"Priority-based budgeting encourages governments to engage with citizens, measure their expectations, and factor this feedback into their budgetary decisions."
Many municipalities across the U.S. are caught in never-ending cycles of financial trouble. These governments find themselves burdened by budget deficits and massive debts that simply pile up over the years. Sometimes, the situation gets so out of hand that they have to file for bankruptcy — a rare but devastating last resort.
When governments fall into so deep a financial hole, it can be very difficult for them to climb out of it. It takes money to reverse the situation — but where does this money come from?
However, raising taxes also comes with its own set of hang-ups. If economic growth hasn’t kept up with projected growth surrounding debt limits, it becomes extremely difficult to keep increasing taxes year after year. Eventually, these constantly rising taxes will induce a mass exodus of residents, which will only make the situation worse.
The resultant shrinking tax base is a worst-case scenario for a local government balancing its budget. Not to mention that even after the economy begins to rebound, most governments cannot immediately respond because they need to wait until they have formulated and executed their annual or biannual budgets.
There’s no question that the cards are stacked against cash-strapped municipalities, but it certainly isn’t impossible for them to get back on track.
Making Better Budgetary Decisions
Governments that rely primarily on sales tax revenue are searching high and low for a quick and easy way to minimize expenditures without sacrificing the services they provide. Often, they’ll wisely look to their vast collections of business data for answers, but they’ll find themselves drowning in too much outdated, disorganized, and irrelevant information. In fact, anywhere from 70 to 80 percent of all corporate business intelligence projects fail for these very reasons.
When governments can’t glean useful insights from their mountains of data, it’s nearly impossible for them to build anything that resembles an effective budgeting road map.
Tech-driven strategic methodologies and cloud-based applications brought us into this era of big data, and they can also help us thrive within it. Here are three potential solutions to the public sector’s budgetary issues:
Priority-Based Budgeting. Join the growing ranks of local governments adopting priority-based budgeting in their attempts to overcome fiscal challenges and unsustainability. This methodology provides cities with a comprehensive review of every program they offer, along with their costs and their effectiveness, helping them prioritize and align available tax dollars to the most important programs.Priority-based budgeting also encourages governments to engage with citizens, measure their expectations, and factor this feedback into their budgetary decisions. The Center for Priority Based Budgeting has introduced intuitive web-based platforms that reshape the way communities can influence how their resources are leveraged.
Local governments are no strangers to financial issues, and some of their common practices only make the problems worse. By consolidating their existing applications and data silos into one cloud platform that offers fresh and strategic budgetary methodologies such as priority-based budgeting, local governments can achieve more stability and visibility and can pave the way to a brighter future.
The Center for Priority Based Budgeting
“A Prioritized World”
2016 Annual (Un)Conference
Denver, Colorado | August 2 - 4, 2016
Sheraton Denver Downtown Hotel
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