Bert Hofman 
and Kai Kaiser World Bank1
Paper Presented 
at the Conference: CAN DECENTRALIZATION HELP 
REBUILD INDONESIA?
A Conference 
Sponsored by the International Studies Program, 
Andrew Young School of Policy Studies, 
Georgia State University
May 1-3 2002
Atlanta, 
Georgia 
Indonesia’s 
new intergovernmental fiscal system devolves on aggregate enough resources 
to cover the devolved expenditure responsibilities.  But the intergovernmental 
fiscal system is as of yet far from ideal.  The distribution of 
resources and tasks has caused budgetary problems in some of the regions, 
especially at the provincial level.  The regions’ high dependence 
on central transfers could undermine local accountability. Inadequate 
provisions for local taxes risks inappropriate taxation and unhealthy 
tax exporting.  And finally, the system has few means for central 
government to finance national priorities at the local level.
Law 25 of 1999 
meant fundamental reforms of Indonesia’s intergovernmental fiscal 
relations.  The reforms strongly increased the regional government’s 
share of government resources, moved the transfer system from one dominated 
by earmarked grants to one largely relying on general grants supplemented 
by revenue sharing, and—with the reforms introduced by law 34/2000—gave 
broad taxing authorities to local government.
Before the 
2001 decentralization, most resources were transferred from central 
to regional governments through earmarked grants.  The largest 
of these was the SDO (Subsidi Daerah Autonom or subsidy for autonomous 
region) grant which covered all civil service salaries and recurrent 
expenditures for the regions.  In addition, INPRES (Instruksi President) 
grants aimed to finance development spending in the regions.  The 
INPRES grants started as a block grant for development spending in the 
1980s, but gradually evolved into an array of specific grants for purposes 
ranging from re-greening18
In the new 
system, central regional transfers remain the dominant means of financing, 
but the earmarking is gone.  The bulk of regional government spending 
is financed by transfers from the center (see Table 1:DAU Dominates).  
Well over 90 percent of regional revenues come from the Balancing Fund 
(dana perimbangan) which includes a general grant (the Dana Alokasi 
Umum or DAU), shared taxes, natural resource revenues (SDA, sumber daya 
alam), and a special allocation grant channel (DAK, dana alokasi khusus) 
Local governments have limited own revenues (PAD, pendapatan asli daerah), 
which constitutes less than 7 percent of total revenues.  Starting 
2002, the center is also making additional special autonomy transfer 
arrangements with two provinces.

 
Dana Alokasi 
Umum. The Dana Alokasi Umum (DAU) or general grant is the mainstay of 
the new intergovernmental fiscal system.  The DAU adds up to some 
65 percent of regional revenues, and to a little over 70 percent of 
the Balancing Fund.  The DAU is by law a minimum of 25 percent 
of central government revenues after tax sharing.19  
For 2001 and 2002 this minimum allocation has been maintained by Government 
and Parliament.   However, although the law and the regulations 
suggest that the 25 percent is the share of actual revenues after revenue 
sharing, for FY2001 the budgeted  amount was disbursed.  In 
all, this cost the region some Rp. 9 Trillion in revenues, or 15 percent 
of the total DAU for that year.20
Because the 
“hold harmless” element was interpreted to be a minimum DAU allocation 
rather than a guaranteed amount, this element took almost 80 percent 
of the total DAU.  In 2002, the minimum DAU was reduced to 50 percent 
of the total amount, but rather than relating it to past SDO and INPRES, 
is became a minimum amount per region, plus an amount related to the 
actual wage bill of 2001. But “hold harmless” obtained a new meaning: 
Parliament objected against the proposed distribution of the DAU, because 
the richer regions stood to lose compared to the 2001 distribution.21
The formula 
part of the allocation relies on the notion of expenditure needs and 
own fiscal capacity.  The share in the DAU pool for a region depends 
on the difference between its fiscal needs and its fiscal capacity.  
For 2001 there concepts were interpreted different from 2002, in part 
due to practical reasons, in part due to more analysis done for 2002.  
In 2001, at the time the formula had to be presented to the Regional 
Autonomy Advisory Council, the data on shared revenues were not yet 
available, and it was decided to ignore them. For 2002 they were included, 
but natural resource revenue shares only for 75 percent.  As indicators 
for expenditure need the formula includes (i) population; (ii) poverty 
rate; (iii) land area; and(iv) the construction price index as an indicator 
of “geographical circumstances.” The formula must include these 
variables, as they arementioned in the elucidation of Law 25/99.  
