US Provincial Reconstruction Team in Basra 2010 (Alamy) |
James Savage is a Professor of Politics at the University of Virginia. He wrote Reconstructing Iraq’s Budgetary Institutions: Coalition State Building after Saddam, which analyzed the successes and failures of the U.S. nation building effort in Iraq. He focused not only on how the Americans tried to reform Baghdad’s budgetary system, but its government as well. Most commentators just focus upon the military and political problems the U.S. faced in Iraq. Savage brought up how the Americans tried and largely failed to change the country’s institutions, which is just as important to know to have a well rounded view of the U.S. occupation. This is an interview with Savage on lessons learned from this experience.
1. Everyone knows
about the Coalition Provisional Authority’s (CPA) problems in Iraq with things
like disbanding the military and deBaathification. One of its biggest successes
however, which is completely unsung was that it created a new system for Iraq
to draft its budget, which is still in use today. What kind of new rules did
the CPA introduce, and more importantly why do the Iraqis still use them
One of the CPA’s most successful and lasting influences in Iraq
is CPA Order 95, the Public Financial Management and Public Debt Law. The law outlined a new budgetary process that
distinctly challenged Saddam’s compartmentalized, opaque, and highly
centralized budgetary process, with its legacy Ministry of Planning created
during the Cold War. The Order called
for parliamentary approval of the budget and enhanced the powers of the
Ministry of Finance, returning it to the coordinating role it played during the
British mandate. In addition, the Order
set a time-table for formulating and approving the budget, it promoted fiscal
transparency, and it initiated a rudimentary system of fiscal federalism. Perhaps most important, the Order included a
provision that authorized the government to continue operational spending at a
rate per month of one-twelfth of the previous year’s budget. This means that the Iraqi government can
continue to function even if politically the Council of Ministers and the Parliament
are unable to adopt a new budget.
Ironically, the CPA created a budget rule that is superior to the U.S.
system where the government shuts down if the president and Congress are unable
to agree upon a budget.
The Order was imposed on the Iraqis and they were forced to
use it during the CPA, but they have since taken ownership of this budgetary
process and they continue to employ it for four reasons. First, IMF and World Bank donor aid
conditionality required the Iraqis to adopt “international best practices” in
public financial management, and the Order incorporated a number of these
conditions. Second, the Order actually
preserved some characteristics of the established system, so that the budgetary
process fundamentally remained Iraqi in design.
In particular, despite the Americans’ profound distaste for the
Soviet-era Planning Ministry, the ministry and its investment and capital
budget responsibilities were retained.
Third, the Order enabled new interests and budgetary claimants, including
provincial governments, to participate in the budgetary process. These claimants then became stakeholders and
owners of the institutions and processes that produced these budgetary
rewards. Fourth, the Order successfully
offered the Iraqis procedural continuity and regularity in policy making in the
face of security threats—including attacks upon the Finance Ministry—extreme
swings in oil prices, the rapid overall growth in operational and investment
programs, rising budget deficits, and sectarian political conflict.
2. The U.S. spent
years trying to reform Iraq’s institutions. It wanted to make the ministries
more efficient, combat corruption, overcome sectarianism, etc. There were
training sessions, conferences, advisers, millions spent, and more, but the
Americans largely failed. You went into
great depth into a perfect example of how this effort faltered when the U.S.
tried to get the Iraqis to use a computerized budget system. What was this idea
and how did it unravel?
Many developing countries, including Iraq, formulate their
budgets and manage their financial accounts literally by relying upon
traditional pencil and paper documents.
This clearly violates “international best practices,” and a standard
requirement of donor aid conditionality imposed upon recipient governments is
that they adopt computerized financial management information systems (FIMS). In principle, this sounds good, because replacing
the Iraqi bureaucracy’s pencil and paper legers presumably would promote more
efficient budgeting, transparency in bookkeeping, and greater accountability in
the use of public funds. For its part,
the Iraqi government agreed to install an FIMS in response to repeated
Coalition and donor demands. Nonetheless,
despite more than decade of effort by USAID and the World Bank, to this day the
Iraqis continue to use pencil and paper budgeting.
