Legitimating the standard-setter of public sector accounting reforms

Andre Carlos Busanelli de Aquino, Andre Feliciano Lino, Ricardo Lopes Cardoso, Giuseppe Grossi

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

17 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

IMPACT Brazil is not the only civil law country that has committed with international organizations to implement accrual accounting IPSAS and prepare whole of public sector accounts. The findings of this paper will be of value to policy-makers from other civil law countries in dealing with the assimilation of new accounting rules in a context of conflict between standard-setters and auditors. This paper shows how the Brazilian Treasury has developed strategies to build legitimacy in a civil law context where the legislature left a vacuum regarding the accrual accounting standard-setting mandate. While the accounting 'rule-enforcers' neglected to require compliance with the rules, the 'rule-makers' co-operated with each other to build normativity for accounting rules and eventually attempted to develop new forms of enforcement, which the 'rule-appliers' lobbied against.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)499-508
JournalPublic Money & Management
Volume40
Issue number7
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2020

Swedish Standard Keywords

  • Economics and Business (502)

Keywords

  • Accrual accounting
  • Brazil
  • IPSAS
  • dual-system
  • governmental accounting
  • legitimacy
  • normativity
  • whole of public sector accounts

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