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entitled 'Budget Issues: Accrual Budgeting Useful in Certain Areas but 
Does Not Provide Sufficient Information for Reporting on Our Nation's 
Longer-Term Fiscal Challenge' which was released on December 21, 2007. 

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Report to the Committee on the Budget, U.S. Senate: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

GAO: 

December 2007: 

Budget Issues: 

Accrual Budgeting Useful in Certain Areas but Does Not Provide 
Sufficient Information for Reporting on Our Nation's Longer-Term Fiscal 
Challenge: 

Accrual Budgeting: 

GAO-08-206: 

GAO Highlights: 

Highlights of GAO-08-206, a report to the Committee on the Budget, U.S. 
Senate. 

Why GAO Did This Study: 

The federal government’s financial condition and fiscal outlook have 
deteriorated dramatically since 2000. The federal budget has gone from 
surplus to deficit and the nation’s major reported long-term fiscal 
exposures—a wide range of programs, responsibilities, and activities 
that either explicitly or implicitly commit the government to future 
spending—have more than doubled. Current budget processes and 
measurements do not fully recognize these fiscal exposures until 
payments are made. Increased information and better incentives to 
address the long-term consequences of today’s policy decisions can help 
put our nation on a more sound fiscal footing. 

Given its interest in accurate and timely information on the U.S. 
fiscal condition, the Senate Committee on the Budget asked us to update 
our study of other nations’ experiences with accrual budgeting and look 
at other ways countries have increased attention to their long-term 
fiscal challenges. 

What GAO Found: 

In 2000, GAO reviewed the use of accrual budgeting—or the recording of 
budgetary costs based on financial accounting concepts—in Australia, 
Canada, Iceland, the Netherlands, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom. 
These countries had adopted accrual budgeting more to increase 
transparency and improve government performance than to increase 
awareness of long-term fiscal challenges. Accrual budgeting continues 
to be used in all six countries; Canada and the Netherlands, which use 
accrual information selectively, considered expanding the use of 
accruals but thus far have made only limited changes. Since 2000, other 
countries have considered using accrual budgeting. For example, Denmark 
and Switzerland began using accrual budgeting on a selective basis. 
Norway and Sweden, however, rejected accrual budgeting primarily 
because they believed cash budgeting enables better control over 
resources. 

Countries have taken different approaches in the design of their 
accrual budgets. The figure below shows the range of approaches used. 
Regardless of the approach taken, cash information remains important in 
all the countries for evaluating the government’s finances. Other 
countries’ experiences show that accrual budgeting can be useful for 
recognizing the full costs of certain programs, such as public employee 
pensions and retiree health, insurance, veterans benefits, and 
environmental liabilities, that will require future cash resources. 
However, these other countries do not use accrual budgeting to 
recognize their long-term fiscal challenges that are primarily driven 
by public health care and pension programs. Instead, many countries in 
GAO’s study have begun preparing fiscal sustainability reports to help 
assess these programs in the context of overall sustainability of 
government finances. European Union members also annually report on 
longer-term fiscal sustainability. 

Figure: Range of Accrual Budgeting Use: 

This figure is a combination of five text boxes, side by side. They are 
as follows: 

Full accrual at all levels of government; 
Full accrual at all levels of government with cash controls; 
Accrual limited to select government agencies; 
Accrual limited to select programs; 
Accrual limited to governmentwide surplus/deficit (agencies on a cash 
basis). 

Source: GAO (PhotoDisc, image). 

[End of figure] 

Although no change in measurement or reporting can replace substantive 
action to meet our longer-term fiscal challenge, GAO believes that 
better and more complete information on both the full-cost implications 
of individual decisions and on fiscal sustainability of the 
government’s finances can help. 

What GAO Recommends: 

The Congress should require increased reporting on the long-term 
budgetary implications of major tax and spending programs. In addition, 
Congress should explore using accrual budgeting for certain programs to 
ensure the information affects incentives and budget decision making. 
Congress should also require periodic reports on fiscal sustainability 
for the government as a whole. 

To view the full product, including the scope and methodology, click on 
[hyperlink, http://www.GAO-08-206]. For more information, contact Susan 
J. Irving at (202) 512-9142 or irvings@gao.gov 

[End of section] 

Contents: 

Letter: 

Results in Brief: 

Background: 

Although Certain OECD Countries Continue to Use Accrual Budgeting, 
Objectives and Approaches Vary Significantly: 

Countries Faced a Number of Common Challenges Inherent to Accrual 
Reporting That Led to Some Changes in Their Approach: 

Accrual Cost Information Helped Inform Some Debates That Led to 
Improvements in Fiscal Condition: 

Countries Use Other Methods to Increase Awareness of Greatest Long-Term 
Fiscal Challenges: 

Although Accrual Budgeting Can Help in Certain Areas, It Does Not 
Provide Sufficient Information to Understand Longer-Term Fiscal 
Sustainability Issues: 

Conclusions: 

Matter for Congressional Consideration: 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

Tables: 

Table 1: Major Reported Fiscal Exposures: 

Table 2: Common Fiscal Indicators Used in Other Countries: 

Figures: 

Figure 1: Cash and Accrual Measures of Annual Fiscal Position: 

Figure 2: Unified Surpluses and Deficits as a Share of GDP under 
Alternative Fiscal Policy Simulations: 

Figure 3: Range of Accrual Budgeting Use: 

Abbreviations: 

EU: European Union: 

GAGAS: Generally Accepted Government Auditing Standards: 

GDP: gross domestic product: 

IPSAS: International Public Sector Accounting Standards: 

OBEGAL: Operating Balance Excluding Gains and Losses: 

OBERAC: Operating Balance Excluding Revaluations and Accounting 
Changes: 

OECD: Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development: 

PBGC: Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation: 

SGP: Stability and Growth Pact: 

United States Government Accountability Office: 

Washington, DC 20548: 

December 20, 2007: 

The Honorable Kent Conrad: 
Chairman: 
The Honorable Judd Gregg: 
Ranking Member: 
Committee on the Budget: 
United States Senate: 

The federal government's current financial condition and long-term 
fiscal outlook present enormous challenges to the nation's ability to 
respond to emerging forces reshaping American society, the United 
States' place in the world, and the future role of the federal 
government. Unfortunately, the federal government's financial condition 
and fiscal outlook are worse than many may understand. In fact, the 
nation's fiscal condition has deteriorated dramatically since 2000. The 
federal budget has gone from surplus to deficit and the nation's major 
reported long-term fiscal exposures--a wide range of programs, 
responsibilities, and activities that either explicitly or implicitly 
commit the government to future spending--have more than doubled. 
Current budget processes and measurements do not fully recognize many 
of these fiscal exposures until payments are made. Increased 
information and better incentives to address the longer-term budgetary 
consequences of today's policy decisions can help put our nation on a 
more sound fiscal footing. 

In 2000, in response to interest in whether accrual budgeting--or the 
recording of budgetary costs based on financial accounting concepts-- 
would improve budget recognition of certain long-term 
commitments[Footnote 1] and so encourage action to address them, we 
looked at the use of accrual budgeting in Australia, Iceland, New 
Zealand, and the United Kingdom.[Footnote 2] We also looked at two 
other countries--Canada and the Netherlands--that used accrual 
budgeting more selectively at that time and were considering expanding 
the use of accrual budgeting. We reported that these countries had 
adopted accrual budgeting more as part of broader public management 
reforms to increase transparency and improve government performance 
rather than as a way of increasing awareness of their longer-term 
fiscal challenges. None used accrual budgeting for social insurance 
programs.[Footnote 3] 

We concluded that the current cash-and obligation-based budget[Footnote 
4] in the United States provides equal or better control than full 
accrual budgeting, but that the United States should consider expanding 
the use of accrual measurement in the budget to certain areas where it 
would enhance up-front control, namely federal employee pensions and 
retiree health, insurance, and environmental liabilities.[Footnote 5] 
For these programs, accrual measurement would move budgetary 
recognition earlier to when benefits are earned or the insured event 
occurs. However, for most other activities there is not a significant 
difference between cash and accrual measures. Furthermore, the up-front 
funding requirement under an obligation-based budget provides 
policymakers greater control over capital investment. 

Since our 2000 report, these nations have not only gained additional 
experience with accrual budgeting but also have begun using other 
measures, analyses, and reporting to improve the understanding of 
broader long-term fiscal sustainability issues. Given your interest in 
the importance of accurate and timely information on the U.S. fiscal 
position, you asked us to update our report on the experiences of these 
countries and look at other ways countries have increased attention to 
their longer-term fiscal challenges. Reviewing the experience of other 
countries with accrual budgeting and fiscal sustainability reporting 
may identify some strategies for focusing more attention on the long- 
term budgetary implications of the U.S. federal government's current 
programs and policies. 

Specifically, this report examines: 

1. Where, how, and why is accrual budgeting used in select Organisation 
for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD)[Footnote 6] countries 
and how has it changed since 2000? 

2. What challenges and limitations have been discovered in the use of 
accrual budgeting and how have select OECD countries responded to them? 

3. What do select OECD countries perceive the effect of accrual 
budgeting to have been on policy debates, program management, and the 
allocation of resources? 

4. Has accrual budgeting been used to increase awareness of long-term 
fiscal challenges and, if not, what is used instead? 

5. What does this and other GAO work tell us about where and how the 
increased use of accrual concepts in the budget would be useful and 
about ways to increase recognition of the long-term implications of 
today's policy decisions? 

We focused primarily on the six countries in our 2000 report: 

* Australia, 

* Canada, 

* Iceland, 

* the Netherlands, 

* New Zealand, and: 

* the United Kingdom. 

We also did a limited review of two other nations--Denmark and 
Switzerland--that recently expanded the use of accrual budgeting and 
two countries--Norway and Sweden--that considered accrual budgeting but 
decided against it. 

Any analysis of budget processes, measurements, and concepts in other 
nations must recognize that the role played by legislative bodies in a 
parliamentary system of government is quite different than the role 
played by the Congress of the United States, especially in the process 
of resource allocation. All countries in our study that have adopted 
accruals have parliamentary systems in which the government is formed 
by the political party, or coalition of parties, that have the support 
of a majority of Parliament. Many important decisions that are debated 
during the annual budget and appropriations process in the Congress of 
the United States occur in case study countries before the budget is 
presented to Parliament for approval. The Parliaments in the countries 
we studied regularly enact the government's budget without amendment; 
failure to do so may be viewed as a lack of confidence in the 
government. This difference is likely to influence perspectives on the 
trade-offs associated with the use of accrual budgeting, particularly 
in terms of accountability and legislative control. 

The work on this report was done from June 2007 through December 2007 
in accordance with Generally Accepted Government Auditing Standards 
(GAGAS). Those standards require that we plan and perform the audit to 
obtain sufficient, appropriate evidence to provide a reasonable basis 
for our findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. We 
believe that the evidence obtained provides a reasonable basis for our 
findings and conclusions based on our audit objectives. 

Results in Brief: 

Accrual budgeting continues to be used to some extent in all six 
countries reviewed in 2000. The six countries have taken different 
approaches in the design of their accrual-based budgets, and all 
continue to use cash information particularly for evaluating the 
overall fiscal condition. Since 2000, more OECD countries have expanded 
the use of accrual measurement in the budget, including Denmark and 
Switzerland. However, two countries in our study--Canada and the 
Netherlands--which had considered broader expansions of accrual 
budgeting, have thus far made only limited changes. Two other 
countries--Norway and Sweden--also considered adopting accrual 
budgeting in recent years but decided against it, primarily because 
they believed the cash budget provides for better control, particularly 
over capital investment. 

When significantly expanding the use of accrual budgeting, there are 
several common transitional challenges countries initially faced 
including developing accounting standards for the budget and deciding 
what assets to value and how to value them. Countries tended to work 
through these issues over time. However, a number of implementation 
challenges cited in our 2000 report still exist. These challenges 
illustrate the inherent complexity of using accrual-based measures for 
managing a nation's resources. For example, accrual-based measures 
experience volatility due to changes in the value of assets and 
liabilities or changes in assumptions (e.g., interest rates, inflation, 
and productivity) used to estimate future payments whether or not there 
has been a change in the underlying fiscal stance. Management and 
oversight of noncash expenses[Footnote 7] were also cited as 
challenges. These challenges have led some countries to modify their 
approaches to accrual budgeting and to continue a reliance on cash- 
based measures for broad fiscal policy making. 

