https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/issue/feed Public Finance Journal 2024-04-01T04:00:15+00:00 Bruce D. McDonald III [email protected] Open Journal Systems <p><em>Public Finance Journal </em>is a biannual journal publishing peer-reviewed research that examines and analyzes contemporary issues in budgeting and finance and explores the applicability of solution sets. The journal is published by the Government Finance Officers Association and serves as a forum for discussion on significant issues related to the advancement of our scientific understanding.</p> https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/12 The Municipal Financial Crisis 2024-02-11T21:34:30+00:00 Kenneth Hunter [email protected] <p>Moses, M. (2022). <em>The municipal financial crisis: A framework for understanding and fixing government budgeting</em>. Palgrave Macmillan, 184 pp., $49.99 (paperback), ISBN: 978-3-030-87835-1.</p> 2024-02-19T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Kenneth W. Hunter https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/14 Municipal Fiscal Stress, Bankruptcies, and Other Financial Emergencies 2024-02-15T03:07:22+00:00 Johnathan Justice [email protected] <p>Guzman, T., &amp; Ermasova, N. (2023). <em>Municipal fiscal stress, bankruptcies, and other financial emergencies.</em> Routledge, 310 pp., $49.95 (paperback), ISBN: 978-1-032-34938-1.</p> 2024-02-26T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Jonathan B. Justice https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/13 Financial Strategy for Public Managers 2024-02-15T03:02:40+00:00 Stephanie Leiser [email protected] <p>Kioko, S., &amp; Marlowe, J. (2023). Financial strategy for public managers (4th ed.). University of Washington, 254pp., $0.00 (ebook), ISBN: 978-1-927-47259-0. https://uw.pressbooks.pub/financialstrategy/</p> 2024-03-04T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Stephanie Leiser https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/15 Establishing an Agenda for Public Budgeting and Finance Research 2024-02-25T01:03:32+00:00 Bruce McDonald [email protected] Sarah Larson [email protected] Craig Maher [email protected] Shayne Kavanagh [email protected] Kenneth Hunter [email protected] Christopher Goodman [email protected] Honey Minkowitz [email protected] Sean McCandless [email protected] Saman Afshan [email protected] Meagan Jordan [email protected] Michaela Abbott [email protected] Whitney Afonso [email protected] Haris Alibašić [email protected] Joanne Allen [email protected] John Allore [email protected] Laura Altizer [email protected] Ralph Amador [email protected] Brian An [email protected] Ljubinka Andonoska [email protected] Lachezar Anguelov [email protected] Theodore Arapis [email protected] Carolyn Arcand [email protected] George Atisa [email protected] Lonce Bailey [email protected] Celeste Baker [email protected] Brian Barnett [email protected] Christina Barsky [email protected] John Bartle [email protected] David Beck [email protected] Jane Beckett-Camarata [email protected] Michael Bednarczuk [email protected] Toy Beeninga [email protected] Terry Bellamy [email protected] L. J. Bilmes [email protected] Carol Block [email protected] David Boyd [email protected] Kaelan Boyd [email protected] Spencer Brien [email protected] Kevin Bronner [email protected] Douglas Brook [email protected] Marlon Brown [email protected] Benjamin Brunjes [email protected] Eric Brunner [email protected] Beverly Bunch [email protected] Thad Calabrese [email protected] Douglas Carr [email protected] Michelle Casciato [email protected] Crystal Certain [email protected] Cleopatra Charles [email protected] Can Chen [email protected] Gang Chen [email protected] Debby Cherney [email protected] Cary Christian [email protected] Benjamin Clark [email protected] Shane Corbin [email protected] Daniel Costie [email protected] Jason Cournoyer [email protected] Andrew Crosby [email protected] Jeff Cummins [email protected] Stephanie Davis [email protected] J. W. Decker [email protected] Jessica DeShazo [email protected] Ana Maria Dimand [email protected] Amy Donahue [email protected] James Douglas [email protected] Janet Dutcher [email protected] Komla Dzigbede [email protected] Robert Eger [email protected] Todd Ely [email protected] Natalia Ermasova [email protected] Liz Farmer [email protected] Lucianna Farmer [email protected] Dagney Faulk [email protected] Drew Finley [email protected] Carla Flink [email protected] Michael Ford [email protected] Daniel Foth [email protected] Aimee Franklin [email protected] Mike Franks [email protected] Marc Fudge [email protected] Richard Funderburg [email protected] Carl Gabrini [email protected] Bryan Gadow [email protected] David Gentry [email protected] Chris Godlewski [email protected] Suzanne Gooding [email protected] Andrew Grandage [email protected] Robert Greer [email protected] Christian Griffith [email protected] Amanda Grogan [email protected] Merl Hackbart [email protected] William Hatcher [email protected] Michael Hattery [email protected] Michael Hayes [email protected] Kellie Hebert [email protected] Rebecca Hendrick [email protected] Edward Hill [email protected] Susan Hiscocks [email protected] Alfred Ho [email protected] Trang Hoang [email protected] Ellenore Holbrook [email protected] Mike Hoppe [email protected] Yilin Hou [email protected] John Hudson [email protected] Nancy Hudspeth [email protected] Jackie Huffman [email protected] Mikhail Ivonchyk [email protected] G. Jason Jolley [email protected] Peter Jones [email protected] Jason Juffras [email protected] Jonathan Justice [email protected] Amanda Kass [email protected] Heidi Kerns [email