Article

Accounting practice, fiscal decentralization and corruption

Details

Citation

Changwony FK & Paterson AS (2019) Accounting practice, fiscal decentralization and corruption. British Accounting Review, 51 (5), Art. No.: 100834. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.bar.2019.04.003

Abstract
In prior studies, accounting and decentralization corruption solutions have so far been analysed in isolation. In this article, we connect these two strands of literature on corruption. Understanding this connection is important because weak financial accounting and reporting systems can inhibit monitoring incentives and thus reduce decentralization benefits in countering corruption. We argue that the effectiveness of decentralization as an anti-corruption barrier is complemented by the quality of the accounting practice in a country. Using multiple sources of data, we find that decentralization has a positive and increasing effect on reducing corruption among countries with a high-quality accounting practice. In contrast, decentralization has a negative and decreasing effect on reducing corruption among countries with weak-quality accounting practices. These findings are robust to alternative measures of accounting, decentralization and corruption and to endogeneity tests. Our findings demonstrate the crucial information role of accounting in enhancing decentralization monitoring mechanisms and in thereby reducing corruption.

Keywords
Accounting practice; Fiscal decentralization; Corruption; Public sector accounting; Financial reporting standards; IPSASs

Journal
British Accounting Review: Volume 51, Issue 5

StatusPublished
Publication date30/09/2019
Publication date online08/05/2019
Date accepted by journal30/04/2019
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/29818
PublisherElsevier BV
ISSN0890-8389

People (1)

People

Dr Fredrick Changwony

Dr Fredrick Changwony

Lecturer in Accounting & Finance, Accounting & Finance