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Budget Methods and PracticesAnwar Shah
ashah@worldbank.orgIIPA Workshop, New Delhi
December 5, 2006
Outline• Budgetary Institutions and Processes
– Role of MOF– Fiscal Rules– Line Ministries– Cabinet– Parliament– Presidential vs Parliamentary system of government
• Issues in budget formulation– Macro-fiscal framework– Comprehensiveness– Multiyear budgeting– Participatory budgeting : potentials and pitfalls– Performance Budgeting
Outline ………………….2
• Performance Budgeting– What?– Why?– How?– Conclusions
Fiscal Framework
• Government ‘s resource envelope, borrowing stance and spending priorities
• Short and medium term objectives• Projections • Need a macro model – better done by a
think tank rather than in-house
Functions of Budgeting Systems
• Setting Priorities• Planning• Financial control over inputs• Management of operations• Accountability
Types of Budget Classifications
• Functional: policy analysis and comparisons (education, health, transport etc.)
• Organizational: accountability, legal appropriations and budget execution, fiscal controls (administrative departments)
• Object: compliance controls, internal management (employee costs, materials, utilities etc.)
Budget Comprehensiveness
• What is to be included?• What works against comprehensiveness?
– Tax expenditures– SOEs– Extra-budgetary and off-budget expenditures – Earmarked funds– External assistance– Contingent and non-contingent liabilities– Quasi-fiscal activities by central bank
Implications of a segmented budget
• Fiscal discipline• Allocative Efficiency• Technical/operational Efficiency• Integrity and Trust
Medium Term Expenditure Framework (MTEF)
• Multi-year budgetary planning to link annual budgets with medium term priorities
• Three year rolling expenditure and revenue plans
• Baseline and forward estimates• Annual reconciliations• Considerations: appropriate cost drivers
and log framework for service delivery
MTEF - PROS• Important management tool for a review of
government operations• Predictability and certainty in planning and
budgeting• Detection of emerging fiscal issues• Holding pork barrel politics at bay while
supporting policy objectives• Potential gains in efficiency• Fiscal discipline• Civic Dialogue on government priorities
MTEF - CONS• Costly paper exercise if dependence on
unpredictable external finance• Costly exercise with no real benefits if done
mechanically using incrementalism without a serious look at government operations
• Costly if no framework for fiscal discipline• Sense of entitlements• Resistance to change even in the presence of
major shocks• Ineffective if no oversight by parliaments and
citizens
Participatory budgeting• Merits
– Citizens’ review of government operations and priorities
– Bottom-up Government accountability – Easier for Local governments
• Demerits– Interest group capture– High transactions costs– Little impact when budgetary inflexibility– Little use when it is used for window-dressing
government programs and priorities
History of Budgeting• Early 1900s Line-item incremental budgeting for
financial control• Central agency for coordination of government
spending• Program budgeting in 1950s to link with
planning• Block vote budgeting in 1960s: aggregate
allocations• Zero based budgeting in 1970s to set priorities• Performance budgeting in 1990s to achieve
operational efficiency and to improve accountability for results
A comparative perspective on the two budgeting approachesFocus on Results
Increased Managerial Discretion and less control
Managers are accountable for what they achieve.
PB
Focus on Control
No Managerial Discretion
Managers are accountable for what and how they spend on inputs.
Line-Item
Zero-based Budgeting?ZBB refers to a budgeting system
where every item of expenditure has to be fully justified again every year.Reality: impossible to implement Developing country – wages and salaries sometimes can reach 70% of the budget which is outside of the control of budget officials
International Experience: discontinued practice-- Impractical technique -- Too costly to administer
Performance Budgeting: What?
A system of budgeting that presents the purpose and objectives for which funds are required, the costs of the programs proposed for achieving these objectives, and outputs to be produced or services to be rendered under each program.
Strict Definition: A system of budgeting that explicitly links each increment in allocated resources to an increment in outputs and outcomes.
Objectives
Programs
Measures and Report Performance
Management and Planning Decisions
Allocation Decisions
Program Budgeting
Performance Management
Performance Budgeting
Transformation: from Line-Item Budgeting to PB
Performance Budgeting Paradigm
Mission
Strategic Goals
(Medium Term)
Program Objectives & Costs(Annually)
P1 P2 P3
Activities Targets & Costs
P1 P2 P3
A1 A2 A3 A1 A2 A1 A2 A3 A4
Performance Measurement
Impact
Outcomes
OutputsCluster
Outputs
BudgetBottom-up
Top-Down
Performance Budgeting Results Chain Application in Education
Enrollments, student-teacher ratio, class size
Educational spending by age, sex, urban/rural; spending by level; teachers, staff, facilities, tools, books
Improve quantity, quality, and access to education services
Program objectives Inputs Intermediate inputs
Winners and losers from government programs
Informed citizenry, civic engagement, enhanced international competitiveness
Literacy rates, supply of skilled professionals
Achievement scores, graduation rates, drop-out rates
Outputs Outcomes Impact Reach
Performance Measures Used in Performance Budgeting
• Cost: Inputs/resources used to produce outputs• Output: Quantity and quality of goods and services
produced. • Outcome: Progress in achieving program objectives• Impact: Program goals• Reach: People who benefit or are hurt by a program• Quality: Measure of service such as timeliness,
accessibility, courtesy, accuracy• Productivity: Output by work hour• Efficiency: Cost per unit of output• Satisfaction: Rating of services by users
Citizen-centered performance budgeting
• Budget format to follow closely service delivery format and also to include a performance report and net worth assessment
• Citizens charter and sunshine rights• Citizen inputs in budget process to be formalized
at all stages– Formulation: Town Hall meeting on the previous
year’s performance and new proposals. Comments on Porto Allegre and Belo Horizonte, Bolivia
– Review and execution: Formal process for complaints– Post: Compliance and feedback reports.
