Government Audits

33 Pages Posted: 20 Feb 2023 Last revised: 19 Feb 2025

See all articles by Martina Cuneo

Martina Cuneo

New York University (NYU) - New York University

Jetson Leder-Luis

Boston University

Silvia Vannutelli

Northwestern University

Date Written: February 2023

Abstract

Audits are a common mechanism used by governments to monitor public spending. In this paper, we discuss the effectiveness of auditing with theory and empirics. In our model, the value of audits depends on both the underlying presence of abuse and the government’s ability to observe it and enforce punishments, making auditing most effective in middling state-capacity environments. Consistent with this theory, we survey all the existing credibly causal studies and show that government audits seem to have positive effects mostly in middle-state-capacity environments like Brazil. We present new empirical evidence from American city governments, a high-capacity and low-impropriety environment. Using a previously unexplored threshold in federal audit rules and a dynamic regression discontinuity framework, we estimate the effects of these audits on American city finance and find no marginal effect of audits.

Suggested Citation

Cuneo, Martina and Leder-Luis, Jetson and Vannutelli, Silvia, Government Audits (February 2023). NBER Working Paper No. w30975, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4364723

Martina Cuneo (Contact Author)

New York University (NYU) - New York University ( email )

Jetson Leder-Luis

Boston University ( email )

595 Commonwealth Avenue
Boston, MA 02215
United States

Silvia Vannutelli

Northwestern University ( email )

2001 Sheridan Road
Evanston, IL 60208
United States

Do you have a job opening that you would like to promote on SSRN?

Paper statistics

Downloads
22
Abstract Views
450
PlumX Metrics