Assessing Incrementalism in British Municipal Budgeting
- 1 July 1976
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in British Journal of Political Science
- Vol. 6 (3) , 335-350
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0007123400000739
Abstract
One observation about the budgets of governments has passed into the conventional wisdom: budget-making, we are told, is a process of ‘incremental decision making’. The approach of the incrementalists is directed primarily to the question of how the creation of the new budget in a particular year (‘the budgetary process’) is to be explained. The approach seeks to characterize how budgeters respond to the problem of allocating resources and to develop explanatory models of budgetary outputs. But, despite the volume of research that now exists on budgetary incrementalism, the operationalization of the concept remains an issue, and many of the empirical studies have the limited perspective of a single budget-making system – that is, of one set of resource allocators, who employ the same standard operating procedures, rules of search, and so on. This paper has two objectives: (1) to explicate some simple operational models of budgetary incrementalism; and (2) to examine the adequacy of these models by means of an empirical test in four comparable budget-making systems – British county boroughs.This publication has 8 references indexed in Scilit:
- Budgetary Strategies and Success at Multiple Decision Levels in the Norwegian Urban SettingAmerican Political Science Review, 1975
- Operationalizing Incrementalism: Measuring the MuddlesPublic Administration Review, 1975
- Bases of Budgetary IncrementalismAmerican Political Science Review, 1974
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- Some Social and Political Correlates of County Borough ExpendituresBritish Journal of Political Science, 1971
- A Theory of the Budgetary ProcessAmerican Political Science Review, 1966
- Comprehensive Versus Incremental Budgeting in the Department of AgricultureAdministrative Science Quarterly, 1965
- Political Implications of Budgetary ReformPublic Administration Review, 1961