The reasons for Iraqi passive and active resistance to FMIS
are rooted in culture and fear. According to David Pryce-Jones, in the
Middle-East, signatures on paper represent power relationships, and signing or
refusing to sign a document reflects hierarchy, status, and power. More directly, Saddam’s regime proved to be
an extremely hierarchical affair that produced a distinct lack of initiative
and inertia that permeated the Finance Ministry and the entire government. Iraqi officials feared to be held responsible
for decisions that might go awry, and to protect themselves they refused to
make even the most fundamental decisions without explicit orders signed by
their superiors. The need to get a
signed document for personal protection meant that making basic financial and
procurement transactions required the signature of the finance minister or a
chief deputy. Officials refused to
accept faxes and other copied instructions, which greatly lessened their
interest in electronically generated paperwork and the use of computers. This hostility towards FMIS reached the point
that in 2007 a USAID team of contractors that attempted to train Finance
Ministry personnel in FMIS were kidnapped in front of the Ministry, reportedly
with the aid of the Ministry’s staff.
For several years following the incident, contractors were
understandably unwilling to visit the Ministry.
3. The reform effort
was also carried out by various U.S. agencies from the United States Agency for
International Development (USAID) to the State Department to the Treasury, etc.
What problems did that create that there were so many different U.S. offices
involved, and was this symbolic of the larger U.S. failure to plan for postwar
Iraq because there is no one agency responsible for reconstructing foreign
countries?
Coordinating the agencies and their contractors proved to be
an ongoing struggle throughout the American presence in Iraq. Some of this was
due to the almost total ignorance Americans had about how the Iraqi government
was organized and functioned. A month
before the invasion, General Jay Garner presided over a gathering of agency
officials and they divided up which of six U.S. agencies would have oversight
responsibilities over twenty-three Iraqi ministries. Treasury and USAID were assigned
responsibility for the Finance Ministry and, remarkably, the State Department
was responsible for the Planning Ministry.
Although the State Department’s staff includes economists, the agency is
not known for its management of capital budgets and planning ministries. This delegation divided the oversight of
Iraq’s operational and investment/capital budgets between three U.S.
agencies. At the Finance Ministry, the
Treasury competed with AID over the control and coordination of contractors,
who sometimes competed with each other for the same contract. This proved to be a disincentive for agencies
and contractors to develop and share harmonized training materials, as they
were proprietary information used in the contract bidding process. The agencies and their contractors divided up
the government of Iraq by level of government and province, so some contractors
worked with the central government and some of the provinces, with the rest of
the provinces assigned to other contractors.
This coordination problem extended to the Provincial Reconstruction
Teams, which were led by a State Department official and a military deputy
officer and staffed with as many as forty to fifty personnel drawn from various
U.S. and Coalition agencies and their contractors. External evaluations of PRT effectiveness
found numerous PRT leaders reporting that their contractors failed to
coordinate with them, and instead reported back to their home agency.
This coordination appears to have been endemic. The U.S. Government Accountability Office
reported that “The implementation of U.S. efforts to help build the capacity of
Iraqi national government over the past four years has been characterized by
multiple U.S. agencies leading individual efforts, without overarching
direction from a lead entity or strategic approach that integrates their
efforts.” Notable attempts at creating
coordination occurred when Ambassador Ryan Crocker created the position of
Minister for Economic Affairs and Coordinator for Economic Transition to
oversee the activities of the agencies and contractors involved in, among other
things, building Iraqi budgetary capacity.
Under Crocker, the Treasury Department established a committee called
the Public Finance Management Action Group (PFMAG) to promote coordination and
help resolve differences among the agencies and contractors. Nevertheless, attendance and participation
were voluntary. As one senior Treasury
official observed, “These coordination problems are deep and profound, and
extraordinarily frustrating,” as turf battles, organizational barriers, and
information stovepipes continued to plague Coalition assistance programs.
