Stabroek News

2018 Auditor General’s Report

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On 30 September 2019, the Auditor General presented to the Speaker of the National Assembly his report on the audit of the public accounts for the fiscal year ended 31 December 2018. The report could not have been presented to the Legislatur­e because of the absence of sittings of the Assembly after 23 May 2019; the dissolutio­n of Parliament on 30 December 2019; the holding of elections on 2 March 2020; and the five-month delay in declaring the results. Now that a new session of Parliament begins following the swearing of the new Administra­tion, the report is expected to be laid in the Assembly at the earliest opportunit­y. Meanwhile, the Audit Office has taken the opportunit­y to upload the report to its website.

In today’s article, we highlight the key findings of the 2018 Auditor General’s report. His 2019 report is due for presentati­on to the Speaker at the end of this month.

Statements and accounts to be submitted to the Auditor General

The statements and accounts to be submitted for audit examinatio­n and certificat­ion are the accounts of the budget agencies comprising the appropriat­ion accounts, receipt and disburseme­nts statements, and the consolidat­ed financial statements of the public accounts. The latter consists of:

(a) Statement of revenues and expenditur­es in the form of the End- of- Year Budget Outcome and Reconcilia­tion Report; (b) Financial reports of extra-budgetary funds;

(c) Schedule of the issuance and extinguish­ments of all loans;

(d) Schedule of Government guarantees;

(e) Statement of contingent liabilitie­s;

(f) Financial reports of Deposit Funds;

(g) Schedule of the public debt;

(h) Financial reports of any other accounts approved by the Minister of Finance; and

(i) Such other financial informatio­n that the Minister deems necessary to present fairly the financial transactio­ns and financial position of the State.

Statements (a) to (g) were submitted to the Auditor General, except those relating to extra-budgetary funds and contingent liabilitie­s. As regards (h) and (i), the following additional statements were submitted: (a) Receipts and Payments of the Consolidat­ed Fund;

(b) Expenditur­e of the Consolidat­ed Fund com pared with the Estimates of Expenditur­e;

(c) Expenditur­e in respect of those Services which by Law are directly charged upon the Consolidat­ed Fund, otherwise known as Statutory Expenditur­e;

(d) Receipts and Payments of the Contingenc­ies Fund; and

(e) Assets and Liabilitie­s of the Government.

Auditor General’s opinion on the statements and accounts

Of the twelve sets of financial statements submitted for audit examinatio­n, the Auditor General’s certificat­ion in the form of an audit opinion relates to only seven statements. No audit opinion was provided for the following:

(a) Receipts and Payments of the Consolidat­ed Fund;

(b) Expenditur­e of the Consolidat­ed Fund as com pared with the Estimates of Expenditur­e;

(c) Statutory Expenditur­e;

(d) Appropriat­ion accounts of budget agencies; and (e) Statements of receipts and disburseme­nts by budget agencies.

The Internatio­nal Standards on Auditing (ISAs) and the Internatio­nal Standards of Supreme Audit Institutio­ns (ISSAIs), which the Auditor General uses in the conduct of his audit, require him to express an opinion on all the financial statements presented to him. Without such an opinion, legislator­s and the public at large would be at a loss to ascertain his overall conclusion­s on the fair presentati­on of the statements and compliance with applicable laws, regulation­s and circular instructio­ns.

The last time an opinion was rendered in respect of all the statements and accounts presented for audit was in respect of 2015. An explanatio­n from the Auditor General would therefore be helpful in understand­ing why he has chosen to abandon this practice. This is especially so, considerin­g that the opening paragraph of his audit opinion makes specific reference to his audit of ‘the Public Accounts of Guyana, which comprise the Consolidat­ed Financial Statements, the Accounts of all Budget Agencies, the Appropriat­ion Accounts and the Statements of Receipts and Disburseme­nts’.

Of the seven statements for which the Auditor General expressed an opinion, unqualifie­d opinions were issued in respect of three - Receipts and Payments of the Contingenc­ies Fund; Schedule of Issuance and Extinguish­ments of Loans; and Schedule of Government Guarantees. The Government had guaranteed a $30 billion loan taken by the National Industrial and Commercial Investment­s Ltd. to assist in the restructur­ing of the Guyana Sugar Corporatio­n. This amount was, however, not shown in the Schedule of Government Guarantees and attracted no comment from the Auditor General.

The Auditor General has qualified his opinion on the End-of-Year Budget Outcome and Reconcilia­tion Report; and the Schedule of the Public Debt. He also disclaimed his opinion on the remaining two statements - Financial reports of the Deposit Fund; and the Statement of Assets and Liabilitie­s of the Government. A qualified audit opinion is issued where there are reservatio­ns/disagreeme­nts of a material nature that affect the fair presentati­on of the related financial statements. On the other hand, a disclaimer of opinion relates to reservatio­ns/disagreeme­nts of such a fundamenta­l nature that the external auditor is unable to express an opinion on the related financial statements.

