How AI restores the public's trust in the fiscal accountability of governments
The public's trust of governmental budgeting, fiscal management, and reporting is at an all-time low, especially in the aftermath of the 2008 financial crisis, where only four out of ten people in OECD countries expressed confidence in their government. Cases of fraud, bid-rigging, and pay-to-play are never far from the headlines, and have continued to undermine trust in the public servants and elected officials tasked to oversee the complex work of managing government finances. A large portion of this mistrust can be attributed to the struggle that government finance managers and auditors are facing in analyzing the increasing amount of financial data. Current financial control and audit techniques, including legislated audit requirements, are not able to scale to keep pace with the massive data explosion coming from their own accounting, payroll, and expense management systems. One government response to this issue, open data, enables a sense of fiscal transparency with the public but it doesn't replace the rigorous professional analysis required to identify fraud, errors, and omissions in large amounts of data.
Jan-16-2020, 14:39:22 GMT
- Country:
- North America > Canada (0.05)
- Oceania > Australia (0.05)
- Industry:
- Banking & Finance (1.00)
- Government (1.00)
- Law Enforcement & Public Safety > Fraud (1.00)
- Technology: