Primary government expenditures as a proportion of original approved budget (%) - Country Ranking - Europe

Definition: Primary government expenditures as a proportion of original approved budget measures the extent to which aggregate budget expenditure outturn reflects the amount originally approved, as defined in government budget documentation and fiscal reports. The coverage is budgetary central government (BCG) and the time period covered is the last three completed fiscal years.

Source: Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability (PEFA). Ministry of Finance (MoF).

See also: Thematic map, Time series comparison

Find indicator:
Rank Country Value Year
1 Lithuania 127.91 2020
2 Slovenia 121.24 2020
3 Finland 119.95 2020
4 Latvia 116.70 2020
5 Poland 115.91 2020
6 Italy 115.19 2020
7 Romania 114.73 2020
8 Turkey 109.75 2020
9 Hungary 103.94 2019
10 Serbia 103.61 2019
11 Montenegro 102.96 2019
12 Slovak Republic 102.78 2019
13 North Macedonia 101.65 2020
14 Croatia 99.72 2019
15 Ukraine 99.42 2018
16 Norway 99.26 2018
17 Switzerland 98.75 2019
18 Albania 97.62 2020
19 Estonia 96.69 2019
20 Belarus 95.98 2019
21 Moldova 95.91 2018
22 Bulgaria 90.09 2020
23 Bosnia and Herzegovina 83.83 2019

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Development Relevance: The indicator attempts to capture the reliability of government budgets: do governments spend what they intend to and do they collect what they set out to collect. The ability to implement the enacted budget is an important factor in government’s ability to deliver public services and achieve development objectives. The deviation between approved and actual spending is measured over a 12-month period (the budget year) and may have important implications for macroeconomic stability, public service delivery, and social welfare. A credibly implemented budget has only small deviations from the approved one. If expenditure is under-executed, beneficiaries may not receive crucial services. Over-executed budgets may result in budget deficits and increased public debt levels and can influence the macroeconomic stability. In both cases, lack of budget credibility undermines the usefulness of the budget process for policy making and implementation and erodes public trust in government.

Periodicity: Annual