1st Edition

Policy and Politics in State Budgeting

    398 Pages
    by Routledge

    398 Pages
    by Routledge

    States are the key to contemporary government reform efforts in the United States, but we know very little about their relative effectiveness at resource allocation and their actual capacity to absorb additional fiscal and managerial responsibilities. This path-breaking study examines state budget offices as institutional actors, with special attentio to the role of budget examiners. Drawing on empirical findings from field studies of eleven states in the American heartland, the authors demonstrate how budgeting at the state level has become more policy-oriented, requiring complex decision making by budget analysts. The incrementalist model of budgetary decision-making thus gives way to a multiple rationalities model. The authors illustrate the decision-making model with the story of two office examiners who have distinctly different orientations as they begin their work, and contrast the different decision nationalities that come into play for them at different points in a typical budget cycle. The book includes a comprehensive bibliography of historical and modern writings on state budgeting operations, activities, and decision-making; state budgeting cycles; and the state-level policy development process.

    List of Tables, Figures, and Boxes Preface Acknowledgments Chapter 1. Introduction Chapter 2. The State Budget Office and the Budget Problem Chapter 3. Budget Rationalities: Effectiveness Decisions Chapter 4. Budget Rationalities: Efficiency Decisions Chapter 5. Budget Office Orientations and Decision Contexts Chapter 6. The Anatomy of a Policy Oriented Budget Recommendation Chapter 7. The Anatomy of a Control Oriented Budget Recommendation Chapter 8. Changing Roles: From Guarding the Purse to Guarding the Policy Chapter 9. Conclusion Notes References Index

    Biography

    Thurmaier, Kurt M.; Willoughby, Katherine G.