The Mexican government is saving an estimated US$ 1.27 billion per year, or 3.3 percent of its total expenditure, on wages, pensions and social transfers. How? By digitizing and centralizing its payments.
The Mexican government is saving an estimated US$ 1.27 billion per year, or 3.3 percent of its total expenditure, on wages, pensions and social transfers. How? By digitizing and centralizing its payments.
The Mexican government’s reform is the story of a sustained effort over time driven by successive, committed Ministers of Finance and Treasurers who were sure of the ultimate benefits of electronic payments systems. This process and the resulting lessons have been examined by the Better Than Cash Alliance in an in-depth case study entitled, Sustained Effort, Saving Billions: Lessons from the Mexican Government’s Shift to Electronic Payments.[2]
The Better Than Cash Alliance is a partnership whose members are committed to moving away from cash to digital payments. Housed at the United Nations Capital Development Fund (UNCDF), the Alliance is uniquely positioned to bring together a broad cross section of governments, multilateral and bilateral donors, UN Agencies, international NGOs and companies. The Alliance is funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation, Citi, the Ford Foundation, the Omidyar Network, USAID and Visa Inc. It operates both globally and in country, providing diagnostics, toolkits, technical support and case studies, like the present example from Mexico.
Of course, Mexico’s savings did not happen overnight. As Richard Allen has pointed out: “…the process of reforming budgetary institutions is difficult and slow largely because it is driven much more by institutional and political economy factors than by technical ones.”[3] The same is true for implementing electronic payments systems.
So, how did Mexico do it? First, we’ll look at where they started. In the mid-1990s, Mexico’s Treasury Department (Tesorería de la Federación, also known as ‘Tesofe’) was wiring funds to the banks of each federal government agency (called Dependencias). This may sound simple, but the money had a very complicated, decentralized journey with ample opportunity for delays and confusion. First, Dependencias had to hand-deliver paperwork showing they were entitled to the wire transfer; Tesofe then had wide discretion on the timing to execute transfers. After the transfer, the funds sat in the Dependencias’ bank accounts until being disbursed (usually by checks), at which point the Dependencias would report their actual expenditures back to the Ministry of Finance. However, Tesofe had no means to assess how the money was actually spent.
It was time for a change that would benefit everyone. The first major transformation came when Tesofe engaged in an ambitious project to centralize payment by processing all federal government expenditures using a single IT platform. This allowed Tesofe to make payments directly to recipients following authorized requests by Dependencias, thus bypassing Dependencias’ accounts. Changes in the legal framework from 2007 onwards underpinned this change and the subsequent reforms.
By the end of 2012, about half of federal salary payments and the vast majority of pension and supplier payments had been centralized in Tesofe. Furtherprogress needs to be made in other areas, such as social transfer payments, where to date less than four percent of payments are being disbursed centrally. The benefits of digitization arise not only from the electronic payments themselves but from a much wider re-engineering of the related business processes.
The Mexican case yields a number of important insights relevant for other countries looking to shift toward electronic payments:
[1] Managing Director, Better Than Cash Alliance.
[2] A summary of the study described in this article can be found at: https://btca-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/documents/132/english_attachments/Mexico-Highlights-English.pdf?1456238845. For the full version, see https://btca-prod.s3.amazonaws.com/documents/19/english_attachments/WEB-UNCDF-BTCA-Mexico-LongVersion-English-20150624.pdf?1438251994.
[3] Richard Allen, Public Financial Management and Its Emerging Architecture, Ch. 14 “Challenges of Reforming Budgetary Institutions in Developing Countries” (International Monetary Fund, 2013).