Does Good Auditing Generate Quality of Government?
Abstract
Despite the large focus in research and practice on audit, inspections and oversight activities there
has been few empirical studies showing the effects of auditing on public sector performance.
Hence, we have little knowledge of whether auditing lead to positive, negative or no effects at all on
the public sector. This paper argues that there is a need to connect empirical studies of auditing to
an overall theoretical framework, defining what “good government auditing” consists of, in order
to study if such auditing has positive effects on public sector performance. The paper presents a
definition of good government auditing which builds on three core principles: independence, professionalism
and recognizing the people as the principal, which is operationalized and tested empirically
in the paper. Using data from a unique worldwide expert survey, covering 122 countries, the
results clearly demonstrate that good government auditing has a distinct positive and statistically
significant effect of the performance of the public sector. These findings indicate that merely conducting
audits of the public sector is not sufficient, auditing also needs to be organized according to
certain principles, in order to contribute to well-functioning public administrations.
Link to web site
http://qog.pol.gu.se/digitalAssets/1538/1538160_2015_15_gustavson.pdf
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Date
2015-08Author
Gustavson, Maria
Publication type
article, other scientific
ISSN
1653-8919
Series/Report no.
Working Papers
2015:15
Language
eng