This paper explores the features of public budgeting that make it resistant to efforts to balance central oversight and situational flexibility. Its aim is to help explain why systemic efforts at budget modernisation in the name of ‘devolution’ may have failed to deliver expanded budget flexibility. After defining flexibility, and briefly surveying how it can be inhibited by budget practices using the example of collaboration, the paper applies a taxonomy of general ‘budget rules’ to illustrate the trade-offs between control and flexibility. It uses an analysis of budget reform in the Australian federal government over the last 30 years to identify a key set of ‘legacy reforms’ – all intended primarily to enable budget flexibility – to show...
Joe Hockey has unveiled the Abbott government\u27s first Budget, one designed to reduce government d...
Participatory Budgeting (PB), an institutional innovation to promote democratic change, is a form of...
People tend to expect both too much and too little of budget rules. Because they are more art (or pe...
The practices and norms of public budgeting have often been seen as a brake on the flexibility neede...
Budgeting reform over the last 25-30 years has been about trying to increase both central control an...
This review of budgeting in Australia concentrates on the national government only. The article firs...
The 1990s saw an era of fiscal consolidation in industrialised countries, which struggled with fisca...
The 1990s saw an era of fiscal consolidation in industrialised countries, which struggled with fisca...
Monetary and fiscal rules are complementary. Whereas monetary policy and monetary institutions have ...
The study of budgetary institutions has long been an important topic in the economic literature. Non...
This paper explores the role of budgeting in the context of the more flexible modes of management re...
In “The economics of the government budget constraint” Stanley Fischer discusses the negative implic...
This paper explores the role of budgeting in the context of the more flexible modes of management re...
textabstractThis paper argues that uncertainty as to the sustainability of a country?s budgetary pos...
Under their constitutions, the various States of Australia have plenary power to make laws for the p...
Joe Hockey has unveiled the Abbott government\u27s first Budget, one designed to reduce government d...
Participatory Budgeting (PB), an institutional innovation to promote democratic change, is a form of...
People tend to expect both too much and too little of budget rules. Because they are more art (or pe...
The practices and norms of public budgeting have often been seen as a brake on the flexibility neede...
Budgeting reform over the last 25-30 years has been about trying to increase both central control an...
This review of budgeting in Australia concentrates on the national government only. The article firs...
The 1990s saw an era of fiscal consolidation in industrialised countries, which struggled with fisca...
The 1990s saw an era of fiscal consolidation in industrialised countries, which struggled with fisca...
Monetary and fiscal rules are complementary. Whereas monetary policy and monetary institutions have ...
The study of budgetary institutions has long been an important topic in the economic literature. Non...
This paper explores the role of budgeting in the context of the more flexible modes of management re...
In “The economics of the government budget constraint” Stanley Fischer discusses the negative implic...
This paper explores the role of budgeting in the context of the more flexible modes of management re...
textabstractThis paper argues that uncertainty as to the sustainability of a country?s budgetary pos...
Under their constitutions, the various States of Australia have plenary power to make laws for the p...
Joe Hockey has unveiled the Abbott government\u27s first Budget, one designed to reduce government d...
Participatory Budgeting (PB), an institutional innovation to promote democratic change, is a form of...
People tend to expect both too much and too little of budget rules. Because they are more art (or pe...