Download Timor-Leste's Recovery from the 2006 Crisis
Transcript of Download Timor-Leste's Recovery from the 2006 Crisis
WORLD DEVELOPMENT REPORT 2011 BACKGROUND CASE NOTE
TIMOR-LESTE’S RECOVERY FROM THE 2006 CRISIS: SOME LESSONS
Doug Porter and Habib Rab
November 2, 2010
The findings, interpretations, and conclusions expressed in this paper are entirely those of the authors. They do not necessarily represent the views of the World Development Report 2011 team, the World Bank and its affiliated organizations, or those of the Executive Directors of the World Bank or the governments they represent.
Background note for the WDR 2011. The authors are grateful for comments received from Emilia Pires, Michael Francino, Tobias Rasmussen, Edie Bowles, Antonio Franco, Sarah Cliffe and Paul Keogh on an earlier draft of this paper
1
Introduction
Timor-Leste’s request in May 2006 that Portugal, Malaysia, Australia and New Zealand send troops to
restore order came just a year after the last UN peacekeepers had departed and four years into the
country’s independence. The 2006 violence that claimed at least 37 lives and drove 155,000 people
(15% of the population) from their homes sent shock waves through an already fragile polity.
The complex causes of the 2006 conflict have been treated in depth elsewhere. This note looks
specifically at how the government used public finance management (PFM) policies to help address the
enormous short-term challenges of a fragile situation in the aftermath of the 2006 crisis. The
government capitalized on a rapid increase in oil revenues and through administrative measures that
delegated more responsibility for spending decisions to line ministries, achieved a rapid increase in the
rate of public spending on cash transfers, goods and services and public works. This note starts by
summarizing the evolving challenges of the post-independence PFM system, the fragility of 2006/07,
and the changed fiscal outlook following the surge in petroleum revenue. It then looks at the
government’s PFM policies that helped it to address urgent demands and successfully restore short-
term stability. The note concludes by drawing possible lessons from this period for other post-conflict
situations.
The Legacy of State Building
When initiated in 1999, two months after the historic referendum in which the Timorese voted
overwhelmingly for independence, the UN Transitional Administration in East Timor (UNTAET)1 was
aware that it carried a heavy weight of expectation. The UNTAET chief, Sergio Vieira de Mello saw in
Timor-Leste a “test case… even a laboratory case where we can transform utopia into reality” (CNN
2000). The performance of the UN-led effort between October 1999 and May 2002 has been widely
debated, but was initially favorably reviewed.2 The UN managed a major humanitarian relief effort in
1999 to avert a crisis. By 2002, the country achieved important benchmarks including adoption of the
constitution, national elections, and demobilization of resistance fighters.
Some early gains in capacity were sustained during the first four years of independence. The tax and
customs service, established by UNTAET, is one example, as is the delivery of health services. The
creation of a Petroleum Fund remains a major achievement. This has provided a critical instrument for
promoting transparency and accountability in petroleum revenue management, particularly as the
volume of resources and pressures to spend increased dramatically in 2007.
The UN’s Independent Special Commission of Inquiry into the 2006 crisis, however, noted several wider
‘governance failures’ in the post-independence period including the failure to follow legislative
procedures; lack of restraint and respect for institutional channels in communication; the leadership
styles of national figures; and the absence of systematic control over distribution of weapons within the
security sector (UN 2006, see also CIGI 2009). Many have also argued that the international community
2
was responsible for “analytical and practical failings” in areas such as policing and security sector reform
(Goldsmith and Dinnen 2007, 1092, 1098; cf. ICG 2009b). With these in mind, the current Minister of
Finance, Emilia Pires and long time adviser Mike Francino, have remarked that the 2006 conflict “should
not have come as a surprise” (Pires and Francino 2007, 144).