4. The U.S. fought a
counterinsurgency war in Vietnam in the 1960s and 70s and then tried to forget
about it so it could go back to planning for a conventional war against the
Soviet Union. The Obama administration withdrew U.S. forces from Iraq, and
tried to treat it like just another country only having to return in 2014 to
help the government fight the Islamic State. Both are examples of America
forgetting what it learned on the battlefield. You made a similar point about
the U.S. and lessons learned in nation building. What do you fear Washington
has lost from this experience?
The U.S. government has been doing its best to unlearn or
forget about statebuilding. President
George W. Bush campaigned in 2000 on the platform that the U.S., and especially
the military, should avoid statebuilding.
Then he rejected his own advice in Afghanistan and Iraq. He did try to learn a bit from his mistakes,
as, for example, putting the Defense Department in charge of Iraq’s occupation
and statebuilding. In 2005, Bush issued National
Security Presidential Directive-44 (NSPD-44) to address the U.S.’s endemic
statebuilding coordination, planning, and implementation problems in Iraq. The Directive authorized the Secretary of
State to lead a “whole of government” approach to coordinate all U.S.
stabilization and reconstruction activities.
The Directive also created the Office of the Coordinator for
Reconstruction and Stabilization (CRS) within the State Department, and
established a Civilian Response Corps made up of seconded agency and contractor
personnel to help with in-country stabilization and reconstruction efforts. However, by 2008, the CRS had failed. The Office lacked authority over other
federal agencies and it lacked sufficient appropriations. The Congress denied funding for much of the
Corps, and by 2011 it fielded just 235 personnel during three years.
Then in 2010, Secretary Hilary Clinton and the State
Department issued its Leading Through
Civilian Power: The First Quadrennial
Diplomacy and Development Review (QDDR), which, among other ambitions,
attempted to address the Coalition’s coordination problems by strengthening the
relevant ambassador’s authority for managing interagency relations. The QDDR also required USAID to establish a
“knowledge and learning center” to evaluate and learn from its experiences in
the field. Nevertheless, the QDDR also
declared “Afghanistan and Iraq are not the primary models for building our
civilian capacity to respond to crises and conflicts.” This enabled AID to avoid evaluating the
performance of its programs and the activities of its contractors in these two
countries. Clinton also replaced the CRS
with the Bureau of Conflict and Stabilization Operations. This new unit neither “coordinates” nor
directs “reconstruction,” because presumably American foreign policy will
successfully avoid placing the U.S. in a position where it would be engaged in
reconstruction efforts reminiscent of Iraq or Afghanistan. Thus, after the U.S. withdrew from Iraq in
2011, the U.S. had the opportunity to evaluate and learn from its mistakes in
state and nation building, but doing so might force changes in comfortably held
doctrine, and holding politicians, the military, civil servants, and
contractors accountable for their actions.
1 comment:
Wonderful interview. It encapsulates the reason that I shudder whenever I hear the term "Whole of Government" as a strategy for US problem-solving; the term, in reality, always means inter-agency competition and stove-piping.
Interesting that Double-Entry Book-Keeping is one of the marvelous ancient Iraqi inventions, yet, it was so difficult to re-implement. USAID contractor, RTI, spent a lot of time training provincial staff in modern government accounting systems (FAMIS, double-entry book-keeping, appropriation conformance, etc...) in 2007/8, but those efforts were sometimes unravelled by PRTs that were not trained in basic government management processes and preferred "quickie" spreadsheets, and rapid activity.
I recall attending a Ministry of Planning/USAID Budgetary Conference in October 2008 where Provincial officials were presented with the "new" processes---only to learn from MoP and Provincial folks that the main annual capital budgeting and project justification procedures were really what was in use Pre-Saddam and well-known to all the Old Timers. That was the brief period when the Technocrats were beginning to return, but were later driven out again.
Great work by Prof Savage (and you). Steve
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