | |
---|---|---|---|
W_Oil extraction x oil price | 0.932 ** | 0.248 *** | 0.472 *** |
(0.298) | (0.066) | (0.144) | |
Oil extraction x oil price | −0.021 | −0.03 | −0.01 |
(0.129) | (0.03) | (0.06) | |
Population | −138.95 | −0.49 | 0.081 |
(226.16) | (1.268) | (2.27) | |
Population squared | 0.046 | 0.292 | −0.035 |
(0.051) | (0.595) | (1.065) | |
Share of rural population | −17.81 | −0.01 | 0.066 |
(63.66) | (0.055) | (0.127) | |
Federal transfer | −0.015 | 0.0001 | 0.001 |
(0.009) | 0 | (0.002) | |
Conflict | 0.097 | 0.890 *** | 0.0005 |
(0.134) | (0.272) | 0 | |
W_population | −336.98 | 6.761 *** | −9.766 ** |
(438.07) | (2.254) | (4.46) | |
W_population squared | 0.083 ** | −3.141 *** | −4.692 ** |
(0.03) | (1.05) | (2.089) | |
W_share of rural population | −156.85 | −0.623 *** | 0.221 |
(148.89) | (0.118) | (0.278) | |
W_transfer | 0.387 *** | 0.035 *** | 0.729 *** |
(0.004) | (0.002) | (0.005) | |
W_Conflict | 0.858 * | −3.314 *** | 0.005 |
(0.347) | (0.819) | (0.001) | |
Observations | 12,023 | 12,023 | 12,023 |
Number of municipalities | 1093 | 1093 | 1093 |
Municipality FE | YES | YES | YES |
Department -year FE | YES | YES | YES |
F-statistics | 9.74 | 14.38 | 10.71 |
Budget Balance | Public Spending | Tax Revenue | |
---|---|---|---|
W_y | −0.002 | 0.084 *** | 0.052 *** |
(0.007) | (0.012) | (0.012) | |
W_o il extract ion x oil price | 0.025 | −0.109 | 0.33 |
(0.273) | (0.012) | (0.278) | |
Oil extraction x oil price | 0.850 * | 0.272 *** | 0.401 |
(0.449) | (0.080) | (0.131) | |
Population | 13.378 | 5.815 ** | −19.527 *** |
(307.67) | (2.538) | (5.711) | |
Population squared | 0.036 | −2.741 ** | 9.052 *** |
(0.021) | (1.163) | (2.69) | |
Share of rural population | 81.64 | −0.517 *** | 0.028 |
(184.47) | (0.143) | (0.252) | |
Federal transfer | 0.409 *** | 0.029 *** | 0.723 *** |
(0.074) | (0.002) | (0.009) | |
Conflict | 0.543 ** | −0.001 * | 0.004 *** |
(0.220) | (0.001) | (0.131) | |
W_popula tion | 1458.64 | −3.746 | −8.652 |
(1929.19) | (4.18) | (9.080) | |
W_population squared | −0.098 | 1.907 | 3.946 |
(0.122) | (1.94) | (4.229) | |
W_shar e of rural population | 689.55 ** | 0.188 | 0.063 |
(312.32) | (0.193) | (0.461) | |
W_transfer | 0.025 | −0.004 | −0.035 *** |
(0.032) | (0.003) | (0.012) | |
W_conflict | 0.216 | 0.001 * | −0.000 |
(0.868) | (0.009) | (0.003) | |
Observations | 12,023 | 12,023 | 12,023 |
Number of municipalities | 1093 | 1093 | 1093 |
Municipality FE | YES | YES | YES |
Department -year FE | YES | YES | YES |
First stage F-statist ics | 9.74 | 14.38 | 10.71 |
Budget Balance (IV) | Budget Balance (QML) | |
---|---|---|
W_y | 5.529 | 0.003 |
(7.129) | (0.0011) | |
W_oil extraction X oil price | −7.327 | −0.664 |
(10.634) | (1.787) | |
Oil extraction x oil price | 0.371 | 0.272 *** |
(0.449) | (0.08) | |
Population | 54.743 | 253.74 ** |
(420.81) | (121.65) | |
Population squared | −23.69 | −126.78 ** |
(210.49) | (60.61) | |
Share of rural population | −1.02 | −2.869 |
(6.17) | (2.206) | |
Federal transfer | 0.247 | 0.489 *** |
(0.367) | (0.037) | |
Conflict | −0.082 | 0.025 |
(0.167) | (0.034) | |
W_population | −2848.86 | 401.03 * |
(4051.31) | (225.82) | |
W_population squared | 1418.998 | −198.95 ** |
(2019.67) | (111.58) | |
W_share of rural population | 37.18 | 2.69 |
(53.69) | (4.14) | |
W_transfer | −3.035 | 0.216 ** |
(4.083) | (0.096) | |
W_conflict | −0.379 | 0.001 |
(0.682) | (0.062) | |
Observations | 12,023 | 12,023 |
Number of municipalities | 1093 | 1093 |
Municipality FE | YES | YES |
Department -year FE | YES | YES |
First stage F-statistics | 2.37 |
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Mainali, R. Spatial Fiscal Interactions in Colombian Municipalities: Evidence from Oil Price Shocks. J. Risk Financial Manag. 2021, 14, 248. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060248
Mainali R. Spatial Fiscal Interactions in Colombian Municipalities: Evidence from Oil Price Shocks. Journal of Risk and Financial Management. 2021; 14(6):248. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060248
Chicago/Turabian StyleMainali, Raju. 2021. "Spatial Fiscal Interactions in Colombian Municipalities: Evidence from Oil Price Shocks" Journal of Risk and Financial Management 14, no. 6: 248. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060248
APA StyleMainali, R. (2021). Spatial Fiscal Interactions in Colombian Municipalities: Evidence from Oil Price Shocks. Journal of Risk and Financial Management, 14(6), 248. https://doi.org/10.3390/jrfm14060248