Examining the Drivers and Effects of Financial Irregularities in Ghana's Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies
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University of Ghana
Abstract
Financial irregularities within subnational governments are prevalent worldwide, transcending varying
stages of development. These irregularities impede the effective delivery of public services, erode trust in
subnational governments, inflate the costs of public transactions, and mostly result in financial losses to
states. This thesis aims to address this pressing concern by examining the nexus between reported financial
irregularities within Ghana's Metropolitan, Municipal and District Assemblies (MMDAs) and the
underlying factors driving them. Furthermore, it seeks to identify the thresholds at which these financial
irregularities significantly affect the fiscal autonomy of MMDAs. Employing methodology including the
method of moments quantile regression, dynamic panel threshold regression analysis, and Granger
causality analysis, this study analyses a dataset spanning 216 MMDAs for a 10-year period (2012-2021).
The findings indicate that successive increases in revenue, asset, and liability levels exhibit statistically
significant and positive relationships with financial irregularities in Ghana's MMDAs. Moreover, female
chief executives exhibit a statistically significant relationship with lower levels of financial irregularities.
However, this association is not statistically significant at higher levels of financial irregularities. Contrary
to expectations, the adoption of regulatory frameworks appears to have limited influence on mitigating
financial irregularities. Moreover, contract and procurement/store irregularities impede fiscal autonomy
above a threshold of 6% of total financial irregularities, whereas cash management irregularities
consistently undermine fiscal autonomy irrespective of the threshold level. These findings underscore the
necessity of implementing strong financial management practices and reliable accountability measures
within Ghana’s MMDAs, especially as their revenues, assets, and liabilities grow. The research
recommends strengthening internal control mechanisms, fostering transparency and accountability,
embracing technological advancements, and broadening revenue sources to mitigate financial
irregularities and boost the fiscal independence of MMDAs. Furthermore, efforts should be made to tackle
gender-specific leadership challenges to improve the effectiveness of female chief executives in MMDAs.
Additionally, policymakers should conduct regular and comprehensive assessments of regulatory
frameworks to address shortcomings in their implementation.
Description
PhD. Accounting
