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Performance Budgeting and Management

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PART training for OMB and agencies - mid February. PART drafts due - March 30. ... PARTs published on ExpectMore.gov - mid August. 8. PART Questions. Four sections ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Performance Budgeting and Management


1
Performance Budgeting and Performance Management
in the U.S. Government Lessons from the PART
Initiative
John Pfeiffer U.S. Office of Management and
Budget jpfeiffer_at_omb.eop.gov Presentation at a
World Bank Brown-Bag Seminar June 6, 2007
2
Overview
  • Background
  • PART Process
  • PART Questions
  • Challenges
  • PARTWeb and ExpectMore.gov
  • How OMB Manages the PART Initiative

3
What is the PART?
  • The Program Assessment Rating Tool is a
    diagnostic tool used to assess program
    performance and to drive improvements.
  • The PART is designed to provide a consistent
    approach to assessing and rating programs across
    the Federal government.
  • PART assessments review overall program
    effectiveness, from design through implementation
    and results.
  • Once completed, PART reviews help inform budget
    decisions and identify actions to improve
    results.
  • Agencies are held accountable for implementing
    PART follow-up actions, i.e., improvement plans,
    for each program.

4
When We Began in 2002
  • Many systems in place to collect and report data
  • Unclear relationship between strategic and annual
    goals
  • Tendency to measure what we could instead of what
    we should
  • Uneven attention to performance measurement
  • Lots of measures, but priorities not transparent
  • Performance data used more for reporting than
    decision-making

5
Where We Are TodayDistribution of Cumulative
Ratings 2002 - 2006
6
PART Process
  • The PART questionnaire is divided into four
    sections program purpose/design, planning,
    management, and results/accountability.
  • Answers must be clearly explained and cite
    relevant supporting evidence, such as agency
    performance information, independent evaluations,
    and financial information.
  • Answers translate into section scores weighted to
    generate an overall score and rating Effective,
    Moderately Effective, Adequate, Ineffective.
  • Programs without performance measures or data are
    rated Results Not Demonstrated.
  • Additional questions are asked about particular
    types of programs Block/Formula Grant, Capital
    Assets and Service Acquisition, Competitive
    Grant, Credit, Direct Federal, Regulatory-based ,
    Research Development.

7
2007 PART Schedule (p. vii)
  • 2007 PARTs identified - January 19.
  • PARTWeb available for data entry - January 22.
  • Questionnaire guidance available - January 29.
  • PART training for OMB and agencies - mid
    February.
  • PART drafts due - March 30.
  • Consistency check performance measures review -
    May 3-10.
  • OMB revises PARTs passes back results to
    agencies - May 18
  • Agencies submit appeals - May 25.
  • Summaries improvement plans ready for
    ExpectMore.gov - July 9.
  • Data entry locked - August 3.
  • PARTs published on ExpectMore.gov - mid August.

8
PART Questions
  • Four sections
  • I. Program Purpose and Design (20)
  • II. Strategic Planning (10)
  • III. Program Management (20)
  • IV. Results (50)

9
Section I Program Purpose and Design (pp. 16-22)
  • 20 weight of total score
  • Clarity and relevance of program purpose
  • Soundness of program design
  • Addresses programs structural issues
  • Clear design and purpose an essential for
    identifying performance measures

10
Section II Strategic Planning(pp. 23-37)
  • 10 of total score, with links to Section IV
    questions
  • Addresses program plans and approach to long-term
    goals
  • Programs must have long-term and annual
    performance measures and ambitious targets
  • Emphasizes independent, quality performance
    evaluations, plus budget transparency and
    budget-performance integration

11
Section III Program Management(pp. 38-54)
  • 20 of total score
  • Addresses
  • Accountability of managers, performance of
    partners
  • Coordination with related programs
  • Financial management and efficiency improvements
  • Correction of deficiencies
  • Do programs have procedures in place to measure
    and achieve efficiencies and cost effectiveness?

12
Section IVProgram Results/Accountability(pp.
55-61)
  • 50 of total score
  • Assesses achievement of long-term and annual
    performance and efficiency goals
  • Compares actual performance to targets
    (identified in Sections II and III)
  • Effectiveness in achieving goals based on
    independent evaluations
  • Compares with performance of similar programs

13
Performance Measures are Central to the PART
  • Allows tailoring to the specific program
  • Results are the most valuable information
    product of the PART
  • Takes most time in completing the PART
  • Biggest determinant of overall score and rating
  • Updated regularly to help keep PART information
    current

14
How PART improves performance measurement
  • Outcome-oriented long-term measures reflecting
    program purpose
  • Outcome-oriented annual measures that directly
    support long-term goals
  • If goals are outputs, must explain how they
    reflect progress toward desired outcomes
  • Challenging but realistic quantifiable targets
    and timeframes
  • Clear baseline from which to measure changes in
    performance
  • Credit in results section tied to measures in
    strategic planning section
  • Performance measures used to manage
  • Accountability for achieving performance goals

15
Where performance measures are today
  • Of programs assessed
  • 86 have long term measures
  • 72 have ambitious targets for long-term measures
  • 87 have annual measures
  • 72 have ambitious targets for annual measures

16
Examples of Improved Measures
  • Coast Guard Aids to Navigation
  • Old focus Percentage of time radio navigational
    systems available
  • Current focus Five year average of number of
    collisions, allisions, and groundings
  • National Bone Marrow Donor Registry
  • Old focus Number of donors in registry
  • Current focus Number of transplants facilitated
    and post-transplant survival rate
  • Leaking Underground Storage Tanks
  • Old focus Number of clean-ups completed
  • Current focus Number of clean-ups that exceed
    state risk-based standards for human exposure and
    ground water migration
  • Community Health Centers
  • Old focus Numbers and characteristics of
    persons served and services provided
  • Current focus Heath outcomes such as low birth
    weight babies
  • Small Business Development Centers
  • Old focus Number of small businesses counseled
    or trained
  • Current focus Number of jobs created (new
    businesses v. old businesses)

17
Performance Measures
  • Outcome Events or conditions external to the
    program and of direct importance to the public,
    beneficiaries and/or customers. They relate to
    the programs mission, purpose, and strategic
    goals.
  • Output Internal program activities products
    and services delivered to the public,
    beneficiaries.
  • Efficiency Reflect economical and effective
    acquisition, use, and management of resources to
    achieve program outcomes or produce program
    outputs.
  • Outcome efficiency
  • Output efficiency
  • Input productivity

18
Performance Goals
  • Targets Improved levels of performance needed
    to achieve stated goals.
  • Programs must have ambitious but realistic,
    achievable targets and timeframes for performance
    measures.
  • Together, measures, targets, and timeframes
    establish the programs performance goals.

19
Program Evaluations
  • Scope - Examine underlying cause and effect
    relationship between program and achievement of
    performance targets.
  • Independence - Performed by non-biased parties
    with no conflict of interest.
  • Quality
  • Applicability All programs expected to undergo
    some type of evaluation.
  • Impact Prefer effectiveness evaluations
    (outcome, e.g., whether Federal intervention
    makes a difference).
  • Rigor The most rigorous evidence that is
    appropriate and feasible for that program.

20
Does It Ever End?
  • Steps after PARTs are completed
  • Draft summaries for ExpectMore.gov
  • Spring Updates in PARTWeb
  • Complete Improvement Plans
  • All programs must have, regardless of PART rating
  • Focus on findings in the PART assessment
  • Implement plans and report on progress
  • ExpectMore.gov release mid-August

21
Challenges Lessons to Learn Quickly
  • Share drafts, communicate frequently.
  • Use clear, direct language.
  • Stick to deadlines.
  • Dont take the PART personally.
  • Rely on evidence, not anecdotes.

22
Challenges Measurement
  • Uneven quality of performance measures in PARTs
  • Several areas difficult to measure
  • Increasing the timeliness of performance
    reporting
  • Consistency agencies and OMB answer some
    questions differently

23
Challenges Program Evaluation
  • Want to promote evaluation to measure and improve
    program design, implementation, and
    effectiveness, including cost-effectiveness..
  • Evaluations are not used enough to assess impact
    and improve performance
  • Decision makers do not appreciate and,
    consequently, do not routinely invest in
    evaluations.
  • Technical complexity can make them hard to
    understand and thus undermine confidence in
    results.

24
Challenges Improvement Plans
  • Aggressiveness varies
  • Unclear how they impact program results (versus
    PART score)
  • Uneven attention to plans across agencies and OMB

25
Challenges Improving Performance
  • Improving PART score versus improving performance
  • Ensuring that program managers are empowered and
    accountable
  • Assessing improvement plans fairly
  • Sharing good approaches and models

26
Challenges Impact
  • Executive Branch
  • Management, funding, or authorization decisions
    are not regularly based on the PART
  • Presidents Management Agenda Budget and
    Performance Integration initiative is being used
    to leverage greater use of PART results
  • Congress
  • Rare, diverse references to PART
  • Not the basis for legislative action
  • Few oppose vigorously
  • Crosscutting
  • Opportunity for collaboration among like programs

27
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28
ExpectMore.gov Summary
29
PART Resources Online
  • www.omb.gov/part
  • Information on process and schedule
  • Guidance for completing PART
  • PARTWeb link, users manual
  • Supporting materials
  • www.ExpectMore.gov

30
How OMB Manages the PART Initiative
31
Presidents Management Agenda
  • A strategy for improving Federal management and
    performance with five government-wide and nine
    agency-specific goals.
  • Strategic Management of Human Capital
  • Competitive Sourcing
  • Improved Financial Performance
  • Expanded Electronic Government
  • Budget and Performance Integration
  • The President directed agency heads to designate
    a Chief Operating Officer for day-to-day
    operations.
  • The President designated the Presidents
    Management Council (PMC) as an integrating
    mechanism for policy implementation across
    government, headed by OMBs Deputy Director for
    Management and comprised of the COOs.

32
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33
BUDGET AND PERFORMANCE INTEGRATIONCriteria for
Achieving GREEN
Senior managers meet at least quarterly to
examine reports integrating financial and
performance information for all major Department
responsibilities. Agency works to improve
program performance and efficiency each
year Strategic plans contain a limited number of
outcome-oriented goals and objectives. Annual
budget and performance documents incorporate
measures identified in the PART and focus on the
information in the senior management
report Reports the full cost of achieving
performance goals accurately in budget and
performance documents and can accurately estimate
the marginal cost of changing performance
goals Has at least one efficiency measure for
all PARTed programs Uses PART evaluations to
direct program improvements and hold managers
accountable for them, and uses PART findings and
performance information to justify funding
requests, management actions, and legislative
proposals and Less than 10 of agency programs
receive a Results Not Demonstrated rating for two
years in a row. To maintain green status,
agency Improves program performance and
efficiency each year and Uses marginal cost
analysis to inform resource allocations, as
appropriate.
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