Can there ever be an ideal programme structure? All programme structures tend to be hybrids resulting from (sometimes messy) compromises. The eventual form of the program structure may depend on the intended use(s). This is the conclusion of an insightful discussion on pages 44-61 of this World Bank publication:
http://www1.worldbank.org/publicsector/pe/bookprogrambudget.pdfThe discussion begins with an interesting quote from an early pioneer of programme budgeting, David Novick, and an accompanying comment:
‘ “The word program,” he cautioned, “can be used by different people…to mean an administrative organization, the performance of a specific function, a combination of activities, a combination of functions, or any endless number of activities, organizations and functions.” In other words, a program is whatever is labelled a program, and a program budget is any budget so designated. Obviously, if there are multiple ways of defining a program budget, no particular approach has a special claim to legitimacy.’
Four applications of programme budgeting are identified, each with somewhat different implications for the design of a programme structure:
1) An instrument of policy analysis
2) A means of improving managerial performance
3) A mechanism for allocating and managing costs
4) A planning process
The programme structure that emerges for a particular country is seen as depending on which of these four dimensions is being emphasised: there is not necessarily a 'right' answer and countries have the opportunity to design a program structure 'that fits into their organisation and political culture'. All the same, there are probably some pitfalls to be avoided and maybe it's more profitable to focus on these than to be too rigid about programme structure design. One principle I would propose is to always keep in mind the absorptive capacities of the decision-makers and legislators who will use the resulting budgetary information. It's all too easy to let the conceptual logic of a system dominate the practical realities of implementation. The World Bank gives the example of Hawaii's 15 volume, 8,000 page budget documents of the 1970s, but we've probably all come across similar, but probably less extreme, examples. In these instances, some simple back-of-the-envelope calculations at the outset or a pilot exercise might have revealed the impracticality of designs with a superficial logical appeal.
Incidentally, New Zealand's output-based model is discussed by the World Bank as a variant of programme budgeting. While not directly transferable to countries with weaker administrative capacities, the New Zealand approach nevertheless has some interesting dimensions that aim to overcome some of the pitfalls of more traditional variants of programme budgeting. A subject for another post?