In the 2001 formula each of the variables was included with equal weight, 
whereas in the 2002 formula, population and area both received higher 
weights than the others.
Contingency.  
The DAU allocation was supplemented by a “contingency fund” to absorb 
any mismatches between devolved expenditure responsibilities and revenues.  
Of a budgeted amount of Rp. 6T. in 2001, some Rp. 3 T was disbursed.  
The first tranche of Rp. 1.1 T. related to genuine mismatches caused 
by decentralization.  A process of application, review and allocation 
set out in a Presidential decree was followed for this tranche.  
The second tranche, however, became necessary because of the centrally 
mandated salary increase which pushed up the regional wage bill by some 
15-30 percent. 
Shared revenues.  
The 2001 decentralization greatly increased the importance of shared 
revenues.  The most important factor was the inclusion of oil and 
gas revenues and personal income tax in the taxes to be shared.  
The former were included to accommodate long-standing dissatisfaction 
of natural resource rich regions which felt that “Jakarta” took 
their resources, and they did not get anything in return.  True 
or not, with the implementation of Law 25/1999, they now get a significant 
share of those revenues (see Table 2: Revenue shares).  In addition, 
the personal income tax was included for sharing through Law 17 of 2000.22  
For each of these shared taxes, the province gets a minor part, whereas 
the bulk of revenues goes to the local governments.

 
The sharing 
formulae for most of the shared revenues contain an additional element 
of equalization.  For oil and gas, mining, and forestry, the local 
governments of regions neighboring the producing region receive a share 
as well.  For fisheries, property tax and land transfer tax, a 
small percentage of the revenues is shared by all local governments 
in Indonesia.  Whereas the underlying motivation may well be one 
of equalization, with the initiation of a formula-based DAU, these complex 
sharing mechanisms may well be redundant—whatever a region gets from 
those shared taxes is counted as own fiscal capacity, and reduces the 
allocation of the DAU.
Own Revenues.  
Law 34/2000 greatly expands the scope for local government revenues.  
The law amended law 18 of 1997, which intended to stop the then-prevailing 
local government practice of issuing a plethora of local government 
taxes, many with little revenue potential, and high costs to the taxpayer 
and the economy.  Law 18/1999 therefore restricted regional taxes 
to a closed list, and made any additional taxes conditional upon approval 
of the Ministry of Finance.
Law 34 reverses 
the burden of proof.  The law still gives a list of regional taxes, 
but regional governments can add taxes through regional regulations 
approved by the regional government council, as long as it abides by 
the principles mentioned in the law.  These principles are sound 
(Box), but supervising them has turned out to be problematic—not least 
because the law has tight deadlines for central government to meet if 
it wants to cancel a local tax.  An added complication is the way 
supervision is structured: Law 22/1999 gives the Minister of Home Affairs 
the authority to cancel regional regulations, including those on regional 
taxes.  Up until now, the Minister has been hesitant to invoke 
these powers, not least because regional governments have the right 
to appeal his decision to the Supreme Court.  As a result, there 
has been little to check regional government’s creativity in taxation, 
and although the damage still remains limited, 84 out of the more than 
1,000 regulations on local taxes have been found to be in conflict with 
the law.  Among them are taxes on the “import” of goats into 
kabupaten Bogor, and an advertisement tax on Coca-Cola bottles in Lampung 
province. Meanwhile, the Minister of Home Affairs has as of now formally 
cancelled only one regional tax.
Do the Regions 
Get Enough? 
A key question 
for the new intergovernmental fiscal system is whether the regions on 
aggregate receive enough resources.   This question can be 
considered in three ways:  (i) do the regions receive enough resources 
to cover the expenditures needed for the tasks they are expected to 
perform? (ii) do the regions receive an amount compatible with what 
government as a whole can afford? and (iii) do the regions receive enough 
to cover the spending obligations they inherited from the central government 
in the course of decentralization.