Despite these challenges, officials in many of the countries in our 
2000 report believe that accrual-based cost information provides better 
information on the cost of performance than cash-based measures. 
Accrual budgeting, which recognizes resources as they are used to 
produce goods and services, provides the full cost of all programs and 
may allow for better comparisons between different methods of 
delivering government services. Therefore, accrual budgeting is 
expected to help program managers achieve efficiencies and better 
allocate resources. Several countries cited examples of where the 
provision of accrual-based cost information helped highlight the full 
cost of programs, such as government employee pensions and insurance, 
that were ultimately reformed. Although officials said that reform 
might have occurred eventually, they believe the accrual-based cost 
information helped spur action. 

Accrual budgeting is not used by the countries in our study for 
recognizing nations' longer-term fiscal challenges that are driven 
primarily by public pension and health care programs (social insurance) 
because, like the United States, the countries in our study do not 
consider future social insurance benefit payments to be explicit 
liabilities. Instead, many of these other countries have prepared or 
are preparing reports assessing fiscal sustainability of their nation's 
finances. The goal of these reports is to increase public awareness and 
understanding of the long-term fiscal outlook in light of escalating 
health care cost growth and population aging; to stimulate public and 
policy debates; and to help policymakers make informed decisions. The 
countries used several common measures, such as cash-flow measures of 
future revenue and spending and summary measures of fiscal imbalance 
and fiscal gaps, to assess fiscal sustainability. Each measure provides 
a different perspective on the nation's long-term financing and each 
measure has its limitations. Therefore, most countries use more than 
one measure to assess fiscal sustainability. 

Our study of these countries and our own work confirms the need for 
better information to make trade-offs between individual programs and 
to increase attention on longer-term fiscal challenges. Despite the 
challenges that exist in estimating accrual-based cost information, it 
may be preferable to be approximately right than exactly wrong. The 
selective use of accrual budgeting in areas where it would enhance up- 
front control of future cash resources would put programs on a more 
level playing field and be beneficial. However, to improve the 
understanding of the broader long-term fiscal challenges, additional 
measures, analyses, and reporting, including fiscal sustainability 
reporting, are needed. 

As the Comptroller General has said before, our nation is on an 
imprudent and unsustainable path. Continuing on our current fiscal path 
would gradually erode, if not suddenly damage, our economy, our 
standard of living, and ultimately even our domestic tranquility and 
our national security. Although no change in measurement or reporting 
can replace substantive action to meet our longer-term fiscal 
challenge, we believe that increasing the use of accrual-based cost 
information for budget decisions involving both existing and proposed 
programs that require significant future cash resources could 
facilitate consideration of competing demands. At the same time a 
fiscal sustainability report would provide both the nation's citizens 
and policymakers with a comprehensive picture of the long-term fiscal 
condition of the government as a whole. 

Background: 

The U.S. federal budget[Footnote 8] serves as the primary financial 
plan of the federal government and thus plays a critical role in the 
decision-making process. Policymakers, managers, and the American 
people rely on it to frame their understanding of significant choices 
about the role of the government and to provide them with information 
to make decisions about individual programs and overall fiscal policy. 
The budget process helps highlight for policymakers and the public the 
overall "cost" of government. Since the budget process also serves as a 
key point of accountability between policymakers and managers, the way 
"costs" are measured and reported in the budget can have significant 
consequences for managerial incentives. The term "cost" has different 
meanings in the budget and financial statements. In the budget, the 
term "cost" generally refers to the amount of cash needed during the 
period. In the financial statements, the term "cost" means the amount 
of resources used to produce goods or deliver services during the 
period regardless of when cash is used. Therefore, one goal of accrual 
budgeting is to report the "full cost" of government services provided 
during the year.[Footnote 9] The different methods of reporting (e.g., 
cash, obligations, or accrual) represent much more than technical means 
of cost measurement. They reflect fundamental choices about the 
information and incentives provided by the budget. 

Cash-based measurement records receipts and outlays when cash is 
received or paid, without regard to when the activity occurs that 
results in revenue being earned, resources being consumed, or 
liabilities being increased. In comparison, obligation-based budgeting--
which is used in the U.S. federal government--focuses on the legal 
obligations entered into during a period regardless of when cash is 
paid or received and regardless of when resources acquired are to be 
received or consumed. Obligation-based budgeting provides an additional 
level of control over pure cash budgeting by requiring that federal 
agencies have statutory authority to enter into obligations to make 
outlays of government funds. With limited exceptions, the amounts to be 
obligated are measured on a cash or cash-equivalent basis. Therefore, 
we generally refer to the U.S. federal budget as "cash based."[Footnote 
10] 

In contrast to cash-and obligation-based budgeting, accrual budgeting 
generally involves aligning budget recognition with the period in which 
resources are consumed or liabilities increased, rather than when 
obligations are made or cash flows occur. Although accruals can be 
measured in a variety of ways, the term accrual budgeting typically has 
been used in case study countries to refer to the recording of 
budgetary costs based on concepts in financial accounting standards. 
Thus, accrual-based budgeting generally provides information similar to 
that found in a private sector operating statement. 

Choices about the appropriate method of budget reporting are 
complicated by the multiplicity of the budget's uses and users, 
including policymakers and managers. The federal budget is 
simultaneously asked to provide full information and appropriate 
incentives for resource allocation, control over cash, recognition of 
future commitments, and the monitoring of performance. Given these 
multiple and potentially competing objectives, choices about the method 
of budget reporting involve trade-offs. For example, control over 
spending is greatest if the budget recognizes the full cash cost at the 
time the decision is made but assessing performance and its cost is 
generally best supported by accrual-based cost information, which 
recognizes resources as they are used to produce goods and services. 
The up-front funding requirement under an obligation-based budget helps 
ensure policymakers' control over the acquisition of a new building but 
does not align its cost with its use. Conversely, accrual budgeting 
better aligns the cost of the building with the periods that benefit 
from its use, but in its simplest form it does not provide for up-front 
control over entering a legally binding commitment to purchase the 
building. Given the necessary trade-offs, the method of budget 
reporting should be selected to meet the primary decision-making and 
accountability needs of a governmental system while balancing the needs 
of multiple users. 

Cash and Accrual Measures of the Government's Annual Fiscal Condition: 

The federal government reports both cash and accrual measures of its 
current finances. The key focus of the policy debate is the unified 
budget deficit/surplus. With limited exceptions,[Footnote 11] the 
unified budget deficit/surplus is the difference between cash receipts 
and cash outlays for the government as a whole including any Social 
Security surplus.[Footnote 12] The second measure, the government's net 
operating cost, is the amount by which costs--as reported on an accrual 
basis--exceed revenue and is reported in the federal government's 
financial statements.[Footnote 13] Figure 1 shows the cash and accrual 
measures for fiscal years 2000 to 2007. 

Figure 1: Cash and Accrual Measures of Annual Fiscal Position: 

This figure is a combination line chart showing cash and accrual 
measures of annual fiscal position. The X axis is the fiscal year, and 
the Y axis represents billions of dollars. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: Department of the Treasury. 

Note: Data from the Financial Reports of the United States Government. 
The fiscal year 2005 accrual results included a significant negative 
actuarial adjustment, and 2006 included a significant positive 
adjustment, primarily due to changes in interest rate assumptions used 
to estimate the veterans compensation liability. 

[End of figure] 

The cash and accrual results are based on the same underlying 
activities--the differences arise due to the timing of when the costs 
of certain activities are recognized. As explained earlier, for the 
cash-based budget deficit, costs are recorded when cash payments are 
made for goods received or services performed. For the accrual deficit, 
costs are recognized when goods are used or services are performed 
regardless of when cash payments are made. For many program areas, the 
timing difference is small but for others the timing differences can 
amount to billions of dollars each year. Differences arise when a cost 
is accrued (and affects the accrual deficit) in one fiscal year but 
paid (and affects the cash deficit) in another fiscal year. The 
following six areas account for the largest differences between cash 
and accrual deficits:[Footnote 14] 

* civilian employee benefits, 

* military employee benefits, 

* veterans compensation, 

* environmental liabilities (e.g., cleanup and disposal), 

* insurance programs, and: 

* capital assets. 

For example, the accrual deficit includes an expense for current 
employees' pension and other retirement benefits, which are earned 
during the employee's working years and are part of the annual cost of 
providing government services but not paid until sometime in the future 
when the employee retires. The cash budget deficit does not include 
retirement benefits earned today, but it does reflect payments made to 
current retirees. (These cash payments reflect past accrued expenses.) 
The difference between the accrued retirement benefits recognized and 
cash payments made during the year is the difference between the 
accrual and cash measures due to employee benefits. 

In the year that capital assets such as structures and equipment are 
purchased, the budget recognizes the full cash cost to provide decision 
makers with the information and incentives to make efficient decisions 
at the only time that they can control the cost. Specifically, budget 
authority for the asset's full cash cost must generally be provided up 
front before the asset can be purchased. The full cash cost of a 
capital asset is recorded as an outlay and included in the cash budget 
deficit when the asset is paid for. However, under the accrual basis of 
accounting used in the financial statements, the cash cost of the asset 
is initially recorded on the balance sheet. The cash cost of the asset 
is then spread over its expected useful life to match the asset's cost 
with its use. Therefore, each year the accrual deficit only reflects 
one year's worth of the cash cost, called depreciation expense. 

We have previously noted that while both cash and accrual measures of 
the government's overall finances are informative, neither measure 
alone provides a full picture.[Footnote 15] For example, the unified 
budget deficit provides information on borrowing needs and current cash 
flow, but does not measure the amount of resources used to provide 
goods or services in the current year. While the accrual deficit 
provides information on resources used in the current year, it does not 
provide information on how much the government has to borrow in the 
current year to finance government activities. Nor does it provide 
information about the timing of payments and receipts, which can be 
very important. Therefore, just as investors need income statements, 
statements of cash flow, and balance sheets to understand a business's 
financial condition, both cash and accrual measures are important for 
understanding the government's financial condition. 

Although a more complete picture of the government's fiscal stance 
today and over time comes from looking at both the cash and accrual 
measures than from looking at either alone, even the two together do 
not provide sufficient information on our future fiscal challenges. In 
addition to considering the federal government's current financial 
condition, it is critical to look at other measures of the long-term 
fiscal outlook of the federal government. While there are various ways 
to consider and assess the long-term fiscal outlook, any analysis 
should include more than just the obligations and costs recognized in 
the budget and financial statements. It should take account of the 
implicit promises embedded in current policy and the timing of these 
longer-term obligations and commitments in relation to the resources 
available under various assumptions. For example, while the cash and 
accrual measures showed improvement between fiscal year 2005 and fiscal 
year 2007, our long-term fiscal outlook did not change. In fact, the 
U.S. government's total reported liabilities, net social insurance 
commitments, and other fiscal exposures continue to grow and total more 
than $52 trillion, representing approximately four times the nation's 
total output, or gross domestic product (GDP), in fiscal year 2007, up 
from about $20 trillion, or two times GDP in fiscal year 2000 (see 
table 1). 

Table 1: Major Reported Fiscal Exposures: 

Dollars in trillions. 

Explicit liabilities: Publicly held debt Military and civilian pensions 
and retiree health; 
2000: 6.9; 
2007: 10.8; 
Percent increase: 57. 

Commitments and contingencies: For example, PBGC,[A] undelivered 
orders; 
2000: 0.5; 
2007: 1.1; 
Percent increase: 97. 

Implicit exposures; 
2000: 13.0; 
2007: 40.8; 
Percent increase: 213. 

Implicit exposure: Future Social Security benefits; 
2000: 3.8; 
2007: 6.8; 
Percent increase: [Empty]. 

Implicit exposure: Future Medicare Part A benefits; 
2000: 2.7; 
2007: 12.3; 
Percent increase: [Empty]. 

Implicit exposure: Future Medicare Part B benefits; 
2000: 6.5; 
2007: 13.4; 
Percent increase: [Empty]. 

Implicit exposure: Future Medicare Part D benefits; 
2000: [Empty]; 
2007: 8.4; 
Percent increase: [Empty]. 

Total; 
2000: 20.4; 
2007: 52.7; 
Percent increase: 158. 

Source: Department of the Treasury. 

Note: Data from 2000 and 2007 Financial Reports of the United States 
Government. Estimates for Social Security and Medicare are at present 
value as of January 1 of each year and all other data are as of 
September 30. Totals and percent increases may not add due to rounding. 

[A] Pension Benefit Guaranty Corporation. 

