The Evolution of Local Government Budgeting in Poland: From Accounting to Policy in a Leap and a Bound
The evolution of U.S. public budgeting has been described by Schick (1966) as a progression from a control orientation to a management and then a planning orientation. Lee (1992) has tracked the evolution of central budgeting staff largely from a group of accountants to a more varied set of backgrou...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Public budgeting & finance 1994, Vol.14 (4), p.84-97 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The evolution of U.S. public budgeting has been described by Schick (1966) as a progression from a control orientation to a management and then a planning orientation. Lee (1992) has tracked the evolution of central budgeting staff largely from a group of accountants to a more varied set of backgrounds, dominated by public administration and general liberal arts educations. As Poland decentralizes fiscal and administrative responsibilities and powers to gminas (local self‐governments), the gmina councils are beginning to view the budget as more than a financial accounting tool proscribed and prescribed by the central government. They are beginning to see the potential for using the budget as a policy and management tool. The evolutionary transformation of budgeting, which took fifty years in the United States, may take only five years in Poland. The evidence for this metamorphosis is based on interviews with several gmina city budgeters, with special attention devoted to the city of Lublin. |
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ISSN: | 0275-1100 1540-5850 |
DOI: | 10.1111/1540-5850.01022 |