General Fiscal Affairs


Book Description




General fiscal affairs


Book Description







Assessing Fiscal Space - An Initial Consistent Set of Considerations


Book Description

Fiscal space is a multi-dimensional concept reflecting whether a government can raise spending or lower taxes without endangering market access and debt sustainability. Making such a determination requires a comprehensive approach considering, among other things, initial economic and structural conditions, market access, the level and trajectory of public debt, present and future financing needs, and dynamic analysis of the liquidity and solvency of the fiscal position under alternative policies. Balancing these considerations involves careful analysis and judgment. Fund staff has over the years developed a variety of indicators to inform assessments of fiscal space in bilateral and multilateral surveillance. The Fund’s core operational framework for such analysis is the debt sustainability framework, which includes a number of indicators, while allowing room for staff judgment. Surveillance also relies importantly on indicators developed by the Fiscal Affairs Department (FAD)––including those that have been used in the internal Vulnerability Exercise and Fiscal Monitors––while more recent methods based on fiscal stress tests and probabilistic approaches proposed in IMF (2016) are also promising. In addition, teams have used scenario analysis and general equilibrium modeling approaches to evaluate fiscal policy choices and their implications for sustainability. When applied to fiscal space, each indicator and approach has pros and cons and none covers all the relevant factors. Ultimately, therefore, assessing fiscal space requires judgment, informed by a broad range of tools. This note seeks to bring together various approaches developed by Fund staff to outline a consistent set of considerations and indicators to help inform assessments of fiscal space, especially for advanced and emerging markets. The intent is to facilitate continued consistency between country team assessments by providing some common considerations and approaches to inform their judgment. The proposed framework will support Fund surveillance and policy advice going forward, informing discussions of the appropriate fiscal stance at all stages of the economic cycle.







Fiscal Affairs --; Collection of Revenue, Forming One of the Twelve Volumes of the Revised and Enlarged Edition of the Science of Railways


Book Description

This historic book may have numerous typos and missing text. Purchasers can usually download a free scanned copy of the original book (without typos) from the publisher. Not indexed. Not illustrated. 1894 edition. Excerpt: ...signatures to the bond need not be witnessed. The sureties must be men. The justification form on the back of the blank (reciting the value of the realty owned by the sureties free from encumbrance, etc.) should be filled up and sworn to before a notary public, justice of the peace, or other authorized officer. Each surety (bondsman) should swear that he is worth twice the amount of the bond in real estate free from encumbrance over and above the amount exempt by law from execution. No exceptions ought to be made to this rule. The sureties should not be men engaged in business likely to cause them to require favors from the employe. No officer or employe of the company should be accepted as surety. No inducement should be ofiered sureties to go on the bond of an employe; officials of the company should not suggest such a thing. To prevent error the date and amount of the bond should be inserted in the instrument when the blank is delivered to be executed. The first name of the sureties should be given in full. The name of each of the parties to the instrument should be duly entered in the body of the form before signing, in proper order, in the blank places provided. Particular care should be taken to see that the technical requirements of the blank are complied with in every respect, otherwise it will be necessary to reject the bond. Every efiort should be made by employes to detect and expose attempt to impose worthless or insufficient sureties on the company. The utmost diligence should be exercised by traveling auditors and others to ascertain whether bondsmen are worth the amounts which they profess, also whether they are honorable, upright men, who" in the event of loss will pay without seeking to evade the plain intent of the...







Federal Payment--borrowing Authority Proposals for the District of Columbia--1967


Book Description

Considers S. 1218 and companion H.R. 8718, to authorize methods for calculating the Federal payments to D.C. and the annual borrowing authority of D.C., and to increase Federal payments to D.C.







Green Book


Book Description

Welcome to the Green Book a comprehensive guide for financial institutions that receive ACH payments from the Federal government. Today, the vast majority of Federal payments are made via the ACH. With very few exceptions, Federal government ACH transactions continue to be subject to the same rules as private industry ACH payments. As a result, the Green Book continues to get smaller in size and is designed to deal primarily with exceptions or issues unique to Federal government operations.