Departmental and central government accountability to the UK Parliament was based principally on cash transactions for a period of over 300 years commencing with the Glorious Revolution of 1688. Beginning in the second decade of the nineteenth century, recurrent proposals for the replacement of cash accounting by accruals accounting were founded on the conviction that “commercial” accounting practices provided a more effective basis for performance measurement, financial control and public accountability. This paper studies the progress of these initiatives through time, with Treasury resistance to the adoption of private sector-type accounting practices by administrative departments recognized as a persistent and effective barrier to innov...
At the end of a long process of transition from cash accounting, UK central government departments d...
This paper draws on the work of Streeck and Schmitter (1985) and its subsequent use by Puxty, et al ...
Accounting regulation in the United Kingdom has arisen as a response to social and economic factors ...
Departmental and central government accountability to the UK Parliament was based principally on cas...
This paper examines a significant accounting innovation in central government accounting – the intro...
In 1988 the New South Wales (NSW) Government was the first in Australia, and amongst the first in t...
Perceptions of the nature and scope of accounting in modern societies have changed dramatically in t...
In a personal account, the author looks back over nearly 25 years of public sector accounting in the...
From a long time, accounting for public entities has been on a cash basis, with no change until the ...
The relationship between accounting and governmentality, and the increasing statutory regulation of ...
Since the introduction of New Public Management, a widespread reform of the whole accountability sys...
The UK government made a commitment to produce a consolidated set of public sector accruals-based ac...
This paper examines a significant accounting innovation in central government accounting – the intro...
Given the breadth and depth of extant literature on the subject, scepticism on the part of the reade...
Traditionally, governments used to deploy input-based budgeting systems and cash-based accounting sy...
At the end of a long process of transition from cash accounting, UK central government departments d...
This paper draws on the work of Streeck and Schmitter (1985) and its subsequent use by Puxty, et al ...
Accounting regulation in the United Kingdom has arisen as a response to social and economic factors ...
Departmental and central government accountability to the UK Parliament was based principally on cas...
This paper examines a significant accounting innovation in central government accounting – the intro...
In 1988 the New South Wales (NSW) Government was the first in Australia, and amongst the first in t...
Perceptions of the nature and scope of accounting in modern societies have changed dramatically in t...
In a personal account, the author looks back over nearly 25 years of public sector accounting in the...
From a long time, accounting for public entities has been on a cash basis, with no change until the ...
The relationship between accounting and governmentality, and the increasing statutory regulation of ...
Since the introduction of New Public Management, a widespread reform of the whole accountability sys...
The UK government made a commitment to produce a consolidated set of public sector accruals-based ac...
This paper examines a significant accounting innovation in central government accounting – the intro...
Given the breadth and depth of extant literature on the subject, scepticism on the part of the reade...
Traditionally, governments used to deploy input-based budgeting systems and cash-based accounting sy...
At the end of a long process of transition from cash accounting, UK central government departments d...
This paper draws on the work of Streeck and Schmitter (1985) and its subsequent use by Puxty, et al ...
Accounting regulation in the United Kingdom has arisen as a response to social and economic factors ...