https://doi.org/10.1016/j.cya.2017.02.002
Paper Research
Progress in the quantity of financial information in
the public sector in Mexico following the LGCG
Avances en la cantidad
de información financiera del sector público en México a raíz de la LGCG
Laura Sour1
1 Universidad Anahuac,
Mexico
Corresponding author: Laura Sour, email: laura.sour@gmail.com
Abstract
This work evaluates the amount, quality, and harmonization of the
financial information published by Mexico City, the states, and the Federal
Government during the period of 2008–2012, following the approval of the
General Law of Government Accounting (LGCG). Firstly, the requirements
indicated by the CONAC and subsequently by the International Public Sector
Accounting Standards (IPSAS) are used to evaluate the publication of financial
statements. Secondly, the compliance of the publication of the accounts
indicated by IPSAS 1, 2 and 17 is reported. Finally, the harmonization of the
financial statements is studied through the Herfindahl-Hirschman
Index (HHI) to determine if the financial statements are comparable with one
another. The results indicate that the public sector has increased the amount,
quality, and harmonization of the financial information published during the
study period.
Keywords: International Public Sector Accounting Standards
(IPSAS), Public Sector Accounting, State government expenditure,
Accountability, Mexico.
JEL classification: H83, H76, M41.
Resumen
En este trabajo se evalúa la cantidad, calidad y
armonización de la información financiera publicada por las entidades
federativas, el Distrito Federal y el gobierno federal durante el periodo
2008–2012, a raíz de la aprobación de la Ley General de Contabilidad
Gubernamental (LGCG). En primer lugar, se emplean los requerimientos señalados
por el CONAC y, posteriormente, las Normas Internacionales de Contabilidad del
Sector Público 1 (IPSAS por sus siglas en inglés) para evaluar la publicación
de los estados financieros. En segundo lugar, se reporta el cumplimiento de la
publicación de las cuentas que señalan los IPSAS 1, 2 y 17. Finalmente, se
estudia la armonización de los estados financieros mediante el índice Herfindahl-Hirschman para determinar si los estados
financieros son comparables entre sí. Los resultados apuntan a que el sector
público ha aumentado la cantidad, calidad y la armonización de la información
financiera publicada durante el periodo de estudio.
Palabras clave: Normas Internacionales de Contabilidad del
Sector Público (NICS), Contabilidad gubernamental, Gasto público estatal,
Rendición de cuentas, México.
Códigos JEL: H83, H76, M41.
Received: 04/02/2015
Accepted: 23/11/2015
Introduction
In 2008, the approval of
the General Law of Government Accounting ( Ley
General de Contabilidad Gubernamental
– LGCG) opened a new path for the financial relation between Mexico
City, the state governments, and the Federation in Mexico. This normativity
proposes the creation of an accounting and financial information system in the
public sector that is compatible at all three governmental levels. The general
objective of this investigation is to testify to the progress achieved in this
matter following the implementation of the LGCG up to 2012 in Mexico City, the
states, and the federal government.
With
this general objective in mind and considering the provisions implemented by
the National Commission of Accounting Harmonization ( Comisión Nacional de Armonización Contable – CONAC), the first specific objective of
this work is to review the presence or absence of a publication containing the
financial statements of Mexico City, the states, and the Federal government,
using the requirement indicated by the CONAC as reference. In addition to
analyzing the progress at a national level, this work also seeks to determine
if the path taken so far is relevant worldwide. Therefore, the publication of
the financial statements is also reviewed based on the requirements that the
International Federation of Accountants (IFAC) promotes through its
International Public Sector Accounting Standards No. 1 (IPSAS).
The
second specific objective is to analyze in detail the presence or absence of
certain accounting elements in the financial reports recommended by IPSAS 1, 2
and 17. This second review is elaborated under the assumption that—if this is
the information that the states, Mexico City, and the federal government are
disseminating—it is proof that the quality to which public servants aspire
seeks to comply with the best practices at an international level. This means
that the IPSAS are the regulations that represent the best international
practices in the elaboration of the financial statements. For this reason, if
the state governments, Mexico City, and the Federal government are already
generating their financial information according to these criteria, then it
means that they are interested in creating an information system that is able
to improve the monitoring of public resources. Thus, quality financial
information improves the possibility of increasing our knowledge on the public
policies implemented by public servants.
Finally,
and in third place, the work shows the degree of progress in the harmonization
of financial information of the federal government, Mexico City, and the
states. Harmonization entails the publication of the same accounts or
accounting elements at all government levels. For this, the Herfindahl-Hirschman
Index (HHI) is used. This is a way to measure the degree in which the financial
statements of each one of the states, Mexico City, and the federal government
list the same items, so that they can be compared between each other during the
period of 2008–2012.
