给我们看数字:对加拿大市政当局的财务报告进行评级

ERN: National Pub Date : 2018-11-13 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.3283947
W. Robson, Farah Omran
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引用次数: 6

摘要

在加拿大几乎所有较大的市政当局中,模糊的财务报告——尤其是预算和年终财务报表中关键数字的不一致——阻碍了议员、纳税人和选民向市政府问责。简单的信息,比如市政当局今年计划花多少钱,或者今年的支出计划与前一年相比如何,对于非专家公民或议员来说很难或不可能找到。预算和财务结果中数字的差异会对现实世界产生影响。例如,通过提供净预算而不是毛额预算数字,市政当局排除了水等关键服务和为其提供资金的费用,从而模糊了关键活动并低估了其收入和支出。通过使用现金而非权责发生制会计,他们夸大了基础设施投资成本,隐藏了养老金义务的成本,并使其活动的成本和收益难以匹配。此外,许多市政当局在本财政年度已经投入或支出了大量资金后才批准预算,未能及时公布其财政年终财务结果,并将关键数字深埋在文件中。这份报告卡对加拿大主要市政当局最近的预算和财务报表的财务情况进行了评分。在我们评估的城市中,多伦多、达勒姆地区、基奇纳、魁北克市、朗格伊尔和蒙特利尔没有通过,它们提供的信息很少。更令人高兴的是,萨里在财务报表的清晰度和完整性方面获得了A+,约克地区以A的成绩紧随其后,而温哥华和万锦市也表现不错。我们有两个关键建议。第一,市政府应采用与年终财务报表相同的会计基础提交年度预算。它们的预算应采用权责发生制,在有关活动发生时记录收入和费用。对阻碍使用权责发生制预算的省级政府来说,它们应该停止这样做——例如,要求城市分别提交运营预算和资本预算。事实上,各省应该要求各市提交应计预算,以便各市和省的财政状况使用相同的透明标准。即使在一个省是一个障碍的情况下,市政当局也可以自己发布相关信息——他们应该这样做。其次,预算和财务报表一样,应该显示全市的综合总收入和支出数字,这些数字代表了该市对其公民资源的全部要求和其活动的全部范围。这些变化将有助于提高加拿大市政当局的财务管理水平,使其与它们在加拿大人生活中的重要性更相称。
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Show Us the Numbers: Grading the Financial Reports of Canada’s Municipalities
In nearly all larger Canadian municipalities, obscure financial reports – notably, inconsistent presentations of key numbers in budgets and end-of-year financial statements – hamper councillors, ratepayers and voters who seek to hold their municipal governments to account. Simple information, such as how much the municipality plans to spend this year or how its spending plan this year compares with the previous year’s, is hard or impossible for a non-expert citizen or councillor to find. The differences between how the numbers appear in budgets and in financial results have real-world consequences. For example, by presenting net, rather than gross, budget figures, municipalities exclude key services such as water and the fees that fund them, obscuring key activities and understating both their revenue and expense. By using cash, rather than accrual, accounting, they exaggerate infrastructure investment costs, hide the cost of pension obligations, and make it hard to match the costs and benefits of their activities. Moreover, many municipalities approve their budgets after significant money has already been committed or spent in the fiscal year, fail to publish their fiscal year-end financial results in a timely way and bury key numbers deep in their documents. This report card grades the financial presentations of major Canadian municipalities in their most recent budgets and financial statements. Of those we assessed, Toronto, Durham Region, Kitchener, Quebec City, Longueuil and Montreal failed, providing little information in reader-friendly form. More happily, Surrey garners an A+ for clarity and completeness of its financial presentation, York Region is a close second with an A, while Vancouver and Markham are also good performers. We have two key recommendations. First, municipal governments should present their annual budgets on the same accounting basis as their year-end financial statements. Their budgets should use accrual accounting, recording revenues and expenses as the relevant activities occur. For their part, provincial governments that impede the use of accrual-based budgets – by mandating that cities present separate operating and capital budgets, for example – should stop doing so. Indeed, provinces should mandate cities to present accrual budgets so the fiscal pictures of municipalities and the province use the same transparent standard. Even in cases where a province is an impediment, municipalities could release the relevant information on their own – and they should. Second, budgets, like financial statements, should show city-wide consolidated, gross revenue and spending figures that represent the city’s full claim on its citizens’ resources and the full scope of its activities. These changes would help raise the financial management of Canada’s municipalities to a level more commensurate with their importance in Canadians’ lives.
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