Title: Week 13: Performance Management and Performance Budgeting
1Week 13 Performance Management and Performance
Budgeting
- Discuss BCP Assignment and Presentation Order
- Conceptual Origins of Performance Management
- Government Performance and Results Act (GPRA)
- Strategic Planning
- Performance Measurement
- Performance Budgeting
- Examples in setting goals, objectives, measures
2Why Performance Management?
- Context
- Public dissatisfaction with government
- Reinventing Government 1992
- Intractable problems (crime, health care,
education) - Fiscal crises
- Goals
- Better management
- More effective and efficient government programs
- Better accountability
- More Congressional oversight -- especially of
cross cutting programs
3Key Tenets of Performance Management
- Mission-driven organizations/culture change
- Outcomes orientation (as opposed to inputs)
- Customer and service focus
- Use of performance information (program and
personnel) - Incentives and rewards
- Deregulation/flexibility for program managers
- Decentralization/empowering employees
- Accountability
- Strategic Plan linked to budget (performance
budgeting)
4Outcomes Orientation Challenges
- Outcomes are hard to measure
- Outcomes are usually not controllable by any one
agency - Outcomes are often long-term
- Consequences of negative outcomes (for managers
and politicians)
- Inputs
- Process
- Outputs
- Outcomes
5Government Performance and Results Act (1993)
- Components
- strategic plans, performance plans, performance
reports - pilots performance budgeting managerial
flexibility - Status report (GAO)
- some improved use of measures and data
- strategies discussed in terms of performance
goals - limited organizational capacity to collect and
use data - results orientation limited esp. cross-cutting
programs - need to show performance consequences of budget
- Future Prospects
- Pre-Bush lowered expectations limited Congr.
interest - Bush era re-orienting from a Clinton program
6Strategic Planning
- A key part of performance management
- Definition a disciplined effort to produce
fundamental decisions and actions that shape and
guide what an organization is, what it does, and
why it does it - Process for determining direction, purpose,
priorities - takes into account strengths and environment
- Benefits
- develops a framework for decision making
- focuses organization on key issues
- look across organizational boundaries
- helps take charge of change
7Strategic Planning Process
- Common, useful steps
- convene stakeholders
- develop mission statement
- look at internal and external environment
- identify key issues
- create vision
- Keys to success
- fit with organizational culture
- champions for the process at high levels
- evidence that the plan matters--that its used
8Integrated Planning at CSU, Sacramento
Planning
Assessment
Resource Allocation
9Evolution of CSUS Strategic Plan and Planning
Process
- From unit plans to Strategic Plan (eight themes)
- Linking plan and budget resource priorities
- Impact on budget process requests must address
resource priorities - Adding assessment (evaluation)
- search for measures and standards
- Improve objectives
- more specific
- more measurable
- Tighten and explain the budget links (more next
week) - Strategic Plan is dynamic
10Performance Measurement Defined
- American Society for Public Administration
- A method of measuring the progress of a public
program or activity in achieving the results or
outcomes that clients, customers., or
stakeholders expect.
11Performance Measurement
- Purposes and audiences
- For policy makers to determine program success
and relative priorities - Public accountability
- symbolic value
- actual information
- Information for managers to increase
effectiveness of organizations -
- Discussion questions
- What if objective measures of performance diverge
from perceived measures (citizen satisfaction
levels)? - Does better performance result in higher level of
citizen satisfaction?
12Performance Measurement Vocabulary
- Clarify the differences among
- objectives
- performance measures (or indicators)
- value for a performance measure
- benchmark or standard
- Objective the intended result of a program or
service - Performance measure a basis for reporting
outcomes - Value on performance measure the score or
outcome - Benchmark a standard to which to compare the
score -
- Policy outcome v program outcome--useful to
distinguish what outcomes are within agencys
control
13Performance Budgeting
- Definition Systematic incorporation of
performance information into the budgetary
process - Basic Requirements
- availability of performance information
- use of that information in budgetary decision
making - program structure (or at least program thinking)
- Program -- a set of related functions that
contribute to a common goal - Programs should not be defined around
- organizational structure
- funding source
14Relating Performance Measures to Budgeting
- Purpose of the budget process
- To help decision makers make informed choices
about the provision of goods and services and to
promote stakeholder participation in the process - Ideal performance budget helps decision makers
understand performance consequences of budget
decisions - Good performance budget helps decision makers
connect to program results to try to affect
outcomes
15Performance Budgeting in Theory
- improvement over line-item budgeting
- focus on performance, not compliance
- connects resource needs to results (tight links)
- integrates performance information into budget
structures and budget process - provides for informed choices impact of
support levels - improves accountability
- improves management
16Steps in Performance Budgeting
- Establish a program plan (mission/goals/objectives
) - Select means to measure results
(measures/indicators) - Set performance targets (or standards)
- Determine strategies for meeting targets
- Provide cost projections for meeting strategies
- Allocate funds based on cost projections
- Collect data on performance measures (the
measurements) - Adjust funding???
17Performance Budgeting in Practice
- hard to define and measure outcomes
- hard to tie dollars to outcomes
- many factors outside control of agency and long
term - limited knowledge of cause/effect relationships
- budget structures dont match program structures
- loose linkages with budget at best
- greatest benefit is internal to organization
- possible perverse incentives whats measured
gets done
18History of Performance Budgeting
- 1949 Hoover Commission
- Planning-Programming-Budgeting-System (PPBS)
LBJ 1965 - Management by Objective Nixon 1973
- Zero-Base Budgeting (ZBB) Carter 1977
- GPRA Clinton 1993
-
- States primary use of perf. budg. is at agency
level, not in central budget office or
legislative budget process - Cities
- less than half of cities gt25,000 use performance
measures - less than ¼ have centralized perf monitoring
systems
19Questions to Consider in Developing Performance
Budget
- Are the program purposes and outcomes clear?
- Can you determine the service effort and
accomplishments? - Are major funding issues highlighted and
supported with performance data? - Does the narrative and performance information
tell the main budget story in a manner that is
easy to understand?
20Performance Budgeting Issues
- Rationality revisited
- is performance budgeting just another attempt to
rid budgeting of politics? - What should be the consequences of agencies not
meeting their performance goals? - Rewards v incentives?
- Rewards to unit budget or individuals (salaries)?
- Will managers focus too much on technical
measurement and lose sight of meaningful results? - Are outcomes really what we should be measuring?
- does it depend on goal/audience?
21State-level Initiatives in Performance Management
- Most states have performance budgeting
requirement (some legal, some executive order) - great variation in degree of actual linkage to
budget - more valuable as management tool
- California
- executive order for strategic planning
- Performance and Results Act of 1993
- set up performance budgeting pilots
- not a priority for Davis administration pilots
not being continued - Grade C from Governing
22Preview of Week 14
- Workbook on performance measures
- Last memo due (not counting portfolio reflection)
- performance measures
- Class exercises on developing performance measures