The
results of this study show that the LGCC has had an acceptable impact regarding
the increase in the amount of financial statements published by the different
government levels in the last couple of years. Similarly, advancements in the
level of financial harmonization have also been found. In other words, since
the promulgation of the LGCG, continuous efforts have been made for the
generation of new harmonized governmental financial information, with
accounting records that clearly portray the past, and which can be compared
among different government levels throughout the years. If the accounting data
are comparable, reproducible by third parties, sufficient and timely, then the
government accounting will effectively help the financial evaluation of the
results reached by public servants, and it will facilitate the projections
required to feed the discussion on public policies that seek to improve social
development.
The
article is organized in the following manner. In the first section, the
properties that the accounting information must comply with in the interest of
being known for its quality at an international level are presented. In the
second section, the methodology and the data used to elaborate this work is
presented. The analysis of the financial information of Mexico City, the
states, and the federal government is presented in the third section. The
conclusions of this work are presented in the last section.
Accounting government information properties at a national and
international level
From its most basic definition, accounting
is a tool that generates the necessary quantifiable information to know the
amount of resources that are used by the public servants in the production of
goods and public services ( Lara,
Chávez, & Toledo, 2011 ). Accounting can even reflect the
efficiency in the management of public revenue, expenses, and government debt
through an easy and transparent record system. Thus, all public reports are
able to reveal the origin and allocation of every resource used in the
management, and every input can be linked to its destination. Therefore, an
efficient accounting system is able to present a correlation between the
budget, public exercise and the results obtained in the three levels of
government ( Ferreira, 2012).
The National Commission of Accounting Harmonization
The National Commission of Accounting
Harmonization (CONAC) came into existence along with the LGCG as an
organization in charge of the coordination for the harmonization of government
accounting. The CONAC brings together representatives of the states, the
federal government, and the municipalities to indicate the minimal elements of
the accounting manuals, to issue the classifiers of the accounting catalogs and
accounting standards for the release of financial information, to generate the
guidelines for the implementation of a cost system, to establish the
methodological framework for the integration between the accounting records and
the budget process, and to define the provisions for the accounting record of
the public debt scheme.1
However, though it is important to analyze
Mexico's case in light of the technical and legal criteria established by the
CONAC, it is also important to estimate the progress achieved at an international
level; even more so considering that one of the mandates of the CONAC is to
address the best accounting practices. Worldwide, the best practices to develop
comparable information at the different government levels are IPSAS—issued by
the International Federation of Accountants (IFAC).2 The IFAC was founded in
1977 with the purpose of establishing the values of integrity, transparency,
and proficiency as the guiding principles of the accounting profession. The
mission of the IFAC is to provide accounting guidelines for international use
so that the financial statements of the public sector are able to acquire the
necessary characteristics to be compared at an international level ( Chan & Zhang, 2013).
The IFAC establishes 32 IPSAS that
comprise the accounting practices with the most international reliability for
the structuring of quality financial information. These standards include
guidelines for the presentation of financial information, such as cash flow
statements, financial statements and investments, as well as for the government
information of the assets, debt and financial instruments of the public sector
( IFAC, 2013 ). Although the IFAC oversees the
elaboration of the accounting standards for the public sector, this
organization does not have the ability to enforce their use. However, IPSAS are
followed by several countries ( Galera & Bolívar, 2011 ). Some Latin American examples are:
Colombia, Costa Rica, Peru and Uruguay ( Araya,
Caba, & López, 2011 ). In Europe, Spain chose to use IPSAS in
2010 because of a reform to the general public accounting plan to improve
transparency and accountability toward its citizens ( Brusca & Montesinos,
2013 ).
In the rest of the world, Australia, New Zealand, the United Kingdom and the
United States have successfully integrated IPSAS to their accounting and
financial information systems, as part of their modernization strategies for
public management ( Benito, Brusca, & Montesinos, 2007; Fuertes, 2008 ). The experience of the countries that
already use IPSAS show that the result is the innovation and the acknowledgment
of good accounting and financial practices at an international level.
World organizations such as the
International Monetary Fund (IMF), the World Bank (WB) and the United Nations
Development Program, consider the adoption of IPSAS as a step toward
modernization and government transparency ( Chan
& Zhang, 2013 ). Therefore, IPSAS increase the
reliability of financial information and promote data provision for accountability.
Even the IMF is conditioning developing countries the release of new credits in
exchange for the adoption of IPSAS by their authorities ( Chan,
2008).
