GAO Advocates Greater Use of Performance Budgeting for DHS

Risk management principles such as performance management

could help the Department of Homeland Security allocate

resources, Comptroller General David Walker said in

testimony addressing the need for a “fundamental

reexamination of the base of government, the role that

performance budgeting tools can play in helping inform

agency activities and DHS’s use of performance

budgeting and risk management concepts.”

Walker, as in past reports and testimony, said the

nation faces a long-term fiscal imbalance and noted

there is a “critical need for the federal government

to reexamine the base of its programs, policies,

functions, and activities” — as well as carry out

periodic reexamination of major federal spending and

tax policies, according to GAO-05-824T.

He said management and performance reforms enacted by

Congress in the past 15 years have provided new tools

such as performance budgeting to support the

elimination of outmoded operations and to better align

operations with the demands of a changing world.

However, while performance budgeting can help policy

makers address how well programs contribute to stated

goals, it “cannot provide answers to every resource

question–particularly where allocation is a function

of competing values and interests that depend on

factors other than program performance,” said Walker.

He said DHS has called for using risk-based approaches

to prioritize its resource investments — but that a

comprehensive risk management framework including an

assessment of risk through threat, vulnerability, and

criticality assessments — “should be applied to guide

these decisions.”

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