Our report tracks the evolution of fiscal rules and how countries comply with them. In the early years, we find that rules were too rigid and constrained responses to economic downturns. Greater flexibility was eventually introduced and proved effective, allowing governments to provide necessary support for ailing economies, particularly in severe crises such as the pandemic. However, the severe shocks were a significant test for fiscal rules, with many countries’ deficits and debt exceeding their own limits. More than two-thirds of countries have revised their fiscal rules, often making them more flexible without considerably safeguarding public finances.
Effective guardrails
For fiscal rules to be effective, they must strike a careful balance: they should safeguard fiscal sustainability while leaving adequate room and flexibility for priority spending. Our analysis shows that effective rules need to have several elements: they are based on a clear and appropriate target or fiscal anchor to guide policy; they have a robust way to correct course when spending pressures or adverse shocks put the rules off track; and there are supportive fiscal institutions to guide and support their implementation.
First, a prudent fiscal anchor—for example a debt-to-GDP ratio or a medium-term budget balance target—should be tailored within a risk framework to a country’s debt capacity and exposure to shocks. To be credible, they must be easy to monitor, clearly communicated to the public, and closely linked to annual budgets.
Second, when thresholds are breached, countries need clear procedures to get back on track. Pre-defined triggers, timelines, and policy responses can help return to fiscal rule limits—such as requiring governments to submit fiscal plans or take corrective actions—and restore discipline. Some countries go further, using progressive triggers that activate stricter measures, for example as debt nears critical levels.
This mechanism is not just good policy—it also helps countries lower their financing costs. An analysis of six countries (Armenia, Costa Rica, Cyprus, Czech Republic, Poland, and Slovak Republic) shows that well-designed correction mechanisms helped lower the cost of issuing debt by about 0.3 percentage points within six months and 0.75 percentage points within a year, compared to similar economies without effective fiscal rules.