It is important to mention that one of the
objectives of IPSAS is to achieve the harmonization of the accounting
information, as is the case of financial statements, and even to reach the
standardization of the accounting practices in the public sector between the
different government levels in all countries. Because of these reasons, the
observance of IPSAS is considered the first step taken by countries interested
in starting a modernization process for their information systems ( Fuertes,
2008 ).
Developing countries are the ones that should more urgently incorporate IPSAS
within their standards and accounting practices ( Benito
et al., 2007). Chan
(2008) even
lists the observance of IPSAS as an international benchmark to evaluate the
government accounting practices and the accountability in accounting and
financial matters.
The
possibilities of IPSAS to improve financial evaluation: some previous
considerations
IPSAS 1 and 2 establish the minimal
requirements for the generation of both the content and the presentation of
financial statements with the purpose of comparing and of having the conditions
to make more informed decisions in financial matters in the public sector. It
is known that the use of the accrual record or the cash flow record has
particular methodological implications. Thus, to compare the financial
information between different entities it is necessary to use the same
recording system, be it accrual or cash flow. Due to this, the governments must
manifest the record system that they use, as the information generated with the
accrual record is not comparable with that of the cash of flow record. Although
the IPSASB acknowledges the right of the governments to establish accounting
guidelines and standards for the presentation of their financial statements, it
openly promotes the adoption of the accrual recording system as the best
mechanism to obtain more precise information ( Fuertes, 2008).3
For those governments that use the cash
flow system, IPSAS 1 requests the full compliance of the provisions issued
mainly to inform about this recording system. This is achieved through the
publication of the collection and cash payment statement. In the presence of
these omissions, the IFAC recommends using IPSAS 1, which corresponds to the
accrual recording system, and voluntarily revealing in the “Financial
statements notes” the accounting policies and the measurement bases used for
the elaboration of the financial statements. The aforementioned is done so that
the potential users of this information are able to correctly use these data
and compare and analyze them against those of other governments ( IFAC,
2013 ).
Therefore, the financial information should always be carefully reviewed, as it
could be assumed that the public servants have incorporated the accrual
recording system into their routines and procedures, when in fact they have
not.
To carry out a more complete financial
evaluation, another important provision is IPSAS 17, the aim of which is the
recognition and valuation of the fixed asset ( IFAC,
2013 ).
It is not hard to imagine that, appropriately accounting the needs of
investment in a fixed asset, of the passive levels, or of the levels of public
debt, shall improve the information about the value of public patrimony to
implement public policies in the country. The analysis of three aspects of the
Mexican government accounting system is below: the amount of data it generates,
the quality of the same considering IPSAS; and the degree of harmonization
reached during the analysis period.
Methodology and data
The first objective is to analyze the
public accounts in the corresponding electronic portals of the state
governments, Mexico City, and the Federal government to record the presence or
absence of the 10 accounting information reports indicated by the CONAC in its
Conceptual Framework for Government Accounting ( Marco Conceptual de Contabilidad Gubernamental – MCCG) during the period of 2008–2012.4
Subsequently, the presence or absence of the financial statements that
IPSAS 1 indicates as a full set of financial statements for the public sector
for the states, Mexico City, and the Federal government for each one of the
years within the period of 2008–2012 is evaluated.
Figure 1:
Publication percentages of accounting
reports indicated by the CONAC (2008–2012).
Source
:
Own elaboration with state and federal public accounts.
The second objective is
to quantify the financial information published considering the requirements
set by IPSAS 1, 2, and 17 as an indicator of their quality, given that they
represent the best international practices in the elaboration of the financial
statements of the public sector. In this manner, an assessment is made on
whether the reports have the same information to build the financial reasons
that facilitate the comparison of the state information with the information
from the federal government and that of Mexico City.
The third objective is to calculate the
level of harmonization of the accounts in the financial reports considering
IPSAS 1 and 2, to see if the financial statements present the same accounts so
that comparative assessments can be carried out between them.
Analysis of the government accounting system in Mexico Publication of the financial statements indicated
by the CONAC (Consejo Nacional de Armonización
Contable)
Figure 1 indicates the frequency each one of the financial
statements required by the CONAC (Consejo Nacional de
Armonización Contable) is
published during the analysis period. It can be observed that the statement of
financial position is the most published (87%), whereas the statement on
contingent liabilities is the least published, followed by the cash flow
statement. This information proves that the states present basic information
regarding their assets, liabilities, and capital through the statement of
financial position. However, they present insufficient reports regarding their
obligations and the variations of assets, rights and their obligations.
IPSAS 1 defines a full set of financial
statements as that which include the statement of financial position, income
statement, statement of changes in the financial position, cash flow statement,
and notes to the financial statements. It is worth mentioning that this
documentation is included in the financial statements recommended by the CONAC.
