WHY CASH-BASED BUDGETING STILL PREVAILS IN AN ERA OF ACCRUAL-BASED REPORTING IN THE PUBLIC SECTOR Hot
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Uploaded by Jan van Helden
Uploaded date: April 04, 2017
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Publication date
July 01, 2017
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Paper language
Abstract
This paper discusses the phenomenon that governments in many Western countries have transferred their cash-based systems into accrual-based systems for reporting purposes during the last decades, while still re-taining cash-based budgeting systems. The main question we want to answer is whether there are more sub-stantial reasons why governments prefer cash above accruals for budgeting. Our paper is the result of a com-prehensive literature review. At first glance, combining accruals for both budgeting and reporting seems to be preferable above combining cash for budgeting and accruals for reporting: there is consistency between the budgeting and reporting logic, and accrual information is richer than cash information. However, we are in favor of a more nuanced perspective. The combination of cash for budgeting and accruals for reporting can be defended through the lens of a fundamental budgeting logic that identifies all expenditures and revenues ex-pected for the budget year and sees the comparison between cash-based appropriations and actual cash-outflows as an easy and straightforward control mode. Moreover, this combination aligns with the domi-nance of budgeting over reporting and the limited accounting expertise of many accounting information users (for example, public sector managers and especially politicians). We argue that the ultimate transfer from cash to accruals in budgeting needs to be based on a solid assessment of its added value to these users, and not due to pressures of accounting experts.
Preferred Citation
Christoph Reichard and Jan van Helden (2017), Why cash-based budgeting still prevails in a era of accrual-based reporting in the public sector,Accounting, Finance and Governance Review, forthcoming
Keywords
cash-based budgeting, accrual-based budgeting, public sector, literature review
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Category
Financial accounting
Type of Paper
Published paper