Demographic Budgeting


Book Description

This paper describes a new approach to examining public budgeting problems called the demographic budget. The demographic budget is a model that uses the size and characteristics of the population to forecast long-range government purchases of goods and services. Underlying this method is the assumption that the size of the population that has traditionally consumed a government service will drive the purchases for that service. Currently, economic models are widely used to forecast long-range government spending, using monetary variables to simulate the complex inter-relationships of the economy. The demographic model uses the size of an age group and the rate at which that age group consumes a government service to explain and then predict purchases for that service. Since the demographic model is easier to understand than an economic model, forecasts from it are more likely to be used by policymakers, and they may also be more accurate than forecasts from economic models.




The Minnesota Filing Plan


Book Description







Social Security, Demographic Trends, and the Federal Budget


Book Description

This paper considers the implications of the prospective aging of the U.S. population for the social security system and concludes that the large and growing cashflow surpluses of the social security trust funds should be saved to help insulate living stands against this change. A number of illustrative scenarios are presented in which the impact of pursuing this policy is analyzed within the context of a growth model incorporating the demographic projections of the Social Security Administration. If the current unified budget framework, which includes Social Security trust fund flows, is retained, the suggested policy would require that fiscal surpluses be achieved.




Population Age Structure and the Budget Deficit


Book Description

"Chen focuses on the effects of age structure changes on the size of budget deficits of national governments. More specifically, he determines whether differences in age structure can account for the observed differences in budget deficits across countries as well as across time. By way of an extension of the untested theory of negative bequest motives advocated by Cukierman and Meltzer (1989), the author argues that the commonly accepted notion that population aging tends to increase the budget deficits of economies is theoretically consistent. However, preliminary results from country and time fixed-effects panel regressions, estimated from 1975 to 1992 over 55 industrial and developing countries, indicate statistical evidence for this postulation is present only in the developing countries but not in the industrial countries. This paper--a product of the Knowledge for Development Program, World Bank Institute--is part of a larger effort in the institute to study the economic and social effects of population aging"--World Bank web site.







The Municipal Budget Crunch


Book Description

This book is based on a national literature search focusing on the best practices of cities, of all sizes and geographic locations, intended to maintain public services while holding down taxes. Many public officials have great ideas, but tend to work in a vacuum, so they don't know what other cities are doing. This volume codifies knowledge in this new field for the first time. Every case study included in this book has the city's website listed. This reference work makes it easy for professionals seeking additional information on any and all budget reduction methods that seem to work somewhere.










The Price of Government


Book Description

Government is broke. The 2004 federal deficit is the highest in U.S. history. The states have suffered three years of record shortfalls. Cities, counties, and school districts are laying off policemen and teachers, closing schools, and cutting services. But the fiscal pain won't go away, and the bankrupt ideologies of left and right offer little guidance.The Price of Government presents a radically different approach to budgeting -- one that focuses on buying results for citizens rather than cutting or adding to last year's spending programs. It advocates consolidation, competition, customer choice, and a relentless focus on results to save millions while improving public services.