1 / 15

Week 2: Politics and Dynamics of Public Budgeting

Week 2: Politics and Dynamics of Public Budgeting. Budgeting: political or technical? The “baseline” Rubin’s model of budgetary decision making p.30 Actors in the budget process Mini-case Budget process--goals, culture, characteristics Student issues from readings Preview week 3.

haley
Download Presentation

Week 2: Politics and Dynamics of Public Budgeting

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Week 2: Politics and Dynamics of Public Budgeting • Budgeting: political or technical? • The “baseline” • Rubin’s model of budgetary decision making p.30 • Actors in the budget process • Mini-case • Budget process--goals, culture, characteristics • Student issues from readings • Preview week 3

  2. Public Administration “Dichotomy” Debate Classical Public Administration: 1880’s - 1930’s • Focus on efficiency of large organizations • Search for scientific principles of administration • Expertise, not politics • Left out concern for politics, values, ethics Behavorial: 1940s - 1960s • Dichotomy questioned • From efficiency to effectiveness • Human element, behavior, decision making in organizations • Led to new kind of science of administration • Continued to ignore politics

  3. Public Administration “Dichotomy” Debate (cont.) The New Public Administration: 1970s - • No dichotomy • Try to bring managerial and political values together • Two branches • Public policy • looked at politics in policy but not in administration • PA moved to Business Schools • Political management • the governance function of public administration • define the role of public managers in political system

  4. Budget (document) scope of government redistribution of wealth priorities reflects relative power reflects public consensus accountability to public Budgeting (process) preparing and defending requests strategy--what to reveal, what to conceal roles in process--who has power Budgeting as Political

  5. Budgeting as Technical? • estimating revenues • estimating costs (benchmarks) • knowing all rules and constraints • spending limitations -- legal • spending requirements • limits on borrowing • need for public referenda (spending and revenues) • different funds • presenting information • accounting/allocating (baseline, one-time)

  6. Budget Management: political or technical? • Internal allocation • how much is needed? • aligning incentives • Staying within budget • Reallocation • Determining and using reserves • Publication -- how much to reveal • Transfers among funds • Year end strategies

  7. Political v Technical • Budget as a Document ___% technical ___% political • Budgeting as a Process ___% technical ___% political • Budget Management ___% technical ___% political

  8. The “Baseline” Budget How to compute it: • Current year initial budget • Current year revised budget • Current year expenditures • Current services level adjusted forward (inflation, caseload) • Current law • Current year budget less one-time • CSUS case study: Program of Dance

  9. Rubin’s Model of Budgetary Decision Making • Environment • Process • Strategies • Outcomes

  10. Rubin’s Model of Budgetary Decision Making • Environment • Affects outcomes directly • Affects strategies • Affects process • Process • Affects outcomes directly • Affects strategies • Strategies • Affects outcomes directly • Affects process

  11. Actors in Public Budgeting • Chief Executive • Executive branch chiefs • Control agencies • executive • legislative • Legislators • Interest groups • Public

  12. Mini-Case -- Indian Health Program • What is the committee chair trying to accomplish? • Why is the Bureau Chief in a difficult position? • What power does the committee chair have over the Assistant Secretary and the Bureau Chief? • What power does the Assistant Secretary have over the Bureau Chief? • Did the Assistant Secretary do a good job of responding? • Did the Bureau Chief do a good job of responding?

  13. Budget Process • Designed to meet organizational goals • Reflects organizational culture • Variables • players • rules/procedures/documents/timelines • balance of executive/legislative power • degree of centralization/coordination • top-down/bottom-up • openness to internal members • openness to external community

  14. Units: 4 elementary schools 2 middle schools 1 high school Players: superintendent/staff school board 7 principals 7 PTAs Process Variables: roles of various players authority/balance of power rules/procedure documents/timelines executive v legis power degree of centralization top down/bottom up openness to internal openness to external Design a Budget Process for a School District

  15. Preview of Week 3 • Lots of different, but short, readings • Congressional Budget Office • Legislative Analysts Office • Department of Finance • Think about: • Differences between State and Federal Processes • Different roles of LAO, Finance • In four sample LAO analyses, think about what they are trying to accomplish • Guest Speaker from Corrections, LAO, DOF (current) • Remember first weekly email assignment (sample on web)

More Related