Others have argued that these difficulties reflect an inability to link state-building efforts with local
governing traditions, and an over-reliance on imported institutional models. Timor-Leste was
traditionally governed by a series of small clan-based polities that were remarkably resilient to years of
foreign occupation and conflict (Traube 1986; McWilliam 2005). But whilst local traditions of social order
and governance dated back four centuries, Timorese leaders were aware that these and the resistance
structures developed during 24 years of independence struggle were ill-suited to governing an
independent nation. Whilst the new government retained the legal framework installed during the
Indonesian occupation, the Indonesian administrative structures were no longer intact, infrastructure
and records had been destroyed and the only people with any understanding of the systems had fled.
That expatriate state-builders perceived they faced an institutional ‘tabula rasa’ many believe
predisposed foreign advisers and the Timorese leadership to adopt governance “models (that) were
imported wholesale” from other countries (Bowles and Chopra 2008. See also Chopra 2000, 2002; Gunn
2007). Over time, the style of executive decision making became increasingly centralized and
hierarchical.
The government faced a number of challenges on planning and financial management. Firstly, while the
majority of international technical assistants between 1999 and 2005 focused on core functions of the
state, relatively few were devoted to budget execution in line ministries responsible for service delivery.
Secondly, the system was very fragmented. Aid effectiveness was constrained by the multiplicity of
funding sources, confusion over mandates, conflicting and complex donor procedures – thus, “there
were many cooks in the kitchen, all baking different kinds of cakes.” (Pires and Francino 2007, 131. See
also Carnahan 2004, 52). In addition four languages – English, Tetum, Portuguese, Bahasa Indonesia –
were daily woven into a myriad of cross-translated public finance operations. Bahasa, the language most
familiar to the majority of national staff recruited in 2000/1, was the language least likely to be used in
administrative instructions.
In addition, the public finance system was book-ended on one side by resource intensive medium-term
planning, and on the other with centralized but fragmented fiduciary controls. Encouraged by donors,
the government consulted extensively to craft a National Development Plan, underpinned by seventeen
Sector Investment Plans and a medium term expenditure framework. The plan heavy architecture was a
challenge to implement in the context. It was intended to ensure that resources were spent prudently
on medium term development priorities. But these carried a high opportunity cost in terms of human
resources and attention to short term spending priorities. By 2005, the number of expatriate TA
declined rapidly, and the vacuum was filled by politically appointed administrative officials and a
‘shuffling up’ from the lower ranks of less experienced people. Administering the growing legacy of
rules, systems and procedures would have perplexed the most experienced, astute and competent
administrator.
3
With hindsight, the combined effects of this aid-focused planning and finance management
architecture, along with a centralized and hierarchical leadership style amongst senior officials
(Kaltenborn-Stachau 2008), are not surprising. As the World Bank and International Monetary Fund
noted in 2005, a combination of “complex and over-centralized processes, and weak human resource
and institutional capacity on the one hand, and a high level of commitment to fiduciary accountability
on the other, results in very low levels of budget execution” (World Bank & IMF 2005, 8). Budget
execution, particularly for Capital and Development projects that were critical for delivering tangible
benefits to the population was very low (Table 1).
Table 1: Spending of Recurrent and Capital Budgets (%, FY01-FY05),
Consolidated Fund for East Timor
Sources: Budget out-turn documents and staff estimates
The 2006 crisis was rooted in complex issues. The performance of the PFM system is likely to have
fuelled these through inability to stimulate economic activity, particularly for the youth who were
increasingly concentrated in Dili. A relatively low share of public spending went on economic sectors
since independence, notably infrastructure and agriculture. This will have had a major impact on
economic wellbeing since the public sector has traditionally been the main diver of economic growth in
Timor. The economic situation was further exacerbated by a scaling back of UN activities after 2004.
Opportunities in Dili, where an estimated fifty percent of non-oil GDP was generated (Carnahan et al
2005), had contracted as a result.
Challenges for the new Government
When the government of Prime Minister Xanana Gusmão took office in August 2007, it faced a daunting
task of maintaining order and stability. The economy in 2006 had contracted (- 5.8% real non-oil GDP
growth). Approximately 150,000 displaced people were scattered around the country and in temporary
camps around Dili. The proportion of unemployed youth engaged in gang activities had increased.
Wounds in the police and army were still fresh. Inflation was rising rapidly, peaking at around 11 percent
in June 2008.
