Public Sector Leadership and Governance Libya

Programme-Based and Performance Budgeting Training Course

Across public finance teams, the pressure is no longer just to balance inputs and line items, but to show how every allocation supports programme outputs, measurable outcomes, and credible reporting. Programme-based and performance budgeting is a budgeting approach that links resources to programmes, activities, outputs, outcomes, and performance indicators. It enables professionals to build costed programme structures, set targets, track variances, and justify budget choices with evidence. Frameworks such as the Government Performance and Results Act Modernization Act, OMB Circular A-11, and activity-based costing already shape how high-performing budget offices work, while AI-assisted variance analysis and digital dashboards are changing how finance teams monitor execution and explain results.

This course is designed for budget analysts, public finance officers, programme managers, performance measurement specialists, and policy leads who need to produce programme budgets, performance scorecards, budget narratives, and monitoring reports that stand up to scrutiny. You will leave with practical tools for linking resources to results, plus the structure needed to communicate budget decisions with clarity and authority.

Duration
5 Days
Duration
Certificate
Certificate
Included
Delivery
Instructor-Led
Delivery
Level
Advanced
Level
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USD 1,050
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USD 1,050
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Mon - Fri (5 Days)
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Mon - Fri (5 Days)
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Weekend (4 Wks)
USD 1,050
Starts
Ends
Mon - Fri (5 Days)
USD 1,050

Classroom Training

In-person sessions at premier locations

Nairobi Kenya
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 1,800
Kigali Rwanda
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 2,100
Dubai United Arab Emirates (UAE)
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 4,600
Zanzibar Tanzania
Mon - Fri
5 Days
USD 2,900
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Location Duration Fee Language
Nairobi, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,800 English See dates & reserve →
Kigali, Rwanda Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,100 English See dates & reserve →
Dubai, United Arab Emirates (UAE) Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 4,600 English See dates & reserve →
Zanzibar, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,900 English See dates & reserve →
Abuja, Nigeria Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,100 English See dates & reserve →
Addis Ababa, Ethiopia Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,700 English See dates & reserve →
Mombasa, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,900 English See dates & reserve →
Cape Town, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 4,200 English See dates & reserve →
Johannesburg, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,800 English See dates & reserve →
Kampala, Uganda Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,100 English See dates & reserve →
Pretoria, South Africa Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,600 English See dates & reserve →
Lagos, Nigeria Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,500 English See dates & reserve →
Arusha, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,000 English See dates & reserve →
Dar es Salaam, Tanzania Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 2,094 English See dates & reserve →
Accra, Ghana Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 3,800 English See dates & reserve →
Bangalore, India Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 4,600 English See dates & reserve →
Muscat, Oman Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 4,800 English See dates & reserve →
Naivasha, Kenya Mon - Fri (5 Days) USD 1,900 English See dates & reserve →

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About the Course

Organizations that want credible results in programme-based and performance budgeting must demonstrate more than spending control. They need to show how they define programme structures, link outputs to costs, set performance indicators, and explain why one allocation better supports mission delivery than another under frameworks such as OMB Circular A-11, GPRA, and activity-based costing. That means you need to work confidently with programme maps, cost drivers, budget ceilings, performance indicators, and variance reports, not just traditional input-based budget tables.

This course turns scattered budgeting knowledge into a structured system you can use in real budget cycles. You will practice building programme hierarchies, mapping activities to outputs, calculating full costs, drafting performance indicators and targets, and preparing budget justification notes. You will also be introduced to dashboard-based budget monitoring, data validation workflows, and AI-assisted analysis for spotting anomalies in execution data. In practical terms, you will learn how to design a programme budget structure, develop a performance scorecard, and prepare a budget narrative that connects resources, outputs, and outcomes in a form decision-makers can review quickly.

The training is built for professionals who work under tight ceilings, competing priorities, weak data quality, and pressure to justify every allocation. You may face fragmented chart-of-accounts structures, inconsistent activity data, or demanding reporting deadlines, so the course keeps the focus on methods you can apply with realistic institutional maturity. This course teaches programme-based and performance budgeting through cost mapping, indicator design, and budget monitoring so you can improve allocation quality, transparency, and reporting discipline.


Target Audience

This course is designed for professionals who prepare, review, justify, monitor, or report on programme budgets and performance results in public finance environments.

