Debate: Auditing and political accountability in local government - dealing with paradoxes in the relationship between the executive and the council
Overview
Identity
Additional Document Info
View All
Overview
abstract
This article addresses the role of external auditing in
enhancing accountability in local government, building
upon several paradoxes that result from the political
relationship between elected bodies. It takes the example
of Portuguese municipalities.
In local governments, the council scrutinizes and inspects
the general activity and financial management of the
executive, censuring where necessary, and supervising the
overall performance of the local management (CEMR, 2016).
The local authority budget, the main instrument of local
policy, must be approved by the council. The executive is
then responsible for implementing it and is accountable
through the annual accounts. In this (internal)
accountability process, statutory external auditors play an
important role in ensuring fair presentation, assuring the
reliability of the information reported (Maclean, 2014;
Nogueira & Jorge, 2017).
The Portuguese reporting framework includes both
financial and budgetary requirements and statements.
Consequently, the external auditor has to express an
opinion on whether the financial statements are prepared,
in all material respects, in accordance with the applicable
financial reporting framework. Furthermore, they also have
to state that the public entity complied with the
requirements for the budgetary execution and statements,
according to what is set out in the Portuguese public sector
budget and accounting standards (Jorge et al., 2022).