TY - JOUR
T1 - Reconsidering public budgeting after the COVID-19 outbreak: key lessons and future challenges
AU - Anessi Pessina, Eugenio
AU - Barbera, Carmela
AU - Langella, Cecilia
AU - Manes-Rossi, Francesca
AU - Sancino, Alessandro
AU - Sicilia, Mariafrancesca
AU - Sicilia, Maria Francesca
AU - Steccolini, Ileana
PY - 2020
Y1 - 2020
N2 - Purpose: The paper aims to offer a viewpoint on how governmental budgeting needs to be reconsidered after the COVID-19 outbreak. Design/methodology/approach: Building on extant research, and drawing on the Italian context, the paper provides reflections on four interrelated aspects: (1) how budgeting and reporting processes and formats are being modified; (2) how budgeting may enhance governments' financial resilience; (3) how citizens are involved in the budgeting cycles and (4) how emergency responses may produce opportunities for corruption. Findings: To tackle COVID-19 related challenges, budgeting, rebudgeting, reporting processes and formats need to be reconsidered and supported by the development of new competencies. Governments will need to put stronger emphasis on the anticipatory and coping roles of budgeting to reduce public organizations' exposure to shocks and support governmental resilience. The involvement of citizens has proven critical to face the pandemic and will become increasingly relevant due to the financial impacts of COVID-19 on future public service provision. Greater attention to the risks of increased corruption is also needed. Originality/value: Drawing lessons from one of the countries most hit by COVID-19, the paper offers a viewpoint on a timely topic of international relevance by looking in an integrated way at interrelated topics such as budgeting, rebudgeting, reporting, financial resilience, coproduction and corruption.
AB - Purpose: The paper aims to offer a viewpoint on how governmental budgeting needs to be reconsidered after the COVID-19 outbreak. Design/methodology/approach: Building on extant research, and drawing on the Italian context, the paper provides reflections on four interrelated aspects: (1) how budgeting and reporting processes and formats are being modified; (2) how budgeting may enhance governments' financial resilience; (3) how citizens are involved in the budgeting cycles and (4) how emergency responses may produce opportunities for corruption. Findings: To tackle COVID-19 related challenges, budgeting, rebudgeting, reporting processes and formats need to be reconsidered and supported by the development of new competencies. Governments will need to put stronger emphasis on the anticipatory and coping roles of budgeting to reduce public organizations' exposure to shocks and support governmental resilience. The involvement of citizens has proven critical to face the pandemic and will become increasingly relevant due to the financial impacts of COVID-19 on future public service provision. Greater attention to the risks of increased corruption is also needed. Originality/value: Drawing lessons from one of the countries most hit by COVID-19, the paper offers a viewpoint on a timely topic of international relevance by looking in an integrated way at interrelated topics such as budgeting, rebudgeting, reporting, financial resilience, coproduction and corruption.
KW - Coproduction
KW - Corruption
KW - Financial resilience
KW - Public budgeting
KW - Rebudgeting
KW - Reporting
KW - Coproduction
KW - Corruption
KW - Financial resilience
KW - Public budgeting
KW - Rebudgeting
KW - Reporting
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10807/164508
U2 - 10.1108/JPBAFM-07-2020-0115
DO - 10.1108/JPBAFM-07-2020-0115
M3 - Article
SN - 1096-3367
VL - 32
SP - 957
EP - 965
JO - Journal of Public Budgeting, Accounting and Financial Management
JF - Journal of Public Budgeting, Accounting and Financial Management
ER -