Fund flow reform for social program delivery

Central and state governments in India have adopted a financial reform to enhance public service delivery informed by evidence.
Three women engage in manual labor in India
With over 70 million beneficiaries in 2016, the MGNREGS is the largest social protection program in the world today. Photo: Cornfield | Shutterstock.com

India’s largest social protection program, the Mahatma Gandhi National Rural Employment Guarantee Scheme (MGNREGS), guarantees households 100 days of work per year, typically in unskilled manual labor on infrastructure projects. Funds for this workfare program were originally disbursed by the central government to local governments based on projected spending, a process that created extensive delays and leakages. In the state of Bihar, J-PAL affiliates Abhijit Banerjee (MIT), Esther Duflo (MIT), Clément Imbert (University of Warwick), and Rohini Pande (Evidence for Policy Design, Harvard University), together with Santhosh Mathew, tested the impact of an information technology reform designed to address these concerns by linking the flow of funds to actual expenditures and reducing the number of officials involved in disbursement. The reform led to a 24 percent decline in expenditure without a detectable decline in employment or assets created, and there is direct evidence that at least part of the decline was due to reductions in fund leakage. Drawing on these results, India’s Union Cabinet approved a national reform of MGNREGS fund flow in 2015. The reform allows beneficiary payments across all Indian states to be made through a newly established electronic fund management system and has been adopted in 24 states.

The Problem

Government social programs in India are plagued by public service delivery failures, which hinder program performance and adversely affect beneficiary experience.

MGNREGS funds were originally disbursed to local governments as advances based on projected spending amounts, rather than on the basis of actual expenditure. This fund-flow system generated opportunities for corruption by allowing a considerable gap between the receipt of funds and documentation of their use, creating increased opportunities for misuse of funds. Multiple layers of approval, introduced to increase accountability, were not effective in eliminating the potential for leakage: a 2011–2012 nationwide study estimated that at least 20 percent of official MGNREGS employment income was not accounted for in household surveys.1 In addition, multiple levels of approvals lead to funding delays or blockages at various levels of administration, and the advance payment system results in funds that sit idle and unutilized in some places, while other places may not have sufficient funds to run the program.

The Research

A fund-flow reform in Bihar reduced corruption and improved program efficiency.

J-PAL affiliates and co-authors worked with the Bihar Department of Rural Development to evaluate the impact of an e-governance reform of the MGNREGS cash flow on corruption and overall program performance. The evaluation, conducted between September 2012 and March 2013, spanned twelve districts in Bihar, covering a rural population of 33 million. In each district, 69 blocks were randomly selected to implement the new fund-flow system and the remaining 126 comparison blocks kept the status quo.

The e-governance reform enhanced transparency by linking the flow of funds to actual expenditures. It also eliminated several steps involved in payments: by introducing a new National Electronic Fund Management System (Ne-FMS), funds flowed directly from the state government to village councils (called panchayats), which in turn paid the beneficiaries. Specifically, the reform required village-level officials to input the names of beneficiaries who had worked in the scheme and were owed wages into an online database. Submitting this information automatically released funds into the village council bank account. These changes were intended to reduce opportunities for leakage and eliminate “parked funds” at the district and village council level.

After a year under the new system, the evaluation found significant impacts along two key dimensions:

  • Reduced corruption: Program expenditure fell by 24 percent without a corresponding change in program participation, suggesting a significant reduction in leakages. In addition, the number of ghost workers decreased by at least 5 percent, and the median self-reported wealth of government officials involved in the program decreased by 14 percent.
  • More efficient fund distribution: The electronic transfer system reduced the amount of parked funds held in treatment village accounts, reducing the financial costs of implementing MGNREGS. Average bank balances for treatment villages councils were 33 percent lower than comparison village councils.

The evaluation also found that the new system increased delays in payments to beneficiaries, especially in the first three months of the reform. The data entry requirements and initial strains on banks to process more payments may have caused these delays. In their policy outreach, researchers emphasized that while the new system reduced corruption and program costs, other proactive measures should be taken to reduce NREGA payment delays to beneficiaries.

For more details, see the evaluation summary.

From Research to Action

Influenced by the Bihar study, the Government of India asked all states to shift to a similar fund-flow system for MGNREGS wage payments.

