Government Finance Review

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COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved.

COPYRIGHT GALE, Cengage Learning. All rights reserved

from December 1991
Last Number: June 2023

Government Finance Officers Association
ISSN 0883-7856


Cantidad de documentos en esta fuente: 3752

December 01, 2019

  • GFOA Makes Changes to CPFO Program.

  • Helping Keep America's Climate Change Pledge.

  • Looking at Pension Portfolio Performance.

  • A Guide to Online Financial Transparency.

  • The Last Line of Financial Defense? Internal Loans in Emergency Situations.

  • BUILDING TRUST through Diversity and Inclusion.

  • The City of Minneapolis Upgrades Its Online Financial Transparency.

  • Early Retirement Incentives Involve Risks.

  • The City of Cupertino, California, Takes a Budgeting Education Road Less Followed.

  • Government Finance Officers Association.

  • Looking Back at 2019.

  • A Timeless Question about the Timeliness of Financial Reporting.

  • This Stuff Works! Let's Talk about It.

  • Government's Core Staffing Problem: Inflexible Pay Systems.

  • April 01, 2020

  • GFOA Is Prepared to Meet Member Needs.

  • February, 1972.

  • Get to Know GFOA's Standing Committees.

  • Infrastructure Policy Update.

  • WILDFIRE: The Talc of Two California Communities.

  • Be Ready When (Not If) You're Hit with a Cyber Attack.

  • Take Your Meetings from Waste of Time to Worth It.

  • THE COST OF COLLECTION: Rethinking Criminal Justice Fees and Fines as a Revenue Source.

  • What Worked: Creating an Award-Winning Local P3 Project.

  • Building a Capital Asset Management Program.

  • Reforming Economic Development Incentives.

  • City of Tempe's Performance-Led Budgeting Team.

  • About Face; Forward March!(IN PRACTICE: ACCOUNTING)

  • Letting the Citizens Help Run the Store.

  • Accrual Budgeting: The Good, the Bad, and the Useful.

  • Q&A: Jay Goldstone, who recently retired as managing director at Mitsubishi UFJ Financial Group, spoke with GFOA managers Ryan Lawler and Elizabeth Fu about his impressive career in both the public and private sector, and the current state of public finance.

  • Tax Incentive Reform.

  • 10 Steps to Running a Worthwhile Meeting.

  • February 01, 2020

  • SHARE YOUR WORK!(Perspectives)

  • Planning Energy Savings Projects.

  • Urban and Rural Populations.

  • The Role of Interns in Succession Planning.

  • GFOA Code of Ethics Reimagines the Old Way of Thinking.

  • High-Deductible Plan Enrollment Grows as Employers Express Increasing Scepticism.

  • A CALL FOR GFOA MEMBERS TO Raise the State of the Profession.

  • How One Town Changed the Pension Conversation in Arizona.

  • MEASURING THE PERFORMANCE OF MODERN PUBLIC FUNDS INVESTMENT PORTFOLIOS.

  • Building Trust through Reliability and Consistency.

  • Kansas City Identifies Four Key Factors to a Successful Online Financial Transparency Project.

  • Montgomery County: Serious about Online Transparency since 1992: Montgomery County explains the elements that contributed to the success of its online financial transparency platforms.

  • Wally Ritchie: From Government Finance to Major League Baseball: A former professional baseball player talks about his days in the Philadelphia Phillies and his second career in local government finance.

  • A Byte of Prevention: As stewards of public data, finance officers must understand the significance of cyber threats, including the large costs governments face in recovering lost data, restoring public trust, and otherwise recovenng from a breach.

  • Government Finance Officers Association: Key Dates.

  • 2020 Federal Priorities: Tax-exempt bonds are the primary mechanism through which state and local governments raise capital to finance a wide range of essential public projects.

  • Budget in the Language of Accounting: The presentation of mandatory budgetary comparisons generally does not provide enough detail to demonstrate that a government has fully complied with its legally adopted budget.

  • The Framework for Coping with an Environmental Disaster: Lessons that the City of Flint, Michigan, has learned as it works to get lead out of its drinking water can show the way for other cities that are coping with their own crises.