CMI (Chr. Michelsen Institute) Development Studies and Human Rights
 
 

Share |
CMI Report

The Accountability Function of Supreme Audit Institutions in Malawi, Uganda, Tanzania

CMI authors:
Lise Rakner
Vibeke Wang

Keywords:
Accountability/economic accountability Audit Auditor general Budget Parliament Supreme audit institutions Malawi Tanzania Uganda

Geographical keywords:
Sub-Saharan Africa
Africa: Malawi, Tanzania, Uganda.

Vibeke Wang and Lise Rakner (2005)

Bergen: Chr. Michelsen Institute (CMI Report R 2005: 4)

[pdf] Download publication

Despite the important accountability functions assigned supreme audit institutions, little is known about their actual functioning and we have scant information about how supreme audit institutions interact with other stakeholders in the budget process. This report provides a comparative study of the supreme audit institutions in Malawi, Tanzania and Uganda. In order to understand how supreme audit institutions function their institutional capabilities are assessed through comparing their mandate, capacity and autonomy. The impact of the supreme audit institutions on actual policy is examined by comparing their relational resources i.e. how they interact with other institutions and agents in the political system and draw support from the environment. This include interactions with parliament, civil society and the donor community. The final part summarises the findings and compares the overall performance of the supreme audit institutions in Malawi, Tanzania and Uganda. The report was originally commissioned by the Norwegian Agency for Development Cooperation (Norad).

[pdf] The Accountability Function of Supreme Audit Institutions in Malawi, Uganda, Tanzania

Sub-Saharan Africa
News

Media constraints in Sub-Saharan Africa

Democratic elections depend on a free press. "Free and fair" elections require free access to information. The last two decades of elections show that political constraints and restricted access to information prevents an independent media in Sub-Sharan Africa. Read more

Navigating complexity.

TfP has been an important programme which has made a significant contribution to the evolving African Peace and Security Architecture, but the programme has struggled with implementing suggested measures to enhance effectiveness and efficiency. Read more

Gunnar Sørbø comments in VG

Senior researcher Gunnar M. Sørbø comments on the election results in Norwegian paper VG. Read more

Monitoring and Evaluating Mozambique's Poverty Reduction Strategy

This report analyses poverty and well-being in the rural district of Murrupula, revisiting four local communities and a total of 120 households, three years after the first study in 2006. Read more

Ownership and Everyday Peacebuilding

Lack of local ownership is seen as a central explanation for why peacebuilding efforts fail to yield sustainable peace dividends. Based on research in Afghanistan, Haiti, Liberia and Sudan, this study shows that external actors foster unsustainable reform efforts because they assume ownership as a conditional right as their to give when certain conditions are met. Read more

Sub-Saharan Africa Southern and Central Asia Middle East Latin America