Two further factors also became evident to the government. Early results from what was later published
as the Timor-Leste Survey of Living Standards3 revealed that poverty had increased sharply since 2001.
By 2007, one out of two Timorese, around half a million people were living below the poverty line, a
significant increase from just over one-third (36% - or around 266,000)4 in 2001. Second, Timor-Leste’s
fiscal environment had been transformed. Petroleum receipts had jumped from $140 million in 2004 to
a peak of $2.2 billion in 2008. The government was no longer dependent on aid to fund the state budget
and projections indicated that aid flows would finance less than 10 percent of capital spending during
the government’s five-year term of office.
FY01 FY02 FY03 FY04 FY05 FY06
Wages and salaries 81.1 84.9 88.7 89.8 89.1 88.3
Goods and services 68.9 90.5 71.8 85.4 68.6 76.9
Capital and development 24.5 0.0 13.4 6.5 9.8
Source: Budget documents and staff estimates
4
Source: Banking and Payments Authority
Public awareness of this wealth meant pressure was steeply mounting to convert it into tangible
dividends. Political commentary had become livelier, feeding off greater access to information. As
important, the result of the 2007 election meant that the administration – predominantly loyal to
Fretilin, the previous government - also had become an arena for coalitional politics. All this placed
further pressure on the public finance system, which the government worried would be unable to
convert sufficiently quickly the petroleum wealth into social and economic outcomes. The Government
was convinced that radical change would be needed at the same time as the PFM system was being
required to do exponentially more than ever before. Within weeks of taking office in August 2007, the
new government followed up their 2007-2012 programmatic announcements with a new budget,
announced to parliament that 2008 would be the “Year of Administrative Reform”, and quickly prepared
a statement of National Priorities for 2008.5
Responding to Crisis: spending choices and administrative reforms
Two aspects of the government’s response to political expectations are highlighted here. On the one
hand the government made decisions that would rapidly increase the size of the budget and add a range
of spending on public transfers, social protection and small scale public works. On the other hand, and
partly to implement these decisions, administrative reforms would involve increasing delegation of
spending and procurement authority to line ministries. Notably, these decisions could be made because
the government was now almost entirely in control of its administration and spending decisions.
Within three months of taking office, the administration produced a half year budget for 2007 and a full
budget for 2008. A budget revision in mid 2008 more than doubled budget outlays (to $788 million from
$348 million, compared to actual spending of $160 million in FY06/07),6 and included a $240 million
Economic Stabilization Fund for market subsidy in response to the commodity price crisis. The aim was
to escalate rates of spending, in particular, by doubling the volume of cash transfers and by opening up
0
500
1000
1500
2000
2500
2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009
Taxes Royalties and profit oil Interest (net of management fee)
-1000000
0
1000000
2000000
3000000
4000000
5000000
6000000
2006 2007 2008 2009
Net Assets Transfers to State Budget
Figure 1: Annual Petroleum Fund Receipts (US$
million)
Figure 2: Petroleum Fund Assets and Transfers to the
State Budget (US$ ‘000)
5
a plethora of new spending lines, and to signal to the public that the government would mitigate the
shocks of the commodity price crisis. Reinforcing the sense of urgency, the government demanded that
administrators achieve “100% obligation” by the end of August 2008, less than two months after the
mid-year budget revision had been approved. Figure 3 illustrates the shifts in volume and categories of
public spending.
Figure 3: State Budget and Spending FY06-FY09 (US$ million)
In addition to the above, there was also a shift in relative priorities as illustrated in Figure 4 below.
These new priorities opened up the possibility of spending quickly to deliver economic benefits both
population-wide and to key constituencies. Not only was there more spending in these areas but their
share of total spending had also risen. For example, before 2007, government had on average spent less
than one percent of its budget on current transfers and social protection payments. In 2008, current
transfers (e.g. compensation for Internally Displaced People; support to Veterans; pensions; social
protection for vulnerable women, children and the poor) amounted to 6 percent of spending (excluding
the Economic Stabilization Fund set up to deal with commodity prices), and in 2009 around 18 percent.
