The application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (PPBS) to project expenditure classification in the Canadian federal government

The objective of this study is to investigate planning-programming-budgeting systems (PPBS) as a method for rationalizing public expenditure decisions, and the evaluation of subsequent performance within the framework of the Canadian Federal Government. Based on a research of the literature, the ra...

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Main Author: Royce, Paul Joseph
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2011
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/32473
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-324732018-01-05T17:46:40Z The application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (PPBS) to project expenditure classification in the Canadian federal government Royce, Paul Joseph Program budgeting -- Canada The objective of this study is to investigate planning-programming-budgeting systems (PPBS) as a method for rationalizing public expenditure decisions, and the evaluation of subsequent performance within the framework of the Canadian Federal Government. Based on a research of the literature, the rationale for such a system is presented, together with a detailed description of its operational mechanics, impact and areas which might cause difficulty in its practical implementation throughout the Federal Government. An operational casting study from a small field organization is presented to illustrate the data requirements and the problem of obtaining the relevant information with a traditional budgeting system. The thesis concludes that despite the commitment to PPBS at the Cabinet and Senior Executive level within the Canadian Federal Government, this has not yet penetrated to the operational managers in the field departments who will be increasingly required to think in these terms if the approach is to be successfully implemented throughout the sphere of government operations. Several recommendations are made to enable the approach to be installed at the operational level, not the least of which is a management education programme to outline the concepts, aims and requirements of PPBS as it affects managers at this level. The measurement of benefits and the problem of joint costs are mentioned as two vital areas which have as yet not been fully considered within the government and are overdue far detailed study. In conclusion it is hoped that this dissertation outlines the disparity between the allocation process as it is outlined by senior government officials, and the process as it actually occurs within the field, making suggestions to enable the PPBS approach to be both accepted and workable at the field organisation level. Business, Sauder School of Graduate 2011-03-15T20:23:44Z 2011-03-15T20:23:44Z 1973 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/32473 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Program budgeting -- Canada
spellingShingle Program budgeting -- Canada
Royce, Paul Joseph
The application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (PPBS) to project expenditure classification in the Canadian federal government
description The objective of this study is to investigate planning-programming-budgeting systems (PPBS) as a method for rationalizing public expenditure decisions, and the evaluation of subsequent performance within the framework of the Canadian Federal Government. Based on a research of the literature, the rationale for such a system is presented, together with a detailed description of its operational mechanics, impact and areas which might cause difficulty in its practical implementation throughout the Federal Government. An operational casting study from a small field organization is presented to illustrate the data requirements and the problem of obtaining the relevant information with a traditional budgeting system. The thesis concludes that despite the commitment to PPBS at the Cabinet and Senior Executive level within the Canadian Federal Government, this has not yet penetrated to the operational managers in the field departments who will be increasingly required to think in these terms if the approach is to be successfully implemented throughout the sphere of government operations. Several recommendations are made to enable the approach to be installed at the operational level, not the least of which is a management education programme to outline the concepts, aims and requirements of PPBS as it affects managers at this level. The measurement of benefits and the problem of joint costs are mentioned as two vital areas which have as yet not been fully considered within the government and are overdue far detailed study. In conclusion it is hoped that this dissertation outlines the disparity between the allocation process as it is outlined by senior government officials, and the process as it actually occurs within the field, making suggestions to enable the PPBS approach to be both accepted and workable at the field organisation level. === Business, Sauder School of === Graduate
author Royce, Paul Joseph
author_facet Royce, Paul Joseph
author_sort Royce, Paul Joseph
title The application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (PPBS) to project expenditure classification in the Canadian federal government
title_short The application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (PPBS) to project expenditure classification in the Canadian federal government
title_full The application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (PPBS) to project expenditure classification in the Canadian federal government
title_fullStr The application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (PPBS) to project expenditure classification in the Canadian federal government
title_full_unstemmed The application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (PPBS) to project expenditure classification in the Canadian federal government
title_sort application of planning-programming-budgeting-systems (ppbs) to project expenditure classification in the canadian federal government
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2011
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/32473
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