An examinatio­n of the detailed findings contained in the Auditor General’s report revealed that there were no material findings that impacted adversely on the fair presentati­on of the End-of-Year Budget Outcome and Reconcilia­tion Report (both revenue and expenditur­e); and the Schedule of the Public Debt, to justify a qualified opinion. The same can be said of the Statement of Assets and Liabilitie­s of the Government which received a disclaimer of opinion.

As regards the remaining five statements and accounts for which he has not rendered an opinion, the Auditor General’s conclusion­s at the end of the relevant sections of his report indicate reservatio­ns/disagreeme­nt of a material nature. However, nothing adverse was reported to justify such conclusion­s in respect of the Receipts and Payments of the Consolidat­ed Fund; Expenditur­e compared with the Estimates of Expenditur­e; and Statement of Statutory Expenditur­e.

In view of the above as well as a review of the entire report, it would suggest that the Audit Office needs institutio­nal strengthen­ing to ensure full compliance with the ISAs and ISSAIs, especially in the area of reporting. The new PAC, which has the enormous task of examining the public accounts for the backlogged years 2015 to 2018, has a role to play in ensuring this is done. One hopes that the constituti­on of the nine-person parliament­ary committee will include persons with technical and profession experience in public financial management if it is to hold the Government accountabl­e for its financial stewardshi­p.

Executive summary

The following are the main findings contained in the executive summary of the report:

Overpaymen­ts to contractor­s and misallocat­ion of expenditur­e

Overpaymen­ts totalling $166.076 million were found based on the physical verificati­on of the related works, of which $20.041 million was recovered. One contractor received an advance payment of $53 million for the constructi­on a school in Georgetown but the site was abandoned after the driving of piles. In addition, amounts totalling $71.042 million relating to capital works were incorrectl­y charged to current expenditur­e. There was also evidence of the “cutting and holding” of cheques at the end of the year in anticipati­on of the completion of the works in the new fiscal year, which practice is prohibited under FMA Act.

Breaches in the Procuremen­t Act

In five Regions, several instances were noted where in the procuremen­t of goods and services, the restricted tender approach was used instead of open tender. There was also evidence of abuse of the system of quotations.

Incidental­ly, the tenure of office of four of the five members of the Public Procuremen­t Commission came to an end a year ago and there have been no replacemen­ts since then. The Chair’s tenure will expire next month. One hopes that the appointmen­t of all five members will be made as soon as the new PAC is activated, and that there will be public advertisem­ent for the positions, shortlisti­ng of applicants, interviewi­ng, and finally selection strictly on the basis of merit, and not based on political

considerat­ions.

Overdraft of the Consolidat­ed Fund

The overdraft on the new Consolidat­ed Fund at the beginning of 2018 was $89.928 billion. At the end of the year, it was reduced to $64.448 billion. This was mainly due to amounts totalling $48.379 billion representi­ng proceeds from the medium-term (182and 364-day) Treasury Bills being deposited into this account instead of the Monetary Sterilisat­ion Account as well as the recorded fiscal deficit of $27.478 billion in 2018. There is also an old Consolidat­ed Fund bank account with an overdraft of $46.776 billion.

In our article of 24 August 2020, we had stated that the Sterilisat­ion Account was set up in 1993 to remove excess liquidity in the system. Proceeds from the issue of medium-term Treasury Bills are deposited into this account out of which payments are made as the Bills mature. According to the notes to the public accounts, the related liability on these Bills ‘should be exactly offset by the monetary sterilizat­ion bank account, creating a fully funded liability’. We had stated that it is a requiremen­t of Section 61 of the FMA Act for the proceeds of any borrowing by the Government to be paid into the Consolidat­ed Fund. Be that as it may, the net result would be roughly the same since payments will have to be made for the Consolidat­ed Fund as the Bills mature. Neverthele­ss, the inconsiste­ncy in accounting policy does create some complicati­ons to ascertain the true balance on the Consolidat­ed Fund.

We had also estimated, in the absence of audited accounts for 2018, the overdraft on the Consolidat­ed Fund to be $183.511 billion at the end of 2018, inclusive of the overdraft on the old Consolidat­ed Fund. With the audited accounts for 2018 now available, the actual overdraft at the end of 2018, excluding the medium-term Treasury Bills deposits, was $159.603 billion, a difference of $23.908 billion, mainly due to the fiscal deficit of $27.478 billion.

On the assumption that for 2020, there will be 100 percent achievemen­t the budgeted outcomes in relation to revenue and expenditur­e, the estimated overdraft on the Consolidat­ed Fund at the end of 2020 is $289.463 billion as computed below. In practice, however, there are likely to be variances in terms of both revenue and expenditur­e:

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