Spending on Economic Affairs increased to 30 percent in 2009, from an average of 26 percent before
2007. Allocations to general public services have remained high in light of the administrative reforms
initiated by the new government. Most sectors had more resources in absolute terms (including health
and education, which declined as a percent of total outlays), and there are implications for quality of
spending and sustainability, as discussed below.
0.0
50.0
100.0
150.0
200.0
250.0
300.0
350.0
400.0
450.0
500.0
Supl. Budg Act. Budget Act. Supl. Budg Act. Budget Actual
2006-07 2007H2 2008 2009
Recurrent expenditure Wages and salaries Goods and services
Current transfers Capital expenditure
6
Figure 4: Functional Spending (% of total government spending)
The pace of decision making, and thus of spending, was aided by a limited set of priorities and strong
direction from the PM’s Office and senior levels in the Ministry of Finance. This was not entirely new, as
noted earlier. But at the same time, the government dramatically increased the levels of delegated
spending and procurement authority to line ministry executives, and simplified treasury processes. This
impacted positively on execution of the capital and development budget, which increased from an
average of 10 percent between FY04 and FY06 to nearly 80 percent in FY08, and on goods and services
spending.
Lessons and Implications: Difficult Choices and Trade Offs
Two years on from the near-fatal shooting of President Jose Ramos-Horta and the assassination attempt
on Prime Minister Xanana Gusmão, the government has been able to address several pressing threats to
social stability through rapidly implemented shifts in spending priorities, new categories of spending,
and administrative streamlining.
A positive account of this period shows a government trying to balance the need to deliver results with
incremental reforms. Under popular pressure, the government has maintained the country’s strong
petroleum revenue management framework, underpinned by the Petroleum Fund Act (2005). The
framework continues to help guide annual budget ceilings. Revenue projections are based on
conservative estimates of oil price and are reportedly free of political interference. Timor-Leste recently
achieved compliance with standards for transparency under the Extractive Industries Transparency
Initiative.
0
5
10
15
20
25
30
35
40
45
Gen Pub Serv Defence Public Order Econ Affairs Health Education Social Prot
FY01 Act FY02 Act FY03 Act FY04 MYBU FY05 Act FY06 Act FY07 H2 Act FY08 Act FY09 Act
7
In addition to this there are ongoing investments to upgrade Financial Management Information
Systems to improve the reliability and availability of financial information. In the absence of capacity to
conduct independent audits, the government continues to commercially retain auditors to review its
financial statements. A Vice Prime Minister has been appointed to oversee administrative reform and
anti-corruption. Over the period of the present government, whilst the executive remains strong,
parliament, oversight institutions and the Presidency, along with the media whilst comparatively
weaker, now play a larger role in political affairs. Some possible lessons from this successful period of
short-term stabilization include:
Prioritize short-term needs to consolidate peace: On taking office in August 2007, the Government
faced an uncertain domestic peace, an expectant population, a civil service of questionable loyalty and a
lack of confidence in donor advice. The government took strong ownership of its resources and priorities
by investing heavily in public transfers, social protection, and infrastructure works. Critics argue that
more effort is needed to address the underlying causes of conflict and the constraints to economic
growth. However, by its many actions in 2008, the government sought first to re-establish trust as a way
of achieving near term peace and building confidence. A number of studies have pointed to the
significance of this kind of ‘social policy’ in post-conflict countries (e.g., Collier and Hoeffler 2002) .
Realistic expectations: Timor-Leste is still in the early stages of post-conflict recovery. Reforms will be
gradual and opportunistic, which could sit at odds with expectations of more linear and predictable
implementation of development plans. This might involve taking measured risks to deliver results –
whilst acknowledging the implications and putting in place mitigating measures. The government may
also incur significant costs in the short-term – mistakes will be made and capacities will need to be
substituted by international TA and short term measures. The counterfactual may be a risk of re-igniting
conflict. Buying the peace through spending directed to particular interests or popular consumption
must however be accompanied by more realistic expectations about the role government spending can
play as it transitions from ‘recovery to development’.
