Note on Budget Ploys |
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General Management |
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Management Control Systems |
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Organizational Behavior |
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Beginner |
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Ever since there has been budgeting, there have been budgetees who
engage in various activities (what we call ploys) to help improve their
chances of obtaining the resources they desire, and supervisors who
engage in their own ploys to try to prevent an inappropriate or
wasteful use of resources. Our observations in both for-profit and
nonprofit organizations, spanning several decades, have led us to
conclude that these ploys fall into four categories:
1. Ploys for new programs (Numbers 1-14)
2. Ploys for maintaining or expanding ongoing programs (Numbers 15-19)
3. Ploys to resist cuts (Numbers 20-25)
4. Ploys used primarily by supervisors (Numbers 26-32)
There are some overlaps among the categories,
and Category 1 clearly relates to the programming (rather than the
budgeting) phase of the management control process. In all instances,
however, the ploys are about obtaining or maintaining resources. We
describe each ploy briefly, and speculate about an appropriate response
to it.
PLOYS FOR NEW PROGRAMS
1. Foot in the Door
Description. Sell a modest program initially
with the idea of concealing its real magnitude until after it has been
initiated, and has built a constituency.
Example: In a certain state,
the legislature agreed to fund a program to educate handicapped
children in regular schools rather than in the special schools then
used. The costs were said to be for transportation and a few additional
teachers. Within five years, the definition of handicapped had been
greatly broadened, and the resources devoted to the program were four
times the amount originally estimated.
Response. This
ploy can elicit one of two responses: (a) Detect it when it is
proposed, consider that it is merely a foot in the door and that actual
costs eventually will exceed estimates by a wide margin, and therefore
disapprove the program initially (difficult to do). (b) Hold to the
original decision, and limit spending to the original cost estimate,
despite pleas for more funds (effective only if the ploy is detected in
time).
Variation. A
variation on this ploy is the bait and switch ploy: initially request
an inexpensive program but increase its scope (and cost) after approval
has been obtained. This differs from the “foot in the door” ploy in
that the changes take place before the program begins rather than after
is has been operating for a while.
2. Foot in the Mouth
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