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Finding the Money

Public Accountability and Service Efficiency Through Fiscal Transparency

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Finding the Money focuses on those areas of government that are most exposed to grand or petty corruption: budgeting, tax administration, public procurement, and management of government assets. The eight chapters are based on the assumption that corruption has systemic causes. By improving social accountability mechanisms and by increasing the institutional and human capacities of government, malfunctioning states and municipalities can be transformed. The anti-corruption techniques presented here go well beyond the introduction of political control mechanisms, expanding transparency, or revising the compact between the state and private service organizations to recommend the steps needed for fiscal transparency and good governance. Public sector integrity also depends on governments' capacity to introduce these measures, the incentives to comply set by intergovernmental fiscal relations, the use of audit and the shortest route of accountability, i.e., its direct influence by customers on service providers.

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Finding the Money, Gábor Péteri

Sprache
Erscheinungsdatum
2008
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Titel
Finding the Money
Untertitel
Public Accountability and Service Efficiency Through Fiscal Transparency
Sprache
Englisch
Autor*innen
Gábor Péteri
Einband
Paperback
Seitenzahl
236
ISBN10
9639719099
ISBN13
9789639719095
Reihe
Beschreibung
Finding the Money focuses on those areas of government that are most exposed to grand or petty corruption: budgeting, tax administration, public procurement, and management of government assets. The eight chapters are based on the assumption that corruption has systemic causes. By improving social accountability mechanisms and by increasing the institutional and human capacities of government, malfunctioning states and municipalities can be transformed. The anti-corruption techniques presented here go well beyond the introduction of political control mechanisms, expanding transparency, or revising the compact between the state and private service organizations to recommend the steps needed for fiscal transparency and good governance. Public sector integrity also depends on governments' capacity to introduce these measures, the incentives to comply set by intergovernmental fiscal relations, the use of audit and the shortest route of accountability, i.e., its direct influence by customers on service providers.