[End of table] 

Another way to assess the U.S. government's long-term fiscal outlook 
and the sustainability of federal programs is to run simulations of 
future revenues and spending for all federal programs, based on a 
continuation of current or proposed policy. Long-term simulations by 
GAO, the Congressional Budget Office, and others show that we face 
large and growing structural deficits driven primarily by rising health 
care costs and known demographic trends. As shown in figure 2, GAO's 
long-term simulations--which are neither forecasts nor predictions-- 
continue to show ever-increasing long-term deficits resulting in a 
federal debt level that ultimately spirals out of control. The timing 
of deficits and the resulting debt buildup varies depending on the 
assumptions used, but under either optimistic ("Baseline Extended") or 
more realistic assumptions ("Alternative simulation"), the federal 
government's current fiscal policy is unsustainable.[Footnote 16] 

Figure 2: Unified Surpluses and Deficits as a Share of GDP under 
Alternative Fiscal Policy Simulations: 

This figure is a combination line graph showing unified surpluses and 
deficits as a share of GDP under alternative fiscal policy simulations. 
The X axis represents the fiscal year, and the Y axis represents the 
percent of GDP. One line represents the Baseline extended, and the 
dotted line represents Alternative simulation. 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO. 

Note: The data are from GAO's August 2007 analysis in GAO-07-1261R. 

[End of figure] 

One summary measure of the long-term fiscal challenge is called "the 
fiscal gap." The fiscal gap is the amount of spending reduction or tax 
increases that would be needed today to meet some future debt target. 
To keep debt as a share of GDP at or below today's ratio under our 
Alternative simulation would require spending cuts or tax increases 
equal to 7.5 percent of the entire economy each year over the next 75 
years, or a total of about $54 trillion in present value terms. To put 
this in perspective, closing the gap would require an immediate and 
permanent increase in federal tax revenues of more than 40 percent or 
an equivalent reduction in federal program spending (i.e., in all 
spending except for interest on the debt held by the public, which 
cannot be directly controlled). 

As demonstrated by these various measures, our nation is on an 
unsustainable fiscal path. This path increasingly will constrain our 
ability to address emerging and unexpected budgetary needs and will 
increase the burdens that will be faced by future generations. Since at 
its heart the budget debate is about the allocation of limited 
resources, the budget process can and should play a key role in helping 
to address our long-term fiscal challenge. 

Although Certain OECD Countries Continue to Use Accrual Budgeting, 
Objectives and Approaches Vary Significantly: 

The six countries reviewed in 2000 continue to use accrual budgeting. 
However, two countries that were considering broader expansions of 
accrual budgeting have thus far made only limited changes. Although 
each country's budgeting framework has unique features, the six 
countries have taken one of two broad approaches toward accrual 
budgeting: 

* One approach uses accruals for most or all items in the budget 
primarily to support broader efforts to improve government performance. 

* A second approach more selectively uses accrual information in areas 
where it increases recognition of future cash requirements related to 
services provided during the year that are not fully recognized in a 
cash-based budget. 

Regardless of which approach is used, cash information remains 
important in all the countries to evaluate overall fiscal position. 
None of the countries reviewed include anticipated future payments for 
social insurance programs (namely public pensions and health services) 
in the current year's budget measure. Social insurance programs are 
generally viewed as transfer payments rather than liabilities. Transfer 
payments are benefits provided without requiring the recipient to 
provide current or future goods or services of equivalent value in 
return. 

Accrual Budgeting Continues to Be Used in the Six Countries Studied but 
Two Did Not Expand Their Use as Previously Anticipated: 

Since 2000, three countries--Australia, New Zealand, and Iceland--have 
continued to use the accrual budgeting frameworks in place in 2000. In 
2000, we reported that the United Kingdom was planning to implement an 
accrual-based budgeting framework, called Resource Accounting and 
Budgeting. After Parliament passed the necessary legislation in 2000, 
the United Kingdom implemented resource accounting and budgeting in 
2001. The United Kingdom has continued to make some modifications to 
its framework, including introduction of controls over cash. 

Although two countries--the Netherlands and Canada--have considered 
broader expansions of accrual budgeting since 2000, thus far they have 
made only limited changes. In the Netherlands only budgets for some 
government agencies are on an accrual basis and the governmentwide 
budget remains on a modified cash basis. The Dutch government decided 
against moving the governmentwide budget to an accrual basis in 2001. 
Although the Dutch cabinet thought that the accrual-based system added 
value at the agencies where it had been implemented, it thought the 
cost of implementing accrual budgeting governmentwide, including 
changing information systems, developing accounting standards, and 
changing regulations would outweigh any advantages. 

In 2003 Canada significantly expanded the use of accruals in the 
governmentwide budget, but the information used to support 
appropriations (called the Main Estimates) and the appropriations 
themselves remain largely on a cash basis.[Footnote 17] Since the 
1990s, there has been debate within the Canadian government concerning 
the appropriate application of accruals. The Canadian Office of the 
Auditor General and a key committee in Parliament, the House of Commons 
Committee on Public Accounts, have advocated preparing the Main 
Estimates on a full accrual basis. The current government agrees in 
principle that accrual measurement can be useful but considers this to 
be a complex issue that requires study and consultation with 
parliamentarians. After consultation with parliamentarians, the current 
government plans to present a model for a new accrual-based 
appropriations process in 2008. 

Although the use of accrual budgeting in other major industrialized 
countries has grown, it is not currently the norm. Since 2000, the 
number of OECD countries that report using accruals at least in part 
has increased.[Footnote 18] For example, as noted previously, Denmark 
and Switzerland recently expanded the use of accruals in the budget. 
Some countries also report using both cash-and accrual-based accounting 
in the budget. However, the majority of OECD countries reported using 
either cash-or obligation-based budgeting or both. 

The extent to which countries in our study used accrual budgeting 
varied--from full accrual at all levels of government to more limited 
use at either the agency or program level. Figure 3 illustrates the 
broad range of use. 

Figure 3: Range of Accrual Budgeting Use: 

This figure is a combination of five text boxes, side by side. They are 
as follows: 

Full accrual at all levels of government; 
Full accrual at all levels of government with cash controls; 
Accrual limited to select government agencies; 
Accrual limited to select programs; 
Accrual limited to governmentwide surplus/deficit (agencies on a cash 
basis). 

[See PDF for image] 

Source: GAO (PhotoDisc, image). 

[End of figure] 
 
The extent to which countries use accrual budgeting generally reflects 
the objectives to be satisfied. Countries that switched to accrual 
budgeting primarily as a way of providing better cost and performance 
information for decision making generally used accruals to a greater 
extent in the budget, as illustrated by the first two approaches--full 
accrual at all levels of government. In general, these countries also 
sought to put financial reporting and budgeting on a consistent basis. 
Countries that switched to accrual budgeting primarily as a way of 
increasing recognition of future cash requirements related to services 
provided during the year generally use it only for selected programs 
where accruals enhance up-front control and provide better information 
for decision making (e.g., loans and government employee pensions); 
this approach is similar to the United States' current use of accruals. 
Regardless of the approach, cash information remains important. Most 
countries in our study continue to use cash-based measures for broad 
fiscal policy decisions. The following section describes each country's 
objective and approach in more detail. 

Most Countries Use Accruals Primarily to Increase Transparency and 
Improve Government Performance: 

Four countries--Australia, New Zealand, the Netherlands, and the United 
Kingdom--primarily use accrual budgeting to support broader efforts to 
improve the efficiency and performance of the public sector. Compared 
to cash-based budgeting, accruals are thought to provide better cost 
information and to encourage better management of government assets and 
liabilities. Among this group of countries, however, there is 
significant variation in the scope of accrual budgeting as well as the 
linkage between performance goals and appropriations. 

Australia and New Zealand: 

Since the 1990s, Australia and New Zealand have extensively used 
accruals in conjunction with output-based budgeting.[Footnote 19] The 
introduction of accrual budgeting in both countries was a key element 
of broader reforms meant to improve the efficiency and performance of 
the public sector. Reformers in both countries thought that accruals 
would provide better cost information and better management incentives 
than the previous cash-based budgeting framework. Reformers also 
thought it was important to have a consistent framework for budgeting 
and financial reporting to allow actual performance to be compared with 
expectations. 

Accrual budgeting in both countries is also intended to provide funding 
for the full cost of departments' activities. Australia and New Zealand 
departments receive funding for noncash expenses, such as depreciation 
of existing assets, accrued employee pension benefits,[Footnote 20] and 
the estimated future costs of environmental cleanup resulting from 
government activities. Reformers in both countries thought that 
appropriating on a full-cost basis created compelling incentives for 
department managers to focus on the full cost of their department's 
activities as well as manage noncash expenses. 

One important feature of Australia's and New Zealand's budgeting 
frameworks is that departmental appropriations are closely linked to 
outcomes and outputs, and department executives are given considerable 
flexibility in managing their department's finances, provided that the 
department meets its performance goals. It is thought that giving 
department executives more flexibility generally contributes to better 
performance. In comparison to the United States, the appropriations 
acts in Australia and New Zealand place less emphasis on how 
departments allocate their funding among different types of expenses. 
Nevertheless, two key departments, the Treasury in New Zealand and the 
Department of Finance and Administration in Australia, do centrally 
review and must approve departmental plans for major capital purchases. 

The Netherlands: 

The Netherlands has used accrual budgeting in select government 
agencies primarily as a tool for improving performance. In the early 
1990s, the government allowed a limited number of government entities 
(called agencies) to operate as if they were private sector contractors 
by adopting a results-oriented performance-management model, including 
accrual accounting and budgeting. Under the Dutch approach, the 
agencies are effectively service providers for the central government's 
ministries. These agencies receive funding for the accrual-based cost 
from the ministries that they service. For example, although the 
Ministry of Justice is appropriated funds on a cash basis to buy 
services from the Prison Service, the Prison Service charges the 
ministry the full cost of the services it provides. The number of 
government entities participating in this program has increased from 22 
in 2000 to approximately 40 in mid 2007. However, while the agencies 
budgeting on an accrual basis represent about 60 percent of the 
government in terms of employees, they are a small part of the 
government's overall budget since the majority of the Dutch 
government's expenditures are spent on transfer payments, which 
continue to be budgeted on a cash basis. 

The United Kingdom: 

The United Kingdom implemented what it calls resource budgeting for 
financial year 2001-2002. The United Kingdom's approach makes less use 
of the Australia-New Zealand form of performance-based budgeting and 
imposes tighter controls on cash than the Australia and New Zealand 
approaches. The United Kingdom's Parliament votes both cash and 
"resources" (i.e., the full accrual-based cost of a department's 
services). The resource budget recognizes such noncash expenses as 
accrued employee pension benefits as well as depreciation of existing 
assets but limits the ability of departments to use funds appropriated 
for noncash items to fund current spending. Treasury officials from the 
United Kingdom told us that in practice this near-cash limit on 
departmental spending is the focus of budgetary planning. Treasury 
officials also noted that although departments have public service 
agreements that include performance targets, the United Kingdom has not 
really used outcome-based budgeting. 

Some Countries Use Accrual Measures Selectively in Areas Where It 
Enhances Transparency of the Government's Future Cash Requirements: 

A second approach has been to use accrual information more selectively 
for programs or areas where it highlights annual costs that are not 
fully recognized in the cash-based budget. Iceland and Canada generally 
have taken this approach. 

Iceland: 

Since 1998, Iceland has budgeted on an accrual basis except for capital 
expenditures, which remain on a cash basis. Iceland's approach was 
designed primarily to improve transparency and accountability in its 
budget. The only areas with significant differences between cash-and 
accrual-based estimates are government employee pensions, interest, and 
tax revenue. Iceland also uses accrual budgeting for loan programs. 
Accrual budgeting in Iceland has had only a limited effect on 
department-level budgets for two reasons. First, capital budgeting 
remains on a cash basis. Second, the oversight and administration of 
employee pensions, tax revenue, and the subsidy costs for loans are 
located in the Finance Ministry, not individual departments. 
Consequently, for most Icelandic departments, there are only minor 
differences between cash-and accrual-based estimates for the 
department's operating budgets. 

Canada: 

The federal government of Canada currently uses both accrual and cash 
for budgeting purposes. The governmentwide budget is largely on an 
accrual basis; the information used to support appropriations (called 
the Main Estimates) and the appropriations themselves remain largely on 
a cash basis; certain areas such as the future pensions for current 
employees are measured on an accrual basis.[Footnote 21] Canada's 
current government has been considering moving the Main Estimates and 
appropriations to a full accrual basis. Since the 1990s, the Canadian 
Office of the Auditor General and a key parliamentary committee, the 
House of Commons Committee on Public Accounts, have recommended moving 
appropriations to an accrual basis so that managers would make more 
informed decisions about the use of resources. The Office of the 
Auditor General and the committee think it is important to use the same 
accounting standards in the budget and the Estimates. The current 
government agrees that moving to accrual-based budget and 
appropriations may have benefits. Officials from Canada's Finance 
Department and Treasury Board Secretariat told us that it was important 
to study the experience of other governments with accruals before 
designing a new, accrual-based appropriations process. The officials 
also said the current government was consulting with members of 
Parliament and plans to present a model for Parliament's consideration 
in 2008. 

