APublic Sector Balance Sheet, like abalance sheet in the corporate world, reports comprehensively on what agovernment owns and owes, as well as its own capital. As such, it is a critical element of a system ofPublic Financial Management. A balance sheet, or statement of financial position, recognises and discloses theassets, liabilities, and net worth at a given point in time, for a government entity, a government or the whole public sector. An important metric for the fiscal position of the whole public sector ispublic sector net worth.
For a government at any level, local, regional or national, the balance sheet offers greaterfiscal transparency, being more comprehensive than the conventional metrics ofdebt anddeficits.[1]
The quality of the financial statements depends on the quality of data used and what basis of accounting is used to compose the balance sheet and the other financial statements.
Willem Buiter and theIMF argued in 1983 for the use of public sector balance sheets to improve public financial management.[2]
Following a financial crisis, theNew Zealand government passed its Public Finance Act (PFA) in 1989, introducing accrual budgeting, appropriations and accounting, publishing the world's first public sector balance sheet based on audited accounting records rather than statistical estimates.[3]
The IMF shifted its Government Finance Statistics Manual from a cash to an accrual basis in 2001.[4] It is more recently emphasising the importance of government balance sheets on a global basis, albeit using statistical rather than accounting data.[5]
IFAC andCIPFA predict that in 2025, almost half the world's governments will adopt accrual-based accounting.[6] Far fewer, however, will be using accrual information at the heart of their financial management and budget systems. For example, the UK's Whole of Government Accounts, which reports its public sector real estate assets, does not have a mandate to assign a fair market value to the assets, and its financial management framework pays very little attention to net worth creation.[7]
The use of proper public sector balance sheets rests upon the use of accrual accounting throughout the public financial management system, making it integral to financial and budgetary decision-making.