I know that colleagues have provided advice in the past to ministries when their programme and administrative structures have sometimes clashed. The issue lies close to the heart of moving away from a line item focus based on historical allocations to a policy and outputs focus. To what extent should the administrative structure change to reflect well-specified programmes and to what extent should programme design be modified to meet the constraints of an existing administrative structure? Whilst it is certainly the case that one could ignore the underlying policy basis of the budget and somehow specify outputs (and other planning and performance measures) for the existing administrative structure (whether that structure links well to clearly defined policy areas or not) such an approach would appear to suggest that there is little point in introducing a programme structure in the first place. I was intrigued, therefore, to come across the following piece of guidance recently.
"To the extent possible, the program and performance budget should merge into a single budget presentation, aligned with the organizational structure of the government department or unit. The components of the organizational structure should directly match the programs, subprograms, activities, and projects funded in the Annual Budget Law,
which should directly match the performance structure of the outputs being created and the results being achieved. The manager of an organizational unit is thus responsible for
using the resources identified for his or her program, subprogram, or activities and projects to produce a clearly specified output and achieve clearly specified results. It is
easiest for budget analysts to achieve this synchronization in the budget presentation between organizational structure, program structure, and performance structure by
reorganizing the budget presentation to match the organizational structure and identifying performance goals for each unit in the organizational structure."
So there we have it. The end of the programme budgeting world is nigh.