While Indonesia had institutional arrangements for public sector audit since the early 1940s, the transparency, accountability, and overall performance of the audit sector suffered from unclear legal and regulatory frameworks, weak oversight, inadequate capacity, low public awareness, and inefficient resource allocation. The State Audit Reform Sector Development Program aimed to address these impediments through a package of policy interventions, adjustment measures, and investments.
This study validates the completion report's assessment of the project, which aimed to enhance the efficiency, economy, and effectiveness of public sector audit function through strengthened central and regional audit institutions operating to internationally accepted standards. IED overall assessment: Successful