In 2008, all states, including the federal
government, published the income statement. The states of Mexico, Guanajuato,
Querétaro, and Zacatecas were the states that published the most financial
statements, reaching the maximum percentage observed in that year (75%).5 In 2009, with the
implementation of the LGCG, an increase is observed regarding the publication
of these financial statements when compared to the previous years: the average
production of financial information at a national level increased 27 percentage
points, reaching the highest average observed during the analysis period.
Aguascalientes, Baja California Sur, Mexico City, Guanajuato, Jalisco, Morelos,
Nayarit, Nuevo León, Oaxaca, Quintana Roo, Sonora,
Tamaulipas, and Yucatán were the entities that released the most financial
statements. Annex 2 presents
the analysis of the publication of the financial statements by the states, in
accordance with the requirements of IPSAS 1.6 The statement of
financial position was published by all the states in 2009, except for
Chihuahua and Guerrero (the latter did not present any type of accounting
information in its internet website). For its part, Tlaxcala was the only state
that generated its cash flow statement, an event that only occurred once during
the entire analysis period.
In 2010, the publication average of the
financial statements analyzed decreased by 12%. This downward trend was also
observed in 2011—three years after the entry into force of the LGCG—when only
54% of the financial statements analyzed that year were published.
Aguascalientes, Baja California Sur, Mexico City, Morelos, Nayarit, Oaxaca,
Querétaro, Sonora, and Yucatán were the states that published the most
financial statements. Hidalgo—same as Guerrero—once again did not publish any
financial statement, same as other states that did not comply, such as: Baja
California, Durango and Sinaloa, who only presented one financial statement.
The following year, an increase in the average of published financial
statements can be observed, even though it is not very large ( Annex 2).
The balance during the studied period is
that Aguascalientes and Yucatán are the states with the largest amount of
published financial statements required by IPSAS 1. Nayarit is one of the
states that released the most financial statements in the last couple of years.
The rest of the states present an inconsistent
behavior. For example, among the states that published more statements at the
beginning of the study is Querétaro, but in 2012 it only published one
statement. During the analysis period Guerrero did not present any type of
accounting information, and Chiapas and Tabasco are the states with the lowest
percentage of compliance (20%).
Publication of the accounts indicated in IPSAS 1 and 2
The accounts or items that are presented
in each financial statement are reviewed based on the set of accounts that the
IFAC establishes in IPSAS 1 to evaluate the financial development of the
states. Thus, the analysis unit is the financial-accounting elements. The
details of this section can be found in Annex 3 . This means that the compliance of
IPSAS 1 was evaluated through the presence or absence of the following elements
in the financial statements: (a) The statement of financial position shows the
lines of the current assets, cash, cash equivalents (Banks), inventories,
accounts receivable from transactions with considerations (services), accounts
receivable from transactions without considerations (taxes, fines), short-term
credits, income from investments, noncurrent assets, properties, facilities and
equipment, investment properties, land and buildings, short-term liabilities,
long-term liabilities, public finance, retained earnings, reserves, period
result; (b) In the income statement (or statement of financial performance) the
accounts of the income, expense, financial costs, earnings or losses after
taxes, and period result must be submitted; (c) In the notes, a summary is
included regarding the accounting policies, such as measurement bases and the
upgrading of the fixed asset; (d) The state publishes a statement of changes in
the net assets; and (e) The cash flow statement is included in the set of
financial statements presented in the Account of public finance of each state.
The elements of sections (a), (b), (c), and (d) enable the assessment of IPSAS
1, whereas the compliance of IPSAS 2 is determined by the report mentioned in
section (e).
Table 1:
States with the greatest-least capacity for
the evaluation of the financial performance during the period of 2008–2012.
a)
The
percentages reflect the level of account publication for the evaluation of
financial performance.
Source
:
Own elaboration with public state and federal accounts.
In accordance with Table 1 , the states that publish more
accounts and therefore have the best possibility to evaluate their financial
performance, at least for one year of study, are: Aguascalientes, Mexico City,
Veracruz, Baja California, Baja California Sur, Oaxaca, Morelos, Guanajuato,
and the federal government. The aforementioned is due to the fact that they
present an average above 80% in regard to the publication of accounts required
by the IFAC. It can be observed that in 2009, the information available in
terms of assets at a national level increased with the help of Aguascalientes,
Nayarit and the Federation, who published 90 percent of the elements requested.
