1 / 15

Overview

Results-based Planning in Ontario Financial Management Institute - Ontario Chapter October 21, 2009 Carlene Jackson, Director General Government, Planning and Resources Branch. Overview. Ontario’s approach to business planning What is results-based planning? Key components of good plans

river
Télécharger la présentation

Overview

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Results-based Planning in OntarioFinancial Management Institute - Ontario ChapterOctober 21, 2009Carlene Jackson, Director General Government, Planning and Resources Branch

  2. Overview • Ontario’s approach to business planning • What is results-based planning? • Key components of good plans • Performance measures in business planning • What should measures do? • What is needed to support effective results-based planning? • Results-based planning and the strategic fiscal cycle

  3. Context: Results-based Planning in Ontario • New results-based planning framework introduced in 2003 to guide public sector management in Ontario • Drivers for change included: • Ongoing fiscal challenges to do more with less • Rising public expectations for government relevance, effectiveness, efficiency and transparency • Most service delivery by transfer payment recipients • Changing accountability relationships with other levels of government, service delivery agents • Influenced by experience of other jurisdictions (the federal government, UK, Australia, New Zealand, Washington State, Oregon, British Columbia and Alberta)

  4. What is Results-based Planning? • Comprehensive, government-wide approach to resource allocation and accountability ensuring that government-funded activities are aligned with key government priorities • Policy direction and key priorities are set by Cabinet • Completed annually on a multi-year basis • Supports the Budget and fiscal plan • Process designed to promote: • Results delivery • Value for money • Accountability and transparency • Quality service (internal and external) • Flexibility to respond to changing conditions • Treasury Board Office (TBO) provides guidance and direction to Ministries on the annual RbP process • Ministry-submitted Results-based Plans (RbPs) are reviewed and presented to Treasury Board/Management Board of Cabinet (TB/MBC) for decision-making

  5. Managing for Results in Ontario The current economic context requires hard choices and discipline • Integrate planning, budgeting and measuring performance, aligned with priorities, results • Responsibility for delivering on priorities and commitments is shared, horizontal • Between/among ministries • Between ministries & broader public sector providers • Accountability for results is shared, horizontal – performance measurement the key tool Premier / Ministers Strategic Direction Leadership Priorities & Results Results-based Plans Implementation Plan Performance Plans Measures / Targets Service Agreements Memorandum of Understanding Contracts Service Providers / Agencies Ministries

  6. Why Are Plans Needed? • A Ministry’s RbP articulates its plans for achieving government priorities and ministry mandate commitments within its minuted multi-year allocation • The government articulated its priorities to Ontarians in the Speech from the Throne and its five-point economic plan for growth and job creation. • As part of the government’s plan for implementation, a number of priority commitments have been established for Ministries. • Resource requirements for new or changed funding commitments • Current and out-year risks to the fiscal plan • Ministry RbPs form the building blocks of a multi-year process designed to provide decision-makers with enterprise-wide information to review government activities related to Ministries’ minuted multi-year expense limits using a risk based approach • Facilitates government choices about ongoing implementation of priorities and areas for potential trade-off • Ensure that service delivery is efficient and effective and all programs, services, initiatives, policies, etc. are focused on implementation to ensure results for the four-year multi-year period supporting the Government’s plan

  7. Components of a Good Plan • Provides TB/MBC with a strategic over-arching outline of the ministry’s multi-year plan to achieve priorities/results and mandate commitments • Risk Management - identifies any key issues facing the ministry and demonstrates that it is managing new and updated financial and non-financial risks within its existing multi-year minuted allocation • Performance information – demonstrates progress towards achieving targeted outcomes; value for money (efficiency and effectiveness); and as evidence to support any change requests.

