Public expenditure statistical analyses 2011


Book Description

PESA provides a range of information about public spending using two Treasury-defined frameworks: budgeting and expenditure on services. The budgeting framework provides information on central government departmental budgets, which are the aggregates used by the Government to plan and control expenditure. It covers departmental own spending as well as support to local government and public corporations. The expenditure on services framework is used for statistical analysis. It is based on national accounts definitions and covers spending by the whole of the public sector.













Public Expenditure


Book Description

Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses (PESA) is a compendium of recent statistics and budgetary plans covering the range of UK public expenditure. It includes data for expenditure for central government, local government and public corporations, as well as an analysis of public expenditure by country and region. It is published annually, alongside the Main Supply Estimates and Departmental Reports.




Public Expenditure Statistical Analyses 2012


Book Description

PESA provides a range of information about public spending using two Treasury-defined frameworks: budgeting and expenditure on services. The budgeting framework provides information on central government departmental budgets, which are the aggregates used by the Government to plan and control expenditure. It covers departmental own spending as well as support to local government and public corporations. The expenditure on services framework is used for statistical analysis. It is based on national accounts definitions and covers spending by the whole of the public sector.




Public expenditure statistical analyses 2013


Book Description

PESA provides a range of information about public spending, using two Treasury-defined frameworks, so that PESA largely contains different presentations of two date sets. Chapters cover: departmental budgets; economic analyses of budgets; changes in departmental budgets; trends in public sector expenditure; public sector expenditure by function, sub-function and economic category; central government own expenditure; local government financing and expenditure; public corporations; public expenditure by country, region and function; public expenditure by country and sub-function. Various annexes supplement the analysis, including: sources, data quality and conventions; population numbers and GDP inflators.




Central Government Supply Estimates 2010-11


Book Description

Supply estimates are the means by which the Government seeks authority from Parliament for its own spending each year. These main estimates start this process and are presented to Parliament around the start of the financial year to which they relate. Detailed departmental estimates are included, and a Supplementary budgetary information publication (Cm. 7359, ISBN 9780101735926) presented alongside provides read-across between the figures in the main estimates and departmental reports. The total resource expenditure for which authority is sought in the 2008-09 main estimates is 447.9 billion, and is consistent with the Government's plans for public expenditure as set out in "Public expenditure: statistical analyses" (HC 489, session 2007-08, ISBN 9780102953770).




Public Expenditure Analysis


Book Description

Monograph on the theoretics and methodology of public expenditure analysis in the area of human resources - covers mathematical analysis, statistical analysis, basic concepts in welfare economics, cost benefit analysis, and the application of public expenditure analysis to the economics of education and health costs. Bibliography pp. 145 to 154 and statistical tables.




Social Policy in a Cold Climate


Book Description

The financial crisis of 2008 led the United Kingdom's Labour Government to make changes--primarily cuts--to social programs and a wide range of social services. The subsequent Coalition Government followed those changes with much more dramatic cuts. This book offers the first in-depth empirical analysis of the two governments and their approach to social policy in a period of crisis, assessing policy aims, policy implementation, and measurable outcomes.