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Facing cutbacks in federal and state assistance and a new wave of
taxpayer revolts, local governments have renewed interest in local
government consolidation as a way of achieving efficiencies of
scale in response to citizen demands for services. Yet the vast
majority of consolidation efforts fail, either during the process
of drafting a charter or once they reach the ballot - only five
have passed since 1990; only thirty-two have been successfully
implemented since the first, when the city of New Orleans merged
with Orleans Parish in 1805. What accounts for the high failure
rate and what factors led to successful consolidations? This volume
presents thirteen comparable case studies of consolidation
campaigns and distills the findings.
States are the key to contemporary government reform efforts in the
United States, but we know very little about their relative
effectiveness at resource allocation and their actual capacity to
absorb additional fiscal and managerial responsibilities. This
path-breaking study examines state budget offices as institutional
actors, with special attentio to the role of budget examiners.
Drawing on empirical findings from field studies of eleven states
in the American heartland, the authors demonstrate how budgeting at
the state level has become more policy-oriented, requiring complex
decision making by budget analysts. The incrementalist model of
budgetary decision-making thus gives way to a multiple
rationalities model. The authors illustrate the decision-making
model with the story of two office examiners who have distinctly
different orientations as they begin their work, and contrast the
different decision nationalities that come into play for them at
different points in a typical budget cycle. The book includes a
comprehensive bibliography of historical and modern writings on
state budgeting operations, activities, and decision-making; state
budgeting cycles; and the state-level policy development process.
States are the key to contemporary government reform efforts in the
United States, but we know very little about their relative
effectiveness at resource allocation and their actual capacity to
absorb additional fiscal and managerial responsibilities. This
path-breaking study examines state budget offices as institutional
actors, with special attentio to the role of budget examiners.
Drawing on empirical findings from field studies of eleven states
in the American heartland, the authors demonstrate how budgeting at
the state level has become more policy-oriented, requiring complex
decision making by budget analysts. The incrementalist model of
budgetary decision-making thus gives way to a multiple
rationalities model. The authors illustrate the decision-making
model with the story of two office examiners who have distinctly
different orientations as they begin their work, and contrast the
different decision nationalities that come into play for them at
different points in a typical budget cycle. The book includes a
comprehensive bibliography of historical and modern writings on
state budgeting operations, activities, and decision-making; state
budgeting cycles; and the state-level policy development process.
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