Intergovernmental Grants by Type-percentage of total grants revenue
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Contact: Intergovernmental Grants by Type-percentage of total grants revenue Enquiry

If the link above does not work please send your enquiry into OECD.RevenueStatistics@oecd.org including a subject line "Intergovernmental Grants by Type-percentage of total grants revenue Enquiry".

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Data are based on a questionnaire from January 2012.
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Percentage
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Units
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Data on grants by type is not available for all OECD countries.

A partial dataset is available for one or more years in the following countries: Austria, Belgium, Canada, Estonia, France, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal.

No data on grants by type is available for Germany, Israel, New Zealand, Slovak Republic, United Kingdom, United States.

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The different types of grants are defined as follows:

Earmarked grants
  • An earmarked grant is a grant that is given under the condition that it can only be used for a specific purpose.
Non-earmarked grants
  • Non-earmarked grants can be spent as if they were the receiving sub-national government's own (non-earmarked) tax revenues.
Mandatory grants
  • Mandatory grants (entitlements) are legal, rules-based obligations for the government that issues the grant. This requires that both the size of the grant and the conditions under which it is given be laid down in a statute or executive decree and that these conditions be both necessary and sufficient.
Discretionary grants
  • Discretionary grants, and the conditions under which they are given, are not determined by rules but decided on an ad hoc, discretionary basis. Discretionary grants are often temporary in nature and include, for example, grants for specific infrastructural projects or emergency aid to a disaster area.
Matching grants
  • Matching grants are grants designed to complement sub-national contributions. Matching grants are dependent on normative or actual spending for services for which the grants are earmarked or on local revenue collection related to these services.
Non-matching grants
  • Non-matching grants are grants not directly linked to any sub-national contribution.
Current grants
  • Current grants are grants assumed to be spent on either current or capital expenditures.
Capital grants
  • Capital grants are grants assumed to be spent only on capital expenditures.
Intergovernmental Grants by Type-percentage of total grants revenueContact person/organisation
Contact: Intergovernmental Grants by Type-percentage of total grants revenue Enquiry

If the link above does not work please send your enquiry into OECD.RevenueStatistics@oecd.org including a subject line "Intergovernmental Grants by Type-percentage of total grants revenue Enquiry".

Data source(s) used
Data are based on a questionnaire from January 2012.
Unit of measure usedPercentagePower codeUnitsPopulation coverage

Data on grants by type is not available for all OECD countries.

A partial dataset is available for one or more years in the following countries: Austria, Belgium, Canada, Estonia, France, Greece, Iceland, Ireland, Italy, Netherlands, Poland, Portugal.

No data on grants by type is available for Germany, Israel, New Zealand, Slovak Republic, United Kingdom, United States.

Key statistical concept

The different types of grants are defined as follows:

Earmarked grants
  • An earmarked grant is a grant that is given under the condition that it can only be used for a specific purpose.
Non-earmarked grants
  • Non-earmarked grants can be spent as if they were the receiving sub-national government's own (non-earmarked) tax revenues.
Mandatory grants
  • Mandatory grants (entitlements) are legal, rules-based obligations for the government that issues the grant. This requires that both the size of the grant and the conditions under which it is given be laid down in a statute or executive decree and that these conditions be both necessary and sufficient.
Discretionary grants
  • Discretionary grants, and the conditions under which they are given, are not determined by rules but decided on an ad hoc, discretionary basis. Discretionary grants are often temporary in nature and include, for example, grants for specific infrastructural projects or emergency aid to a disaster area.
Matching grants
  • Matching grants are grants designed to complement sub-national contributions. Matching grants are dependent on normative or actual spending for services for which the grants are earmarked or on local revenue collection related to these services.
Non-matching grants
  • Non-matching grants are grants not directly linked to any sub-national contribution.
Current grants
  • Current grants are grants assumed to be spent on either current or capital expenditures.
Capital grants
  • Capital grants are grants assumed to be spent only on capital expenditures.