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Deficit Politics and Rational Budgeting Reforms

Explore the challenges of deficit politics, the role of rationality in budgeting, and proposed reforms to the budget process. Discuss the importance of reducing the deficit and examine why it remains a contentious issue. Analyze different models of policy analysis and critique the rational budgeting approach. Evaluate proposed reforms, such as zero-based budgeting, and consider the outcomes and efforts involved. Delve into the role of political leadership in addressing budget deficits and fostering fairness. Examine deficit politics at the state level and compare strategies and proposed reforms. Assess the role of budget analysis in informing decision making and explore conflicts between politics and analysis.

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Deficit Politics and Rational Budgeting Reforms

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  1. Week 5: Deficits, Budget Balancing, Reforms • Week 4 follow up: BCPs – look at sample • Deficit politics – federal • questions raised by Kettl book • rationality in theory • reforms in practice • Kettl’s answers • Deficit politics – state • Proposed reforms: ZBB; new commission • Role of analysis • Budget balancing strategies • class exercise • Preview of week 6

  2. Federal Deficit Politics • Questions raised by Kettl • How important is it to reduce the deficit? • Why can’t we reduce the deficit if most people agree it should be done? • Is the deficit a sign of faulty budget process? • Is it possible to make budget process more rational?

  3. Is/Should/Can the Budget Process be Rational? • What is rationality? • The economics/politics debate • do concepts of economic efficiency and rationality apply to politics? • do they apply to budgeting?

  4. Rationality in Economics and Political Science • Economics • individuals • fixed preferences • maximize expected utility • market mechanism • Economic Rationality Applied to Politics • explains political outcomes as result of self-interested behavior of individuals • citizens/voters as individual consumers • politics is a marketplace • no collective goals or interests • no learning from others or situations • public interest is sum of individual interests

  5. from Deborah Stone’s Policy Paradox:Critique of the Market Model of Politics

  6. Rational-Comprehensive Method: 1. Clarify objective apart from policy choices 2. Ends-means analysis 3. Good policy is the best means to the ends 4. Analysis is comprehensive --accounts for all relevant impact Information is conclusive and authoritative Outcomes projected with certainty Successive Limited Comparisons: Objectives and choices are linked 2. Ends and means not distinct 3. Good policy is one on which agreement can be reached Analysis is always limited 5. Information is ambiguous; subject to interpretation/framing 6. Outcomes rationalized afterward Critique of Rational Model of Policy AnalysisBased on Lindblom: The “Science” of Muddling Through

  7. Rationality in Budgeting: Assumptions of Rational Process • economic, not political • based on analysis • comprehensive review of options • orderly decision rules • allocated funds where they are most needed by objective measures • promote reallocation from lower to higher priorities

  8. Critiques of rational budgeting • Practical critiques: • comprehensive analysis is impossible • asks analysts to do what they cannot • Normative critiques • budgeting is about choosing among values • political process does a better job of solving value problems • political strength of program = deserving of $$ support • incrementalism/bargaining is the most fair • process reflects political system – change system not process • analysis must serve, not replace, politics

  9. Rational Budget Reforms Proposed to replace line-item budgeting – why? • Performance budgeting • links inputs with outputs • Planned Programming Budgeting Systems • link program goals/strategic plans with program costs • Management by Objectives • links manager-driven objectives with budgets • Zero-Based Budgeting • justify all costs above specified level --------------------------------------------------- • Do the outcomes justify the efforts?

  10. Reforms to Budget Process The search for an alternative to political struggle: • Gramm Rudman I, II, III • Line item veto • Balanced budget amendment • Biennial budget

  11. Summarizing Kettl • rationality fixes have failed • technique cannot substitute for political judgment • role of Congress must be honored • implementation problems • process fixes have failed • procedures cannot substitute for political judgment • always a circumvention strategy • procedures cannot force unwanted decisions • creativity and game playing • Other foils: • top-down, centralized process open to interest groups/closed to citizens • anti-tax sentiment • divided party government

  12. Summarizing Kettl -- continued • Solution: political leadership • confront controversy • promote vision and values • promote citizenship and sense of fairness • define the public interest • other characteristics of effective political leadership? • Would a greater sense of fairness of tax and spending policies help? • disconnection between who pays and who benefits • should there be a closer connection?

  13. Deficit Politics—State level • Does the state face the same pressures toward deficits? • Do process or rationality “fixes” have a better chance of success at the state level? • Current deficit • what’s the constituency for budget balance? • what strategies (gimmicks) are being used? • real alternatives – who is proposing them? • Proposed reforms • ZBB • Commission on Government Waste and Inefficiency

  14. Role of Budget Analysis • Are politics and analysis antithetical? • How can analysis serve, rather than replace politics? • What should analysis try to accomplish? • If analysis is rejected by decision makers, is it useless? • What should budget analysts try to accomplish? • Would unlimited analysis achieve rationality? • LAO type of analysis v PPBS, MBO, PB, etc. • More in Week 10

  15. Balancing Budgets -- State and Local • Balanced budget requirement • More intense efforts to hide deficits • Fewer macroeconomic issues to consider • Greater influence of environment on balance/deficit • Deficits don’t (usually) accumulate--problems more tractable • Temporary, not structural deficits -- more fixes available ---------------------------------------------------- Class exercise on balancing bugets

  16. Preview of Week 6 Begin Part II: Context of Public Finance • Readings • Rubin Chapter 2 on revenue politics • Primer on state taxes • LAO section on “perspectives on state revenues” • Guest speaker, Brad Williams, from LAO • process (and politics) for projecting revenues • current issues in state finance

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