protected] Junghack Kim [email protected] Saerim Kim [email protected] Lynn Korn [email protected] Arwi Kriz [email protected] Olha Krupa [email protected] Jennifer Lampman [email protected] Jim Landers [email protected] Keith Lane [email protected] Jekyung Lee [email protected] Keith Lee [email protected] Sooho Lee [email protected] Matthew Leight [email protected] Stephanie Leiser [email protected] Agustin Moreta [email protected] Helisse Levine [email protected] Tony Levitas [email protected] Sungdae Lim [email protected] Michelle Lofton [email protected] Felipe Lozano-Rojas [email protected] Martin Luby [email protected] Onyumbe Lukongo [email protected] Jennifer Mace [email protected] Kaitrin Mahar [email protected] Joseph Martin [email protected] David Matkin [email protected] Rusty Mau [email protected] Arche McAdoo [email protected] Anthony McCann [email protected] Dean Mead [email protected] Kirk Medlin [email protected] Charles Menifield [email protected] Justin Merritt [email protected] John Metro [email protected] Roy Meyers [email protected] David Mitchell [email protected] Thomas Moeller [email protected] Zachary Mohr [email protected] Temirlan Moldogaziev [email protected] Bryant Morehead [email protected] Chris Morrill [email protected] Sian Mughan [email protected] Joyce Munro [email protected] Bruce Neubauer [email protected] Melissa Neuman [email protected] Phuong Nguyen-Hoang [email protected] Marc Nicole [email protected] James Nordin [email protected] Julius Nukpezah [email protected] Susan O'Brien [email protected] Amy Oland [email protected] Julie Osteen [email protected] Amber Overholser [email protected] Michael Overton [email protected] Sungho Park [email protected] Jordan Paschal [email protected] Rahul Pathak [email protected] Marvin Phaup [email protected] Kawika Pierson [email protected] Wendy Pope [email protected] Geoffrey Propheter [email protected] Steve Redburn [email protected] Lesley Reder [email protected] David Reed [email protected] Vincent Reitano [email protected] Sam Riddle [email protected] William Rivenbark [email protected] Alejandro Rodriguez [email protected] Mark Romito [email protected] Justin Ross [email protected] Irene Rubin [email protected] Nicholas Sadler [email protected] Nicholas Sarpy [email protected] Josephine Schafer [email protected] Robert Schuhmann [email protected] Elizabeth Searing [email protected] Alex Sekwat [email protected] Iuliia Shybalkina [email protected] Akheil Singla [email protected] Alex Smith [email protected] Christy Smith [email protected] Zachary Smith [email protected] Douglas Snow [email protected] Dragan Stanisevski [email protected] Jon Stehle [email protected] Eric Stokan [email protected] Samuel Stone [email protected] David Swindell [email protected] Charles Taylor [email protected] Lori Taylor [email protected] Tran Vu [email protected] Jay Toland [email protected] John Topinka [email protected] Evelyn Trammell [email protected] Paul Trogen [email protected] Ed Van Eenoo [email protected] Elizabeth Wadle [email protected] Sally Wallace [email protected] Shu Wang [email protected] Rob Wassmer [email protected] Paul Weinstein [email protected] Amy Wells [email protected] Laura Wheeler [email protected] Daniel Williams [email protected] Katherine Willoughby [email protected] Darrin Wilson [email protected] Paul Winfree [email protected] Sharon Wojda [email protected] Blue Wooldridge [email protected] Paige Worsham [email protected] Kristina Wright [email protected] Stefen Wynn [email protected] Yan Xiao [email protected] H. Xu [email protected] Lang Yang [email protected] Wie Yusuf [email protected] Aziza Zemrani [email protected] Zhirong Zhao [email protected] Nancy Zielke [email protected] <p>Public budgeting and finance is a discipline that encompasses communities of research and practice. Too often, however, these communities fail to engage each other, instead choosing to operate independently. The result is that the research being conducted fails to address the questions of the day and our governments’ challenges. In this article, we come together as a community of academics and practitioners to establish an agenda for where future research should be conducted. This agenda aims to align the research being undertaken within the academic community with the needs of those working in the community of practice. After establishing ten areas where research is needed, we followed a ranked-choice voting process to establish a prioritization for them. Based on the outcome of this process, the two primary areas where research is currently needed most are the fiscal health of our governments and the implementation of social equity budgeting.</p> <p><span style="font-weight: 400;"> </span></p> 2024-04-01T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Bruce D. McDonald III, Sarah E. Larson, Craig S. Maher, Shayne Kavanagh, Kenneth W. Hunter, Christopher B. Goodman, Honey Minkowitz, Sean A. McCandless, Saman Afshan, Meagan M. Jordan https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/8 Modeling Approach Matters, But Not as Much as Preprocessing 2023-12-13T03:07:02+00:00 Sarah Larson [email protected] Michael Overton [email protected] <p>Revenue forecasting accuracy is critical to governmental operations. This paper addresses the question: What is the best technique for forecasting sales tax revenue? Prior studies in this area have focused on the differences between machine learning techniques and traditional approaches and neglected to consider how differences in pre-processing steps for the data before the forecasting model is applied are important. Here, we show that machine learning techniques do not always provide increased forecasting accuracy. Instead, the modeling choices matter, but less than the prior literature and practice suggested. Rather, pre-processing makes the most significant difference in forecasting accuracy, and forecasters need to understand the unique characteristics of time series data to improve forecasting performance. The immediate implications of these findings are that the focus of practitioners of in sales tax revenue forecasting should shift from prioritizing model choice towards data pre-processing.