UNIVERSITY OF GHANA DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
MASTER OF
PHILOSOPHY (MPHIL) POLITICAL SCIENCE
POLI 608: GOVERNMENT BUDGETING
COURSE OUTLINE AND READING
LIST, SECOND SEMESTER, 2019-2020
LECTURER: PROFESSOR ATSU AYEE
1. Course Objective
The aim of the
course is to introduce students to the concept of government budgeting.
Specifically, it deals with what a budget is about, the types of budgets
(balanced, surplus and deficit), the qualities of a good budget, importance of
the budget, the budgetary process, the institutional framework for budgeting in
Ghana, the politics of budgeting, the public financial management system. It
also examines budget reform strategies, fiscal decentralization and techniques
and tools of budgeting such as line item budgeting, Zero-Based Budgeting,
medium- term expenditure framework (MTEF), Activity Based Budgeting (ABB) and
Programme Based Budgeting (PBB).
2.
Learning Objectives
The learning
objectives of the course are at three levels, namely, knowledge, skills and
behaviour.
3.
Learning Outcomes
At the end of
the course, students should be able to do the following:
·
Define government budgeting.
·
Describe the budget process.
·
Appreciate the politics of the budget
process.
·
Identify the three types of the budget.
·
Enumerate Ghana’s public financial management system, its strengths and weaknesses.
·
Describe the institutional framework for the budget in Ghana
·
Describe that strategies for budget reform in Ghana
·
Describe the techniques and tools of
budgeting.
·
Make a prognosis of the future of government budgeting in Ghana.
4.
Instructional
Methodology
This class will
use a seminar/workshop format and will meet for three hours once a week. It
will comprise a combination of lectures, discussions, student presentations and
term papers.
5. Evaluation
|
|
|
Seminar
presentation by student
|
-
|
15%
|
Term paper of 15 pages on student’s choice
of topic
|
-
|
15%
|
Written Examination
|
-
|
70%
|
Total
|
-
|
100
|
COURSE OUTLINE AND READINGS
WEEK 1
Nature and scope of government budgeting: definitions, features and
importance of the budget
Republic of
Ghana, The Budget Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget.
Prepared by the Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
Kariuki, E. & K. Kiragu,
“Public Expenditure Management” in L. Adamolekun (ed.) Public Administration in Africa: Main Issues and Selected Country
Studies. 2nd edn. Ibadan: Evans Brothers. Chapter 6.
Rubin, I.S. “New Directions
in Public Budgeting”, in D.C. Menzel & H.L. White (eds.) The State of Public Administration: Issues,
Challenges and Opportunities. London/New York: M.E. Sharpe,
2011. Chapter 9.
Hilton, R.M.
& P.G. Joyce, “Performance Information and Budgeting in Historical and
Comparative Perspective”, in B. Guy Peters & Jon Pierre (eds.) The Handbook of Public Administration.
London: Sage, 2007. Chapter 20.
Kok, L.
“Accrual Budgeting in a Comparative Perspective”, in B. Guy Peters & Jon
Pierre (eds.)
The Handbook of Public Administration. London: Sage, 2007. Chapter 21.
United Nations, Realizing Human Rights through Government
Budgets. New York: Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights (OHCHR). HR/PUB/17/2017.
Humado, C.K.
“Pro-poor Policies and the Budget Process: The Role of
Parliament/Parliamentarians – the Ghanaian Experience”, in Parliaments, Poverty
and the Budget Process in Africa. Accra: Africa Poverty Reduction and
Parliamentarian Centre, 2009.
Caiden, Naomi and
Aaron Wildavsky. Planning and Budgeting
in Poor Countries. New York: John
Wiley and Sons, 1974.
WEEK 2
Types of budget: strengths and weaknesses
Kariuki, E. & K. Kiragu,
“Public Expenditure Management” in L. Adamolekun (ed.) Public Administration in Africa: Main Issues and Selected Country
Studies. 2nd edn. Ibadan: Evans Brothers. Chapter 6.
Rubin, I.S. “New Directions
in Public Budgeting”, in D.C. Menzel & H.L. White (eds.) The State of Public Administration: Issues,
Challenges and Opportunities. London/New York: M.E. Sharpe,
2011. Chapter 9.
Ipek, E.A.S.
“New Approaches in Public Budgeting”, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.82371
Hou, Y.
“Designing and Administering Revenue Systems”, in J.L. Perry & R.
Christensen (eds.) Handbook of Public Administration 3edn. San Francisco, CA:
Wiley, 2015. Chapter 23.
