Let's go through the questions one by one and provide the best answers for each:
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An often-used approach to budgeting that simply derives the new year’s budget from the current year’s budget is called:
- b. Incremental budgeting.
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Which of the following steps would not usually be part of the budgeting process?
- c. One or more public budget hearings are held. (While public hearings can be a part of the process, they are not typically seen as a standard step in every budgeting process.)
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The budgeting principle in generally accepted accounting principles (GAAP) for state and local governments states that:
- d. All of the above.
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The budgetary comparison schedule required of state and local governments by GASBS 34:
- a. Can be presented as required supplementary information (RSI) or as a statement in the basic financial statements.
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All of the following are true statements about budgeting for performance in a governmental entity except:
- a. There are few examples of successful improvements in budgeting processes that have resulted in higher quality and performance of governments.
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An approach to budgeting that requires the very existence of each program and the amount of resources requested to be allocated to that program to be justified each year is called:
- b. Zero-based budgeting.
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A benefit of using activity-based costing in a government is:
- d. All of the above.
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Total quality management (TQM), a process designed to continuously improve the government’s ability to meet customer demands, incorporates all of the following elements except:
- b. Adherence to a line-item budgeting and centralized management system.
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Efficiency measures, as the term is used in the service efforts and accomplishments (SEA) literature, can be described as:
- a. Measures that relate the quantity or cost of resources used to units of output.
If you have any further questions or need clarification on any of the answers, feel free to ask!