1 / 11

Week 15: Ethics, Wrap Up, Student Presentations

Week 15: Ethics, Wrap Up, Student Presentations. Ethics -- public sector Ethical issues in public budgeting and finance Revisit course goals Begin student presentations. Ethics: Definition. Systematic thinking about morals and conduct Making judgments about right and wrong

lea
Download Presentation

Week 15: Ethics, Wrap Up, Student Presentations

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 15: Ethics, Wrap Up, Student Presentations • Ethics -- public sector • Ethical issues in public budgeting and finance • Revisit course goals • Begin student presentations

  2. Ethics: Definition • Systematic thinking about morals and conduct • Making judgments about right and wrong • Choosing between legitimate but competing values • In public sector: • from thought to action and consequences • discretion by un-elected public managers

  3. Ethical Philosophy • right v right (value conflicts) • individual v community • short-term v long-term • truth v loyalty • justice v mercy • theories of moral philosophy • utilitarian – ends-based • rule-based (Kant) • care-based

  4. Framework for Public Sector Ethics • Competing roles and loyalties: • personal • professional • organizational • public interest • ASPA Code of Ethics • reflects new public management • not much help with role conflicts

  5. Changing Public Sector Ethics • Traditional view of ethics (roots in business world): • “low road” of compliance -- stay out of trouble • neutrality/efficiency/rules • prevention of fraud, waste, abuse • means-based approach • Contemporary view of ethics • “high road” of moral reasoning, integrity, justice, leadership • ethics of value, not of neutrality • integrity/moral reasoning/leadership/justice • accomplishment of public good • Results-oriented government ==> ends-based ethics • Responsible use of increased administrative discretion

  6. Ethics Applied to Public Budgeting • Old budgetary ethics • limited discretion • line item accountability • focus on allowable uses of funds • New budgetary ethics • discretion on use of funds to meet goals • program control, not line-item • accountability for accomplishments

  7. Ethical Issues in Public Budgeting • Budgeting as political • who benefits/who pays from public budgeting decisions • political leadership for the public interest • Budgeting as technical • budget experts can withhold or frame information • gimmicks and fixes • Budget process • playing the budget game • use (abuse) of data in budget justifications • advocacy for program v loyalty to executive budget

  8. Ethical Issues in Public Finance • Estimating revenues • Choosing optimistic v pessimistic scenarios • Withholding information on available reserves • Impact of finance policies • Short-term v long-term impacts • Political expediency to gain passage (features or gimmicks that aren’t fiscally sound) • User taxes to replace general purpose revenues

  9. Ethical Issues in Budget Implementation • Budget analysis • tactics to delay implementation of programs • Budget management • using funds for different purposes than budgeted • circumvent budget controls to accomplish desired outcomes • Accountability • setting goals and objectives—who is involved? • accountability for results – how much discretion? • ethical issues in performance reporting

  10. Discussion Questions • Does unethical behavior in public servants occur because they are inherently unethical or because unethical behavior is rewarded? • How can “high road” focus on accomplishments be a guide when there is no consensus on desired public outcomes? • Is “public trust deficit” best addressed by low-road ethical focus, rather than promoting administrative discretion?

  11. Course Goals Revisited • Understand political context of budgeting at federal, state, local levels • Develop working knowledge of California budget process, concepts, terminology • Learn some basic skills in budget development, analysis • Understand role of budgets within life of an agency • Understand budgets as tools of accountability • Develop some basic skills in selection and use of performance measures in context of budgeting • Improve applied (memo) writing skills

More Related