Eighty percent of the frequency of data related to the assets was published in
Aguascalientes, Guanajuato, Morelos, Veracruz, and the Federation in 2010. In
the following years, the percentage increased to 90 and was reached by Chiapas,
Guanajuato, and Veracruz in the period of 2011, and only in the state of Oaxaca
for 2012. It was the Federation and the state of Aguascalientes who published
the most information regarding the assets in the study period.
Equity information by public entities is
scarce: during the years analyzed, only in 2010 and 2011 did more than one
state present these requirements in a complete manner. Aguascalientes, Durango,
Puebla, Quintana Roo, San Luis Potosí, Sinaloa,
Tamaulipas, Veracruz, Yucatán, Zacatecas, and the Federation are the ones that
published the most information regarding public equities in 2010. The following
year, this position was occupied by Baja California Sur, Chiapas, Colima,
Durango, Guanajuato, Jalisco, Michoacán, Morelos, Querétaro, San Luis Potosi,
Veracruz, and the Federation. The information presented is more substantial
when the records of the liabilities are analyzed: most of the states publish
information from these accounts, except for Chihuahua, Coahuila, Guerrero,
Hidalgo, and Tlaxcala.
The activity report is evaluated with the
accounts of the income statement, that is, the income and expenditure accounts,
the financial costs, and the result of the financial year. The states of
Zacatecas, Yucatán, and the Federation are the only ones that present all the
accounts required to evaluate government activities. The rest of the states
comply with 75% of the requirements.
It is important to remember that, for the
information produced under the guidelines of IPSAS 1 to be comparable, it is
necessary that the government specifies the recording basis of its accounting.
In this manner, the financial statements done with an accrual recording basis
could be comparable with other financial statements produced under the same
accounting basis ( IFAC, 2013
). Thus, IPSAS 1 indicates the need to report – in the notes of the financial
statements – the method used to evaluate the fixed asset and whether said
evaluation has been updated, including their depreciation. The states of
Oaxaca, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí, Tabasco, Veracruz, and Yucatán publish
information that enables the assessment of their quality and whether they can
be compared with each other. Said statements provide information in regard to
the update of the fixed asset and the measurement basis of their accounting
statements during each one of the years after 2008. The rest of the states were
not consistent with the presentation of this information.
Table 2:
Average percentages of the requirements of
IPSAS 17.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sources : Own elaboration with public state and
federal accounts. |
Publication
of the accounts indicated in IPSAS 17
IPSAS 17 establishes the minimum
requirements to validate the recording of noncurrent assets of public entities,
their depreciation (loss of value due to its use or over the course of time),
as well as the measurement bases of the resources.7 This standard must be
applied to all entities in the public sector that own properties, facilities,
equipment—including those of a military nature—and the infrastructure asset. It
is worth mentioning that IPSAS 17 does not require recording the historical,
artistic or cultural heritages; however, should an entity fail to do so, it is
recommended that it follows the guidelines established in this provision ( IFAC, 2007).
Through IPSAS 17 it is possible to infer
the comparability of the information published in the financial statements of
the states, as the noncurrent assets comprise the resource that remains through
time, and in a long-term period. The calculation of the real value of the
resources is facilitated when depreciation is recorded. These records, along
with the measurement basis, allow for the determination of whether the
information is comparable when the same method is used to value these resources
( González, 2011).
Before the year 2000, there is a great
lack of information related to the noncurrent assets, investment properties,
movable and immovable property, and the measurement basis with which these
assets are assessed in each one of the studied government bodies ( Annex 4 ). However, with
the entry into force of the LGCG, the dissemination of this accounting
information has considerably improved, going from a publication average of
47–68% in 2012 ( Table 2).
Harmonization index in the accounts
indicated in IPSAS 1 and 2
Once the financial information
requirements complied with by the states, Mexico City and the federal government
have been analyzed, then the degree of financial harmonization can be evaluated
to determine how comparable the data is between the bodies of the public sector
that were studied throughout the course of time. For this purpose, the Herfindahl-Hirschman Index (HHI) is used.8 The information obtained
from the HHI allows for the inference of the degree of uniformity of the data
and thus, it is possible to conclude the level of accounting comparability in
the country ( Lara et al., 2011
). The value of the HHI will vary between zero and one. When the publication of
the data is concentrated in a few states, the HHI will take values closer to
one. The HHI expression is the following:
where H is the HHI, p indicates the number of
elements that appear in the reviewed reports of each state ( i ) that
comply with IPSAS 1 and 2 with regard to the total criteria found at a national
level, and variable ( k ) is the number of states studied. Therefore, pi2 is
the squared relative frequency of the elements of IPSAS 1 and 2 found in the
sample ( Rodríguez, 2009
). Thus, based on the requirements of IPSAS 1 and 2, H indicates the
concentration level with which the states publish their accounting information.9
The HHI indicates that the years with the highest accounting
harmonization were 2009 and 2012, with a degree of harmonization of
(0.03342560) and (0.03342658), respectively, as shown in Annex 5.
