Beyond the Annual Budget

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Beyond the Annual Budget

Table 6.1 (continued) Income level

Country setting Fragile Resource rich Transitional

Country Mauritius Morocco Pakistan

High income

Low income and middle income

Panama Senegal Sri Lanka Tunisia Croatia Slovak Republic Chad Cameroon

Type of product lending DPL SAL 2 DPL DP, DPL SAL 2 DPL SAL, DPL SAD, DPL DP DPL DP DPL DP DPL PRSC DPL SAL DPL PSAL TAL SIL SIL

Source: World Bank data. Note: Low-income, middle-income, and high-income countries are based on the World Bank list of economies as of July 18, 2011. Economies are divided among income groups according to 2010 gross national income per capita, calculated using the World Bank Atlas method. The groups are low income, US$1,005 or less; lower middle income, US$1,006–US$3,975; upper middle income, US$3,976–US$12,275; and high income, US$12,276 or more. Resource-rich countries are rich in hydrocarbons or mineral resources on the basis of the following criteria: (a) an average share of hydrocarbon and/or mineral fiscal revenues in total fiscal revenue of at least 25 percent during the period 2000–03 or (b) an average share of hydrocarbon and/or mineral export proceeds of at least 25 percent of total export proceeds during the period 2000–03 (IMF 2005, 63–64). Transitional countries refer not only to the countries of Central and Eastern Europe and the Russian Federation but also to countries emerging from a socialist-type command economy and becoming a more market-based economy (for example, China, Vietnam; see IMF 2000). Fragile countries are either countries that (a) are eligible for international development assistance and have a harmonized average country policy and institutional assessment (CPIA) rating of 3.2 or less (or no CPIA) or (b) have had a United Nations or regional peacekeeping or peace-building mission present during the past three years. This list includes nonmember or inactive territories and countries. It excludes World Bank–only countries for which the CPIA scores are not currently disclosed. This definition is pursuant to an agreement between the World Bank and other multilateral development banks at the start of the IDA 15 round in 2007 (http://intresources.worldbank.org/INTOPCS/Resources/FCS_List_FY12_External_List.pdf ). Lending instruments include development policy loans (DPL). Lending types include Adaptable Program Loan (APL), Specific Investment Loan (SIL), Technical Assistance Loan (TAL), Sector Adjustment Loan (SAD), Structural Adjustment Loan (SAL), Program Structural Adjustment Loan (PSAL), Poverty Reduction Support Credit (PRSC), and Development Policy (DP).

Notes 1. A Bank lending project with substantial support for MTEF adoption is defined here as one in which the objectives, components, and conclusions presented in an ICR refer to an MTEF, a medium-term budgetary framework (MTBF), or a medium-term fiscal framework (MTFF), and these expressions are used more than six times in the ICR document. The selection of projects also considered regional and country coverage as well as different types of lending products.


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