Method (i), 
sometimes labeled the costed minimum standards approach, has practical 
and theoretical issues.  For starters, as was argued previously, 
Law 22/1999 does not clearly define the functions of the regional governments, 
as the functions are defined negatively: local government does everything 
that the center and the provinces does not do.  And for the obligatory 
functions of local government, which are defined in the law, it does 
not clearly define what part of the function local government performs, 
not what minimum standards of services should be delivered.  Even 
if these issues could be overcome, the in formation to cost out the 
functions is lacking at present.  Moreover, determining what the 
functions cost at present may not be very telling for what the functions 
should cost if efficiently delivered.  But apart from all these 
practical objections, there is a more fundamental objection against 
this method: unless carefully managed, minimum standards are but a wish 
list of spending developed independently of what government as a whole 
can afford.
Method (ii) 
the affordability  approach faces several issues as well.  
The method requires the Indonesian government to make choices for the 
nation as a whole as to what it wants to spend its scarce resources 
on.  If the priorities so determined are tasks of regional government, 
then more resources would need to be devolved—be it through grants, 
revenue sharing, or devolution of more tax bases to regional governments.23  
Although the method is to be preferred over the costed minimum standard, 
there are numerous practical impediments, not least the lack of information 
in the current budget and accounting system which does not allow a link 
between policy goals and spending.
Central government 
could devolve more resources if it wanted to do so.  Currently, 
a significant part of its spending is devoted to tasks that could be 
considered local government tasks.  Taking the 2002 budget as a 
guide, the development budget still contains as much as 10-20 trillion 
or \[1 percent] of GDP in spending which could be further devolved to 
the regions, together with a corresponding increase in revenues.  
Note that implementation of these projects is already largely done at 
the sub-national level.  However, since the financing is done from 
the central budget, there is no local scrutiny over the spending.   
On the recurrent budget, the wage bill probably offers further scope 
for savings, as not all civil servants that ought to have been decentralized 
actually were.  Moreover, the Government has already decided to 
phase out the fuel subsidies over time, and this will further free up 
resources that could be made available to the regions.  And finally, 
the government is determined to increase the tax ratio to GDP over time.  
One quarter of that increase will already be automatically transferred 
to the regions through the DAU, but more could be made available to 
the regions.
Whether increased 
resources should be made available remains to be seen.  First, 
several areas of central government’s own responsibility that have 
been chronically underfunded, most notably Operations and Maintenance.  
Second, the central government is aiming for a zero budget deficit by 
fiscal year 04, and achieving this goal is likely to absorb much of 
the savings and additional revenues mobilize.  And third, local 
governments may not be ready to absorb additional spending at this time, 
as they have just almost doubled their levels of spending, and their 
local planning, budgeting and financial management systems may already 
be stretched, and accountability at the local level is still weak.
(iii) Do the 
devolved resources cover the devolved responsibilities?  On aggregate, 
more than enough revenues seem to have been devolved to match the transferred 
revenue responsibilities.  This holds even if we take account of 
the July 2001 wage increase, and correcting the region’s own development 
spending for inflation.  In total, the regions received “surplus” 
revenues of some Rp.21 Tr. in 2001, or 1.5 percentage point of GDP (Figure 
3.__: More than enough).24

 
One could, 
therefore, argue that decentralization “cost” the center this very 
same amount: if Government could have perfectly targeted the devolved 
resources, it could have transferred Rp. 21 Trillion less than it actually 
did.  Lewis (2001, p.330) estimates an even higher surplus of Rp.27.5, 
but this was before the wage increase and the subsequent disbursement 
of the contingency fund.  Lewis also estimates separately the surpluses 
of the provincial level and the local level.  His judgment is that 
whereas at the provincial level the extra revenues more or less just 
cover the extra expenditures, local governments received most of the 
surplus.  This findings jives also with the disbursements from 
the contingency fund, of which a disproportional amount was disbursed 
to the provinces.
Further evidence 
for the finding that more than enough resources were transferred can 
be found in development spending.  Budgeted regional development 
spending made a significant jump in 2001, from an (annualized) Rp. 14 
Tr. in FY2000 to a planned Rp. 26 Tr. in FY2001 (Table 3: Consolidated 
Development Spending).
The regions 
may have been forced to cut back slightly on these plans after the July 
wage increase, but there is every reason to believe that development 
spending in the regions rose significantly.  This is good news 
for government development spending as a whole: because of the increase 
in regional development spending, the drop of central development spending 
as a percent of GDP did not lead to a n overall decline: for both 2000 
and 2001, this was budgeted to be about 5.1 percent of GDP.
Thus, the regions 
as a whole do not seem strapped for funds.  The increase in development 
spending in the regions also suggests that there is more than sufficient 
funds to cover the (recurrent cost of) functions transferred.  
