Title: Budgeting For Results
1Budgeting For Results
- An idea whose time may be here?
Anwar Shah, World Bank CEPAL Regional Seminar on
Fiscal Policy Santiago, Chile January 24-27,
2005
2Outline
- Theme
- Theory and practice of Performance Budgeting
- Structure
- PB What?
- PB Why?
- PB How? -- International Experience
- Some Conclusions
3Performance Budgeting What?
4Performance 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.
5A comparative perspective on the two budgeting
approaches
Focus on Results
Focus on Control
Increased Managerial Discretion and less control
No Managerial Discretion
Managers are accountable for what and how they
spend on inputs.
Managers are accountable for what they achieve.
PB
Line-Item
6Performance Budgeting Paradigm
Performance Measurement
Impact
Mission
Strategic Goals (Medium Term)
Outcomes
Budget Bottom-up
Program Objectives Costs (Annually) P1 P2 P3
Outputs Cluster
Activities Targets Costs P1
P2 P3 A1 A2 A3
A1 A2 A1 A2 A3 A4
Outputs
7Performance Budgeting Results Chain Application
in Education
Program objectives Inputs Intermediate inputs Program objectives Inputs Intermediate inputs Program objectives Inputs Intermediate inputs
Improve quantity, quality, and access to education services Educational spending by age, sex, urban/rural spending by level teachers, staff, facilities, tools, books, regulations Enrollments, student-teacher ratio, class size
Outputs Outcomes Impact Reach Outputs Outcomes Impact Reach Outputs Outcomes Impact Reach Outputs Outcomes Impact Reach
Achievement scores, graduation rates, drop-out rates Literacy rates, supply of skilled professionals Informed citizenry, civic engagement, enhanced international competitiveness Winners and losers from government programs
8Performance Measures Used in Performance Budgeting
- Cost Inputs/resources used to produce outputs
- Output Quantity and quality of goods and
services produces. - 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
9Citizen-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
years performance and new proposals. Comments on
Porto Allegre and Belo Horizonte, Bolivia - Review and execution Formal process for
complaints - Post Compliance and feedback reports.
10Performance 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)
11Output Accountability vs. Outcome Accountability
12Performance Budgeting Why?
13Public Sector Reform Goals
- Responsive Governance or Doing the Right Things
- Matching public services with citizens
preferences - Responsible Governance or Doing it Right
- Prudent management of fiscal resources.
- Earning trust
- Working better and costing less
- Managing fiscal and social risks
- Improving the quality, quantity and access of
public services
14Public Sector Reform Goals .
- Accountable Governance
- Accountable for all actions to citizens
- Public Integrity, safeguards
- Citizens charter
15A Framework for Improving Government Performance
Mandate
Authorizing Environment
Operational Capacity
Outputs, Results, Outcomes
16(No Transcript)
17Tools for Results Oriented Managementexternal,
citizen focus
18Performance Budgeting How?
- International Experiences
19Theory to Reality
Diversification in Implementation
20Alternate 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 (?)
21Output Orientation under the Malaysian and NZ
Models
- Program agreements monitored for achievement in
outputs and impacts - Output budgeting
- Activity based costing
- capital charging
- Accrual accounting
- Monitoring governments net worth
22Singapore 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
23U.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.
24U.S. Experience with PB Montgomery Country,
Maryland
Source Office of Management and Budget,
Montgomery Country. Montgomery Measures Up! For
the Year 2002
25Conclusions
- 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.