Cash Information Remains Important, Particularly for Monitoring a 
Country's Fiscal Position: 

Regardless of the approach taken in use of accrual budgeting, all of 
the countries consider cash information to be important, particularly 
for monitoring the country's fiscal position even where fiscal 
indicators are accrual based. Three of the countries--Australia, the 
Netherlands, and the United Kingdom--calculate the governmentwide 
surplus/deficit on either a cash or near-cash basis. In the other three 
countries--Iceland, New Zealand, and Canada--aggregate fiscal 
indicators are largely accrual based, but officials we spoke with said 
that cash information continues to be important in evaluating fiscal 
policy. 

Although Australia extensively uses accruals for departmental 
appropriations, Australian officials said that a key measure for 
policymakers is the country's surplus measured on a cash 
basis.[Footnote 22] This is due in part to a goal of running cash-based 
surpluses over the business cycle to contribute to national savings. 
Both the Netherlands and the United Kingdom, as members of the European 
Union (EU), are required to report the net lending or borrowing 
requirement, which officials described as a near-cash number.[Footnote 
23] Officials from the United Kingdom also said that cash information 
is important because the current government has pledged to avoid 
borrowing to finance current expenditures and to keep net debt at 
prudent levels. New Zealand makes several adjustments to the accrual- 
based operating balance to remove items that do not affect the 
underlying financing of government and must pay attention to its cash 
position to ensure it meets its debt-to-GDP target. 

Several Other OECD Countries Have Considered Accrual Budgeting since 
2000 but Reached Different Decisions: 

Since 2000, at least two additional OECD countries--Denmark and 
Switzerland--have expanded the use of accruals in the budget without 
moving to full accrual budgeting. Switzerland has recently expanded 
accrual measurement as part of broader reforms to improve government 
financial reporting. However, Switzerland's governmentwide surplus/ 
deficit continues to be calculated on a cash basis and some government 
assets, such as defense assets, are not capitalized. Beginning in 2007, 
Denmark moved departmental operating budgets and associated capital 
spending to an accrual basis, primarily to support efforts to improve 
the performance of government departments. However, Denmark does not 
accrue capital spending on infrastructure, and both grants and transfer 
payments are measured on a cash basis. 

Sweden and Norway considered moving toward accrual budgeting but 
decided against it. Between 1999 and 2003 Sweden developed a plan to 
move from cash to accrual budgeting but in 2004 chose not to implement 
these plans. Swedish officials said that the government was concerned 
that accrual budgeting would diminish control of cash spending, 
potentially undermine fiscal discipline and lead to bigger investments, 
principally for infrastructure and war equipment. Norway went through a 
similar decision process. In 2003, a government-appointed committee 
recommended Norway move to full accrual budgeting, but the government 
at that time argued that the fiscal policy role of the budget is better 
served by cash-based appropriations and that the cash system enables 
better control of investments. Parliament agreed. However, Norway is 
testing accrual accounting at 10 agencies to achieve purposes similar 
to those cited by other countries--namely to provide better cost 
information; to establish a baseline for benchmarking costs, both 
between government agencies and in relation to private organizations; 
and to generate more complete information on the assets and liabilities 
of the government. 

Countries Faced a Number of Common Challenges Inherent to Accrual 
Reporting That Led to Some Changes in Their Approach: 

Any significant expansion in the use of accruals creates a number of 
transitional challenges, including how to develop accounting standards 
for the budget and deciding what assets to value and how to value them. 
Beyond transitional issues however, there are several challenges 
inherent to accrual budgeting, as we noted in 2000. These challenges 
illustrate the inherent complexity of using accrual-based numbers for 
managing a nation's resources and led to some modifications in 
countries' use of accrual reporting in the budget, such as reliance on 
more cash-based measures of the overall budget. 

Countries Have Generally Addressed Challenges Related to Developing 
Accounting Standards to Be Used in the Budget, Including Asset 
Identification and Valuation: 

Developing accounting standards to use in the budget and deciding what 
public assets to value and how to value them were initial challenges 
for countries moving to accrual budgeting. These took time to work out 
and refinements continue. Some countries in our study sought to put the 
government's financial reporting and budgeting on the same basis and to 
make them comparable to the private sector. In all, three of the six 
countries in our 2000 report and Denmark said that the technical 
standards used in the budget were substantially based on private-sector 
accounting standards. Only Canada and Switzerland said the technical 
standards were based on public sector accounting standards. Three 
countries--Australia, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom-- 
reported that the standards used for aggregate measures were based on 
national accounting standards (similar to the national income and 
product accounts in the United States) set by an international 
organization (e.g., the International Monetary Fund's Government 
Finance Statistics or the European System of Accounts). 

Some countries in our study thought that adopting standards and 
concepts developed by independent bodies was important. While both cash 
and accrual accounting can be subject to gaming, some believe that 
accrual accounting in particular opens up the opportunity for 
manipulation. Three countries responded that a commission of experts 
outside of government developed the standards. Other countries, 
however, said that although their standards were based on independent 
standards, the finance ministry or bureau of statistics has the 
ultimate responsibility for developing standards. In these countries, 
accounting standards were generally not adopted intact from an 
independent entity. For example, Switzerland's accrual budgeting system 
is designed to be closely aligned with the international public sector 
accounting standards (IPSAS), but there were some deviations from IPSAS 
for constitutional reasons such as compliance with the cash-based 
balanced budget requirement. Also, for practical reasons, Switzerland 
does not capitalize defense investments, which is required under IPSAS. 

Besides developing the accounting standards to be used in the budget, a 
key challenge when switching to accrual budgeting, particularly for 
countries that choose to treat capital on an accrual basis (i.e., to 
capitalize assets and record them on the balance sheet) and provide 
funding for noncash depreciation costs, is to ensure that the recorded 
value of the capital asset is as accurate as possible. The value of the 
capital asset is used to calculate annual depreciation costs and in 
turn fund future capital acquisitions (replacements). If an agency 
overvalued its assets, it could be difficult to reduce the level of 
assets once accrual budgeting is implemented because the excess value 
represents a source of funding for the agency in the form of 
depreciation. On the flipside, if assets were undervalued, they may not 
provide good information on the cost of maintaining or replacing the 
asset. In 2004, for example, the New Zealand government purchased the 
nation's rail network for only NZ$1. Officials with whom we spoke said 
the NZ$1 value did not yield good information about annual depreciation 
(maintenance) costs. Therefore the New Zealand government revalued the 
network at NZ$10.3 billion in 2006; this revaluation led to an increase 
in the New Zealand government's net worth. More importantly, the annual 
operating balance used in the budget now reflects the associated 
depreciation costs. 

In Australia, the government thought that capitalizing assets would 
lead to a better understanding of what is owned and what would be 
needed in the future. However, an Australian official said departments 
still request supplementary funding to replace old assets. An 
Australian official said that this may be because some departments were 
not fully funded for all capitalized assets in their opening balance 
sheets during the move to accrual budgets. It could also be because new 
asset purchases are not identical to the assets they replace or because 
agencies did not have sufficient assets to carry out their goals in the 
first place. 

Asset identification and valuation were cumbersome and time-consuming 
efforts for the countries that chose to capitalize assets. Indeed, one 
of the reasons that Iceland decided against capitalizing assets was the 
difficulty it would have faced identifying and agreeing on the asset 
values. Valuing assets poses special problems in the public sector 
since it owns unique assets such as heritage assets (e.g., museums and 
national parks) and defense assets (e.g., weapons and tanks). By 
nature, heritage assets are generally not marketable. Their cost is 
often not determinable or relevant to their significance and they may 
have very long life cycles (e.g., hundreds of years). Although the 
recognition issues associated with heritage assets are challenging, 
these assets are generally not very significant in terms of the overall 
effect on fiscal finances. As a result, valuing heritage assets may be 
seen as not worth the effort. Indeed, of all the countries we reviewed, 
only Australia and New Zealand capitalize all assets. The other 
countries exclude unique government assets such as highways, bridges, 
national parks, historical buildings, and military assets. 

The most common approaches for valuing assets are historical cost and 
fair value. (Fair value is usually the same as market value; in the 
absence of reliable market values, replacement cost is often used.) 
Five of seven countries in our study that measure capital assets on an 
accrual basis use fair or market value. Only two--Canada and Denmark-- 
use historical cost. Use of market value relies on professional 
judgments to assess values and the values can fluctuate sharply between 
reporting periods. Although historical cost is based on a verifiable 
acquisition price and does not fluctuate, the reported amounts may not 
reflect the current value of the asset. Furthermore, it is often very 
difficult to estimate the original costs of government assets that are 
hundreds of years old or for which cost records have not been 
maintained. 

Developing Reliable Financial Data Is Seen as a Prerequisite to Accrual 
Budgeting in Some Countries: 

We have reported that enhancing the use of performance and "full-cost" 
information in budgeting is a multifaceted challenge that must build on 
reliable cost and performance data, among other things.[Footnote 24] 
Reliable financial information was also viewed as important to have 
before moving to accrual budgeting in some countries we reviewed. For 
example, in the Netherlands, an agency must receive a "clean audit" or 
an unqualified audit opinion for the year prior to moving to accrual 
budgeting and at least 6 months must have been spent in a trial run of 
the accrual accounting system. Other criteria must also be met before 
moving to accrual-based budgeting and receiving the associated 
flexibilities including being able to describe and measure the agency's 
products and services. Before moving to accrual budgeting in New 
Zealand, a department had to define its broad classes of outputs, 
develop an accrual-based system capable of monthly and annual 
reporting, and develop a cost-allocation system to allocate all input 
costs including depreciation and overhead to outputs and provide 
assurance it had an adequate level of internal controls. There was not, 
however, a requirement for an unqualified opinion for the agency. 

Accrual budgeting can also lead to improvements in financial 
information. Auditable financial accounts were not a prerequisite for 
moving to accrual budgeting in the United Kingdom. When the United 
Kingdom moved to accrual budgeting in 2001-2002, the government had 16 
accounts for central government departments with "qualified" 
opinions.[Footnote 25] However, since the introduction of accrual 
budgeting, the United Kingdom reported that the number of qualified 
accounts had declined and the timeliness of financial reporting, which 
maximizes the usefulness of the information to managers, Parliament, 
and other stakeholders, has improved. 

Volatility in Aggregate Accrual Measures Can Lead to Use of More Cash- 
Like Measures: 

Both cash and accrual measures are subject to volatility. Cash 
accounting may not be useful for measuring cost because spikes in 
receipts or payments can cause swings in the apparent "cost" of a 
program or activity. For example, if a program purchases a large amount 
of equipment in one year, it will appear costly under cash accounting, 
but under accrual accounting, only a proportion of the equipment's cost 
in the form of depreciation would be shown in that year. Accrual 
measures experience volatility for other reasons such as changes in the 
value of assets and liabilities or changes in assumptions (e.g., 
interest rates, inflation, and productivity) used to estimate future 
payments. 

Because the accrual-based operating results can be volatile due to 
events outside the government's control, New Zealand generally does not 
use it as a measure of the government's short-term fiscal stewardship. 
For example, under New Zealand's accrual-based accounting standards, 
most assets are revalued at least every 3 years. New Zealand uses fair 
value, which is usually the same as market value when there is an 
active market. As noted above, market values tend to fluctuate between 
reporting periods. The changing market values can cause swings in the 
reported accrual-based operating results because such changes are 
reflected as revenue or cost in the year revalued. Therefore, changes 
in operating results may reflect not a fundamental change to the 
government's finances but rather changes in the value of assets or 
liabilities that do not affect the government's financing in the 
current period. Fluctuations can also result from annual changes in the 
value of liabilities when there are deviations between actual 
experience and the actuarial assumptions used or changes in actuarial 
assumptions. The liabilities for New Zealand's government pension and 
insurance programs, for example, fluctuate from year to year partly due 
to changes in the underlying assumptions such as interest rates and 
inflation.[Footnote 26] To deal with this, the New Zealand Treasury 
removes revaluations and other movements that do not reflect the 
underlying financing of government from its operating balance. It is 
this measure--the Operating Balance Excluding Revaluations and 
Accounting Changes (OBERAC)--that has been the focus of policy debates 
in New Zealand since about 2001. 

