Author:
Parker Lee D.,Jacobs Kerry,Schmitz Jana
Abstract
Purpose
In the context of global new public management reform trends and the associated phenomenon of performance auditing (PA), the purpose of this paper is to explore the rise of performance audit in Australia and examines its focus across audit jurisdictions and the role key stakeholders play in driving its practice.
Design/methodology/approach
The study adopts a multi-jurisdictional analysis of PA in Australia to explore its scale and focus, drawing on the theoretical tools of Goffman. Documentary analysis and interview methods are employed.
Findings
Performance audit growth has continued but not always consistently over time and across audit jurisdictions. Despite auditor discourse concerning backstage performance audit intentions being strongly focussed on evaluating programme outcomes, published front stage reports retain a strong control focus. While this appears to reflect Auditors-General (AGs) reluctance to critique government policy, nonetheless there are signs of direct and indirectly recursive relationships emerging between AGs and parliamentarians, the media and the public.
Research limitations/implications
PA merits renewed researcher attention as it is now an established process but with ongoing variability in focus and stakeholder influence.
Social implications
As an audit technology now well-embedded in the public sector accountability setting, it offers potential insights into matters of local, state and national importance for parliament and the public, but exhibits variable underlying drivers, agendas and styles of presentation that have the capacity to enhance or detract from the public interest.
Originality/value
Performance audit emerges as a complex practice deployed as a mask by auditors in managing their relationship with key stakeholders.
Subject
Economics, Econometrics and Finance (miscellaneous),Accounting
Reference88 articles.
1. Efficiency auditing in the Australian audit office;Australian Journal of Public Administrations,1986
2. Accounting and organizations: realizing the richness of field research;Journal of Management Accounting Research,1998
3. Australian Government (2018), “State and territory government”, available at: www.australia.gov.au/about-government/how-government-works/state-and-territory-government (accessed 5 March 2018).
4. Commentary: where you sit is what you see: the seven deadly sins of performance auditing: implications for monitoring public audit institutions;Australian Accounting Review,2011
5. Central audit institutions and performance auditing: a comparative analysis of organizational strategies in the OECD;Governance,1997
Cited by
57 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献