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POGO8057 Managing Government Finances

Offered By Policy and Governance Program
Academic Career Graduate Coursework
Course Subject Policy and Governance
Offered in Winter Session, 2011 and Winter Session, 2012
Unit Value 6 units
Course Description

This course on Managing Government Finances aims to give students a basis for considering the environment that public sector managers operate in as it bears on their management of public financial resources.

The course steers between:

  • the methodologies of financial decision-making and analysis, and
  • description or analysis of the Australian government system.

Regarding the latter aspect, an understanding of the institutional and broad behavioural aspects of the Australian system of politics and government is assumed, at least at a basic level, and is an advised precondition.

While the course places its major focus on middle to senior public sector managers in the Australian government system, its emphasis on principles and concepts of government, government processes and public management broadens its appeal, including to students and public officials from outside Australia.  The course forms a mandatory component, for those students who enrol through the ANU, of ANZSOG's Executive Master of Public Administration degree.

The course investigates the roles carried out by managers in government agencies in managing public financial resources, and the political and administrative setting in which government finances are managed.

Lectures are multi-disciplinary.  They cover:

  • the Australian institutional and statutory governance structure,
  • federal financial relations,
  • financial governance and modes of service delivery,
  • the Australian Government model of budget formulation and control,
  • financial management and performance at agency level,
  • management and accounting frameworks at the operational level,
  • risk management,
  • accountability and audit.

Lectures are presented by ANU academics in the field of public management and by former or present senior public officials.

Learning Outcomes

On completion of the course, students are expected:

  1. To have a clear understanding of the framework of the Australian governmental system and its impacts on the roles and responsibilities of managers of public resources;
  2. To be able to extrapolate their understanding of the Australian public financial management environment to other governmental systems;
  3. To be able to explain the methods, roles and relevance of the broad systems applicable in the Australian governmental system relating to budgeting, financial management, accounting and audit;
  4. To understand the drivers, successes and failures of public financial management reform;
  5. To understand the two-way interaction between governance structures and operational practice;
  6. To be able to evaluate the effectiveness of forms of performance management in contemporary government systems; and
  7. To be able to question and critique the effectiveness of the financial managerial setting operating within Australian governments or governments in their own countries.
Indicative Assessment

Assessment for the course consists of two written assignments, a short one to be written after the first three-day session and a long one due two weeks after the completion of the course.    The short assignment will be 2000 words in length and worth 40% of the course assessment.  The long assignment will be 3000 words in length and worth 60% of the course assessment. 

The short assignment will be based only on material presented and discussed during the first three days.  In the long assignment, all course material will be relevant to the coverage expected of assignments.

Both assignments will involve a choice of topics that will be provided to students on the first day of each segment of the course. 

In both assignments, students will be expected to present critical arguments relating to the theoretical and institutional setting influencing the management of government finances.

Workload

Class contact is for 30 hours over six days.  Classes are held in two three-day sessions about three weeks apart.  Students are expected to read the material supplied in the brick and, desirably, additional material provided for the course on the Wattle website.  Essential reading and essay writing are the only obligations on outside-class time.

Course Classification(s) SpecialistSpecialist courses are designed for students having reached 'first degree' level of assumed knowledge, which provide for the acquisition of specialist skills; or 'second degree' and higher level of knowledge; or for transition to research training programs; or knowledge associated with professional accreditation.
Areas of Interest Policy Studies
Programs Master of Public Policy, Master of Business Administration, Master of Environmental and Resource Economics, Master of International and Development Economics, Master of Management, Master of Public Administration, Master of Public Policy, Master of Public Administration, Master of Business Administration, Master of Management, Master of International and Development Economics, Master of Environmental and Resource Economics, and Executive Master of Public Administration
Other Information

Delivery Mode:

On Campus. 

The course will include class discussions, in plenary or workgroups, based on case studies and examples.  It will be delivered in lecture form. 

 

Timetable information is available here.

Academic Contact Dr David Rosalky, phone 6125 3884

The information published on the Study at ANU 2011 website applies to the 2011 academic year only. All information provided on this website replaces the information contained in the Study at ANU 2010 website.

Updated:   13 Nov 2015 / Responsible Officer:   The Registrar / Page Contact:   Student Business Solutions