OECD (2014) OECD principles of
budgetary governance, http://www.oecd.org/governance/budgeting/draft-prin-ciples-budgetary-governance.pdf.
(Accessed January 20, 2020)
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
Caiden, Naomi and
Aaron Wildavsky. Planning and Budgeting
in Poor Countries. New York: John
Wiley and Sons, 1974.
WEEK 3
The budgetary
process or cycle: strengths and weaknesses
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
Kariuki, E. & K. Kiragu,
“Public Expenditure Management” in L. Adamolekun (ed.) Public Administration in Africa: Main Issues and Selected Country
Studies. 2nd edn. Ibadan: Evans Brothers. Chapter 6.
Rubin, I.S. “New Directions
in Public Budgeting”, in D.C. Menzel & H.L. White (eds.) The State of Public Administration: Issues,
Challenges and Opportunities. London/New York: M.E. Sharpe,
2011. Chapter 9.
Caiden, Naomi and Aaron Wildavsky. Planning
and Budgeting in Poor Countries. New York: John
Wiley and Sons, 1974.
WEEK 4
Institutional framework for budgeting in Ghana: issues, strengths and
weaknesses
Republic of Ghana, Public Financial Management Act, Act
921, 2016. Accra: GPCL Assembly Press, 2016.
Republic of Ghana, Public Financial Management Regulations,
LI2378, 2019. Accra: GPCL Assembly Press.
Republic of
Ghana, The Budget Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget.
Prepared by the Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
Garnet, H & W. Plowden,
“Cabinets, Budgets and Poverty: Political Commitment to Poverty Reduction”, in
B. Levy & S. Kpundeh (eds.) Building
State Capacity in Africa: New Approaches,
Emerging Lessons. Washington DC: The World Bank, 2004, Chapter 5.
B. Dorotinksky & R.
Floyd, “Public Expenditure Accountability in Africa: Progress, Lessons and Challenges”, in B. Levy & S. Kpundeh (eds.)
Building State Capacity in Africa: New Approaches,
Emerging Lessons. Washington DC: The World Bank, 2004, Chapter 6.
OECD. OECD principles of budgetary
governance, http://www.oecd.org/governance/budgeting/draft-prin-ciples-budgetary-governance.pdf.
(Accessed January 20, 2020).
WEEK 5
Ghana’s public
financial management system: issues
Republic of Ghana, Public Financial Management Act, Act 921, 2016. Accra: GPCL
Assembly Press, 2016.
Republic of Ghana, Public Financial Management Regulations, LI2378, 2019. Accra: GPCL
Assembly Press.
Adamtey, N. (2017) The Road to Budget Transparency in Ghana, https://www.internationalbudget.org/wp-content/uploads/the-road-to-budgettransparency-in-
ghana-ibp-case-study-2017.pdf (accessed, 20/1/20)
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
WEEK 6
Ghana’s public
financial management system: strengths and weaknesses
Republic of Ghana, Public Financial Management Act, Act 921, 2016. Accra: GPCL
Assembly Press, 2016.
Republic of Ghana, Public Financial Management Regulations, LI2378, 2019. Accra: GPCL
Assembly Press.
Adamtey, N. (2017) The Road to Budget Transparency in Ghana, https://www.internationalbudget.org/wp-content/uploads/the-road-to-budgettransparency-in-
ghana-ibp-case-study-2017.pdf (accessed, 20/1/20)
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
WEEK 7
Strategies for
budget reform in Ghana
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
Schick, A. “Twenty Five Years of Budgeting Reform”, OECD Journal of Budgeting, Vol. 4, No.
1, 2004, pp. 81-102.
OECD, Managing Public
Expenditure: A Reference Book for Transition Societies. Paris: OECD, 2001.
Kariuki, E. & K. Kiragu,
“Public Expenditure Management” in L. Adamolekun (ed.) Public Administration in Africa: Main Issues and Selected Country
Studies. 2nd edn. Ibadan: Evans Brothers. Chapter 6.
Rubin, I.S. “New Directions
in Public Budgeting”, in D.C. Menzel & H.L. White (eds.) The State of Public Administration: Issues,
Challenges and Opportunities. London/New York: M.E. Sharpe,
2011. Chapter 9.
WEEK 8
Fiscal decentralization in Ghana: issues, strengths and weaknesses
Institute for Fiscal Studies,
“Fiscal Decentralization in Ghana: Progress
and Challenges”. Prepared by the staff team of the IFS,
led by Edna Osei (Research Analyst) June 2017. Discussion Paper No. 10, 2017.