Therefore, the often-heard argument that the regions spend mostly on 
“bureaucrats” and have too few resources for “services to the 
people,” therefore seems to be a red herring.  In fact, on aggregate, 
wages make up little over 50 percent of regional spending (Table 4: 
Summary Regional Expenditures).  Moreover, it is a misconception 
that only development spending can be considered as service delivery: 
as the civil service numbers in chapter 2 suggest, some 70 percent of 
the wage bill is paid to teachers and health workers, civil servants 
that provide direct services to the people.

 
In conclusion, 
on aggregate more than sufficient revenues were devolved to cover the 
additional expenditure responsibilities of the regions.  Little 
can be said about whether this was enough to cover expenditure levels 
sufficiently large to cover some minimum standard of services in the 
regions.
How equal 
is the new intergovernmental fiscal system? 
Sufficient 
resources for the regions on aggregate disguise large variations among 
the regions in fiscal capacity.  Even after redistribution through 
the DAU, in FY2001 the richest local government had more than fifty 
times as much revenues per capita as the poorest one (Table A.2).  
The poorest region has only 20 percent of the per capita revenues as 
the average.  And the variation among the regions as measured by 
the Gini coefficient for the per capita revenues for the regions is 
some 0.39. 
Some of this 
variation can be explained by the small size of the units of local government 
in Indonesia.25

 
But even if 
one aggregates revenues at the provincial level, the variation in revenue 
capacity remains large:  the richest province has about ten times 
as much revenues per capita as the poorest one, and the poorest one 
has only some 40 percent of the revenue capacity of the average one.  
For comparison, in the US, the poorest state as about 65 percent of 
the revenues of the average state, and in Germany, any state falling 
below 95 percent of average gets subsidized.  In Russia, the variation 
in the \[56] oblasts is more in line with that of Indonesia: the richest 
of the 89 regions has revenues per capita some 40 times higher than 
the poorest, which is still considerably less than that among Indonesian 
local governments, although larger than among the provinces.26  
In Brazil, the richest state has 2.3 times the revenues per capita of 
the poorest state.27  In China, expenditures per capita 
in the richest province was some 17 times that of the poorest one, but 
excluding the city provinces of Shanghai, Beijing, and Tianjin, the 
disparity fell to 5.5 to 1.28

 
Why are inequalities 
in fiscal capacity so high among Indonesia’s regions?  After 
all, the Law on Fiscal Balance promises a system that would equalize 
fiscal capacity among the regions taking into account the regions’ 
own fiscal capacity and fiscal needs.  Two causes of inequality 
stand out: (i) The large variation in own fiscal capacity among Indonesia’s 
regions, and (ii) the imperfections in the equalization mechanism of 
the DAU.
Disparities 
in own fiscal capacity.  
Own fiscal 
capacity among the regions varies widely.  Much of the variation 
is due to revenues from natural resource sharing.  The few regions 
that do receive substantial amount, but not all.  The distribution 
of the personal income tax share is highly unequal as well, with some 
regions receiving no revenues at all from this source.  Relative 
to these two sources of revenues, variation in own taxes (PAD) per capita 
is relatively small.
Equalizing 
properties of the DAU29
The DAU allocations 
reduce disparities in fiscal capacity among the regions.  Whether 
it does so by enough is hard to tell, in part because the concept of 
equalization itself is left vague in the law, the regulations, and even 
in the political debate surrounding the DAU allocation.  Law 25/1999 
requires the DAU to be allocated such that it reduces the disparity 
between expenditure needs and “economic potential.” The allocation 
is to be done by formula taking objective factors of needs into account 
and own fiscal capacity.  The elucidation of the law mentions explicitly 
the factors population, area, poverty, and geographical condition—which 
was later interpreted as cost differences.  There are several reasons 
for this, but the key one was that the allocation of the DAU was restricted 
by the need to give regions enough finance to pay for the devolved government 
apparatus, and the resulting “hold harmless” clause was misinterpreted.
The hold harmless 
clause.  In the run-up to 2001, the authorities had to solve the 
intractable issue of matching the new expenditure assignments with the 
new intergovernmental fiscal system.  Expenditures “landed” 
in those regions where the government apparatus that was to be decentralized 
was located.  To avoid that the bulk of the money, the DAU, would 
land somewhere else, and thereby risking that civil servants went unpaid 
and services break down, it was decided that the DAU allocation should 
hold regions harmless compared to what they received before in SDO and 
INPRES and what they had to spend extra on the devolved government apparatus. 