  8. Performance Measure Requirements for RbP • Performance measurement information is integral to decision-making in the Results-based Planning process. • Ministries are asked to support their RbP submissions with key performance measures (public and internal) • Key performance measures should demonstrate progress towards achieving government priorities/results, key mandate letter commitments/deliverables and ministries’ strategic objectives, or track other large or high-risk programs of interest to the Board. • Key measures should include numeric targets for 2010-11 and three out-years • To provide meaningful information for effective decision-making, key measures should cover major expenditure areas including transfer payments • To demonstrate accountability, key measures should focus on value for money • Any requests for changes in funding should be supported by meaningful program-level performance measures (i,e., that relate to program objectives) to support business cases in activity notes.

  9. What Should Performance Measures Do? • Provide good information: • Are we doing the right thing? (effectiveness) • Are we doing things right? (efficiency) • Are our clients satisfied? (customer satisfaction – internal & external) • Aid in good decision making, to: • Manage programs and services to inform results based planning • Determine whether program, service and strategy objectives are being met • Ensure accountability • Drive continuous improvement • Signal the need for action

  10. SMART Rule To test the strength of a performance measure: • Specific: clearly and concisely state what will be measured • Measurable: Performance measures should be quantified – even if based on qualitative data • Achievable and Attributable: relate to things that the ministry can influence or achieve • Realistic: based on reliable, verifiable data that reflects the ministry’s contribution to achieving government priorities • Timely: data can be collected, processed and distributed within a useful timeframe and at a reasonable cost S M A R T

  11. Results-based Planning - Strategic Fiscal Cycle • Ontario’s strategic fiscal cycle facilitates government decision-making processes including resource planning, management and risk reporting, to deliver priorities and results within the context of the fiscal plan. • The Results-based Planning (RbP) process provides integrated and strategic decision-making that ensures the government is positioned to meet its key objectives while delivering balanced budgets • Government committed to delivering on priorities of Ontarians while ensuring value for money and restoring fiscal balance by 2015-16 • The RbP process is a key element of the co-ordinated strategic fiscal/ resource planning and reporting cycle. • The annual RbP process is influenced by a variety of factors: • key policy objectives/commitments the government set out in its election document; • the evolving status of the fiscal plan and state of the economy; and • feedback on the previous year's process

  12. Ontario’s Strategic Fiscal Cycle • Other activities include: • Monitoring of FTE caps • Corporate Overviews/Expenditure Updates for TB/MBC • - In-year Investments can occur through the Fall Economic Outlook and Fiscal Review and Ontario Budget processes During the current fiscal year there are concurrent activities/processes relating to the prior and the next fiscal year.

  13. Integrating Performance Measurement Throughout the Fiscal Cycle • Internal Management • Support Treasury Board/Management Board of Cabinet (TB/MBC) in-year requests • Year-end report to TB/MBC on Key Performance Measure (PM) results achieved ensures ministry accountability for key results • PMs are required in agreements with all transfer payment (TP) recipients to ensure value for money for Transfer Payments (> 80% of government spending) • PMs are integrated in quarterly reporting for early monitoring and mitigation of performance risk • Support for PM and continuous improvement of the quality of PM information increasing in ministries (e.g., dashboards, etc.) • Support program evaluation to improve efficiency and effectiveness of program management and service delivery

  14. Integrating Performance Measurement Throughout the Fiscal Cycle continued.... • External Reporting • PMs support government transparency and accountability • Annually through the Premier’s Progress Report • All ministries publish on-line results-based plans and annual reports that include reporting of performance progress and achievements • Performance results are integrated into materials provided to Standing Committee on Estimates • Results-based performance reporting included in Public Accounts (Annual Report)

  15. Support for Performance Measurement in Multi-year Planning Tools • Performance Measurement Guide • Pocket Guide to Performance Measurement • Measurement and Progress System (MAPS) & Guide • Program Evaluation Reference and Resource Guide • Vendor of Record for Program Evaluation and Performance Measurement Services • RbP Briefing Book Guideline and Style Guide • Guidelines for annual multi-year planning, quarterly reporting Learning and Development • Encourage and support ministries in their capacity building: • Performance Measurement/Program Evaluation (PM/PE) Network • PM Community of Practice • PM e-learning initiative • Transfer Payment Forum and relevant resources

More Related