Management Reform: Test Your Knowledge

OK, let's test your memories: Below is a quotation from a president about his management reform effort. Can you fill in the blanks with the correct name of the crusade (and, for bonus points, name the president)?

This coming week I'll bring my senior appointees together at the White House to continue an ambitious program to upgrade management of the Federal Government. Our long-range goal is to overhaul the entire administrative system. I call this effort _______________. It's a big job. Our government has ... personnel in over 22,000 buildings, using 19,000 computers, 330 differing financial systems, and 200 payroll systems, and there's never been an effective effort to manage this growing administrative monster.

Each year we've fallen behind the private sector in management techniques. Well, we're bringing this to an end now. _______________ is geared to get results. Over a 6-year period, it'll save the taxpayers or result in a better use of tens of billions of dollars that could mean as much as the equivalent of nearly $2,000 for the average American family. And these savings won't be obtained by cutting help to the deserving but by eliminating waste and inefficiency.

Use the comments field to supply your answer. (Here's a tip: Shortly, there will be a big clue posted elsewhere on GovernmentExecutive.com.)

And remember, in the world of bureaucratic reform, everything old is new again.

Update: As the comments make pretty clear, the correct answer is Reform 88 and Ronald Reagan. In retrospect, the bit about more federal buildings than computers was kind of a giveaway. Thanks to all for playing.