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Performance-Based Budgeting×Zero-Based Budgeting×
DomainePublic AdministrationPublic Administration
FamilleProcess / pipelineProcess / pipeline
Année d'origine19661970
Auteur d'origineAllen SchickPeter A. Pyhrr
TypeBudgeting methodologyBudgeting methodology
Source fondatriceSchick, A. (1966). The Road to PPB: The Stages of Budget Reform. Public Administration Review, 26(4), 243–258. DOI ↗Pyhrr, P. A. (1970). Zero-Base Budgeting. Harvard Business Review, 48(6), 111–121. link ↗
AliasPBB, Performance Budgeting, Results-Based Budgeting, Outcome-Based BudgetingZBB, Zero-Base Budgeting, Decision-Package Budgeting, Build-From-Zero Budgeting
Apparentées44
RésuméPerformance-based budgeting is an approach to public budgeting that connects the funds allocated to programs with the results those programs are expected to and actually do deliver. Rather than appropriating money by line items such as salaries and supplies, it organises the budget around programs with stated objectives and performance indicators, so that resource decisions can be informed by what the money buys in terms of outputs and outcomes. Allen Schick's classic 1966 analysis of budget reform traced how budgeting evolved from controlling inputs toward management and planning orientations, of which performance budgeting is a central strand, and the OECD has documented its modern variants across member governments.Zero-based budgeting is a method of preparing a budget in which every activity must be justified from scratch each cycle rather than inheriting the previous year's allocation as a baseline. Developed by Peter Pyhrr at Texas Instruments and described in his 1970 Harvard Business Review article and 1973 book, it breaks the organisation into decision units, builds 'decision packages' that describe each activity at alternative funding levels, ranks all packages by priority, and funds them in order until the budget is exhausted. In government it was famously adopted by the State of Georgia under Governor Jimmy Carter and later promoted federally, as a counter to incremental budgeting's automatic perpetuation of past spending.
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ScholarGateComparer des méthodes: Performance-Based Budgeting · Zero-Based Budgeting. Consulté le 2026-06-24 sur https://scholargate.app/fr/compare