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Public management institutions’ alignment: the case of Egypt

Lobna Mohamed Abdellatif, Baher Mohamed Atlam and Ola Abdel Moneim El Sayed Emara

Review of Economics and Political Science, 2019, vol. 4, issue 2, 90-104

Abstract: Purpose - This paper aims to show the aligned development that took place in public administration and public financial management toward serving public values. By analyzing the mode of institutions’ interaction, the paper attempts to pinpoint the changing trends in budget institutions in Egypt, probing the extent to which they can be read from an administrative perspective and the possibility of enhancing budgetary outcomes under the existing administrative arrangements. Design/methodology/approach - An analytical framework for public management administrative and budgetary institutions’ alignment is presented. A ladder analysis is developed to highlight the consistency of rationale between the two sets of institutions. The alignment is demonstrated at three consecutive levels: control and discipline, efficiency and effectiveness and openness and communication. Findings - The international experience reveals that the alignment of administrative and budgetary institutions is both theoretically traceable and practically applicable in the case of developed economies. Whereas, in the case of Egypt, both sets of institutions have been exposed to best practices; yet, they are not seen as complementary and enforcing each other. The internalization of the benefits of reforms in the two tracks into an integrated public management context in the case of Egypt is not reached. Practical implications - Egypt needs to ensure the alignment of both dimensions to maximize the benefits of reform. Originality/value - The ladder approach sorts the developments in both administrative and budgetary institutions into three levels to help assessing the maturity and conformity in countries’ public management systems.

Keywords: Public management; Administrative institutions; Budgetary institutions; Egypt (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2019
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:eme:repspp:reps-03-2019-0031

DOI: 10.1108/REPS-03-2019-0031

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