More recently the New Zealand Treasury shifted its focus to a new 
measure--Operating Balance Excluding Gains and Losses (OBEGAL). Gains 
and losses can result when the value of an asset or liability differs 
from the value booked on the balance sheet. If the government sells an 
asset and the sales price equals book value, there is no gain or loss, 
because a cash inflow equal to book value is the exchange of one asset 
for another of equal recorded value. However, if the sales price is 
more or less than the book value of the property, the difference is 
reflected as a gain or loss. New Zealand set up a fund to partially 
prefund future superannuation expenses.[Footnote 27] This fund reports 
gains and losses on its investments. Because the current government 
wishes to retain the investment returns in the fund, beginning with the 
2007 budget the government has shifted its focus to the OBEGAL to 
ensure the government is meeting its fiscal objectives. New Zealand 
said that by excluding net gains and losses the OBEGAL gives a more 
direct indication of the underlying stewardship of the government. 

Complexity of Accrual-Based Accounting and Use of Cash-Based Fiscal 
Targets Makes It Difficult for Policymakers to Focus on Accrual 
Measures: 

Accrual accounting is inherently more complex than cash-based 
accounting, which is like managing a checkbook. One Australian official 
noted that using accrual measures can be challenging because many 
cabinet ministers and members of Parliament are trained in professional 
fields other than finance and accounting and may be more familiar with 
cash budgeting. 

Focusing on accrual-based numbers can be difficult given the existence 
of cash-based fiscal policy targets. For example, several countries-- 
Canada, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom--have fiscal policy targets 
that target the amount the country can borrow; borrowing (or debt) is 
based on cash measures. Also, while accrual numbers are used at the 
agency level in Australia, Australia has had a goal of running cash- 
based surpluses over the business cycle. This is due in part to a long- 
standing goal in Australia to improve national savings. At the time of 
our study,[Footnote 28] Australia's Treasurer primarily focused on the 
cash-based fiscal position to show the government's effect on national 
savings.[Footnote 29] Agency managers therefore have an obligation to 
manage both the cash and accrual implications of their resource use. 

New Zealand also pays attention to its cash position. New Zealand's 
current fiscal policy goal is to maintain gross debt at around 20 
percent of GDP. This means that New Zealand's cash position must be 
such that cash receipts equal cash outlays excluding interest 
expense.[Footnote 30] It also means the accrual-based operating surplus 
must be sufficient to cover investments--cash needed today but not 
expensed until the future. 

Cash information is still used at both the overall fiscal policy level 
and department level in the United Kingdom. The current United Kingdom 
government has pledged to avoid borrowing to finance current 
expenditures and maintain public debt at a prudent level. Both of the 
government's fiscal targets are measured on a near-cash basis. 
Consequently, United Kingdom Treasury officials said that Treasury has 
imposed limits on departmental cash spending because spending directly 
affects the country's cash-based fiscal position. 

Concerns about Management and Oversight of Noncash Expenses Can Lead to 
Increased Use of Cash Controls: 

Different countries have taken different approaches to managing noncash 
expenses, particularly in regard to capital assets. In Australia and 
New Zealand, cash is appropriated for the full accrual amounts, 
including noncash items such as depreciation for existing assets. 
Agencies are expected to replenish their current assets from funding 
provided for depreciation and they have the funding to do so (subject 
to the oversight discussed below). The full cost of government is the 
focus of the operating budget rather than the immediate cash 
requirement. The downside of this approach is that control of cash and 
capital acquisitions to replace assets can become challenging. If an 
agency is given cash to fund depreciation expense, there is a risk that 
agencies may use the funds to cover other expenses. Similarly, 
Parliament may lose control over the acquisition of capital assets 
since it will have funded them through depreciation provided in 
previous years. 

To address these concerns, countries have implemented cash management 
policies and specific controls over capital acquisitions. For example, 
like Australia and New Zealand, the United Kingdom initially provided 
funding for the full cost of programs, outputs, or outcomes with the 
thought that it would generate efficiencies. Over time, however, United 
Kingdom Treasury officials said they became concerned that some 
departments were shifting noncash expenses to cash expenses, which 
adversely affected the government's borrowing requirement. As a result, 
the United Kingdom has imposed controls on cash. Departments' budgets 
now include both the amount of the full accrual costs and the cash 
required. The Parliament approves both numbers. This not only helps 
ensure that department spending is in-line with the government's fiscal 
policy goals but also reinforces Parliament's control over capital 
acquisitions. 

Australia also reported that it is considering a model that would give 
the Parliament both cash and accrual information in a form that better 
meets its needs and preferences. On the basis of reports by the 
Australian National Audit Office and others that departments could 
potentially use funds provided for depreciation of existing assets to 
fund noncapital acquisitions or that agencies are not appropriately 
using the funds to repair or replace existing assets, the Australian 
Senate expressed concern about the transparency of funding for 
depreciation and the potential loss of control over new capital 
purchases.[Footnote 31] The Senate recommended that the government 
consider reporting and budgeting for capital expenditures separately, 
including a subdivision of expenditures between asset replacement 
(i.e., the depreciation component) and asset expansion. 

All countries we reviewed that accrue capital investments have a 
process in place to facilitate oversight over capital. While most of 
these countries include depreciation of existing assets in operating 
budgets, most also preserve up-front control of capital by approving 
capital purchases above a certain threshold. For example, in New 
Zealand, all capital purchases above NZ$15 million must be approved by 
the cabinet. In Australia, any capital purchase above A$10 million in 
any one year must have a business case prepared and must be included in 
the budget proposal to be submitted for government approval. The United 
Kingdom Treasury reviews departmental capital plans. In the 
Netherlands, capital purchases by agencies are made through loans 
provided by the Ministry of Finance. The Ministry of Finance has to 
approve the level of loans per agency. 

Some Governments Have Had to Address Parliamentary Concerns: 

As previously noted, all of the countries in our study are 
parliamentary systems in which the political party that controls the 
current government has primary control over budgetary matters. However, 
as noted above, in some countries Parliaments have expressed general 
concerns that the budget presentations are confusing under accrual 
budgeting. Several countries in our study use more than one method of 
budget accounting, which can be confusing for Parliament and other 
users. In Australia, for example, where two accounting standards are 
currently used in the budget, the Senate has recommended the adoption 
of a single agreed-upon accounting standard. In Canada, the government 
reports the budget surplus/deficit on an accrual basis but department- 
level appropriations remain on a cash basis. Canadian audit officials 
we spoke with said the Parliament wants the department-level 
appropriations prepared on an accrual basis in part because the two 
different measures and crosswalks are confusing. Canada is considering 
moving department-level budgets to an accrual basis in order to provide 
consistent financial information for all levels of government and a 
better linkage between the budget and appropriations. 

In the United Kingdom, some members of Parliament said it was unclear 
how the accrual-based appropriations related to the nation's fiscal 
goals, which are largely cash based. As a result, the government is 
undertaking an "alignment project" to better align budget accounts with 
the government's two fiscal rules to (1) avoid borrowing to finance 
current expenditures and (2) keep net debt at prudent levels. 

Australia's Senate expressed concern about reduced transparency of some 
information and said that the budget could be improved if data were 
presented at the program level (in addition to outcomes). The 
Australian government official we spoke with said that the government 
already provides the Parliament and public with extensive information 
on both the full costs of government activities and the performance of 
agencies. It was not clear to the official, however, that providing 
more detailed information would improve the quality and usefulness of 
information considering the administrative workload involved and the 
potential for creating more "red tape" for managers. The Australian 
official thought more concise and relevant reports might be more useful 
than more information. 

Accrual Cost Information Helped Inform Some Debates That Led to 
Improvements in Fiscal Condition: 

Despite the inherent challenges, our six case study countries have 
continued to use accrual budgeting and additional countries have 
adopted accrual budgeting since 2000. These countries view having 
accrual-based cost information available to program managers for 
resource allocation decisions as outweighing the associated 
difficulties. In several countries, officials we spoke with said they 
believe accrual budgeting provides better information on the cost of 
annual operations and performance than cash-based budgeting 
particularly in regard to the use of capital assets and programs that 
incur costs that are not paid in cash today. 

Accrual Budgeting May Provide Better Cost Information than Cash 
Budgeting for Resource Allocation Decisions: 

In general, countries said that accrual-based cost information 
contributes to improved resource allocation and program management 
decisions. Under cash budgeting, a program's budget shows only the 
immediate cash outlay and not the cash that will have to be paid in the 
future for the service provided today. Accrual budgeting, which 
recognizes resources as they are used to produce goods and services, 
provides the full cost of all programs and may allow for better 
comparisons between different methods of delivering government 
services. 

New Zealand officials, in particular, believe the cost information 
provided by accrual-based budgeting has led to efficiencies and better 
resource allocation decisions. New Zealand attributed the cost 
information provided by accrual budgeting as helping them identify 
where and how to cut spending to put the country on a more sound fiscal 
footing in the early 1990s. Several of the countries have attributed 
specific improvements on the departmental level to accrual budgeting. 
For example, under accrual accounting, the cost of a loan includes the 
subsidy cost--the cost of lending below market rates and provisions for 
bad debt. When New Zealand recently made student loans interest free, 
the cost of the subsidy was taken into consideration during the policy 
debate. The United Kingdom also reported the more complete information 
on student loans directly affects lending decisions at the Department 
of Education and Employment.[Footnote 32] 

In several of the countries, one perceived advantage of accruals was to 
facilitate comparisons between the public sector and private sector. 
Accrual-based cost estimates could be used to "benchmark," or compare 
the cost of existing public service providers to alternative providers 
in either the public or private sectors. The OECD reported in 2005 that 
both agencies and core ministries in the Netherlands were content with 
the results from accrual budgeting at the agencies.[Footnote 33] 
Agencies, which now receive a budget for the full cost of their 
activities, like the flexibilities under accrual budgeting, while core 
ministries value the output and price information they receive from the 
agencies. The ministries also reported that agencies' use of accrual 
budgeting enables them to consider the performance of the agencies 
relative to alternatives (i.e., decentralization to subnational 
government or contracting out). At the same time, the availability of 
the alternatives enabled ministries to put more pressure on agencies to 
improve cost efficiency and to reduce prices. New Zealand, however, 
reported that there is little evidence available that similar types of 
outputs are compared or benchmarked in a way that was thought desirable 
at the time the reforms were initiated. Concerns about the usefulness 
and robustness of cost accounting systems continue and there remains a 
concern that the specification of outputs is not at a sufficient 
standard to ensure high-quality government performance. 

Accrual Budgeting Attributed with Helping to Control or Manage Certain 
Long-Term Commitments: 

In several case study countries, accrual budgeting helped policymakers 
recognize the full cost of certain programs at an earlier point and 
make decisions that limited future cash requirements. For example, as 
reported in 2000, both New Zealand and Iceland credited accrual 
budgeting with highlighting the longer-term budgetary consequences 
associated with public sector employee pension programs. In Iceland, 
accrual budgeting showed the consequences of wage negotiations on 
future public sector employee pension outlays. The full costs of these 
agreements were not fully realized by the public until the adoption of 
accrual budgeting. At that time, Icelandic officials told us that there 
was no longer public support for decisions that were so costly in the 
long term. Similarly, New Zealand officials decided to discontinue the 
defined benefit public employee pension program after pension 
liabilities were recognized on the balance sheet and the expense 
incurred was included in the budget. 

Since 2000, reforms aimed at putting government employee pensions on a 
more sustainable footing were enacted in Australia and the United 
Kingdom. In Australia, unfunded pension liabilities for government 
employees are currently the largest liability on Australia's balance 
sheet (which is part of its budget documents). To cover this liability, 
the Australian government recently established an investment fund 
called the "Future Fund" to help pay future pension payments.[Footnote 
34] Government employee pensions in the United Kingdom were also 
reformed. In 2007, the United Kingdom government raised the pension age 
to 65 for employees hired beginning in July 2007 and limited the 
government's contribution to pensions to 20 percent. United Kingdom 
officials acknowledged that there was already recognition that the 
program needed significant reform before the introduction of accrual 
measures, but said accrual budgeting helped highlight the full cost of 
pension liabilities and forced the debate on pension reform to happen 
sooner. 

Accrual budgeting has also changed the information available for 
insurance programs, veterans benefits, and environmental liabilities. 
As reported in 2000, New Zealand officials attributed reforms of the 
Accident Compensation Corporation program to recognizing the liability 
and expenses from providing accident coverage in the budget. 
Recognizing the estimated future outlays associated with current 
accidents reduced budget surpluses by NZ$500 million. At that time, 
officials attributed New Zealand's decision to raise premiums and add 
surcharges largely to this inclusion of program costs in the budget. 
Also, in 2002 New Zealand ratified the Kyoto Protocols committing to 
reduce net emissions of greenhouse gases over the 2008-2012 period. 
Consistent with financial accounting standards, New Zealand recognized 
a liability for the obligation created by this commitment. New Zealand 
officials attributed accrual accounting with helping them focus on ways 
to manage environmental liabilities. 