Demonstrate results: The economy has started to recover with strong growth in 2008 and 2009. The
National Priorities process, whilst not a substitute for a national development strategy, provides specific
targets against which government holds itself to account in a transparent manner. These priorities set
short-term expectations, with clear outputs. These of course tell only part of the story but provide the
building blocks for monitoring outcomes in the future. For example, as budget execution becomes less
chronic, it is important to gradually turn to quality and accountability measures.
Maintain transparency and accountability: Throughout the post-crisis period, the government has
endeavored to operate within the broad framework of laws and institutions in place since
Independence. Despite the urgency, government spending was mandated through budgets approved by
Parliament, there were no off-budget expenditures, parameters set by the Petroleum Fund Law were
respected, and there has been regular reporting on budget implementation. There is increased scrutiny
of the budget and government spending by Parliamentary Committees and civil society, as more
detailed information is produced (e.g. on resource allocations across districts). In addition, although
capacity remains weak, there are more resources going to external oversight bodies.
8
The task going forward is to build on the important short-term achievements to sustain peace, growth
and poverty reduction. The government is conscious of the governance challenges ahead around
security sector reform, a weak justice system, and increased perceptions of corruption. It is starting to
establish the systems and institutions, which are needed to tackle these challenges and other emerging
priorities, and to avoid a situation where the drive for results is at the expense of fiduciary standards
and sustainability.
It is fair to remark that these problems must be tackled, not least because they have been at the root of
the instability facing Timor-Leste since independence. But the present government’s experience in many
respects shows in exaggerated form – due to its oil revenue and the latitude this provides – the difficult
trade-offs facing any regime in the aftermath of conflict. A high premium on medium term results,
allocative efficiency in development spending and minimizing fiduciary risks where downstream
spending systems are weak will make it difficult to respond to the ‘here and now’ pressures for
immediate results. Reversing the equation, delegating to line ministries high degrees of responsibility for
spending decisions and focusing on cash spending will likely, where spending controls remain similarly
weak, enable rapid but less targeted and accountable spending.
Thus, the Government’s policy of achieving a “transition from post-conflict to development” presents a
series of PFM-related challenges:
Quality of spending: The administrative and expenditure innovations introduced since 2007 have not
appreciably lessened the country’s dependence on international technical assistance, nor the underlying
weaknesses in Timorese capacity to appraise, design and cost investments, manage internal controls or
ensure audits. This is not surprising given how rapidly pressures have built up over the past three years
on a limited capacity base. However, rapid delegation of authority is likely to have exacerbated the risks
to quality of spending. The country is vulnerable to the destabilizing effects of corruption. The
government is trying to tackle these through PFM reforms and the establishment of external oversight
agencies. The continued commitment to delivering results demonstrated since the 2006/07 crisis should
help to gradually shift the focus to quality of spending and development outcomes.
Fiscal sustainability: Government spending has understandably scaled up to help address major
infrastructure, human capital and private sector capacity deficits. Some favor further scaling up given
high returns to government spending and the opportunity cost of building up Petroleum Fund savings.
Aside from the implications for quality of spending, income from hydrocarbon resources is volatile and
finite. There may of course be significant untapped resources. But the non-oil fiscal deficit is high.
Rapidly growing spending may mean less flexibility for future adjustments given the increase in non-
discretionary expenditure (e.g., wage bill, now around 50% more than domestic non-oil revenue),
growing contingent liabilities (e.g., civil service pensions) and the recurrent demands of infrastructure
spending. Petroleum savings provide a strong buffer against potential shocks. The government
commendably moderated spending growth in 2009 and 2010 based on macro-fiscal analysis. It has
indicated its intention to borrow, which will require sound debt management capacity to ensure that
Timor-Leste is not exposed to the past experiences of Heavily Indebted Poor Countries.