Amoako-Asiedu, E. & K.A. Domfeh, “The Challenges of Central Government Fiscal and Financial Policies on Local Government Programmes in Ghana”.
International Journal
of African and Asian
Studies, Vol. 26, 2016, pp. 32-40.
Dafflon, B & T. Madies
(eds.) The Political Economy of
Decentralization in Sub Saharan Africa. Washington DC: World Bank, 2013.
WEEK 9
Techniques and tools of budgeting: line item and zero-based budgeting
Republic of
Ghana, The Budget Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget.
Prepared by the Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
Ipek, E.A.S.
“New Approaches in Public Budgeting”, DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.5772/intechopen.82371
Kariuki, E. & K. Kiragu,
“Public Expenditure Management” in L. Adamolekun (ed.) Public Administration in Africa: Main Issues and Selected Country
Studies. 2nd edn. Ibadan: Evans Brothers. Chapter 6.
Rubin, I.S. “New Directions
in Public Budgeting”, in D.C. Menzel & H.L. White (eds.) The State of Public Administration: Issues,
Challenges and Opportunities. London/New York: M.E. Sharpe,
2011. Chapter 9.
Wildavsky, A. “A
budget for all seasons? Why the traditional budget lasts,” Public Administration Review 38 (6), 1978: 501–509.
WEEK 10
Techniques and
tools of budgeting in Ghana: activity-based budgeting versus programme based
budgeting
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
Ho, A.T-K., “Performance Budgeting”, in J.L. Perry
& R. Christensen (eds.) Handbook of
Public Administration 3edn. San Francisco, CA: Wiley, 2015. Chapter 22.
Kariuki, E. & K. Kiragu,
“Public Expenditure Management” in L. Adamolekun (ed.) Public Administration in Africa: Main Issues and Selected Country
Studies. 2nd edn. Ibadan: Evans Brothers. Chapter 6.
Rubin, I.S. “New Directions
in Public Budgeting”, in D.C. Menzel & H.L. White (eds.) The State of Public Administration: Issues,
Challenges and Opportunities. London/New York: M.E. Sharpe,
2011. Chapter 9.
Schick, A. “The
metamorphoses of performance budgeting,” OECD Journal of Budgeting, 13(2),
2013.
Wildavsky, A. “A budget for all seasons? Why the
traditional budget lasts,” Public Administration
Review 38 (6), 1978: 501–509.
WEEK 11
The politics
of budgeting in Ghana
Killick, T. “The politics of Ghana’s budgetary
system”, CDD/ODI Policy Brief No. 2,
November 2005.
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
Johnson, M. “Understanding the
Real Budget Process: The Case
of Ghana”, IFFRI
Discussion Note # 029.
Wildavsky, A. The New
Politics of the Budgetary Process.
2d ed. New York: Harper Collins, 1992.
WEEK 12
The political
business cycle in Ghana
Iddrisu, A. G. & G.A. Bokpin,
“Political business cycles
and economic growth
in Africa”, Journal
of Economic Studies, Vol. 45 No. 4, 2018 pp. 760-772.
Kwankye, J.K. “Budget Discipline
should be Entrenched in Ghana as a Policy Priority”,
Legislative
Alert, Vol.
21, No.1, August, 2014.
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
WEEK 13
The future of
government budgeting in Ghana
Killick, T. “The politics of Ghana’s budgetary
system”, CDD/ODI Policy Brief No. 2,
November 2005.
Republic of Ghana, The Budget
Operations Manual for Development of the National Budget. Prepared by the
Ministry of Finance (Budget Division), n.d.
SEMINAR TOPICS
1. What is government
budgeting? What are its features, strengths and weaknesses?
2. Why is budgeting political?
3. Examine the major types of budget.
4. Discuss the budgetary cycle
in Ghana. Illustrate your answer with examples.
5. Examine the major reforms
implemented over the years to improve budgeting in Ghana.
6. How effective is Ghana’s
public financial management system? Give examples to illustrate your points.
7. Compare and contrast line
item budgeting and zero-based budgeting.
8. Compare and contract
activity based budgeting and programme based
budgeting.
9. Comment on the view that
fiscal decentralization remains the Achilles heel of decentralization in Ghana.
10. How can the political
business cycle be improved in Ghana?
11. What do you think is the
future of government budgeting in Ghana?
No comments:
Post a Comment