Canadian officials attributed accrual information with leading to 
recent changes in veterans benefits. The use of accrual accounting 
requires Veterans Affairs Canada to record the full cost of veteran 
benefits in the year they are earned rather than paid. Therefore when 
considering changes to veterans benefits, Veterans Affairs Canada 
considered the effect of future cash flows in discounted terms. Initial 
results indicated that the planned changes to veteran benefits 
represented a substantial expense for the year. As a result, Veterans 
Affairs Canada modified the admissibility requirements limiting the 
financial effect of the changes. 

Countries Use Other Methods to Increase Awareness of Greatest Long-Term 
Fiscal Challenges: 

Accrual budgeting was not used to increase awareness of long-term 
fiscal challenges that are primarily driven by old-age public pensions 
and healthcare programs. None of the countries in our study include 
future social insurance payments in the budget. Like the United States, 
the other countries do not consider future social insurance payments to 
be liabilities. Instead, in recent years, several countries have begun 
reporting on the sustainability of the government's overall finances 
over longer-term horizons, given demographic and fiscal trends. 

Aging-Related Expenditures Are Major Drivers of Long-Term Fiscal 
Challenges in Other Countries: 

Aging is a worldwide phenomenon. One of the key challenges that all 
developed economies are facing over the coming decades is demographic 
change. This demographic shift--driven by increased life expectancies, 
falling fertility rates, and the retirement of the baby boom 
generation--will place increased pressure on government budgets (i.e., 
public pensions and health care). For example, by 2047, a quarter of 
Australia's population is projected to be aged 65 and over--nearly 
double the current proportion. Similarly, by 2050, New Zealand projects 
that the number of people over 65 is expected to grow almost threefold, 
while those 85 and over will grow sixfold. Similar trends hold for the 
other countries we studied. 

Although public pension benefits are a major driver, the most 
challenging aspect of the long-term fiscal outlook in many of the 
countries we studied--as in the United States--is health care spending. 
Health spending is expected to increase significantly over the next 40 
years due to population aging, new medical technologies, new drugs, and 
other factors. For example, Australia projects that health care 
spending as a share of GDP will nearly double by 2046---2047. 
Similarly, the United Kingdom projects that its health spending will 
increase faster than other types of spending--from around 7½ percent of 
GDP in 2005-2006 to around 10 percent of GDP by 2055-2056. New Zealand 
projects a rise in the ratio of health spending to GDP of 6.6 
percentage points between 2005 and 2050 resulting in health spending of 
about 12 percent of GDP. Similar trends are projected in the other 
countries we reviewed. 

Long-Term Fiscal Sustainability Reports Used by Many Countries to Raise 
Awareness of Long-Term Fiscal Challenges: 

In recent years, many countries in our study have started preparing 
long-term fiscal sustainability reports. Frequently cited reasons for 
this are: 

* to improve fiscal transparency and provide supplemental information 
to the budget; 

* to increase public awareness and understanding of the long-term 
fiscal outlook; 

* to stimulate public and policy debates; and: 

* to help policymakers make informed decisions. 

These reports go beyond the effects of individual pension and health 
care programs to show the effect of these programs on the government 
budget as a whole. Unlike accrual or cash budgeting, which are intended 
to provide annual cost information, fiscal sustainability reporting 
provides a framework for understanding the government's long-term 
fiscal condition, including the interaction of federal programs, and 
whether the government's current programs and policies are sustainable. 
In fiscal sustainability reports, countries measure both the effect of 
current policy on the government's fiscal condition and the extent of 
policy changes necessary to achieve a desired level of sustainability. 
These countries hope that a greater understanding of the profound 
changes they will experience in the decades ahead will help stimulate 
policy debates and public discussions that will assist them in making 
fiscally sound decisions for current and future generations and in 
achieving high and stable rates of long-term economic growth. 

Fiscal sustainability is generally described by countries as the 
government's ability to manage its finances so it can meet its spending 
commitments now and in the future. A sustainable fiscal policy would 
encourage investment and allow for stable economic growth so that 
future generations would not bear a tax or debt burden for services 
provided to the current generation. An unsustainable condition exists 
when demographic and other factors are projected to place significant 
pressures on future generations and government finances over the long 
term and result in a growing imbalance between revenues and 
expenditures. 

Four of six case study countries produce reports on long-term (i.e., 
more than 10 years) fiscal sustainability. The Netherlands first issued 
a report on the long term in 2000. Both the United Kingdom and 
Australia followed, issuing their first reports in 2002. New Zealand 
issued its first report in 2006. Of our case study countries, only 
Canada and Iceland currently do not issue long-term fiscal 
sustainability reports.[Footnote 35] However, Canada is planning to 
issue a comprehensive fiscal sustainability and intergenerational 
report in the near future. Of our limited review countries, Norway 
reported that it has traditionally provided Parliament reports on long- 
term budget projections as well as fiscal sustainability analyses. 
Further, Switzerland is planning to issue a long-term fiscal 
sustainability report in early 2008.[Footnote 36] 

The European Commission is also increasing its focus on the fiscal 
sustainability of the EU member states, including the Netherlands, 
United Kingdom, Denmark, and Sweden, as part of the Stability and 
Growth Pact (SGP). The SGP, an agreement by EU member states on how to 
conduct, facilitate, and maintain their Economic and Monetary Union 
requirements, requires member states to submit Stability or Convergence 
Reports, which are used by the European Council to survey and assess 
the member's public finances.[Footnote 37] The guidelines for the 
content of these reports were changed in 2005 to include a chapter with 
long-term projections of public finances and information on the 
country's strategies to ensure the sustainability of public finances. 
The European Commission uses this information to annually assess and 
report on the long-term sustainability of all EU members, including 
consideration of quantitative measures (e.g., primary balance, debt-to- 
GDP) and qualitative considerations of other factors, such as 
structural reforms undertaken and reliability of the projections. Such 
reporting includes an assessment of the sustainability of member 
countries' finances, policy guidance to EU members to improve 
sustainability, and discussion of the effect of significant policy 
changes on the sustainability of member countries' finances. The 
Commission released its first comprehensive assessment on the long-term 
sustainability of public finances in October 2006.[Footnote 38] 

Whether a government will be able to meet its commitments when they 
arise in the future may depend on how well it reduces its debt today so 
the burden does not fall entirely to future generations. Countries may 
have different assumptions about what is sustainable but one aim is to 
keep debt at "prudent levels." Several of our case study countries have 
set debt-to-GDP targets in their efforts to address fiscal 
sustainability issues. For example, Canada wants to reduce its net debt 
(i.e., financial liabilities less financial assets) for all levels of 
government to zero by 2021. Similarly, New Zealand's current objective 
is to reduce debt to around 20 percent of GDP over the next decade. The 
United Kingdom, under its sustainable investment rule, requires that 
public sector net debt is to be maintained below 40 percent of GDP over 
the economic cycle. Australia and the Netherlands have no explicit debt 
level targets, although the Netherlands is subject to EU limits on 
general government debt.[Footnote 39] 

Several Common Measures Are Used to Assess Fiscal Sustainability: 

The countries studied used a number of measures to assess the fiscal 
sustainability of their policies. Common approaches to assessing fiscal 
sustainability include cash-flow measures of revenue and spending and 
public debt as a percent of GDP as well as summary measures of fiscal 
imbalance and fiscal gap (see table 2). Each measure provides a 
different perspective on the nation's long-term financing. Cash-flow 
measures are useful for showing the timing of the problem and the key 
drivers, while measures such as the fiscal imbalance or fiscal gap are 
useful for showing the size of action needed to achieve fiscal 
sustainability. Each measure has limitations by itself and presents an 
incomplete picture. Therefore, most countries use more than one measure 
to assess fiscal sustainability. 

Table 2: Common Fiscal Indicators Used in Other Countries: 

Measure: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size. 

Measure: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size: Future annual cash flows (as a percent of GDP); 
Used by: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size: Australia; 
Netherlands; 
New Zealand; 
United Kingdom; 
Description: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but 
not overall size: Illustrates the timing of and future trends in 
spending components, total spending, and revenue and their relationship 
over time. 

Measure: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size: Future primary balance (as a percent of GDP); 
Used by: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size: Australia; 
Netherlands; 
United Kingdom; 
Description: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but 
not overall size: The primary balance excludes net interest payments 
from underlying cash balances. Primary balances offer useful parameters 
for the part of the budget that is controllable. 

Measure: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size: Future annual projections of public debt (as a percent of 
GDP); 
Used by: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size: Australia; 
Netherlands; 
New Zealand; 
United Kingdom; 
Description: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but 
not overall size: Illustrates the relationship between public debt and 
GDP over time. The debt-to-GDP ratio provides an indication of a 
nation's ability to repay its public debt by comparing the size of its 
debt to the size of its economy. 

Measure: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size: Future primary operating balance; 
Used by: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but not 
overall size: New Zealand; 
Description: Indicators that show the timing of long-term problem but 
not overall size: Illustrates the relationship between future revenues 
and expenses excluding financing costs (measured on an accrual basis) 
over time. 

Measure: Indicators that show the size of long-term problem but not 
timing: Fiscal gap (as a percent of GDP)[A]; 
Used by: Indicators that show the size of long-term problem but not 
timing: Australia; 
Norway; 
United Kingdom; 
Description: Indicators that show the size of long-term problem but not 
timing: Illustrates the change in fiscal policy needed to achieve a 
particular debt target at some point in the future. This change can be 
calculated in terms of the adjustment needed today or at some point in 
the future. 

Measure: Indicators that show the size of long-term problem but not 
timing: Fiscal imbalance or intertemporal budget constraint (as a 
percent of GDP)[A]; 
Used by: Indicators that show the size of long-term problem but not 
timing: Netherlands; 
United Kingdom; 
Description: Indicators that show the size of long-term problem but not 
timing: The fiscal imbalance is similar to the fiscal gap except that 
it is more stringent; it assumes that all government debt must be 
repaid by the end of the period. It illustrates whether and to what 
extent the government's future revenues cover future expenditures and 
public debt. 

Source: GAO. 

[A] These measures can be presented as either percents of GDP or in 
present value dollars, however, case study countries focused on the 
percents of GDP. 

[End of table] 

Two measures--the fiscal gap and fiscal imbalance--show the size of the 
problem in terms of action needed to meet a particular budget 
constraint. Changes in these measures over time are useful for showing 
improvement or deterioration in the overall fiscal condition. The 
fiscal gap shows the change in revenue or noninterest spending needed 
immediately and maintained every year to achieve a particular debt 
target at some point in the future. The fiscal imbalance (or 
intertemporal budget constraint) is similar to the fiscal gap but the 
calculation assumes all current debt is paid off by the end of the 
period. These summary measures can also be calculated in terms of the 
adjustment needed in the future if adjustment is delayed (which would 
increase its size). The change in policy can be in the form of 
adjustments to taxes, spending, or both. A positive fiscal gap or 
imbalance implies that fiscal policy should be tightened (i.e., 
spending cut or taxes raised) while a negative fiscal gap or imbalance 
implies that fiscal policy could be loosened (i.e., spending increased 
or taxes reduced). A fiscal gap or imbalance implies potential harm to 
future generations if action to make public finances sustainable is 
deferred thus requiring more budgetary actions (or higher interest 
costs) in the future than today. It should be noted that a fiscal gap 
or imbalance of zero over a finite period does not mean that current 
fiscal policy is sustainable forever. For example, debt could still be 
rising faster than GDP at the end of the period. Another limitation to 
these summary measures is that by definition they do not provide 
information on timing of receipts and outlays, which is important. 

Most of the countries we studied used share of GDP measures rather than 
present value dollar measures. In part this is to avoid the situation 
in which a small change in the discount rate assumption leads to large 
swings in the dollar-based sustainability measures. Present value 
dollar measures are highly sensitive to assumptions about the discount 
rate. An increase of 0.5 percentage points in the discount rate used to 
calculate the U.S. fiscal gap reduces the present value of the fiscal 
gap from $54.3 trillion to $47.7 trillion; in contrast such a change 
results in a smaller proportional change to the gap as a share of GDP 
from 7.5 to 7.3 percent.[Footnote 40] Also, since the numbers can be so 
large, it may be difficult for policymakers and the general public to 
understand without placing the numbers in context of the resources 
available in the economy to finance the fiscal gap. 

Reports Stem from Law and Political Commitments: 

Fiscal sustainability reports are required by law in two countries-- 
Australia and New Zealand.[Footnote 41] The legislation underpinning 
both countries' fiscal sustainability reports does not dictate in 
detail what measures should be included in the report. Rather, the law 
specifies only the frequency of reporting (i.e., every 4 years for New 
Zealand and every 5 years for Australia), the years to be covered, and 
the overall goal. Both Australia and New Zealand are required to assess 
the long-term sustainability of government finances over a 40-year 
horizon. Switzerland is required by law and an accompanying regulation 
to issue a sustainability report periodically, but at least every 4 
years. 

