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Learning to live with public expenditure: politics and budgeting in britain since 1976

Andrew M. McLaughlin (Department of Social Science Glasgow Caledonian University Glasgow, G40BA Great Britain)
Jeremy. J. Richardson (European Public Policy Institute University of Warwick Coventry, CV4 7AL Great Britain)

Journal of Public Budgeting, Accounting & Financial Management

ISSN: 1096-3367

Article publication date: 1 March 1994

62

Abstract

Budgetary reform in the UK since the International Monetary Fund (IMF) intervention under a Labour government in 1976 has been prompted by a new conventional wisdom that public expenditure was too high, and consequently, "crowded out" private sector investment. Although this belief became widespread in western democracies, in Britain it developed relatively early and was closely linked to the wider debate about Britain's relative economic decline. The first section of this article reviews the main reforms of the budgetary process which these concerns prompted.

In the second section we note that, despite the political concern with reducing public expenditure in the 1980s, success has been limited and priority is now the improvement of the underlying control and evaluation mechanisms in government spending. In practice, the main policy activity of the Thatcher administrations was on gaining "value for money" from existing expenditure. These developments are discussed and the likelihood of success considered. The nature of the present annual budgetary cycle is described as are the most recent developments designed to finally gain some form of effective expenditure control.

Citation

McLaughlin, A.M. and Richardson, J.J. (1994), "Learning to live with public expenditure: politics and budgeting in britain since 1976", Journal of Public Budgeting, Accounting & Financial Management, Vol. 6 No. 1, pp. 97-129. https://doi.org/10.1108/JPBAFM-06-01-1994-B005

Publisher

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Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 1994 by PrAcademics Press

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