| New Releases | | • | The Strong Man: John Mitchell and the Secrets of Watergate | | • | Honor Bound: Inside the Guantanamo Trials | | • | Money Laundering: Federal Criminal Law | | • | Code of Federal Regulations, Title 24, Housing and Urban Development, Pt. 700-1699, Revised as of April 1, 2008 | | • | Code of Federal Regulations, Title 24, Housing and Urban Development, Pt. 0-199, Revised as of April 1, 2008 | | • | Code of Federal Regulations, Title 18, Conservation of Power and Water Resources, Pt. 1-399, Revised as of April 1, 2008 | | • | Justice at War: The Men and Ideas that Shaped America's War on Terror (New York Review Books Collection) | | • | Code of Federal Regulations, Title 20, Employees' Benefits, Pt. 400-499, Revised as of April 1, 2008 | | • | Federal Courts, Cases and Materials (University Casebook Series) | | • | Haiti Energy Policy, Laws and Regulation Handbook (World Law Business Library) |
|
|
|
| Strategic Budgeting |  | Author: Roy T. Meyers Publisher: University of Michigan Press Category: Book
Buy New: $60.00
New (2) Used (7) from $4.87
Sales Rank: 3110562
Media: Hardcover Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 248 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.2 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.1 x 1.1
ISBN: 0472103628 Dewey Decimal Number: 353.007222 EAN: 9780472103621 ASIN: 0472103628
Publication Date: November 15, 1994 Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
|
| Editorial Reviews:
Product Description
Strategic Budgeting offers a new way to understand how federal budget deficits developed. Rejecting the incrementalist theory of budgetary strategy, this study focuses on the micro level--the competitive process of budgeting for individual programs--to advance a theory based on the changing structural characteristics of the budgetary process itself. The book illustrates how advocates for spending have creatively taken advantage of flawed accounting practices to make costs less visible and documents how they designed programs to avoid budgetary controls. Strategic Budgeting also shows how controllers reacted to these tactics by improving accounting rules and budget procedures. The book concludes with practical recommendations for improving the process of budgeting for individual programs.
"[Meyers] spent much of the 1980s as an analyst for the Congressional Budget Office, and so he knows just about every budgeting gimmick there is to know. He traces how flaws in the government's budget data can lead to wildly incorrect assumptions, which in turn can be exploited by clever players with a stake in the budget." --National Journal
Roy T. Meyers is Assistant Professor of Political Science, University of Maryland, Baltimore.
|
|
| Powered by Associate-O-Matic
| |