Democracy isn’t just about elections — it’s about who decides what gets built, funded, or ignored.
Participatory budgeting (PB) flips the script: everyday people directly propose, debate, and vote on how public dollars are spent.
It turns governance from a spectator sport into a shared responsibility.
Participatory budgeting started in Porto Alegre, Brazil, in 1989.
Today, more than 7,000 cities, schools, and counties use PB to:
The result: Democracy that’s hands-on, not hands-off.
1. Communities propose ideas.
Residents identify local needs: safer streets, school upgrades, parks, climate resilience, transit access.
2. Committees shape proposals.
Volunteers work with city staff to turn ideas into feasible, costed projects.
3. The community votes.
Anyone in the area—often including youth and non-citizens—casts ballots.
4. The government funds the winning projects.
Budgets get allocated. Progress is tracked publicly.
Transparency replaces guesswork. Shared governance replaces top-down power.
NYC’s “The People’s Money” gives residents — including 11- to 18-year-olds — the power to steer $5 million to mental health programs, housing support, and violence prevention.
Result: Highest youth turnout in the program’s history, with dozens of projects led by students and neighborhood groups.
Paris allocates 5% of its entire city budget — roughly €100 million per year — to citizen-designed projects.
Funded ideas include rooftop gardens, bike corridors, micro-libraries, and urban cooling zones.
Seoul’s online PB platform allows millions to propose and discuss ideas.
Popular projects: community solar, senior care centers, and neighborhood “pocket parks.”
Residents vote on local reinvestment funds for street lighting, water access, local markets, and women’s safety corridors — directly influencing basic infrastructure in underserved neighborhoods.
Students aged 6–18 decide how to spend school improvement funds.
Winning ideas: science labs, inclusive playgrounds, anti-bullying design, mental-health rooms.
PB is evolving from one-off projects to systemic governance tools:
PB is no longer an experiment — it’s a new operating system.
Communities are moving from “advocacy” to agency.
From “please fix this” to “we’ll lead the fix — partner with us.”
Participation becomes a right, not a request.
Expect PB to expand into:
As communities take the wheel, democracy stops being a crisis to manage and becomes a practice we all share.
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June 12, 2026 Risk shows exposure. Solutions build capability. Mobilized connects the two — daily.…
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June 12, 2026 Risk shows exposure. Solutions build capability. Mobilized connects the two — daily.…
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