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Blog main article:
Using taxpayers' money efficiently
Why it's not about saving - but about maximum impact per euro
Public budgets are under constant pressure. At the same time, citizens are increasingly expecting government services to have a measurable impact: better infrastructure, faster administration, functioning education, affordable housing, security and resilience.
The central question is therefore not: "Are we spending too much?"
Rather: "Are we achieving the best possible impact with every euro?"
The core problem: budget management instead of impact management
In many administrations, budgets are still managed according to traditional logic:
- Departments optimize in isolation
- Individual measures are evaluated separately
- Historical budget lines are updated
- Synergies and conflicting objectives remain invisible
- Opportunity costs are rarely quantified
The result is often not waste in the criminal sense - but suboptimal combinations. Money is spent, but not where it will have the greatest impact in the overall system.
The invisible cost block: suppressed alternatives
Every decision in favor of measure A is automatically a decision against B, C or a better combination of several measures. These suppressed alternatives are the largest - and most invisible - cost factor in government budgets.
The most important control question is therefore:
Which combination of measures maximizes the overall social impact within a fixed budget?
Why complexity goes beyond traditional decision-making logic
Even a few dozen measures create a decision-making space that can no longer be reliably surveyed by humans. Interactions, path dependencies, delayed effects and risks make the evaluation not only complex, but also non-linear.
This inevitably leads to simplifications: political heuristics, gut feeling, media logic or departmental interests. These mechanisms are understandable - but they are not a reliable optimization process.
Efficiency means: more impact with the same budget
"Efficient use of taxpayers' money" does not automatically mean cuts. It means
- clear impact targets instead of pure input logic
- Portfolio view instead of individual project silos
- measurable prioritization under budget and risk restrictions
- systematic use of synergies (measures that reinforce each other)
- Transparency about conflicting objectives and opportunity costs
How AI is changing the management of public budgets
Modern decision-making intelligence does not use AI as an "opinion machine", but as a calculation and optimization tool: it evaluates large quantities of possible combinations of measures, takes budget limits, risks and impact parameters into account - and identifies the combination with the highest overall impact.
This turns budget management into impact-oriented portfolio optimization.
Conclusion
Using taxpayers' money efficiently is not a question of morality, but of method. In complex systems, efficiency is not achieved through stricter rules alone - but through better decision-making logic.
If you manage public funds like a portfolio, you can achieve significantly more impact with the same budget - transparently, comprehensibly and controllably.