</p> 2024-03-11T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Sarah E. Larson, Michael Overton https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/6 AI as a Budgeting Tool: Panacea or Pandora’s Box? 2023-12-13T03:11:39+00:00 Michael Lee [email protected] Daniel Hayes [email protected] Craig Maher [email protected] <p>Local government officials are consistently tasked with doing more with less. The combination of fiscal institutions, devolution of fiscal federalism, voter frustration, and economic shocks have been the leading causes of these more recent challenges. However, the reality is that smaller local governments, by their very nature, struggle with service provision. This paper explores the next evolution of change to local governments – artificial intelligence (AI), specifically ChatGPT – and its potential for local governments. We discuss the use of AI in budgeting, with a focus on financial data management and statistical analysis, including forecasting and policy recommendations for a small Nebraska municipality. Our experience with ChatGPT highlights its powerful capabilities for data processing. Transitioning to ChatGPT-4 from ChatGPT-3.5 (with or without Python) improved data processing efficiency but introduced financial costs, and we observed that the use of detailed and precise prompts enhances output quality across all versions. Achieving a balance between time, cost, data preparation, and prompt precision is crucial for optimizing the potential of ChatGPT in financial data analysis.</p> 2024-03-18T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Michael Lee, Daniel Hayes, Craig S. Maher https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/7 Adoption of Property Tax Expenditure and Limitations by U.S. States 2024-01-05T00:56:44+00:00 John Decker [email protected] <p>Property tax expenditure and limitations (TELs) are key tools used by U.S. states to control local government spending and taxing authority. This paper employs a multiple events history analysis to understand the factors influencing the adoption of county-level property tax TELs by state governments. The findings show that external factors such as policy learning, competition, imitation, and coercion play crucial roles in this process. Notably, the study reveals that higher out-migration rates and the presence of voter-based ballot initiatives significantly increase the likelihood of TEL adoption. Additionally, the spread of TELs is influenced more by national trends rather than neighboring state actions, highlighting the saliency of these policies. These findings shed light on the dynamics of policy diffusion and provide insights into the interplay between state-level decisions and local government financial autonomy. The study’s implications extend beyond public finance, offering a nuanced understanding of policy adoption and diffusion in federal systems.</p> 2024-04-01T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 J. W. Decker https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/16 Bridging the Divide 2024-03-17T01:56:57+00:00 Bruce McDonald [email protected] Craig Maher [email protected] <p>The creation of <em><span data-preserver-spaces="true">Public Finance Journal</span></em><span data-preserver-spaces="true"> (</span><em><span data-preserver-spaces="true">PF)</span></em><span data-preserver-spaces="true"> is the culmination of several years of discussion about how best to address the divide between practitioners’ research needs and academic scholarship. </span><em><span data-preserver-spaces="true">PF’s</span></em><span data-preserver-spaces="true"> origin is predicated on the expectation that for a professional discipline such as public administration and the subfield of public budgeting and finance, in particular, there needs to be an easily accessible forum for the dissemination of ideas and solutions. This journal would not be possible without the support of the Government Finance Officers Association, the oversight committees, the editorial board, and those helping with the journal’s management. We are excited about the inaugural edition, where we have reviews of three important books, three thought-provoking research articles, and an article that surveys current research needs in the budget and finance field as expressed by faculty and practitioners.</span></p> 2024-04-01T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Bruce D. McDonald III, Craig S. Maher https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/18 Back Matter 2024-03-17T19:36:44+00:00 The Editors [email protected] <p>Publication License, Submission Information and Back Cover</p> 2024-04-01T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Public Finance Journal https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/19 Front Matter 2024-03-20T03:11:58+00:00 The Editors [email protected] <p>Front Cover and Editorial Board</p> 2024-04-01T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Public Finance Journal https://www.publicfinance.org/index.php/pfj/article/view/17 Table of Contents 2024-03-17T19:32:31+00:00 The Editors [email protected] 2024-04-01T00:00:00+00:00 Copyright (c) 2024 Public Finance Journal