9
Government spending and employment generation: One challenge specifically worth highlighting in
relation to spending priorities, is that of dealing with a rapidly growing labor force. There are around
15,000-20,000 new entrants to the labor force each year, most of whom are unprepared for work in a
dynamic formal economy. This results in an excess supply of young workers, at a time when there is an
excess demand for skilled and experienced workers. The demand gap is being filled by expatriate labor
both in the public and the private sectors. Tackling the problem of unemployed youth is a high priority,
not only for long-term development but also short-term stability. There are a number of steps that can
be taken, some of which are already underway including: improving agricultural extension services;
seeking labor market access agreements with countries in the region; institutionalizing the transfer of
skills from foreign labor; compiling reliable labor market data to better understand the scope of the
skills gaps; and using this to develop appropriate vocational training. In addition to these longer-term
efforts, promoting labor-based infrastructure works, that create employment particularly for unskilled
workers, can provide an important bridge for the short-term.
References
Bowles, E and T Chopra 2008. East Timor: State-Building Revisited, in Call, C and V Wyeth, (eds.) Building States to
Build Peace, Lynne Rienner, Boulder, Chapter 12.
Carnahan M, 2004. “Case Studies in Post-Conflict Budgeting, East Timor,” in Carnahan, M, Manning, N, Bontjer, R, Guimbert, S (eds.), Reforming Fiscal and Economic Management in Afghanistan, The World Bank Carnahan, M, Gilmore, S, and Rahman, M, 2005. “Economic Impact of Peacekeeping: Interim Report Phase I,” UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations Chesterman, S. 2001. East Timor in Transition: From Conflict Prevention to State-Building, New York: International
Peace Academy
Chesterman, S. 2004. You, The People: the United Nations, Transitional Administration and State-building, New
York, Oxford University Press.
Chopra, J. 2000. ‘The UN’s Kingdom in East Timor’, Survival, 42(3): 27-39
Chopra, J. 2002. ‘Building State Failure in East Timor’, Development and Change, 33(5): 979-1000
CIGI Centre for International Governance Innovation 2009, Timor Leste December 2009, Security Reform Monitor,
No. 1.
CNN 2000. ‘Rebuilding East Timor is a challenge for returning refugees and citizens’, CNN report aired 15 March
2000, posted on http:==transcripts.cnn.com=TRANSCRIPTS=0003=15=i_ins.oo.html.
Collier, P and Hoeffler, A. 2002. “Aid, Policy and Growth in Post Conflict Countries,” WB Conflict and Prevention
Unit, April.
East Timor National Development Plan (2002)
Global Integrity 2007. Timor-Leste: Integrity Indicators Scorecard. http://report.globalintegrity.org/Timor-
Leste/2007/scorecard. (last accessed 2 February 2010).
Goldsmith, A. and S. Dinnen 2007. ‘Transnational police building: critical lessons from Timor-Leste and Solomon
Islands’, Third World Quarterly, 28(6): 1091-1109.
Goldstone, A 2004. ‘UNTAET with Hindsight: The Peculiarities of Politics in an Incomplete State,’ Global
Governance 10 (1): 83-98;
Goldstone, A. 2003. A Review of Peace Operations: A Case for a Change, London: King’s College
Gorjao, P. “The Legacy and Lessons of the United Nations Transitional Administration in East Timor,” Contemporary
Southeast Asia 24, no. 2 (August 2002): 313-336;
Gunn. G. 2007. ‘The State of East Timor Studies after 1999’, Jnl of Contemporary Asia, V37(1): 95-114
International Crisis Group 2009a: Timor-Leste: No Time for Complacency, Asia Briefing N°87
9 February 2009. http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=5900&l=1. (Last accessed 17 December 2009).
International Crisis Group 2009b. Handing Back Responsibility to Timor Leste’s Police: Asia Report N°180, 3
December 2009. http://www.crisisgroup.org/home/index.cfm?id=6413&l=1 (Last accessed 17 December 2009).
Jones, S., J. Wilson, A. Rathmell, and J. Riley 2005. Establishing law and order after Conflict, Santa Monica, RAND.
Kaltenborn-Stachau, H. 2008. The Missing Link: Fostering positive citizen-state relations in post-conflict
environments, Communications for Governance and Accountability Program, World Bank, Washington DC.
