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Topic: Budget 1Co) ncept 2Si) gnificance of Budget 3T)ypes of Budgeting 4Bu) dget Policy Orientations in India 5M) ajor Actors in Budgetary Process in India 6Bu) dget Cycle I India Budget • Budgeting is concerned with allocating limited resources to problems that governments and other public organisations face. Budget refers to the estimated receipts and expenditure of the government. • The word “budget” is derived from a French word “bougette” which means a Leather bag or sack. Budgeting is the heart of financial administration Leroy Beaulieo defines budget as ‘a statement of the estimated receipts and expenses during a fixed period’. According to Remo Storm it is ‘a document containing a preliminary approval plan of public revenue and expenditure. • the budget is a plan of action and manifests the programme of the chief executive for the ensuing financial year. It is an instrument through which the several operations are correlated, compared and examined at one and the same time. The real significance of the budget system lies in providing for the orderly administration of the financial affairs of a government. It is, thus, much more than a mere statement of revenue and expenditure of the government. Significance • Budget is one of the major instruments for the expression of a government’s programme. It has a vital role to play in the economy of a welfare state. Through a budget, citizens are benefited from various plans and programmes of the government. The government tries to narrow down the class distinctions and inequalities through its taxation policy. • The budget policy of the government aims at removal of poverty, unemployment, social and economic inequalities in society. By imposing heavy taxation upon articles of consumption, it can encourage investment, and thus, promote the economic growth of the nation. By taxing the rich, it can mitigate economic inequality. The signs of the welfare state are reflected in the budget with its heavy outlay on social services and the like. In this way, it is an instrument of socioeconomic change. • Budget also acts as an allocator of social resources. Because people cannot always acquire all goods and services that they need for themselves; they must rely on others for help. It is the government which allocates society’s resources by mandating that taxes be collected and then by deciding where those taxes are spent. Governmental allocations are necessary because the market mechanism is not adequate to serve all societal needs. • Budgeting is the heart of administrative management. It serves as a powerful tool of coordination, an effective device of eliminating duplication and wastage. • The budget is many things-an economist view it as a device of influencing the country’s economy, the politician employs it for defending or criticizing the government, the administrator uses it as a framework for communication and coordination as well as for exercising administrative discipline throughout the administrative structure. Types of Budget The objectives of all budgets include regulating unnecessary government spending and waste. However, different types of budgets vary in their spending provisions. • Line-item Budget: this is the earliest system of budgeting which was designed to control governmental expenditure and activities. A line-item budget is simply the allocation of resources according to the cost of each item, from paperclips to personnel, used by a governmental agency. It operates on a pay-as-you-go basis and is designed to reveal exactly how much has been spent on what. • Performance Budgeting: performance budgeting a narrative describing an agency’s work in progress, and accomplishments and aims to provide policy-makers with data for measuring work-load and activity costs and to tell the public whether they are getting their money’s worth. The idea behind performance budgeting is that how much you spent on department x is tied directly to how well department x is performing. Performance budgeting requires the establishment of performance levels and the collection of information that tells weather those performance levels have been met. • Planning, programming and budgeting system: Planning, programming and budgeting system (PPBS) emerged as a reaction to the unscientific and disjointed planning in preparing the budget. PPBS evaluates policy by dividing it into separate programmes and quantifying their gains and losses. A basic element of programme budgeting-cost- benefit analysis-systematically weighs the cost of a project against the amount of benefit-in terms of money or material saved or earned-that an agency or department can expect in return. • Zero-based budgeting: the zero-based budgeting (ZBB) is the allocation of resources to agencies on the basis of those agencies periodically re-evaluating the need for all of the programmes for which the agency is responsible and justifying the continuance or termination of each programme in the agency budget proposal. This leads the allocating agencies to warn such funding schemes which are sick or irrelevant to the ground realities of socioeconomic life. • Gender Budgeting: it is process that entails incorporating a gender perspective at various stages of budgeting, that is, planning, policy formulation, assessment of needs of target groups, allocation of resources, implementation, impact assessment, and repriorotization of resources. The main objective of gender budgeting is to bring out a gender-responsive budget. Gender budgeting is understood as a dissection of the government budget to establish its gender-differential impacts to translate gender commitments into budgetary comitments.
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