When budget allows: Difference between revisions

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''Just thinkin’ about tomorrow'' <br>
''Just thinkin’ about tomorrow'' <br>
''Clears away the cobwebs and the sorrow ’til there’s none'' <br>
''Clears away the cobwebs and the sorrow ’til there’s none'' <br>
<br>
''Tomorrow! Tomorrow! I love ya, tomorrow! —'' <br>
''Tomorrow! Tomorrow! I love ya, tomorrow! —'' <br>
''You’re always a day away.'' <br>
''You’re always a day away.'' <br>

Revision as of 17:05, 12 October 2021

Annie, get your gun
In which the curmudgeonly old sod puts the world to rights.
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The sun’ll come out tomorrow
Bet your bottom dollar that tomorrow there’ll be sun
Just thinkin’ about tomorrow
Clears away the cobwebs and the sorrow ’til there’s none
Tomorrow! Tomorrow! I love ya, tomorrow! —
You’re always a day away.

— “Tomorrow”, from Annie (1977)

“When budget allows” is a hypothetical time in the future that, like Little Orphan Annie’s Tomorrow, is always there, dangling tantalisingly before us, as each day turns, getting no nearer. It is an indeterminate time of hope and aspiration: a sunlit dream-time in which there will be budget to hook up that feed, build out that API or invest in that brilliant piece of legaltech, for which there is no budget now.

Logicians will immediately sense a paradox. If its worth now fails to pass muster, its present value should it be delivered at an unknowable point in the henceforth is surely smaller still. The aperture constricts the further out we push. Through what of contortion in the spacetedium continuum must we crawl to reach that happy land?

Their suspicions will be confirmed by that glint in the middle manager’s eye. Presented with some supplicant’s woe-filled entreaties for the proposed expenditure, he will happily promise to sort it all out just as soon as budget allows. He will say this with confidence and without regret, while maintaining eye contact. He can assure, in good conscience, that all will, at that time, be well. For that time — the notional time in the future whjen budget allows is, literally, unknowable, in that it will never be known.

For if there is not enough interest to shell out for it now, will it be any closer to that threshold next month, next quarter, or by the time the next fiscal budgeting cycle rolls around?

Rhetorical question.

See also