The first indication of infection is glazing of the eyes. This can be followed by eyes rolling back into the head, rapid lid fluttering, head bobbing, and rarely, drooling. The urge to sleep starts to take control. Onset is caused by someone initiating a conversation about budgets. Symptoms will quickly dissipate once the conversation ends.
Those affected by this condition may find it humorous at first, but the side effects can be quite serious. They include, but are not limited to, inability to feed your family due to improper priorities (a new motorcycle is more important than food); furloughs; injuries caused by outdated and unsafe equipment; a decrease in take-home pay caused by the government's inability to ratify a budget; elimination of programs or services; pay decrease combined with benefit cost increase; public outcry over misuse of funds; public embarrassment; increased taxes; or even the loss of a job.
As a financial officer, I see the symptoms of this disease every day. Some officers don't think budgets affect them, so why should they care? I've even heard budgets compared to diets. Seriously? Budgets are important in every aspect of our lives. Ignoring, avoiding, or denying them doesn't change their importance. Inaction may cause panic.
Consider this. A supervisor with budget responsibility believes budgets are an annoyance. She marginalizes anything to do with them, pays no attention to her department's spending and writes off the financial officer as a controlling little nerd with nothing better to do than bother her. Without realizing the impact of her dismissive attitude, she may utter statements such as:
"I'm a cop. I have more important things to worry about."