
Budgeting and Financial Management (Taxing, Budgeting, and Spending)
Accounting: The process of identifying, measuring, and communicating economic information to permit informed judgment and decision-making.
Allotments: Amounts that agencies are authorized to spend within a given period.
Apportionment: The process by which funds are allocated to agencies for specific portions of the year.
Appropriation: Legislative action that permits establishment or continuation of a particular program or agency.
Bond: Promise to repay a certain amount (principal) at a certain time (maturity date) at a particular rate of interest.
Budget padding: Proposing a higher budget than is actually needed.
Business cycle: Periods of economic growth featuring inflation and high employment followed by periods of recession or depression and unemployment.
Capital budget: A budget depicting spending for items that will be used over a periods of several years.
Capital investment program: A timetable indicating various projects to be undertaken, schedules for their completion, and methods of financing.
Continuing resolution: Resolution permitting the government to continue operating until an appropriation measure is passed.
Debt capacity: Value of a city’s resources combined with the ability of the government to draw on them to provide payment.
Deferral: Decision by the president to withhold expenditure of funds for a brief period.
Discretionary spending: That portion of the budget still open to changes by the president and Congress.
Entitlement programs: Programs that provide a specified set of benefits to those who meet certain eligibility requirements.
Excise tax: Tax applied to the sale of specific commodities.
Fiduciary funds: Funds used when government must hold assets for individuals or when government holds resources to be transmitted to another organization.
Fiscal policy: Public policy concerned with the impact of government taxation and spending on the economy.
Fiscal year (FY): Government’s basic accounting period.
General fund: Fund that handles the “unrestricted” funds of the government.
Gross National Product (GNP): Measure of total spending in the economy; includes total personal consumption, private investment, and government purchases.
Impoundment: Withholding of funds authorized and appropriated by law.
Item veto: Allows the executive to veto specific items in an appropriations bill.
Linen-item budget: Budget format for listing categories of expenditures along with amounts allocated to each.
Outcome-based budgeting: Budgeting system that takes into account long-term effects or outcomes.
Performance auditing: Analysis and evaluation of the effective performance of agencies in carrying out their objectives.
Performance budget: Budget format organized around programs or activities, including various performance measurements that indicate the relationship between work actually done and its cost.
Planning-programming-budgeting system (PPBS): Effort to connect planning system analysis, and budgeting in a single exercise.
Prelude: Review in advance of an actual expenditure.
Progressive tax: One that taxes those with higher incomes at a higher rate.
Proportional tax: One that taxes everyone at the same rate.
Proprietary funds: Used to account for government activities that more closely resemble private business.
Reconciliation bill: Legislative action that attempts to reconcile individual actions in taxes, authorizations, or appropriations with the totals.
Regressive tax: One that taxes those with lower incomes at a proportionally higher rate than those with higher incomes.
Rescission: Decision by chief executive to permanently withhold funds.
Risk management: Ways that public organizations anticipate and cope with risks.
Supplemental appropriation: Bill passed during the fiscal year adding new money to an agency’s budget for the same fiscal year.