Abstract
PurposeThe World Bank-sponsored public financial management reforms attempt to instil fiscal discipline through techno-managerial packages. Taking Ghana's integrated financial management information system (IFMIS) as a case, this paper explores how and why local actors engaged in counter-conduct against these reforms.Design/methodology/approachInterviews, observations and documentary analyses on the operationalisation of IFMIS constitute this paper's empirical basis. Theoretically, the paper draws on Foucauldian notions of governmentality and counter-conduct.FindingsEmpirics demonstrate how and why politicians and bureaucrats enacted ways of escaping, evading and subverting IFMIS's disciplinary regime. Politicians found the new accounting regime too constraining to their electoral and patronage politics and, therefore, enacted counter-conduct around the notion of political exigencies, creating expansionary fiscal conditions which the World Bank tried to mitigate through IFMIS. Perceiving the new regime as subverting their bureaucratic identity and influence, bureaucrats counter-conducted reforms through questioning, critiquing and rhetorical venting. Notably, the patronage politics of appropriating wealth and power underpins both these political and bureaucratic counter-conducts.Originality/valueThis study contributes to the critical accounting understanding of global public financial management reform failures by offering new empirical and theoretical insights as to how and why politicians and bureaucrats who are supposed to own and implement them nullify the global governmentality intentions of fiscal disciplining through subdued forms of resistance.
Subject
Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),Accounting
Reference100 articles.
1. The power of partnerships in global governance;Third World Quarterly,2004
2. Accounting and structural reforms: a case study of Egyptian electricity;Critical Perspectives on Accounting,2018
3. Behind the World Bank's ringing declarations of ‘social accountability’: Ghana's public financial management reform;Critical Perspectives on Accounting,2021
4. Appearance of accounting in a political hegemony;Critical Perspectives on Accounting,2008
5. Weapons of the weak: subalterns' emancipatory accounting in Ceylon Tea;Accounting, Auditing & Accountability Journal,2009