![]() Date: 2025-07-02 Page is: DBtxt003.php txt00003133 | |||||||||
ATCnet | |||||||||
COMMENTARY | |||||||||
ATCnet ... Accountability Program Overview ATCnet Program of Accountability for Government Introduction ATCnet has launched a comprehensive program to improve accountability and transparency in the use of financial, material and human resources in connection with development and relief. ATCnet has established an Internet database on accountability to provide a global independent forum for stakeholders on our global society so that critical data about socioeconomic progress are easily available to all. There are five main program areas of Accountability
The program has a focus on making excellence visible, as much as on identifying issues of low performance or worse. The program makes it far easier for stakeholders to get easy access to important information and to learn objectively about the accountability of the entities engaged in the allocation and use of scarce resources being used for public expenditures in general operations, programs and development and emergency. Accountability for Government Accountability for Government is probably the most critical area of accountability for success in socioeconomic progress. Public resources reflect the largest resources flows in most countries, and the efficiency of their use is a significant determinant of development performance. The ATCnet Accountability Program is based on the concept that accountability is an integral part of an organization’s management system, and not simply an external afterthought. The Whitehall system of government accounts developed in an era of manual accounting systems had a substantial degree of accountability built into the processes, and is, in fact, a very solid foundation for excellence in accounting, accountability and transparency. The ATCnet Accountability Program enables government to implement a comprehensive accountability system for government at modest cost, and do it with a level of independence that gives the report and feedback local and international credibility. The ATCnet Accountability Program is a natural outcome from the widespread criticism of government and official development assistance (ODA) organizations concerning the allocation of resources and the use of scarce public and ODA resources. While both government and the ODA institutions have progress towards better systems and procedures, the public as a stakeholder in both government and ODA performance remains totally unconvinced. At the same time, public perception of development programs is limited to information flows that are heavily influenced by media perceptions (and maybe a media agenda) than by objective factual information easily accessible. The ATCnet Accountability Program is facilitated where there is good accounting, and accounting reports are prepared on time and using generally accepted accounting principles. But the ATCnet program goes far beyond the normal process of account validation called “audit”. And it even goes beyond the “value for money” innovation in audit that has been popularized in recent years. The ATCnet Accountability program for Government brings information about Government initiatives into a forum for public dialog with the facts and the perceptions clearly presented and easily accessible. Public policy translates into government programs and legislation. The ATCnet Accountability program enables the results of government initiatives to be evaluated from the perspective of public stakeholders. The ATCnet Accountability program for Government incorporates “benchmarking”, a process that helps to link the use of public resources with specific goals of public policy. The benchmarking technique has been used effectively to focus scarce resources on emerging issues that need attention now to avoid more serious problems in the future. Where benchmarking has been successful, the use information flows from all key stakeholders, including the public, is very similar to the ATCnet process. ATCnet analysis of government accounting system reform shows that accountability is rarely improved in the way projected by the reform proponents. This is frequently because the approach is technical rather than managerial, with little understanding and appreciation of the issues of change management and controllership in accounting. Major reform of an accounting system without equivalent reform in other inter-related aspects of the organization will only yield modest results at best. The more comprehensive approach advocated by ATCnet and the use of objective and independent accountability has the potential to yield material practical improvements in government performance, as well as an even greater improvement in the public and external perception of performance. The ATCnet Accountability program for Government has a focus on value creating development investments, and uses value creation is the primary measure of performance assessment. No other accountability program is based on this methodology. Using this approach, ATCnet is able to differentiate very clearly between activities that make good use of limited financial, material and human development resources, with those that are value destroying and actually waste resources. In contrast to prevailing “procedure based” audit and assessment, the ATCnet approach has a focus on the results achieved relative to the resources used. This is a profound difference that enables good decisions to be recognized for the results achieved. It also addresses the issue of performance degradation resulting from delays in decision making and ineffective decision making processes. It provides a framework to systematically address the issues of national priority and community priority versus the priorities for resources allocation mandated by donors and other external funding agencies. The ATCnet Accountability program for Government is unique in being a methodology that systemically addresses the issues of resource allocation and resource use within a comprehensive context. While there have been many initiatives to improve budgeting and planning and put these in a broader contextual framework, the ATCnet program addresses a similar set of issues ex-post facto from the accounting and performance and accountability perspective. It is also a methodology that takes complex inter-relationships at an academic level, and converts these to practical observations and feedback from the stakeholders. Steps to Implementation of Accountability for Government
This work will be done almost exclusively by ATCnet local staff and associates under the supervision of ATCnet senior staff. The timeframe for doing this work is 3 to 6 months The ATCnet database will be used as the foundation for reporting using an international standard format. ATCnet staff have experience of the international recommendations for government financial reporting and are deploying a database environment that will go beyond the IMF GFS standards. Work done should build on already available information. The ATCnet program that incorporated feedback from operating units and the public in a systemic way ensures accountability in ways never before possible. ATCnet accountability work should be done in cooperation with the regulatory authorities of the banking and finance sector, including the Central Bank |