公共部门审计:是否物有所植Public Sector Auditing : Is it Value for Money

分類: 图书,进口原版书,经管与理财 Business & Investing ,
作者: John Bourn 著
出 版 社:
出版时间: 2008-1-1字数:版次: 1页数: 412印刷时间: 2008/01/01开本: 16开印次: 1纸张: 胶版纸I S B N : 9780470057223包装: 精装编辑推荐
作者简介:Sir John Bourn is the Comptroller and Auditor General of the United Kingdom and head of the National Audit Office. He, and the National Audit Office, are totally independent of Government. He certifies the accounts of all UK Government Departments and a wide range of other public sector bodies; and he has statutory authority to report to Parliament on the economy, efficiency and effectiveness with which departments and other bodies use their resources.
内容简介
Drawing on 20 years of experience as Comptroller and Auditor General, and head of the United Kingdom National Audit Office, Public Sector Auditing: Is it Value for Money? is Sir John Bourn’s own account of the role and influence value for money auditing has in holding governments to account and in helping public bodies improve the ways in which they deliver services.
Key features include:
In-depth case studies from UK, US, Canada, China, India and Australia;
Detailed analysis of complex areas of public expenditure such as health, education, privatisation, regulation, defence and IT;
Examples of how auditing can promote positive outcomes rather than negative post mortems.
This book is relevant for people working in both the public and private sectors, and should be essential reading for the staff of public sector audit institutions around the world, as well as commercial accountancy firms and students of accountancy, politics, economics and public management.
目录
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgements
1 Introduction
1 Modern Public Administration
1.2 The Traditions of State Audit
1.3 The Contents and Argument of this Book
2 Why Bureaucracy Will Never Work
2.1 Public Programmes are Often Late, Cost More than Planned and do not Work s Intended
2.2 The Causes of Public Programme Failure
2.3 Bureaucracy’s Fundamental Flaw
2.4 Literary Insights
2.5 Wider Problems with Bureaucracy
2.6 The Flaws of Bureaucracy have been Reinforced by Traditional Audit
2.7 Summary
3 The Failure to Analyse Outcomes
3.1 How is Value for Money to be Secured?
3.2 Traditional Outputs are Valuable but Cannot Demonstrate Value for Money
3.3 Public Choice
3.4 Cost Benefit Analysis and Cost Effectiveness Analysis
3.5 Value for Money Auditing
3.6 Greater Focus on Outcomes
3.7 More Sophisticated Diagnostic and Analytical Techniques
3.8 Summary
4 How Effective Audit can be Secured – the Auditor as Soach and Mentor Rather than Critic and Nark
4.1 How can Progress be Made?
4.2 Separate Methodologies for Separate Subjects
4.3 The Meanings which Participants give to their Roles
4.4 Understanding ‘Accountability’
4.5 The Relevance of Social Anthropology
4.6 The Auditor as Coach and Mentor
4.7 Conclusion
4.8 Summary
5 Privatisation – The Alternative to Bureaucracy?
5.1 Private and Public Sector Approaches Compared
5.2 Getting the Best from Privatisation
5.3 The Privatisation Process – the General Issues
5.4 Getting the Best from Privatisation
5.5 The Importance of having the Right Pre-conditions in Place to Maximise the Success of Privatisation
5.6 Conclusion
5.7 Summary
6 Public Private Partnerships—Another Option
6.1 Getting the Best from PFI/PPP Deals
6.2 Selecting the Best Project
6.3 Applying the Proper Processes to PPP/PFI
6.4 Selecting the Best Bid
6.5 Checking the Deal Makes Sense
6.6 Delivering Long Term Value for Money
6.7 Good Practice for the Future
6.8 Questions for the Future
6.9 Summary
7 Regulations—Bureaucracy’s Tentacles
7.1 Bureaucracies Cause Regulations to Grow – for Commendable and Less ommendable Reasons
7.2 The Costs of these Regulations are Hidden, and Quite Pernicious
7.3 The Auditor can Help to Some Extent. . .
7.4 . . . But Society’s Addiction to Rules and Regulations Make it Hard to do
7.5 Summary
8 Meeting Citizens’ Needs – Quality of Public Services
8.1 Barriers to High Quality Services
8.2 Improving the Quality of Public Services
8.3 The Implications for Audit
8.4 Conclusions
8.5 Summary
9 Risk Averse or Risk Ignorant?
9.1 Risk Ignorance and Bureaucracy
9.2 The Application of Technology
9.3 Human Behaviour
9.4 Asymmetry of Information
9.5 Agency Interdependence
9.6 The Impact of the Media
9.7 ‘The Risk Management of Everything’
9.8 The Requirements for Effective Risk Management – General
9.9 Effective Risk Management – Top Level Commitment
9.10 Effective Risk Management – Synergy through the Delivery Chain
9.11 Effective Risk Management – Understanding and Managing Common Risks Together
9.12 Effective Risk Management – Reliable, Timely and up to Date Information
9.13 Effective Risk Management – Scrutiny and Challenge
9.14 Conclusion
9.15 Summary
10 Vulnerability to Fraud, Theft and Corruption
10.1 Varieties of Fraud, Theft and Corruption
10.2 What are Fraud, Corruption and Theft?
10.3 Definition of Terms
10.4 Crime and Punishment
10.5 Problems Faced by the UK: Diagnosis and Cure
10.6 Macro Weaknesses: Social Security Benefits and Tax Credits
10.7 Micro Weaknesses: Abuse of Trust
10.8 A Failure to Pilot: Fraud and Abandonment
10.9 Fraud versus Corruption
10.10 The Changing Nature of Fraud: Identity Theft, Information Technology and Organised Crime
10.11 Conclusions
10.12 Summary
11 Programme and Project Management – Bureaucracies’ Weakest Link?
11.1 Bureaucracies’ Failures
11.2 Transcending Failure
11.3 Examining Broader Delivery Issues
11.4 Conclusion
11.5 Summary
12 Performance Measurement – Clarity or Confusion?
12.1 Management by Objectives and Performance Measurements
12.2 Performance Measurement Methodologies
12.3 International Experience
12.4 Experience in the United Kingdom
12.5 The Difficulties of Determining what Interventions Secure the Desired Outcomes
12.6 Outcome Measuring – the Influence of External Factors
12.7 Outcome Measures: Links Between the Public, Staff and Delivery Agents
12.8 Outcome Measures: Specification, Incentives and Accountabilities
12.9 Outcomes Measures: Accountability
12.10 Outcome Measures: Data Quality and Reporting
12.11 Conclusions
12.12 Summary
13 Organising the Audit
13.1 What Results do We Achieve?
13.2 Conclusion and Summary
14 Concluding Thoughts
14.1 Traps
14.2 The future
Appendix: Value for Money Methodology
A1 The Choice of Subject
A2 The Team
A3 Study Process and Methodology
Bibliography
Index