By Steve Freer | 1 December 2011
As the eurozone crisis continues and sovereign debt soars, governments need to urgently reform their accounting practices. CIPFA’s chief executive calls for a collective effort across the profession to transform public financial management globally

The sovereign debt crisis has grown steadily over the past two or three years to its current climax in Greece and Italy. Its origins lie in that other financial disaster – the global collapse of 2007/08. Indeed, sovereign debt is just the latest chapter in that crisis, which rolls on like a great financial hurricane or tsunami, threatening all in its path.
Click here for the full article

As the eurozone crisis continues and sovereign debt soars, governments need to urgently reform their accounting practices. CIPFA’s chief executive calls for a collective effort across the profession to transform public financial management globally

The sovereign debt crisis has grown steadily over the past two or three years to its current climax in Greece and Italy. Its origins lie in that other financial disaster – the global collapse of 2007/08. Indeed, sovereign debt is just the latest chapter in that crisis, which rolls on like a great financial hurricane or tsunami, threatening all in its path.
Click here for the full article