Performance Management Framework is a pre-requisite for the success of PB
• Letting managers manage: operational flexibility and freedom – few rules more discretion
• Making managers manage. Accountability for results. Contracts/work program agreements based upon pre-specified output and performance targets and budgetary allocations
new civil service framework• Activity based costing, accrual accounting,
capital charging• Subsidiarity principle• Competitive service delivery and benchmarking• Incentives for cost efficiency (including capital
use)
Performance Budgeting: Why?
Why pursue PBB?
• Enhance communication between budget actors
• Promote management in government agencies
• Improve public services delivery• Facilitate more informed budgetary
decision-making• Achieve higher transparency and
accountability
Performance Budgeting: How?
International Experiences
Theory to Reality
Diversification in Implementation
Alternate approaches• PB with Fuzzy New Public Management (Letting
Managers Manage, competition, voice and choice, informal agreements): USA, Netherlands, Australia, Uganda, Mongolia, South Africa (small steps towards PB).
• PB with New Public Management (Making Managers Manage, stronger competition, voice and choice, formal contracts or agreements ): New Zealand, Malaysia (?), Singapore (?)
Singapore: Milestones to PB
• Pre 1978 – Line Item Budgeting: The emphasis was on inputs and input control.
• 1978 to 1989 – Program Budgeting: The emphasis changed to what had to be done and managers had more managerial flexibility.
• 1989 to 1996 – Block Vote Budgeting: More managerial flexibility. Line agencies were given larger blocks of appropriations within which they had the flexibility to reallocate without seeking central approval.
• 1996 Onwards – PB: The emphasis now is on outputs. Public sector managers are given more authority to improve performance in exchange for increased accountability.
Singapore: PB Framework• Government departments managed as
Autonomous Agencies• Macro Incremental Factor• Targets and output plans• Funding linked to output levels• Operational and financial autonomy• Capital charging including office use,
interdepartmental charging• 3-year development block vote• New Civil Service Framework
U.S. Experience with PB State Governments
Source: Melkers and Willoughby. 1998. Performance Based Budgeting Requirements in State Governments.
U.S. Experience with PB State Governments
• line-item budget 27 states• program budget 10 states• Half-way to PB 10 states• PB Michigan & Texas
Source: Hager, G. & Hobson, A. June 2001. Performance-Based Budgeting.
Texas State
Source: Hager, G. & Hobson, A. June 2001. Performance-Based Budgeting.
Montgomery Country, Maryland … 1
Public Works and Transportation Highway Services
Programs: Resurfacing Program Mission: To resurface the Country’s roads on a seven year cycle to assure an aesthetically pleasing, adequately maintained, functional roadway surface
Program Measures FY99 Actual
FY00 Actual
FY01 Actual
FY02 Budget
FY02 Actual
FY03 Approved
Outcomes: Lower maintenance cost and better safety
Outputs: Percentage of roads needing resurfacing that were resurfaced (assuming a 7-year cycle) Lane miles resurfaced
77
300
79
309
76
296
64
248
39
152
42
162Service Quality: Effective resurfacing cycle (years)
9.1
8.8
9.2
11.0
18.0 16.9
Efficiency: Average cost per lane-mile resurfaced ($)
4,483
5,706
5,115
5,109
5,099 5,230
Inputs: Expenditure ($000) Workyears
1,345
1,763
1,514
1,267
775 847
Source: Office of Management and Budget, Montgomery Country. Montgomery Measures Up! For the Year 2002
Montgomery Country, Maryland … 2
Montgomery Country, Maryland … 3
Fairfax County, Virginia … Police Patrol Services (1)
Fairfax County, Virginia … Police Patrol Services (2)
Fairfax County, Virginia … Fire and Rescue (1)
Fairfax County, Virginia … Fire and Rescue (2)
Fairfax County, Virginia … Fire and Rescue (3)
Conclusions• Performance budgeting must be an integral
element of a broader reform package to bring about performance culture. In the absence of an incentive environment for better performance and accountability for results, the introduction of performance budgeting will not lead to better performance.
• Managerial accountability must be on outputs and not on outcomes as the latter are influenced by external factors. Outcomes however should be monitored.
• Transparency of the budget and citizens’evaluation of outputs helpful in improving budgetary outcomes.
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