The highest value of HHI is observed in
2008 (0.03453), which means that in that year the comparability of the
information was lower in comparison with the following years. This lack of
harmonization can be explained by the fact that the guidelines of the LGCG were
just emerging. The lowest harmonization or comparability in the financial
information is observed in 2011, with an HHI of (0.03442). Fortunately, the HHI
of 2011 does not reach that of 2008, which represents progress by itself.
A criteria to evaluate whether the changes
were significant and therefore favorable throughout the years is to employ the
concentration resolution mechanism of the Federal Economic Competition
Commission ( Comisión Federal de Competencia Económica
), which states that if the change in the
HHI is lower to (|0.02|), the changes that present themselves are not
significant ( Comisión Federal de Competencia, 1998 ).
Based on Table 3 , it can be concluded that the
marginal changes of the periods of 2008–2009 and 2011–2012 were superior to
(|0.02|), and therefore the changes for a better accounting comparability are
significant. The previous statement is consistent with the analysis presented
up to this moment, in which it is declared that the years with the highest
accounting harmonization were 2009 and 2012.
It can be concluded that the topic of
financial harmonization at the different government levels in Mexico has
obtained favorable results when compared to the year 2008, year in which the
LGCG was not yet present. However, there is still room for improvement so that
the harmonization of the accounting information is fully established in all
states in the country.
Table 3:
Marginal changes in the HHI.
Source: Own elaboration with data from
state and federal accounts (2013).
Other
advances on the road to improve the financial evaluation of the public sector
in Mexico
The LGCG authorizes the National
Commission of Accounting Harmonization (CONAC) to dictate the design and
operation of the accounting system at a national level. The CONAC—comprised by
representatives of the federation, the states and the municipalities—is in
charge of designing the provisions that enable the compliance of the
aspirations of the LGCG. The results show that the CONAC is keeping its promise
to increase the amount of accounting and financial information of the Mexican
government. They also show its concern to improve the quality of the
information. Proof of this is that in 2009, it indicated the following
financial statements as essential within the accounting information to be
generated by the states: (i) Statement of financial
position; (ii) Statement of activities (similar to the former Income
Statement); (iii) Statement of changes in public finance/equity (formerly
Statement of Changes in the Financial Position); (iv) Cash flow statement; and
(v) Notes in the financial statements.
Furthermore, the manual, “Standards and
Methodology for the Release of Financial Information and Structure of the Basic
Financial Statements of the Public Entities and the characteristics of their
notes” ( Normas y Metodología para la Emisión
de Información Financiera y
Estructura de los Estados Financieros Básicos del Ente Público y características de sus notas ), presents a format for the filling of
the “Cash Flow Statement”, the structure of which is consistent with the one
recommended by IPSAS 2. The invitation of the CONAC for the generation of this
report since 2010 is another improvement that promotes the release of
information regarding the input and output flow of the resources of public
administration. In 2012, according to article 9 of the LGCG, new recommendations
were issued for the contents of the government account manuals, along with the
re-classifiers of account catalogs; as well as the standards for accounting and
for the release of financial information that have been formulated and proposed
by the Technical Secretary of the CONAC.
The progress related to the unification of
the depreciation system is also encouraging. The Secretariat of Finance and
Public Credit issues standards—through its Government Accounting and Reports on
Public Administration Unit ( Unidad de Contabilidad Gubernamental
e Informes sobre la Gestión Pública – UCGIGP)—to regulate its government
accounting system. More specifically, it regulates anything related to use
value, depreciation and re-evaluation, establishing the need to depreciate the
tangible noncurrent assets of the public sector in order to carry out gradual
economic projections to maintain and preserve public heritage.10 These institutional
improvements are subject to the compliance on behalf of the states and to the agreement
reached at a national level to define assets and national heritage. It is
necessary for the states, led by the CONAC, to be willing to unify the
depreciation evaluation system at the three government levels. Otherwise, the
information will continue to not be comparable because, as previously
explained, each state can make use of one of the accounting record methods to
assess its assets (cash flow or accrual). The CONAC will also have to
reconsider that the state governments inform the amounts of depreciation within
the Financial Situation Statement of each one of the assets, as it is usually
done in the private sector, instead of generally presenting it in the notes of
the financial statements. This practice done in the private sector allows to more
easily and specifically read the value of each one of the noncurrent assets,
their accumulated depreciation and the net value once the same is subtracted.
