Title of article
Public sector accrual accounting: institutionalising neo-liberal principles?
Author/Authors
Sheila Ellwood، نويسنده , , Susan Newberry، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Pages
25
From page
549
To page
573
Abstract
Purpose – The purpose of this paper is to examine the role of public sector accounting in
implementing neoliberal reforms.
Design/methodology/approach – The proposition that the adoption and development of accrual
accounting in the public sector is a technical development intended to improve transparency and
accountability is investigated. The paper compares the development and use of accrual accounting in
public sector financial management reforms in the UK and New Zealand.
Findings – The findings in this paper suggest that in both countries, accrual accounting, as
developed, also provides a means to reduce the government’s role to that of procurer of services and
enforcer of rules set by others, thus advancing a controversial privatisation and trade liberalisation
agenda which is consistent with neo-liberal principles.
Research limitations/implications – The paper shows that in contrast to more usual claims about
the need for accrual accounting to provide a “read across between the sectors” or that public interest
motives assure the neutrality of accounting, seemingly technical accrual accounting developments
seem to function as a political tool to aid a controversial political agenda. There is a need to look at the
overall effect of public sector financial management reforms and the role of, and implications for,
accounting standard-setters.
Originality/value – The information in the paper applies to accounting the new political economics
literature on agenda control and information based structures where control is achieved through
information asymmetries.
Keywords
New Zealand , Public sector accounting , United KingdomPaper type Research paper
Journal title
Accounting Auditing and Accountability Journal
Serial Year
2007
Journal title
Accounting Auditing and Accountability Journal
Record number
705259
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