"Jay Eungha Ryus The Public Budgeting and Finance Primer brings public finance down from abstract clouds by recognizing that behind any abstract formulation resides real people with differences in what they know and what they desire, and who must put together programs and practices that not only must be articulated theoretically but must also be managed and administered by actual people. Where modern public finance generally locates its material as a proper subset of economic theory, Ryus text locates public finance as a multi-disciplinary field of study, centered on economics to be sure, but touching as well, and significantly so, on politics, public administration, and law." --Richard E. Wagner, George Mason University, USA
Preface PART I. BUDGET PROCESS AND INSTITUTIONS 1. Executive Budgeting System 2. Legislative Budgeting System 3. Line-Item Veto 4. Balanced Budget Requirements 5. Tax and Expenditure Limits 6. Rights-Based Budgeting 7. Divided vs. Unified Governments and Fiscal Choice PART II. RATIONAL APPROACHES TO RESOURCE ALLOCATION 8. Zero-Based Budgeting 9. Performance-Based Budgeting 10. Performance-Based Budgeting: Challenges 11. Cost-Benefit Analysis: Measurements and Time Values 12. Activity-Based Costing PART III. INFORMATION CAPACITY AND BUDGET CHOICE 13. Bounded Rationality and Budgetary Incrementalism 14. Stable Interactions Among Budget Actors 15. Disproportionate Information Processing 16. Budget-Maximizing Bureaucrats PART IV. PUBLIC CHOICE AND TAXATION 17. Public Goods and Public Choice 18. Taxation: Revenue Collection and Efficiency 19. Taxation: Equity and Politics of Taxation 20. Measures of Fiscal Capacity and Stress PART V. INTERGOVERNMENTAL FISCAL RELATIONS 21. Intergovernmental Grants: Rationales and Types 22. Intergovernmental Grants: Fiscal Impacts PART VI. MACRO-BUDGETING 23. Macroeconomic Theories: Classical, Keynesian, and New Approaches 24. Macroeconomic Policies: Fiscal Policy, Monetary Policy, and New Policy Suggestions 25. Congressional Macro-Budgeting 26. Mechanics of Debt Management PART VII. NEW APPROACHES TO BUDGET AND FINANCE 27. Emerging Topics