Government accounts are afflicted by a twofold shortcoming:
- on one hand, they are shortsighted and lack time perspective, since budgets are generally for one year, with only limited perspective on a three year horizon.
- On the other hand, accounts are specialized for liquidity management and do not address either the question of income nor the question of wealth accounting in any significant manner.
As tools of management, government accounts have been mostly used to expand parliamentary control over the budget by trying to incorporate a crucial phase of financial and economic management within the legislative process. This has been used both to control spending of the executive branch and to transfer a significant part of the economic power of the state into the political process, mainly through its “pork and barrel” mode.
Technically speaking, in most advanced countries, the public budget is still a so called “authorization “ budget, formulated on a cash basis, almost entirely devoted to a registration of outlays by expenditure class (typically called budget chapter). This type of budget is completely non recognizant of the intertemporal nature of capital expenditure, which is assimilated to current expenditure by either instantaneous amortization or by conversion into debt. Wealth and capital accounting are limited to financial assets and liabilities and is a consequence of current accounting of issuance of paper on the part of the government in form of bonds or money. No comprehensive balance sheet is maintained on accrual basis and the consequence of instant amortization of capital expenditure is the fact that the government does not know, in practice, what it owns in terms of real assets and productive capital, nor what obligations arise from their maintenance and the servicing.