Title: Achieving the Benefits of Accruals in a Cash Environment
1Achieving the Benefits of Accruals in a Cash
Environment
- Justine Kilpatrick
- U.S. Office of Management and Budget
- 6th Annual OECD Public Sector
- Accrual Symposium
2Separation of Powers
- The United States is characterized by separation
of powers between the Legislature and Executive.
Power has also been divided by party for most of
the 1970s through 1990s. - Congress does not vote on the budget as a whole,
but on authorizing laws and 13 Appropriations,
which they may modify in substance and detail. - No money shall be drawn from the Treasury, but
in Consequence of Appropriations made by Law.
3Controlled, Yet Flexible
- Each section of an Appropriations Act that
provides an amount of funding available for a
specified time and for a specified purpose is
tracked in a separate Treasury account. - The budget is not simply cash outlays. Budget
authority may be enacted for single or multiple
years. While obligations must be in those years,
outlays may occur whenever the obligations are
liquidated.
4The Principle Cost Up Front
- The budget is a financial plan for allocating
resources within the government and between
government and the rest of the economy. Cost up
front helps to control execution of the intended
allocation. - Requiring budget authority for full cost up front
provides the appropriate information and
incentives when comparing the cost of a program
against its benefits, the cost/benefit of one
program with another, and the cost of alternative
means of achieving a specified goal.
5Pulling Up Financial Transactions
- For exchange financial transactions, the net
present value of cash flows pulls cost up front. - This approach is used to budget for direct loans
and loan guarantees under credit reform. - Net present value is appropriate for insurance
programs also. Skill at estimating insurance
program costs is improving, but not yet used for
budgeting. - NPV is used to pull up front the full BA for
capital leases. Operating leases budget for
annual plus close-out costs.
6Budgeting for Capital Up Front
- A task force under President Reagan and a public
Commission under President Clinton assessed
whether cost up front was the best way to budget
for capital. Both concluded that cost up front
was right. - The Reagan Task Force developed the concept of a
useful segment -- a component of an investment
project with benefits exceeding cost even if
there were no future budget authority. - The Clinton Commission set capital in the context
of strategic planning. They suggested trying out
the use of capital acquisition funds.
7Contentious Issues
- Does everybody have a capital budget? Do they
all budget for depreciation? - Is there a problem of underinvestment? Of
misallocation of investment? - Is there a bias for or against capital?
- Should capital be financed by borrowing? How
does that relate to growth? Equity? - What is the best framework for making investment
decisions? Is it the same for Federal capital as
for national capital?
8Continuing Reforms
- Invest in usable segments so that benefits
exceed cost without more BA. - Follow the Capital Programming Guide for
planning, budgeting, procurement, and management
in use. - Set investment in the context of long-term
strategic and program planning. Budget to achieve
goals effectively. - Oversee budget justification and asset management
throughout government.
9Seeking Results
- The United States is shifting focus to budgeting
and managing for outcomes. - The fourth revision of strategic plans is
underway (1997, 2000, 2003, 2006). - The Program Assessment Rating Tool has been
applied to 800 programs, and made transparent on
ExpectMore.gov. - Annual Performance and Accountability Reports
show agency performance and financial results.
10Budgeting for Results
- Agencies are justifying budgets around strategic
goals and supporting programs. - Funds for each PART have been identified by
Treasury and budget accounts. - Overviews and some whole justifications are
posted on the Web. Congressional interest in
posting all is sprouting. - Web transparency and development of a
government-wide electronic budgeting system could
encourage performance budgeting.
11Matching Cost with Programs
- Align one or two budget accounts or sub-accounts
with each program. Data is available to assess
how close this is. - Appropriate BA for the full resources used by
that program to those accounts. There may be
resistance to doing this. - For most inputs, the budgetary and accrual
measures are relatively close. - Where that is not the case, make payments from
the program to a support account.
12Key Accrual Timing Differences
- Support Account
- Accrual Before Budget
- Retiree Benefits Retirement Fund
- Hazardous Substance Cleanup Fund
- Budget Before Accrual
- Inventory Acquisition Supply, Working
Capital Fund - Capital Acquisition CAF - Capital
Acquisition Fund
13Two Perspectives of Capital
- Retaining the value of cost up front
- Require budget authority for the full cost of a
useful segment with benefits greater than cost
without future budget authority. - Gaining value matching cost to programs
- Get the BA as borrowing authority from Treasury,
and require each program to pay its share of the
mortgage during the assets useful life.
14A Capital Acquisition Fund
Purchase 10 million park facility in year 1
(BA/OL)
Agency CAF
Private Contractor
Collect rent for park facility 800 thousand
each year for 30 years (-BA/-OL)
Borrow 10 million in year 1
Repay principal interest 800 thousand each
year for 30 years
Pay rent for park facility 800 thousand each
year for 30 years (BA/OL)
Operation of Program
Treasury
BA Budget Authority OL Outlays CAF Capital
Acquisition Fund
15Issues in Implementation
- Historical vs Current Cost
- Historical cost permits borrowing and repayment,
which seems logical. - Current cost is theoretically better, but
requires sweeping any gains. - Dealing with Perceptions
- There is no double counting.
- Program cost is not really higher.
- Including Existing Assets
- or else full cost is far in the future
16The Budget Drives Decisions
- Matching cost and results in the budget puts
information on both at the point of
decision-making and provides incentives to
maximize effectiveness and efficiency. - The budget drives and provides context for
policy development and legislation. - The budget allocates resources among purposes
and programs. - Appropriations establish the structure for
budget execution and program management.