A systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social services

The aim of this thesis is to examine the specific contextual factors affecting the applicability and development of the planning, programming, budgeting system (P.P.B.S.) as a systems approach to public sector budgeting. The concept of P.P.B.S. as a systems approach to public sector budgeting will f...

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Main Author: Smalley, Terrence
Published: Aston University 1979
Subjects:
320
Online Access:http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.473024
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spelling ndltd-bl.uk-oai-ethos.bl.uk-4730242017-04-20T03:25:35ZA systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social servicesSmalley, Terrence1979The aim of this thesis is to examine the specific contextual factors affecting the applicability and development of the planning, programming, budgeting system (P.P.B.S.) as a systems approach to public sector budgeting. The concept of P.P.B.S. as a systems approach to public sector budgeting will first be developed and the preliminary hypothesis that general contextual factors may be classified under political, structural and cognitive headings will be put forward. This preliminary hypothesis will be developed and refined using American and early British experience. The refined hypothesis will then be tested in detail in the case of the English health and personal social services (H,P'9'S,), The reasons for this focus are that it is the most recent, the sole remaining, and the most significant example in British central government outside of defence, and is fairly representative of non-defence government programme areas. The method of data collection relies on the examination of unpublished and difficult to obtain central government, health and local authority documents, and interviews with senior civil servants and public officials. The conclusion will be that the political constraints on, or factors affecting, p.P.B.S, vary with product characteristics and cultural imperatives on pluralistic decision-making; that structural constraintsvary with the degree of coincidence of programme and organisation structure and with the degree of controllability of the organisation; and finally, that cognitive constraints vary according to product characteristics, organisational responsibilities, and analytical effort.320Management studiesAston Universityhttp://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.473024http://publications.aston.ac.uk/12099/Electronic Thesis or Dissertation
collection NDLTD
sources NDLTD
topic 320
Management studies
spellingShingle 320
Management studies
Smalley, Terrence
A systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social services
description The aim of this thesis is to examine the specific contextual factors affecting the applicability and development of the planning, programming, budgeting system (P.P.B.S.) as a systems approach to public sector budgeting. The concept of P.P.B.S. as a systems approach to public sector budgeting will first be developed and the preliminary hypothesis that general contextual factors may be classified under political, structural and cognitive headings will be put forward. This preliminary hypothesis will be developed and refined using American and early British experience. The refined hypothesis will then be tested in detail in the case of the English health and personal social services (H,P'9'S,), The reasons for this focus are that it is the most recent, the sole remaining, and the most significant example in British central government outside of defence, and is fairly representative of non-defence government programme areas. The method of data collection relies on the examination of unpublished and difficult to obtain central government, health and local authority documents, and interviews with senior civil servants and public officials. The conclusion will be that the political constraints on, or factors affecting, p.P.B.S, vary with product characteristics and cultural imperatives on pluralistic decision-making; that structural constraintsvary with the degree of coincidence of programme and organisation structure and with the degree of controllability of the organisation; and finally, that cognitive constraints vary according to product characteristics, organisational responsibilities, and analytical effort.
author Smalley, Terrence
author_facet Smalley, Terrence
author_sort Smalley, Terrence
title A systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social services
title_short A systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social services
title_full A systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social services
title_fullStr A systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social services
title_full_unstemmed A systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social services
title_sort systems approach to public sector budgeting: the case of the planning, programming, budgeting system for the health and personal social services
publisher Aston University
publishDate 1979
url http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.473024
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AT smalleyterrence systemsapproachtopublicsectorbudgetingthecaseoftheplanningprogrammingbudgetingsystemforthehealthandpersonalsocialservices
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