On August 15th [2015], the Government of India’s Union Cabinet passed an order rolling out an improved version of the NREGA Bihar experiment across the country. That’s policy success number one. Policy success number two is that we believed … that if you save this amount of money in NREGA—there’s reduced corruption—if you actually implemented this across all government programming then the potential benefit is US$15 billion.

— Santhosh Mathew, Former Joint Secretary, Ministry of Rural Development, Government of India; Country Lead Social and Public Finance Policy, Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation

Coauthor Santhosh Mathew, an Indian Administrative Services officer, moved from Bihar to a senior post in the Government of India’s Ministry of Rural Development in 2013, marking an opportunity to leverage study findings nationwide. He collaborated with J-PAL affiliates to share the research results and emerging policy insights with key central government ministries. The J-PAL South Asia regional office supported these research translation efforts through a grant from the J-PAL Government Partnership Initiative.

The research and policy outreach informed the Union Cabinet’s approval for a national reform of the MGNREGS’s fund flow in August 2015, citing J-PAL’s work.2 Drawing on the success of the evaluated reform in Bihar in reducing corruption and program costs, the new system approved by the cabinet linked the flow of funds to actual expenditures and reduced the number of administrative steps in the payments process. It also allowed beneficiary payments across all Indian states to flow through Ne-FMS directly into beneficiaries’ bank accounts. To date, 24 states have adopted this new financial system for administering MGNREGS wage payments.

In addition, the study’s results have influenced the broader discourse on fund flow in government spending. For example, the 2015–2016 Economic Survey (the Ministry of Finance’s annual review of the economy) cited the study when advocating for large-scale, technology-enabled, and real-time direct benefit transfers in the delivery of government programs. In 2016, the Ministry of Finance also extended the use of the Public Financial Management System, which integrates expenditure-based fund-flow systems from the Bihar study into all centrally funded government programs.

The Government of India continues to introduce changes to the implementation of the evidence-based policy. In 2022, the Ministry of Finance released guidance requiring all states to open a bank account for each centrally funded program, through which implementing agencies can withdraw funds based on costs incurred.3 This reform is intended to reduce the amount of unspent funds in bank accounts, to link the flow of funds to actual expenditures, and to enable better monitoring of public funds.

Learn more about the research and policy influence from Abhijit Banerjee and Santhosh Mathew's presentation at a J-PAL co-hosted conference in 2016:

This case study was originally published in October 2018. It was updated in March 2023 to include new developments in fund flow policy, as well as context on payment delays in the Bihar reform.

References

Banerjee, Abhijit, Esther Duflo, Clément Imbert, Santhosh Mathew, and Rohini Pande. “E-Governance, Accountability, and Leakage in Public Programs: Experimental Evidence from a Financial Management Reform in India.” NBER Working Paper No. 22803, November 2016.https://www.nber.org/papers/w22803.

Imbert, Clément, and John Papp. 2015. "Labor Market Effects of Social Programs: Evidence from India's Employment Guarantee." American Economic Journal: Applied Economics 7(2): 233-63.https://doi.org/10.1257/app.20130401.

Imbert, Clément and John Papp. 2014. “Estimating Leakages in India’s Employment Guarantee: An Update.” World Bank technical report for the Social Protection and Labour India Team.

Mathew, Santhosh. 2016. "What Have We Learned? Improving Development Policy through Impact Evaluation." Center for Global Development. Filmed December 6, 2016 in Washington, D.C. Video, 56:45.https://www.cgdev.org/event/what-have-we-learned-improving-development-policy-through-impact-evaluation.

Suggested citation:

Abdul Latif Jameel Poverty Action Lab (J-PAL). 2018. "Fund flow reform for social program delivery." J-PAL Evidence to Policy Case Study. Last modified October 2018. 

1.
Imbert, Clément and John Papp. 2014. “Estimating Leakages in India’s Employment Guarantee: An Update.” World Bank technical report for the Social Protection and Labour India Team.
2.
Mathew, A. Santhosh. 2018. “Lessons from GST for eliminating the Rs1 trillion lying around as float.” LiveMint, February 16, 2018.
3.
Ministry of Finance. 2022. Department of Expenditure Memo. https://dolr.gov.in/sites/default/files/PDF%20format%20of%20Guidelines%20for%20Central%20Sector%20Schemes_0.pdf