Neither the Netherlands' nor the United Kingdom's reports are required 
by law. Instead, the reports stem from political commitments of the 
current government. The Netherlands prepared its first report in 2000 
and reported again in 2006. In the United Kingdom the current 
government made a political commitment to annually report on the long- 
term fiscal challenges as part of the current government's fiscal 
framework and has prepared reports annually since 2002. Canada's 
upcoming report also stems from a commitment made by the current 
government.[Footnote 42] A drawback of not having any legal or 
legislative requirement for the report is that future governments may 
or may not continue what the current government started. 

Selection of Time Horizon Is Important: 

The size of a nation's fiscal gap or fiscal imbalance will depend on 
the time period chosen. Even if a particular sustainability condition 
is satisfied over the chosen period, there may still be fiscal 
challenges further out. Extending the time period can partially address 
this limitation, but it increases uncertainty. Most of the case study 
countries that prepare fiscal sustainability reports cover the next 40 
to 50 years. However, the Netherlands report goes out through 2100. The 
United Kingdom calculates the intertemporal budget constraint over an 
infinite time horizon, which poses a high degree of uncertainty. 
Choosing the horizon for the fiscal gap or imbalance calculations 
therefore involves a trade-off in that it should be long enough to 
capture all the major future budgetary developments but also short 
enough to minimize uncertainty. It may be best to present these 
measures over a range of horizons. 

Countries Use Sensitivity Analysis to Deal with Uncertainty: 

As with any long-term projection, uncertainty is an issue. To deal with 
the uncertainty of projections, countries have done sensitivity 
analysis. For example, the United Kingdom performed a sensitivity 
analysis using different assumptions for productivity growth and 
interest rates. The United Kingdom found that the fiscal gap was robust 
to changes in productivity growth, meaning that the required policy 
action changed little. However, the fiscal gap was more sensitive to 
changes in the interest rate assumption. For example, in the United 
Kingdom, an increase in the interest rate assumption from 2.5 percent 
to 3.0 percent increases the fiscal gap for the 50-year period by 50 
percent from 0.5 percent to 0.75 percent of GDP. 

In Some Countries, There Are Indications That the Long-Term Report Is 
Affecting Nearer-Term Decisions: 

Sustainability requirements are important when setting short-and medium-
term policy targets. The sooner countries act to put their governments 
on a more sustainable footing, the better. Acting sooner rather than 
later permits changes to be phased in more gradually and gives those 
affected time to adjust to the changes. Citizens can adjust their 
savings now to prepare for retirement. In the Netherlands, a medium-
term fiscal target has been set based on the information presented in 
the sustainability report. The current government has explicitly linked 
expenditure ceilings and revenue targets to attaining a structural 
fiscal surplus of 1 percent of GDP at the end of 2011, which the 
Netherlands Bureau of Economic Policy Analysis has estimated is needed 
for public finances to be sustainable given the impending population 
aging.[Footnote 43] In addition a study group recommended that the 
adjustments should be introduced gradually so that they are bearable 
for all generations.[Footnote 44] 

According to New Zealand officials, its fiscal sustainability report 
shows that long-term demographic pressures will make it increasingly 
hard to meet fiscal objectives and therefore policy adjustments will be 
required. Recognizing that small changes made now will help to prevent 
making big changes later on, officials said the report has encouraged 
and enabled greater consideration of long-term implications of new 
policy initiatives in the budget process. New Zealand intends to link 
departments' annual Statements of Intent to long-term projections. 
Under this approach, departmental objectives will have to be modified 
or justified to meet the long-term objectives. 

Although Accrual Budgeting Can Help in Certain Areas, It Does Not 
Provide Sufficient Information to Understand Longer-Term Fiscal 
Sustainability Issues: 

Before implementing accrual budgeting some countries were experiencing 
moderate to large deficits. Some countries' dependence on trade and 
foreign borrowing led to concerns that increased deficits could lead to 
rising interest rates and devaluation of the currency, and ultimately a 
financial crisis. As a result, fiscal discipline was necessary. Accrual 
budgeting was adopted as part of larger reforms to improve 
transparency, accountability, and government performance. The United 
States faces long-term fiscal challenges that, absent reforms, could 
have adverse effects in the form of higher interest rates, reduced 
investment, and more expensive imports ultimately threatening our 
nation's well-being. 

The range of approaches used by countries in our study illustrate that 
accrual budgeting need not be viewed as a "one size fits all" choice. 
The experiences of countries in our study show that the switch to 
accrual budgeting was most beneficial for programs where cash-or 
obligations-based accounting did not recognize the full program cost up 
front. As we stated in 2000 and in other GAO reports, increased accrual 
information in certain areas of the budget--insurance, environmental 
liabilities, and federal employee pensions and retiree health[Footnote 
45]--can help the Congress and the President better recognize the long- 
term budgetary consequences of today's operations and help prevent 
these areas from becoming long-term issues. However, accrual budgeting 
raises significant challenges for the management and oversight of 
capital purchases and noncash expenses, especially depreciation. Many 
of our case study countries implemented additional controls to maintain 
up-front control over resources within their accrual budget frameworks. 
Indeed, in the U.S. system of government where the Congress has the 
"power of the purse," maintaining control over resources is important. 

While cost and performance information provided under accrual budgeting 
can be useful, this information must be reliable if budget decisions 
are to be based on it. We have reported that the financial management 
systems at the majority of federal agencies are still unable routinely 
to produce reliable, useful, and timely financial information.[Footnote 
46] Until there is better financial information, a switch to full 
accrual budgeting may be premature. As we reported in a previous report 
on U.S. agencies' efforts to restructure their budgets to better 
capture the full cost of performance, the use of full-cost information 
in budget decisions may reflect rather than drive the development of 
good cost information in government.[Footnote 47] 

Further, challenges exist in estimating accrual-based cost information 
for some areas, including veterans compensation, federal employee 
pensions and retiree health, insurance, and environmental liabilities, 
that require a significant amount of the government's future cash 
resources. For example, estimates of future outlays for pensions or 
veterans compensation depend on assumptions of future wages, inflation, 
and interest rates that are inherently uncertain and subject to 
volatility. Trends in health care costs and utilization underlying 
estimates of federal employee postretirement health benefits have also 
been volatile. The estimated cleanup costs of the government's 
hazardous waste are another area where the accrued expenses may not be 
based on reliable estimates. Not all environmental liabilities have 
been identified and cleanup and disposal technologies are not currently 
available for all sites. However, in areas such as these, it may be 
preferable to be approximately right than exactly wrong. Failure to pay 
attention to programs that require future cash resources can further 
mortgage our children's future. 

Although accrual budgeting can provide more information about annual 
operations that require future cash resources, it does not provide 
sufficient information to understand broader long-term fiscal 
sustainability. An accrual budget does not include costs associated 
with future government operations and thus would not help recognize 
some of our greatest long-term fiscal challenges--related to Social 
Security, Medicare, and Medicaid. A growing trend in other countries is 
to develop reports on fiscal sustainability that evaluate the fiscal 
condition of not only the key drivers of the nation's long-term fiscal 
outlook but government as a whole. Fiscal sustainability reports that 
show future revenue and outlays for social insurance programs and the 
interrelationship of these programs with all federal government 
programs would provide a comprehensive analysis of the nation's fiscal 
path and the extent to which future budgetary resources would be 
sufficient to sustain public services and meet obligations as they come 
due. By highlighting the trade-offs between all federal programs 
competing for federal resources, such a report would improve 
policymakers' understanding of the tough choices that will have to be 
made to ensure future generations do not bear an unfair tax or debt 
burden for services provided to current generations. 

Most countries recognize the need for various measures of fiscal 
position, including the projected debt-to-GDP ratios and fiscal gap 
measures. Since no single measure or concept can provide policymakers 
with all the information necessary to make prudent fiscal policy 
decisions, it is necessary to use a range of measures or concepts that 
show both the size of the problem and the timing of when action is 
needed. 

Conclusions: 

This study and the deterioration of the nation's financial condition 
and fiscal outlook since 2000 confirm our view that the Congress should 
consider requiring increased information on the long-term budget 
implications of current and proposed policies on both the spending and 
tax sides of the budget. In addition, the selective use of accrual 
budgeting for programs that require future cash resources related to 
services provided during the year would provide increased information 
and incentives to manage these long-term commitments. While the 
countries in our study have found accrual-based information useful for 
improving managerial decision making, many continue to use cash-based 
information for broad fiscal policy decisions. This suggests that 
accrual measures may be useful supplements rather than substitutes of 
our current cash-and obligations-based budget. Presenting accrual 
information alongside cash-based budget numbers, particularly in areas 
where it would enhance up-front control of budgetary resources would 
put programs on a more level playing field and be useful to 
policymakers both when debating current programs and when considering 
new legislation. 

Since accrual-based budgeting would not provide policymakers with 
information about our nation's largest fiscal challenges--Social 
Security, Medicare, and Medicaid--fiscal sustainability reporting could 
help fill this void. The reports could include both long-term cash-flow 
projections and summary fiscal gap measures for the whole of government 
that would show both the timing and overall size of the nation's fiscal 
challenges. 

Accrual budgeting and fiscal sustainability reporting are only means to 
an end; neither can change decisions in and of itself. The change in 
measurement used in the budget provides policymakers and program 
managers with different information, but the political values and 
instincts of policymakers may not change. While recognizing fuller 
costs could help inform policymakers of the need to reform, it will 
require action on their part to address them. Any expansion of accrual- 
based concepts in the budget or increased reporting requirements would 
need to be accompanied by a commitment to fiscal discipline and 
political will. 

Matter for Congressional Consideration: 

To increase awareness and understanding of the long-term budgetary 
implications of current and proposed policies for the budget, the 
Congress should require increased information on major tax and spending 
proposals. In addition, the Congress should consider requiring 
increased reporting of accrual-based cost information alongside cash- 
based budget numbers for both existing and proposed programs where 
accrual-based cost information includes significant future cash 
resource requirements that are not yet reflected in the cash-based 
budget. Such programs include veterans compensation, federal employee 
pensions and retiree health, insurance, and environmental liabilities. 
To ensure that the information affects incentives and budgetary 
decisions, the Congress could explore further use of accrual-based 
budgeting for these programs. 

Regardless of what is decided about the information and incentives for 
individual programs, the Congress should require periodic reports on 
fiscal sustainability for the government as a whole. Such reports would 
help increase awareness of the longer-term fiscal challenges facing the 
nation in light of our aging population and rising health care costs as 
well as the range of federal responsibilities, programs, and activities 
that may explicitly or implicitly commit the government to future 
spending. 

We are sending copies of this report to interested parties. Copies will 
also be sent to others upon request. In addition, the report will be 
available at no charge on the GAO Web site at [hyperlink, 
http://www.gao.gov]. Please contact Susan Irving at (202) 512-9142 or 
irvings@gao.gov if you have any questions about this report. Key 
contributors are listed in appendix II. 

Signed by: 

Susan J. Irving: 

Director, Federal Budget Analysis Strategic Issues: 

[End of section] 

Appendix I: Objectives, Scope, and Methodology: 

To update the findings of our 2000 report, we examined (1) where, how, 
and why accrual budgeting is used in select Organisation for Economic 
Co-operation and Development (OECD) countries and how it has changed 
since 2000; (2) what challenges and limitations were discovered and how 
select OECD countries responded to them; (3) what select OECD countries 
perceived the effect to have been on policy debates, program 
management, and the allocation of resources; (4) whether accrual 
budgeting has been used to increase awareness of long-term fiscal 
challenges and, if not, what is used instead; and (5) what the 
experience of select OECD countries and other GAO work tell us about 
where and how the increased use of accrual concepts in the budget would 
be useful and ways to increase the recognition of long-term budgetary 
implications of policy decisions. 

To address these objectives, we primarily focused on the six countries 
in the 2000 GAO report: 

* Australia, 

* Canada, 

* Iceland, 

* the Netherlands, 

* New Zealand, and: 

* the United Kingdom. 

We also did a limited review of two other nations--Denmark and 
Switzerland--that have recently expanded the use of accrual measures in 
the budget. Since these countries may not provide a complete picture of 
the potential limitations or the use of alternative ways to increase 
the focus on long-term fiscal challenges, we also looked at two 
countries--Norway and Sweden--that considered expanding the use of 
accrual measurement in the budget but decided against it, to understand 
why. 