This became known as the “base amount,” equal to 130 percent of 
SDO and 110 percent of INPRES of (annualized) FY2000 amount.  A 
true hold harmless clause would have ensured that regions would not 
fall below that amount.  Instead, it became a minimum—absorbing 
some 80 percent of the total DAU.
The DAU allocation 
for 2001 therefore became strongly correlated with past distribution 
of grants.  This favored the resource rich regions, because the 
old INPRES system was implicitly compensating these regions for the 
revenues generated by them.  On top of the base amount, each region 
received an amount based on a formula that included fiscal needs and 
own fiscal capacity.  But because information on revenue sharing 
was not yet known at the time of formulating the  DAU, natural 
resource revenue shares were not counted as own fiscal capacity.
The “hold 
harmless” took on a different meaning in 2002. MOF had proposed a 
more equalizing DAU allocation for 2002—among others by now taking 
natural resource revenues into account, and the Regional Autonomy Advisory 
Board had approved the proposal. But the regions that stood to lose 
lobbied hard with Parliament, and even though according to Law 25/99 
Parliament had no formal say in the distribution of the DAU (as opposed 
to the aggregate amount), it insisted that each region would get at 
least as much as DAU as in 2001.
The bottom 
line of all this is that the DAU allocations are less equalizing than 
one would expect based on the Law. Regression analysis in Hofman, Kajatmiko, 
Kaiser (partially reproduced in Annex 3) shows that the DAU is positively 
correlated with own fiscal capacity, and shows a strong relationship 
with the wage bill.  Nevertheless, the DAU still equalizes in the 
sense that variation in revenue per capita as measured by Gini coefficient 
or coefficient of variation is reduced by the DAU (Table 5).  The 
reason for this is that regions with high own fiscal capacity do receive 
less DAU as a proportion of that own fiscal capacity even though in 
absolute amounts they may receive more that regions with low own fiscal 
capacity.
Fiscal Dependency 
Historically 
Indonesia has had one of the most centralized tax systems in the world 
(Ma, Jun 1997).  The recent fiscal decentralization actually increased 
regional fiscal dependence, as measures by the share of own revenues 
(PAD) in total revenues.International evidence suggests that this high 
degree of dependence is inversely associated with governance outcomes 
(de Melo, Luiz and Matias Barenstrein 2001), and fiscal dependence should 
therefore be a concern for Indonesia.
Law 34/200 
on regional taxes should have addressed the issue of fiscal dependency. 
However, the approach taken in that law led to another set of problems.  
Law 34/2000 allows for regions to issue their own tax regulations, as 
long as they abide by certain (sound) principles.  This is far 
more liberal than Law 18/1997 which only allowed a limited number of 
taxes specified in the law, with high hurdles on additional taxes. At 
the same time, Law 34/2000 did not devolve a tax most suited for regional 
governments: the land and real estate tax.30 Arguably the 
approach of Law 18/1997 may be better, even though it did perhaps not 
encompass an appropriate tax base for the regions “Nuisance” or 
“predatory” taxation have received some attention during the first 
year of decentralization. Many of those taxes are technically illegal, 
and improved central supervision is clearly one important remedy to 
this problem,.  But a more fundamental solution to the “revenue 
hunger” of the regions will probably include enhanced local tax bases 
and marginal levels of revenue discretion.  The trouble with this 
solution is that those taxes that may be most lucrative from a revenue 
basis, are also be less desirable from an equalization of fiscal capacity 
perspective (e.g., natural-resources or property/service based taxes 
which will disproportionately benefit urban areas).31
Directions 
for Reforms 
Indonesia’s 
intergovernmental fiscal system can be much improved.  The broad 
orientation of reforms is to have the relatively rich regions “fend 
for themselves” with own tax base, shared taxes and commercial borrowing.  
The poorer regions are to get support through DAU, DAK, and access to 
well-managed central lending and on-lending facilities to enable them  
to provide similar quality services at similar local tax rates throughout 
Indonesia.
Improving the 
intergovernmental fiscal system in this direction requires, among others: 
- Moving to a more 
 equalizing DAU by phasing out the transitional elements in the allocation.
