September 2017 | by Luciana Díaz Frers

The Open Budget Index assigns countries covered by the International Budget Partnership’s Open Budget Survey a transparency score on a 100-point scale using 109 of the Survey’s 140 questions. These questions focus specifically on whether the government provides the public with timely access to comprehensive budget information based on the public availability and content of eight key budget documents that all governments should publish over the different stages of the budget cycle. A score of roughly 60 is considered to represent the level at which countries are publishing sufficient information to allow public discussions on the budget to occur.
While Argentina has consistently produced six of the eight key budget documents included in the Open Budget Index, its scores from 2006-2015 range between 40 and 60, leaving it stuck in the middle. This case study examines Argentina’s journey toward greater budget transparency, describing inconsistencies and speculating about their potential causes.
Downloads
- The Road to Budget Transparency in Argentina (September 2017)
Related
- The Road to Budget Transparency in Indonesia (September 2017)
- The Road to Budget Transparency in the Philippines (September 2017)
- The Road to Budget Transparency in Mexico (September 2017)
- The Road to Budget Transparency in Ghana (September 2017)
- The Road to Budget Transparency in Uganda (September 2017)
- The Road to Budget Transparency: Learning from Country Experience (November 2017)
- The Road to 61: Achieving Sufficient Levels of Budget Transparency (July 2016)