Perhaps the first and most basic issue that must be addressed in programme budgeting is the question – what is a programme? In many, if not most country cases, the question is addressed reasonably clearly. In Albania, for example, the following definition applies:
“A programme is a group of activities that can be effectively and jointly managed and whose outputs contribute directly (or indirectly as inputs to other activities) to the achievement of policy objectives”
In turn, the terms ‘programme policy statement’, ‘input’, ‘activity’, ‘output’, ‘goal’ and ‘objective’ have specific definitions in Albania to ensure clarity over what is, and what is not, a programme.
But what is a sub-programme?
So far, the only definition I have come across in various budget manuals that I have seen is some variation on the following: ‘A sub-programme is a sub-division of a programme’. Whilst this is not incorrect (it is not incorrect because it is tautological), it is not helpful in determining if and when a programme should be divided into sub-programmes and the criteria for making that sub-division.
This made me consider whether, in fact, there is actually a distinct concept that is a sub-programme, or whether there are only programmes. It then made me think that the answer must surely lie in whether it is possible to specify a clear definition for ‘sub-programme’ that is not merely tautological – a definition that also explains why a sub-programme exists, what it is for and why it is not a ‘programme’. If a clear, workable and useful definition can be specified, sub-programmes must exist. If not, then they do not exist.
After some thought, I have come to the conclusion that sub-programmes could exist according to the following definition (within the framework of an Albanian programme, or according to a similar definition under an alternative programme framework):
“Where a programme policy statement contains separate and distinct sub-policy areas, with discrete goals and objectives that relate exclusively to each sub-policy area respectively, and where management arrangements for sub-policy areas are distinct from one another, sub-programmes may be specified. A sub-programme, therefore, is a group of activities that can be effectively and jointly managed and whose outputs contribute directly (or indirectly as inputs to other activities) to the achievement of policy objectives in the corresponding sub-policy area.”
Does this fly? Do colleagues have better alternatives to offer?