Financial Management in the Public & Nonprofit Sectors — University of Delaware
This is a course in the fundamentals of budgeting and accounting for public, health, and not-for-profit organizations.
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Modern fiscal policy and its administrative implications to planning, budgeting, revenue administration, accounting and appraisal, and the process for assuring accountability in the development, timing, and execution of public programs.
An overview of public agency financial administration including: microeconomic foundations of public-sector services and regulation; financial analysis tools and techniques; expenditure categories and program costing; revenue sources and forecasting methods; finance department functions, organization, and systems; internal controls and risk management; and governmental accounting and financial reporting.
This course will examine how the accumulation of assets – namely land, homes, investments – is and should be stimulated and shaped by government intervention.
The field of urban economics introduces space into economic models and studies the location of economic activity. Urban economics typically addresses three sets of questions, and this course is organized around these three areas.