The hope is for these good practices to be complied with by the public sector
and that their intention permeates the agreements that are promoted by the
CONAC at a national level in regard to the valuation and depreciation of
assets.
Conclusions
The information provided by government accounting
constitutes the primary material for the realization of the financial
evaluation of the public sector and to contribute to the discussion on the
redesign of public policies. However, for this to happen, the government
accounting needs to comply with certain suitability criteria to ensure their
veracity, reliance and opportunity. These attributes enable the connection
between the internal administration of the government and the administration of
public policies in Mexico. Thus, in that moment the production of quality
information shall allow the “culture of evaluation” to grow in the country.
The LGCG aims to achieve a kind of
harmonization that reviews, re-structures and seeks to make compatible the
current accounting elements at a national level. This action will produce
information that will be available in the interest of enriching the discussion
on the quality of the expenses in the country. This is an advantage of the LGCG
that has not been highlighted and that becomes relevant in light of the not so
favorable outlook on public finances. The lack of available resources forces
civil servants and citizens to discuss, now having more information, how the
resources will be assigned to obtain the greatest benefit possible. In this
sense, the technical role of the CONAC to produce quality data is important,
but even more so is their political behavior to encourage all government levels
to join in the effort to reach the objectives of the LGCG as soon as possible.
There is evidence that the sum of all these efforts has made the publication of
financial information in the country more prosperous.
Several countries—both developed and
developing—are adopting the new government accounting model, based on the
recommendations proposed by the IFAC in terms of the generation, report, and
publication of their accounting information through IPSAS. The progress made in
this subject indicates that the matter is moving in the right direction, given
that in 2009 and 2012 several states published all the financial statements
requested by the CONAC and IPSAS 1. This is the first objective of the work.
The years with the most financial publications were 2009 and 2012.
Aguascalientes and Yucatán stand out as the states with the most publications
through the analyzed period.
The second objective entails the
evaluation of the financial information of the states analyzed using as
parameters IPSAS 1, 2, and 17 as an approximation to analyze quality in light
of the accounts required at an international level. Several states published
more than 80 percent of the accounts required. The states that have a greater
viability to carry out a financial evaluation, at least for one of the study
years, are: Aguascalientes, Mexico City, Veracruz, Baja California, Baja
California Sur, Oaxaca, Morelos, Guanajuato, and the Federal Government. It is
worth mentioning that the liabilities portion of the states is better known
than that of the equities.
Oaxaca, Nuevo León, San Luis Potosí,
Veracruz, Tabasco and Michoacán are the states with a good performance and
quality regarding their accounting information, and which comply with all the
requirements to carry out a financial evaluation. These states serve as models
to those that have yet to release consistent asset updates or measurement bases
reports of the financial statements.
There is little information available
before 2009 on the asset register, depreciation and the accounting measurement
basis. However, based on the analysis of IPSAS 17, it can be observed that
since the entry into force of the LGCG, there is a growing tendency in the
publication of these data at a national level. The LGCG does not establish the
obligation to do the valuation and depreciation corresponding to the fixed
asset, nor does it mention the method of depreciation or the rate that will
apply. This void is a wake-up call for the CONAC to bring this matter up for
discussion with the governors, who are in charge of the conciliation of the
political wills. This is a discussion that should start at a local level.
The discussion on the adoption of an
accrual record system that enables a better understanding of the assets and the
availability of public resources should also start at this level. In this
manner, there is the possibility to better evaluate the present, but also to
generate more accurate estimates regarding longer term tendencies. Only with
the reliable construction of the goals reached—and of all that remains to be
done—will it be possible to imagine a different future for Mexico.
The third objective was to use the HHI to
evaluate the degree of harmonization of the information in the financial
statements based on the criteria indicated in IPSAS 1 and 2. Based on the
results obtained, it is concluded that there is a greater accounting
standardization going from 2008 to 2012, even though the full participation of
the states is still not there. The foregoing is consistent with the results
obtained in a survey carried out by the Technical Secretariat of the CONAC and
the National Association of Superior Controlling Authorities and Government
Control ( Asociación Nacional de Organismos de Fiscalización
Superior y Control Gubernamental – ASOFIS) for the state organizations of
accounting harmonization. The progress done in terms of accounting
harmonization on behalf of the states has been favorable, but the objectives
and efforts to fully comply with the requirements of the LGCG remain in effect
so that the accounting systems of the public sector at the three government
levels are in complete harmony ( CONAC,
2013).