We reviewed budget publications and used a set of questions to gather 
information on how and why accrual concepts are used in the budget in 
the selected countries and how this has changed since 2000. For 
context, we also reviewed the results of a recent survey done by the 
OECD on budgeting practices in all OECD countries and compared to older 
survey results to understand general trends in the use of accrual 
budgeting over time. To identify factors that facilitated accrual 
budgeting; strategies for addressing commonly cited implementation 
challenges; and how and where accrual has or has not changed the budget 
debate, we primarily focused on the six countries studied in 2000. We 
interviewed (by e-mail, telephone, and videoconferencing) officials 
from the budget and national audit offices in select countries and 
reviewed official budget documents and related literature to gather 
information on the challenges and limitations of accrual budgeting; how 
the use of accruals in the budget has affected policy debates, resource 
allocation decisions, and program management; and other approaches used 
to address long-term fiscal challenges. We did not interview 
parliamentary officials or staff or program managers. The information 
on foreign laws in this report does not reflect our independent legal 
analysis, but is based on interviews and secondary sources. We 
identified key themes from the experience of other nations, reviewed 
past GAO work, and considered the differences between other nations and 
the United States to identify useful insights about how to use more 
accrual-based or other information to inform budget debates. 

The experience of any one OECD country is not generalizable to other 
countries. In analyzing other countries' experiences and identifying 
useful insights for the United States, it is important to consider the 
constitutional differences between Parliament in parliamentary systems 
of government and the Congress of the United States, especially in the 
role each legislature plays in the national budget process. The U.S. 
Congress is an independent and separate, but coequal, branch of the 
national government with the constitutional prerogative to control 
federal spending and resource allocation. Many important decisions that 
are debated during the annual budget and appropriations process in the 
United States occur in case study countries before the budget is 
presented to Parliament for approval. Also, most case study countries 
generally deal with the approval of obligations through agency or 
bureaucratic controls whereas in the United States congressional 
approval (i.e., "budget authority") is required before federal agencies 
can obligate funds. Further, most case study countries used purely cash 
reporting for budgeting before adopting accrual budgeting. In contrast, 
the United States' obligation-based budgeting already captures many 
obligations not apparent in a purely cash system. These differences are 
likely to influence perspectives on the trade-offs associated with the 
use of accrual budgeting, particularly in terms of accountability and 
legislative control. 

[End of section] 

Appendix II: GAO Contact and Staff Acknowledgments: 

GAO Contact: 

Susan J. Irving, (202) 512-9142 or irvings@gao.gov: 

Acknowledgments: 

Key contributors to this assignment were Jay McTigue, Assistant 
Director; Melissa Wolf, Analyst-in-Charge; Michael O'Neill; and Margit 
Willems Whitaker. 

[End of section] 

Footnotes: 

[1] In this report, the term "commitment" is used to mean a promise to 
provide a good or service. It does not necessarily mean a legally 
binding obligation unless noted. 

[2] GAO, Accrual Budgeting: Experiences of Other Nations and 
Implications for the United States, GAO/AIMD-00-57 (Washington, D.C.: 
Feb. 18, 2000). 

[3] In this report, social insurance programs are generally defined as 
government programs intended to protect households or individuals 
against certain social risks including loss of income. These programs 
typically require payment by the participant (or another party on their 
behalf) of contributions through payroll taxes or premiums. Social 
insurance benefits are generally viewed as transfer payments and 
recorded in the budget as benefits due and payable (accrual basis) or 
when benefits are paid (cash basis). Transfer payments are benefits 
provided without requiring the recipient to provide current or future 
goods or services of equivalent value in return. 

[4] In the United States, federal agencies are required to have 
authority to enter into obligations to make outlays of government 
funds. Obligations and outlays are usually measured on a cash basis, so 
we generally refer to the U.S. federal budget as "cash based." See the 
background section for more information. 

[5] For some areas, such as federal credit programs and some federal 
employee pension benefits, the U.S. budget already records outlays on 
an accrual basis rather than a cash basis in order to recognize the 
full cost of the government's commitment up front when the commitment 
is made. 

[6] The OECD currently consists of 30 member states that share a 
commitment to democratic government and the market economy. 

[7] Noncash expenses are expenses related to services provided but not 
paid during the year, such as depreciation. 

[8] For this report, the "federal budget" is used broadly to refer to 
the planning and debate during the federal budget process by both the 
executive and legislative branches. For an overview of the federal 
budget process, see GAO, A Glossary of Terms Used in the Federal Budget 
Process, GAO-05-734SP (Washington, D.C.: September 2005). 

[9] In this report, the term "full cost" is used in the financial 
reporting sense unless otherwise noted. 

[10] For a discussion of the methods for tracking funds in the federal 
government, see GAO-05-734SP at app. III, 120-3. 

[11] The budget surplus/deficit includes the outlays for credit 
programs and certain interest payments measured on an accrual basis. 
Federal agencies record outlays on an accrual basis for several other 
items, including some federal employee pensions; however, these outlays 
do not affect the unified budget deficit because the outlays are 
intragovernmental--paid by one agency to another. 

[12] The unified budget is a comprehensive measure of all federal 
activities both on-budget and off-budget. The on-budget deficit 
includes all budgetary accounts other than those designated by law as 
off-budget. The off-budget accounts are the Postal Service and Social 
Security trust funds. Because the unified deficit is compatible with 
the accrual deficit that also includes both on-and off-budget accounts, 
we focus on the unified budget number. 

[13] The consolidated financial statements of the U.S. government are 
largely on an accrual basis. See Department of the Treasury, Financial 
Report of the United States Government, 2006. GAO is responsible for 
auditing the financial statements included in the Financial Report, but 
we have been unable to express an opinion on them because the federal 
government could not demonstrate the reliability of significant 
portions of the financial statements. Accordingly, amounts taken from 
the Financial Report may not be reliable. 

[14] For a discussion of how the accrual and cash deficits relate to 
each other, see GAO, Understanding Similarities and Differences between 
Accrual and Cash Deficits, GAO-07-117SP (Washington, D.C.: December 
2006). 

[15] GAO-07-117SP. 

[16] For more information on the assumptions underlying our 
simulations, see GAO, The Nation's Long-Term Fiscal Outlook: August 
2007 Update, GAO-07-1261R (Washington, D.C.: Sept. 28, 2007). 

[17] Canada does provide departments with appropriations for the 
accrued cost of employee pensions. 

[18] Based on our analysis of OECD surveys conducted in 2000, 2003, and 
2006. The most recent survey results can be found at [hyperlink, 
http://webnet4.oecd.org/budgeting/Budgeting.aspx] (as of Oct. 3, 2007). 
We were unable to validate some of the responses to the surveys and 
there were changes in the response categories over time; therefore our 
use of the survey results is limited. 

[19] Australia transitioned to accrual budgeting in financial year 1999-
2000; New Zealand transitioned to accrual budgeting on the departmental 
level in 1992 and 1994 for the governmentwide budget. 

[20] Australia and New Zealand government departments are generally not 
responsible for funding health benefits for current or retired 
government employees. Australia's and New Zealand's governments provide 
health care for all citizens, although some citizens purchase 
supplementary private health insurance. 

[21] The budget provides the government's overall fiscal plan for 
revenues and expenses and details spending proposals for the 
government's new initiatives. The Main Estimates are detailed plans for 
all government expenditures by department and agency. Appropriations 
are the legislation necessary to implement the Main Estimates. 

[22] Unusual transactions such as large receipts from asset sales are 
excluded from the cash surplus in Australia. 

[23] Net borrowing (or lending) is a national accounting concept and is 
similar to the unified budget surplus or deficit. Unlike accruals, the 
national accounts in the United Kingdom recognize pensions paid in the 
current year and do not recognize costs associated with "provisions," 
which are cases where there is uncertainty about whether a liability 
exists, the amount to settle it, or the timing of the payments. The 
United Kingdom's national accounts also record the cost of single-use 
military equipment in the year purchased rather than depreciating them. 

[24] GAO, Performance Budgeting: Efforts to Restructure Budgets to 
Better Align Resources with Performance, GAO-05-117SP (Washington, 
D.C.: February 2005). 

[25] A "qualified" opinion means that the auditor disagreed with the 
treatment or presentation of financial information. 

[26] Such fluctuations also occur in the U.S. government's financial 
statements. For example, in the United States, changes in the interest 
rate assumptions used to estimate the value of future benefits led to 
wide fluctuations in the veterans compensation liability. The liability 
increased by $105.6 billion in 2003, decreased by $30 billion in 2004, 
and then increased by $197.8 billion in 2005. 

[27] New Zealand Superannuation is financial assistance for people 65 
years of age or older who have lived in New Zealand for a certain 
amount of time. It is not based on income. This entitlement is 
recognized in the budget when due and payable. 

[28] A new government was sworn in on December 3, 2007, just before 
issuance of this report. This statement refers to the government in 
power prior to December 3. 

[29] Australia's underlying cash balance is the difference between 
revenues and expenditures measured on a cash basis and excludes unusual 
transactions such as large receipts from asset sales. 

[30] This rule of thumb holds precisely if the interest rate on debt 
equals the rate of GDP growth. If, however, the interest rate exceeds 
GDP growth, cash receipts must exceed cash outlays excluding interest 
in order to keep the debt-GDP ratio constant. Conversely, New Zealand 
can run cash deficits if GDP growth exceeds the interest rate on debt. 

[31] In Australia, both houses of Parliament approve all 
appropriations, but the Senate has more authority to review and amend 
appropriations for new government activities. 

[32] Credit programs are already recorded on an accrual basis in the 
U.S. budget. 

[33] Dirk-Jan Kraan, "Typically Dutch," OECD Journal on Budgeting, vol. 
4, no. 4 (2005). 

[34] For background information on the Future Fund, see [hyperlink, 
http://www.futurefund.gov.au/about_the_future_fund/outline.html]. 

[35] Canada issued a report called The Sustainable Development Strategy 
2007-2009, which discusses strategies and progress relating to broad 
fiscal, social, and environmental goals. This report is required by the 
1995 amendment to the Auditor General Act. The report has been prepared 
every 3 years since 1997 and is available at [hyperlink, 
http://www.fin.gc.ca/toce/2006/sds2007e.html]. 

[36] Both Canada and Switzerland are federal systems and are planning 
to report on fiscal sustainability for all levels of government--not 
just the central government. 

[37] The European Commission requires member states that have adopted 
the euro (e.g., the Netherlands) to submit stability program updates 
annually that cover at least the preceding year, the current year, and 
the next 3 years. Member states that have not adopted the EU currency 
(e.g., Denmark and Sweden) prepare a "Convergence Report" annually that 
is similar to the Stability Report but includes more information on 
monetary policy objectives. 

[38] Economic Policy Committee and European Commission, "The impact of 
ageing on public expenditure: projections for the EU25 Member States on 
pensions, health-care, long-term care, education and unemployment 
transfers (2004-2050)," European Economy, Special Reports, no. 1 
(Luxembourg, 2006). 

[39] An important condition for successfully moving to a single 
European currency is that economies of the participating countries 
should converge toward each other and remain healthy. Therefore, 
members of the EU are expected to avoid excessive budgetary deficits 
(i.e., above 3 percent) and to ensure their debt-to-GDP ratio stays 
within the reference value limit of 60 percent. 

[40] Under GAO's Alternative simulation that is based on recent trends 
and policy preferences. For more information on this simulation, see 
GAO-07-1261R. 

[41] In Australia the legislation requiring the report is the Charter 
of Budget Honesty Act of 1998 and in New Zealand the Public Finance 
Act, as amended in 2004. 

[42] See Department of Finance Canada, Budget 2007 (Mar. 19, 2007), p. 
155, which can be downloaded from [hyperlink, 
http://www.fin.gc.ca/access/budinfoe.html]. 

[43] See Netherlands Bureau of Economic Policy Analysis, Ageing and the 
Sustainability of Dutch Public Finances (2006). 

[44] See Government of Netherlands, Ageing and Sustainability, Twelfth 
Report by the Study Group on the Budget Margin (Jun. 22, 2006). 

[45] For civilian employees hired since 1984 and personnel in military 
service after October 1, 1984, the full cost of pension benefits is 
recognized in the budget at the department level as they are earned. 
Also, since 2001 the full cost of retiree health benefits for military 
retirees eligible for Medicare is also recognized in the budget. 
However, the remainder of federal pension and health benefits needs to 
be addressed. The federal budget currently recognizes only about 40 
percent of the cost of pensions for civilians hired before 1984. 

[46] See GAO's Auditor's Report in the 2006 Financial Report of the 
United States Government (Washington, D.C.: Dec. 15, 2006). 

[47] GAO-05-117SP. 

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