- Restricting local 
 taxes to a closed list over which the regions have tax rate autonomy—possibly
 within centrally set limits.
- This list of taxes 
 should include the property taxes, and could include a local surcharge
 in the personal income tax and payroll taxes and selective business
 taxes. Expanding motor vehicle use or fuel taxation  is a further
 option.
- Deciding on a transparent 
 and consistent treatment of natural resource revenues in revenue sharing
 and in the equalization formula.
- Introducing a selective 
 system of specific grants—combined with an (on) lending window—to
 promote the financing of national priorities at local level.  A
 larger DAK could be financed from a gradual reduction in the center’s
 own development spending on regional functions.
References
1 
The findings, interpretations and conclusions expressed in this paper 
are entirely those of the authors. They do not represent the views of 
the World Bank, its Executive Directors, or the countries they represent. 
This paper draws on the forthcoming World Bank Regional Public Expenditure 
Review for Indonesia, and on Hofman, Kaiser and Kajatmiko (2001). The 
authors wish to express thanks to Jorge Martinez, Roy Bahl, Richard 
Bird, Roy Kelly, Dana Weist, Blane Lewis, Bernd May, and Machfud Sidik 
for the many helpful discussions on the topic of the paper. We thank 
Fitria Fitriani for excellent research assistance.
18 
See Annex Table XXX for detail, and Silver, Christopher, Iwan J. Azis, 
and Larry Schroeder. 2001. Intergovernmental Transfers and Decentralization 
in Indonesia. Bulletin for Indonesian Economic Studies 37 (3):345-62
19 
Law 25 is not specific on whether the 25 percent is before or after 
revenue sharing. PP104 has taken this interpretation, which has apparently 
been accepted by Parliament and the regions. 
20 
Revenues in the approved budget for 2001 were Rp.263T and revenue sharing 
Rp. 20 T, which yields a DAU of Rp. 60T.  Actual revenues as per 
preliminary outcome data suggests revenues of Rp. 299T.  Assuming 
the same amount of revenue sharing, this would result in a DAU of Rp. 
69T
21 
This Parliamentary involvement in the distribution seems against Law 
25/1999 which specifies that the Regional Autonomy Advisory Council 
proposes the distribution of the DAU to the President, who approves 
it by Presidential decree. 
22 
The sharing of the personal income tax on a derivation basis was decided 
at the last moment, and inspired by a conversation the Minister ff Finance 
had on a trip to disseminate the decentralization laws.  Art .31C 
of Law 17/2000 describes the sharing. However, the article is unclear 
whether the sharing of the personal income tax is based on the residence 
principle or the place of work.
23 
South Africa is operating such a system.  The constitution prescribes 
functions for the provinces and municipalities, and orders the government 
to give each level of government its “equitable share” of the national 
revenues.  The equitable share is determined in the context of 
budget preparation, which in the case of South Africa is ased on a medium 
term expenditure framework.  If, say, more priority is put on health 
case, the equitable share of the province—which is responsible for 
it, will; get a larger share.  
24 
One caveat here is the assumption that all development projects implemented 
by the Kanvils and Kandeps continue to be financed from the central 
budget.  This seems to have been the case but the center is now 
trying to find ways do devolve this financing responsibility.
25 
This point was made by Richard Bird in a comment at the Bali conference 
on Decentralization in East Asia, January 10-11 2002.
26 
Martinez-Vazquaesz, Jorge and Jameson Boex (1998): Fiscal Decentralization 
in the Russian Federation: Main Trends and Issues.  Report prepared 
for the World Bank/EDI, December. 
27 
Issues in Brazilian Federalism, Draft World Bank Report, May 8, 2001 
28 
World Bank, 2001 China: Provincial Expenditures Review, Report No. 22591-CHA), 
November, Washington DC.
29 
For more detail on this issue see Lewis (2001) and Hofman, Kajatmiko, 
and Kaiser (2002)
30 
The thinking in the ministry of Finance on this has already shifted 
in the direction of devolvingthis tax.
31 
Zhuravskaya (2000) argues that the intergovernmental fiscal system prevailing 
in the Russian federation in the ninetees provided no incentives to 
increase the local tax base or provide public goods.  Shared revenue 
allocations effectively penalized regions that raised their own revenues.  
When regions effectively have no opportunity to increase local revenues, 
they will also have little incentives to increase the local tax base 
and will over-regulate local business.