  • Budget Analysts responsible for programme cost builds and budget justification notes
  • Public Finance Officers tracking allocations, execution, and budget variance analysis
  • Programme Managers linking activities, outputs, and delivery targets to funding
  • Performance Measurement Specialists designing indicators, targets, and monitoring scorecards
  • Planning and Budget Officers coordinating strategic plans with annual budget submissions
  • Management Accountants supporting activity-based costing and full-cost calculations
  • Policy Analysts translating service priorities into budget narratives and allocations
  • Monitoring and Evaluation Officers aligning performance data with budget reporting
  • Budget Directors presenting allocation trade-offs to executive leadership and oversight bodies
  • Financial Controllers reconciling programme execution data with chart-of-accounts structures

Course Objectives

This course equips you to plan, execute, and measure programme-based and performance budgeting initiatives that improve allocation quality, strengthen budget credibility, and support accountable public finance decisions.

  • Assess your current budget structure using programme mapping and OMB Circular A-11 alignment.
  • Apply activity-based costing to link programme activities, resources, and output costs.
  • Design a programme budget framework with measurable outputs, outcomes, and cost centres.
  • Build performance indicators and targets using GPRA-style performance logic and dashboard fields.
  • Calculate full costs, variance rates, and unit costs from budget execution data.
  • Evaluate budget proposals against performance measures, GPRA Modernization Act principles, and indicator quality.
  • Implement budget monitoring workflows using Excel-based trackers and AI-assisted variance analysis.
  • Synthesize cost, output, and outcome data into budget narratives and executive reporting packs.

Requirements & Prerequisites

Participants should have working knowledge of public budgeting, financial reporting, and programme planning. Familiarity with Excel-based budget analysis, performance indicators, and basic cost concepts will help you apply the exercises more quickly. No coding is required, although experience using spreadsheets, budget templates, or reporting dashboards is useful. The course is pitched at an advanced level, so it assumes you already work with budget preparation, monitoring, or performance reporting in a finance, planning, or programme role.


Local Application and Business Return in Libya

How participants can apply the training in local operating conditions, and the return their organisation can plan for.

How participants apply this

Participants apply this course by redesigning budget submissions around programmes, activities, outputs, and outcomes instead of only economic line items. They learn how to cost each programme, define measurable indicators, and set targets that can be tracked through the fiscal year. In day-to-day work, this helps them prepare budget notes, performance scorecards, and monitoring reports that align spending with delivery. It also supports more structured discussions with managers when actual spending or delivery is deviating from plan.

Expected ROI

Within 6–12 months, organisations typically see clearer budget justifications, faster variance explanation, and better internal visibility over programme delivery. Finance teams can reduce time spent reconciling fragmented reports because the programme structure creates a common reporting frame. Managers gain a more practical basis for shifting funds, tightening weak activities, or defending high-priority programmes. The strongest payoff is usually improved accountability, not immediate cost cutting.

Training Methodology

This is a practical, outcome-driven course designed to turn programme-based and performance budgeting aspiration into measurable action and credible reporting.

Methodology includes:

  • Calculate unit costs and full costs using an Excel budget dataset.
  • Simulate a budget negotiation under fiscal ceiling and performance target pressure.
  • Assess a sample budget against GPRA, OMB Circular A-11, and indicator quality checks.
  • Map stakeholder reporting from programme team to finance lead to executive reviewer.
  • Analyze cases from health, education, local government, and social protection budgets.
  • Build a programme budget, performance scorecard, and budget justification note in workshop time.
  • Reflect on current practices against budget execution variance benchmarks and cost-driver evidence.

Upcoming Sessions

Next available dates worldwide

Virtual

(Zoom) Training
USD 1,050
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Nairobi

Kenya
USD 1,800
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Kigali

Rwanda
USD 2,100
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Dubai

United Arab Emirates (UAE)
USD 4,600
27th Jul-31st Jul 2026

Abuja

Nigeria
USD 3,100
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Zanzibar

Tanzania
USD 2,900
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Addis Ababa

Ethiopia
USD 2,700
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Mombasa

Kenya
USD 1,900
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Cape Town

South Africa
USD 4,200
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Johannesburg

South Africa
USD 3,800
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Kampala

Uganda
USD 2,100
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Pretoria

South Africa
USD 3,600
29th Jun-3rd Jul 2026

Lagos

Nigeria
USD 2,500
6th Jul-10th Jul 2026

Certification

Recognized credentials that advance your career

Participants who complete the Programme-Based and Performance Budgeting Training Program earn a Trainingcred Certificate of Achievement, demonstrating professional competence and alignment with global standards in learning and development.

