Allen Schick

Allen Schick is a governance fellow of the Brookings Institution and also a professor of political science at the Maryland School of Public Policy of University of Maryland, College Park.[1] He is known as an authority on budget theory and the federal budget process, in particular. His book, Congress and Money: Budgeting, Spending, and Taxing, won the D.B. Hardeman Prize in 1982.

Schick advises members of Congress and has conducted numerous studies on budget systems and policies; public management; and government finance.

He is the founding editor of the professional journal, Public Budgeting and Finance.[1]

Publications

  • Congress and Money: Spending, Taxing, and Budgeting, American Society for Public Administration, 1987
  • Making Economic Policy in Congress, American Enterprise Institute, 1984
  • The Capacity to Budget, 1990
  • The Budget Puzzle, 1993
  • The Federal Budget: Politics, Policy, Process, 1995
  • Budget Innovation in the States, 1972[2]
gollark: Remove your nails.
gollark: This isn't better.
gollark: So people will have to plug numbers into the accursedly long approximation™ instead?
gollark: I think it's smarter to assume/have basically-reliable-when-running individual nodes and build redundancy in at a higher level.
gollark: Probably nobody wants to have to deal with primitives which might randomly not work fully or reason about all the underlying weirdness continuously, and with 2/3 of the nodes not doing anything you'll be wasting a lot of space.

References


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