Kammen, D. 2009. ‘Fragments of utopia: Popular yearnings in East Timor’, Jnl of Southeast Asian Studies, 40 (2):
385-408.
La’o Hamutuk, 2009. “How much money have international donors spent on and in Timor-Leste,” (August), La’o
Hamutuk, Dili.
McWilliam, A. 2005. ‘Houses of Resistance in East Timor: Structuring Sociality in the New Nation’, Anthropological
Forum, 15(1), March: 27-44.
Ministry of Finance, Government of Timor-Leste Budget papers; Budget Execution Reports; and Annual Financial
Statements and Reports (www.mof.gov.tl)
Ministry of Planning and Finance 2005. Report on Budget Execution Study, internal document. Cited in . ‘National
Ownership and International Trusteeship: the Case of Timor-Leste’, in Boyce, J and M. O’Donnell (eds.), Peace and
the Public Purse: economic policies for post-war statebuilding, Lynne Rienner, London, pp. 119-152..
Neves, G. 2006. “The Paradox of Aid in Timor-Leste,” La’o Hamutuk, Timor-Leste Institute for Reconstruction
Monitoring and Analysis (25-28 July).
Pires, E. and M. Francino 2007. ‘National Ownership and International Trusteeship: the Case of Timor-Leste’, in
Boyce, J and M. O’Donnell (eds.), Peace and the Public Purse: economic policies for post-war statebuilding, Lynne
Rienner, London, pp. 119-152.
Roland K. and S. Cliffe 2002. The East Timor Reconstruction Program: Successes, Problems Tradeoffs, Washington DC. World Bank, Conflict Prevention and Reconstruction Unit, Working Paper No.2, November. Suhrke, A. 2001. “Peacekeepers as Nation-Builders: Dilemmas of the UN in East Timor,” International Peacekeeping
8, no. 4 (Winter 2001): 1-20
TFET 2005. Report of the Trustee and Proposed World Program for May 2005 – April 2006 (April 16, 2005) UN 2006. Report of the United Nations Independent special Commission of Inquiry for Timor Leste, Geneva, 2
October.
World Bank, 2004. Public Expenditure Review
World Bank, 2006. Strengthening the Institutions of Governance in Timor-Leste, The World Bank, April
World Bank, 2008. Fiscal Policy Responses to the Current Financial Crisis: Issues for Developing Countries, (10
December)
World Bank, 2008. Timor-Leste: Poverty in a Young Nation, November 2008
1 UNTAET was established by Security Council resolution on October 25, 1999 less than two months after the
Popular Consultation of August 30 1999. The PC itself had taken place under the aegis of UNAMET.
2 UNTAET, its mandate for intervention and success and failures, see Chesterman 2001, 2004; Jones et al.,2005;
Suhrke 2001; Gorjao 2002; Goldstone 2003, 2004. 3 Timor-Leste: Poverty in a Young Nation, November 2008
4 According to the 1990 census, the population of Timor-Leste stood at around 748,000. The UN tried to update
this through a registration process, which estimated the population at around 738,000. The results of the 2004 census indicated that the population had grown to 925,000. 5 GoTL, IV Constitutional Government Program, 2007-2012, Presidency of the Ministers’ Office, Democratic
Republic of East-Timor (2007); Democratic Republic of Timor-Leste, Speech by His Excellency The Prime Minister, Kay Rala Xanana Gusmao, at the presentation of the bill on the State General Budget for 2008, National Parliament, 18 December 2007; and reiterated in National Priorities 2008, announced to TLDPM March 2008. National priorities as follows: i) Public Safety and Security; ii) Social Protection and Solidarity, iii) Addressing the Needs of Youth, iv) Employment and Income Generation, v) Improving Social Service Delivery, vi) Clean and Effective Government. 6 After the elections in 2007, the government changed the Fiscal Year from July-June to January-December. After
this four Budgets had to be prepared in relatively quick succession: (i) Transitional Budget (July-Dec 2007); (ii) 2008 Budget (January-December); (iii) 2008 Mid-Year Review Budget (July-December); (iv) 2009 Budget (January-December).