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The Watchdog: New Zealand's Audit Office, 1840 to 2008

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In a global economic climate troubled by the consequences of a dearth of fiscal accountability and transparency, the importance of independent auditing bodies, whether in the public or private sector, is not to be underestimated. Today, New Zealand is perceived as one of the world's least corrupt nations - ranking alongside Denmark and Finland - indicating a job well done by the country's national Audit Office in inspiring public confidence. Yet the government auditing function, set up in 1840, was initially a 'timid creature.' This book traces the Audit Office's rise and decline towards 'impotent irrelevance' before it was saved by the development of computers, which facilitated more targeted and searching methods of examination. It is an absorbing tale that moves from the teething problems of difficult origins in which 'the fulminations of Auditors-General were increasingly dismissed as nit-picking and legislated around - or ignored' to the brave new world of radical 'value for money' auditing in the 1970s. New Zealand's public sector reforms of the 1980s saw questioning of the very need for an Audit Office - questions that the Office was by then well equipped to answer.

208 pages, Hardcover

First published September 1, 2009

About the author

David Green

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