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2024 | OriginalPaper | Chapter

The Climate Dimension of Fiscal Policy Sustainability: Best Practices in Green Budgeting and Lessons for Portugal

Authors : Carlos Fonseca Marinheiro, Amílcar do Rosário e Sousa, Ana Pinheiro

Published in: Sustainable Finances and the Law

Publisher: Springer Nature Switzerland

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Abstract

The green budgeting technique is being adopted by an increasing number of countries and has the potential to align fiscal policy objectives with climate and environmental goals. Given that the (financial) sustainability of public finances and environmental sustainability are intrinsically interconnected with each other, this section argues that the traditional public debt sustainability analysis should be expanded to encompass climate and environmental sustainability considerations. Other key elements of a proper budgetary framework, such as fiscal transparency, should also be broadened to include the disclosure of the environmental and climate impacts of fiscal policy. The Green budgeting technique is increasingly used to expand the scope of such usual fiscal concepts. One of the main tools for its adoption is green tagging that enables citizens to assess the environmental and climate impacts of fiscal policy on both the revenue and spending sides of the state budget. It enables capturing both the positive and negative impacts of fiscal policy. Additionally, it provides more visibility to the amount financial resources countries allocate to climate and environment goals and to mitigation and adaptation policies while allowing the assessment of whether such goals are attained. A proper working fiscal framework, including the adoption of accrual accounting and performance programme budgeting, seems to be instrumental in this domain along with strong political commitment. Portugal has already taken a few steps such as the recently enacted Climate Law but still has a long way to go in terms of green budgeting. This section proposes a roadmap for its adoption. To start with, both the completion of the public accounts reform and the full adoption of programme budgeting foreseen in the 2015 Budgetary Framework Law should be attained. The meeting of such two pre-conditions will then lay the foundations for the implementation of green budgeting and disclose the climate and environmental impacts of policy measures following the international best practices. The adoption of green budgeting might also pave the way to the emission of green bonds to finance specific environmental and climate related projects. Such bonds might be a cost-effective way to finance the substantial green investment needs in a highly indebted country while contributing to the decrease of global risk.

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Footnotes
1
Marinheiro (2006), pp. 155–179.
 
2
Balassone and Franco (2000), pp. 21–60.
 
3
Hamilton and Flavin (1986), pp. 808–819.
 
4
European Parliament (2019).
 
5
United Nations General Assembly – UN (1987).
 
6
This widely used definition is the one retained in the glossary of summaries of the European Union’s law, EUR-Lex (https://​eur-lex.​europa.​eu/​legal content/​EN/​TXT/​?​uri=​LEGISSUM:​sustainable_​development), and sustainable development has formally became one of the European Union’s long-term goals under Article 3(3) of the Treaty on European Union. It states that “The Union shall establish an internal market. It shall work for the sustainable development of Europe based on balanced economic growth and price stability, a highly competitive social market economy, aiming at full employment and social progress, and a high level of protection and improvement of the quality of the environment. It shall promote scientific and technological advance.”
 
7
Radu (2021).
 
9
OECD (2021c).
 
10
OECD (2017).
 
11
Petrie (2021).
 
12
United Nations General Assembly - UN (1987), Sect. 12, paragraph 27.
 
13
European Commission (2019).
 
14
There are also additional resources on the European Green Deal in a dedicated part of the Europa portal: https://​ec.​europa.​eu/​info/​strategy/​priorities-2019-2024/​european-green-deal_​en.
 
19
Battersby et al (2021).
 
20
Office for Budget Responsibility (2021).
 
21
Conselho das Finanças Públicas (2021).
 
23
Battersby et al. (2021).
 
25
OECD (2021a).
 
26
OECD (2021a).
 
27
Pizarro et al. (2021).
 
28
OECD (2021a).
 
29
France Gouvernement (2021).
 
31
ICMA (2018).
 
37
OECD (2021b).
 
38
Reichelt and Keenan (2017).
 
39
Harrison and Muething (2021).
 
40
On green bond issuance in European countries by the end of March 2021, see Domínguez-Jiménez and Lehmann (2021).
 
41
Lehmann (2021).
 
42
Domínguez-Jiménez and Lehmann (2021).
 
43
D’Incau et al (2022).
 
44
Bachelet et al. (2019) and Harrison and Filkova (2019).
 
45
Baker et al. (2018), D’Incau, et al. (2022) and Harrison (2022).
 
46
Harrison (2022).
 
47
Gutsche and Zwergel (2020), pp. 111–157.
 
48
Dorfleitner et al. (2022), pp. 797–834.
 
49
Bova (2021).
 
50
Petrie (2021).
 
51
France Gouvernement (2021).
 
53
Approved by the Resolution of the Council of Ministers no. 107/2019.
 
54
Approved by the Resolution of the Council of Ministers no. 53/2020.
 
55
Approved by the Resolution of the Council of Ministers no. 24/2020.
 
56
Approved by the Resolution of the Council of Ministers no. 130/2019.
 
57
Mackaill-Hill and Mascolo (2022).
 
58
Mackaill-Hill and Mascolo (2022).
 
59
Established by Law 82-D/2014, of 31 December.
 
60
See Decree-Law No. 162/2014, 31 of October.
 
61
See Ordinance No. 38/2021, 16 of February.
 
62
Created by the Decree-Law 42-A/2016, of 12 August.
 
63
The role of this Environmental Fund as an instrument for climate transition is detailed in (Marujo et al. 2022).
 
68
Battersby et al. (2021).
 
69
Petrie (2021), p. 77.
 
70
Battersby et al. (2021), p. 18.
 
72
Formally, the Portuguese State Budget is organized as a programme budget but with just one programme per ministry (two for the Ministry of Finance) without any performance indicators associated which, in practice, is not different from the previous “organic classification of expenditure”.
 
73
Gonguet et al. (2021).
 
74
OECD (2021c).
 
Literature
go back to reference OECD (2021a) Green budget tagging: introductory guidance & principles OECD (2021a) Green budget tagging: introductory guidance & principles
Metadata
Title
The Climate Dimension of Fiscal Policy Sustainability: Best Practices in Green Budgeting and Lessons for Portugal
Authors
Carlos Fonseca Marinheiro
Amílcar do Rosário e Sousa
Ana Pinheiro
Copyright Year
2024
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-49460-4_9