Utilization in public organizations: a case study of dawuro zone finance and economic development department


Descriptive or Explanatory Theories



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2.5.5 Descriptive or Explanatory Theories
Bailey held that we cannot improve what we cannot describe and explain (Bailey 1968). Here he focused squarely on the nature of the organizations in which public administrators practice. What must a budget theory for public administration explain Research should focus on the determinants of the elements of the budget process broadly defined, as well as the determinants of budgetary outcomes favored by political science and normative standards for the mix of outcomes targeted by economics. Budget theory for public administration should be able to explain national budget processes in light of society preferences for macro-political and economic structures, differences instate and local budget processes, as well as differences


38 among national, state, and local processes. Factors influencing the evolution and development of budget systems should also be explored. A potentially fruitful focus for these efforts is the public organization. The concepts elements, and issues outlined above can be explored by other disciplines, but the field of public administration should operationalize them in terms of the public organization because that is definitive disciplinary focus of the field. The focus in public organization will allow the field to develop a contingency theory of resource allocation processes in terms and contexts that are familiar to practitioners. Possible contingent factors include the degree of organizational differentiation and integration, managerial capacity, available technology and form of government, as well as environmental factors such as political divisiveness, political culture, economic base, and demographic variables Public administration is also the field that should target what occurs within the public organization and how organizational process and structures influence budgetary outcomes and processes. The public organization is where the societal history, political and economic structures, political culture, needs for collective action, and resource capacity, which are the proper study of other disciplines, meet the organizational structure, development, culture, and decision-making capacity that is the proper study of public administration. In the framework described here, the former are operationalized as the environment of the public organization, and public budgeting issues can be approached as the study of the goodness of fit between these environmental factors and the public organizations managerial, operational, and strategic planning subsystems.


39 Organizational factors include the source and substance of the values and predispositions that budget analysts use to evaluate resource requests, the role of the budget process as an organizational communication mechanism through which agency missions and their interrelationships are expressed, the symbolic and latent functions of the formal budget process, and the degree to which the parallel decision processes that comprise the resource allocation process described by Rubin (1993) are integrated and rationalized in the organization. The thing to be improved through this effort to develop descriptive or explanatory theories of the resource allocation process from an organizational prospective is the capacity of the organizations managers to produce good decisions. The nature of this good is outlined in the section on normative theory that follows. The development of instruments to pursue this end should be rooted in the descriptive or explanatory theories of the resource allocation functions of public managers operating in public organizations described here. Otherwise, instrumental theories of managerial action are rooted in theories of private management, and they reflect the normative stance the public sector management should simply be made to resemble private sector management

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