NITA Accredited

Accredited by the National Industrial Training Authority, ensuring programs meet nationally recognized standards of quality and relevance.

CPD Certified

Recognized by the CPD Certification Service, ensuring every program meets internationally benchmarked standards of professional excellence.

Why this course earns its place on your CV

Accredited training, practitioner trainers, and peers on the same career track — the three things real expertise is built on.

Effective Learning & Skill Development

  • Build expertise with structured, outcome-driven learning.
  • Equip individuals and teams with skills that grow with industry needs.
  • Reinforce learning through real-world scenarios, case studies and practical exercises.

Career Growth & Professional Advancement

  • Apply what you learn with a proven methodology that ensures lasting impact.
  • Develop immediately usable skills that translate directly into workplace success.
  • Gain the expertise needed for career advancement and leadership roles.

Training Optimization & Learning Excellence

  • Tailor training to industry-specific challenges and organizational goals.
  • Use data-driven insights and automation to enhance training effectiveness.
  • Evaluate progress and ensure long-term learning success.

Tools and platforms relevant to this field

Examples Libya teams may encounter, and that may be featured in training where they support the confirmed course scope.

3

These are field-relevant examples, not a promise that every tool will be covered. Exact coverage depends on the confirmed course scope, participant needs, and delivery format.

  • Microsoft Power BI Microsoft
    Used to build budget dashboards, track execution against targets, and present programme performance to management.
  • Microsoft Excel Microsoft
    Used for budget modelling, variance analysis, programme cost tracking, and preparing performance schedules.
  • SAP Analytics Cloud SAP
    Used by finance teams to consolidate planning, forecasting, and performance reporting in a single environment.

Real Results from Real Professionals

Thousands of professionals have transformed their careers through our training programs. Now, it's your turn.

Local market advisory

Course relevance for Libya

A country-specific view of market pressure, regulatory context, and practical business return behind this training.

  • Market context
  • Regulatory fit
  • Business application

Why this course matters in Libya

A market-specific advisory on the operating pressures this course helps teams address.

Programme-based and performance budgeting is relevant in Libya because public institutions need stronger ways to link scarce fiscal resources to service delivery, monitor execution, and explain trade-offs with evidence rather than line-item inputs alone. The course is most useful for budget departments, line ministries, planning units, and programme managers that must build credible programme structures, set measurable targets, and report results to senior decision-makers. It helps leaders decide which activities to fund, which outputs to prioritise, and where implementation gaps are weakening outcomes. The wider value is better budget discipline, clearer accountability, and more defensible funding requests in a resource-constrained environment.
Outputs matter more than inputs

In a programme budget, Libyan ministries need to show what services and outputs money will buy, not just how much will be spent. That makes the course especially relevant for finance teams that must defend allocations during budget negotiations.

Performance evidence improves credibility

When reporting is weak, budget requests are easier to challenge and harder to sustain. Training in indicators, targets, and variance analysis helps teams produce reports that support planning and strengthen internal accountability.

Useful for reform and control functions

Public-sector reform efforts depend on a common budgeting language across finance, planning, and programme teams. This course gives those teams a practical framework for linking strategy, spending, and delivery in one structure.

This training is timely because performance-oriented budgeting requires more disciplined programme definitions, better monitoring, and clearer reporting than traditional line-item approaches. In a setting where public resources must be justified carefully, teams need the capability to connect allocations to measurable results and explain execution gaps quickly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Got questions? We've gathered the answers to common queries to help you feel confident and informed.

Budget analysts, public finance officers, planning staff, programme managers, and performance monitoring staff benefit most. It is also useful for leaders who review budget submissions and want clearer links between spending and results.

Prior exposure to budgeting helps, but the course is most valuable for teams moving from line-item budgeting to a programme structure. Participants learn the practical steps for building indicators, targets, and reporting templates.

Ordinary budget training often focuses on preparing and controlling expenditure by account code. Programme-based and performance budgeting adds the logic of outputs, outcomes, and performance measures, so decision-makers can judge whether spending is producing results.

They should be able to draft programme budgets, performance narratives, monitoring tables, and variance explanations. Those outputs are designed to support internal review and more defensible budget submissions.

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