The highest level of harmonization can be
observed in 2012, which could be explained by the amount of time that the LGCG
had been in force, as the length of time since its promulgation had been
sufficient for the states to be presenting their financial reports according to
the law. Another possible explanation is that in this year, the CONAC provided
the state entities with an electronic tool called Sig@if
which allows automating some accounting processes such as the administration of
income, outcome, account plan, and the catalog of suppliers and beneficiaries.11
This was done for those states that did not have an automated accounting
tool ( CONAC, 2013).12
The LGCG authorizes the CONAC to dictate the
way in which the accounting system must be designed and operated. The CONAC is
in charge of making the agreements, at a national level, that will fill the key
gaps in the institutional framework. The experts indicate that the culture,
conservatism, and special characteristics of the government have an influence
in the way in which the accounting model in each country is defined, but at the
same time, they state that a greater political competition forges the efficient
performance of the government and the increase in transparency and
accountability. For this virtuous circle to be completed it is also necessary
that the elaboration of the study on the quality of the expenses in Mexico
increases to enrich the democratic and plural debate in the country, this in
the interest of developing the social welfare of the population. The
information system promoted by LGCG seeks to build the necessary elements to
evaluate the financial capacity of the public sector. These actions will help
improve the practices for the evaluation of the expenses, and will not only
improve the evaluation, but also the discussion on public policies to promote
social development and the economic growth of the country.
Appendix A
Annex 1:
Financial statements published in
accordance with the CONAC (Annual percentages).
Source
:
Own elaboration with state and federal public accounts.
Annex 2:
Financial statements published in
accordance with IPSAS 1 (2008–2012).
Source
:
Own elaboration with federal and state public accounts.
Annex 3:
Public accounts in accordance with IPSAS 1
and 2 (2008–2012).
Source
:
Own elaboration with federal and state public accounts.
* Unpublished information in the public
accounts.
Annex
4:
Accounts published in accordance with
IPSAS 17 (2008–2012).
Source
:
Own elaboration with federal and state public accounts.
Annex
5:
Harmonization Index of accounts in
accordance with IPSAS 1 and 2 (2008–2012).
Source
:
Own elaboration with federal and state public accounts.
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Notes
2
IPSAS are issued by the International
Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (IPSASB), an internal body of the
IFAC.
3 Organizations that may have the intention
of adopting the accrual accounting system in the future will find several
publications of the IPSASB useful, especially Study 14 “Transition to the
Accrual Accounting Basis: A guide for the Governments are Government Entities”,
where they will find a guide for the migration toward the accrual system ( IFAC, 2007).
4
Most of the database comes from the public
accounts of Mexico City, the states, and the federal governments. However, a
lot of the information was not found within these documents, thus it was
necessary to visit the corresponding transparency portals. This absence of data
is critical for the municipal case; thus that level of government is not
included within the objectives of this investigation.
5
See Annex 1.
6
To quantify the presence, the value of 1 is
used; and when the elements being searched are absent then the value of 0 is
used. When the document is found but its content does not fully comply with the
guidelines of IPSAS, a value of 0.5 is assigned to indicate that an element is
incomplete.
7
The measurement bases approved for the
recording of the assets in the financial statements are: historical cost,
current cost, net realizable value, fair value or recoverable amount or
recoverable service amount ( IFAC,
2007).
8
The Herfindahl-Hirschman
Index (HHI) is a statistical indicator commonly used to measure the level of
concentration in an industry. The higher the index, the more concentrated the
market and, therefore, there is less competition in the industry ( Rhoades, 1993).
9
The value of H depends on the number of
entities analyzed in the sample (33 including the federal government). The
minimum value of the HHI would be the maximum value of the frequency ( p ) divided by the
total number of states, that is 1/33 = 0.03030. This value indicates that all the
states have the same percentage of compliance regarding the international
accounting standards. Therefore, a HHI close to 0.0330 indicates a significant
harmonization level in the presentation of information ( Sour, 2012).
10
The noncurrent tangible assets, defined
within the Specific Standard for Government Financial Information ( Norma Específica de Información
Financiera Gubernamental – NEIFG 004VUDR, 2007:4,), are “the set of
movable and immovable property that can be appreciated through the senses, that
is, it is material, for example: land, buildings, machinery, tools, etc.” ( UCGIGP, 2008).
11
Harmonized Government System of Financial
Information ( Sistema Gubernamental
Armonizado de Información Financiera – Sig@if),
“application developed by the CONAC, with the objective of providing all public
entities with a tool and the necessary services to achieve the goals of
accounting harmonization” ( CONAC,
2012).
12
Automated accounting tool: It is the tool
that automatically records in real time the registers of the accounting and
budget operations ( Asociación
Nacional de Organismos de Fiscalización
Superior y Control Gubernamental, 2012) .
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