Stabroek News

Bill restores ministeria­l control over funds for constituti­onal agencies

-reverses amendments by APNU+AFC gov’t

- By Thandeka Percival

Following a lengthy debate, the National Assembly on Thursday passed an amendment to the Fiscal Management and Accountabi­lity Act (FMAA) which removes the requiremen­t that budgets for constituti­onal agencies be submitted directly to the National Assembly and be reflected as lump sum subvention­s in the National Estimates.

While the Opposition APNU+AFC argued that the amendment subjects constituti­onal agencies to executive control in violation of constituti­onal provisions for independen­ce, the PPP/C government maintained that it actually brings the legislatio­n in compliance with the constituti­on and particular­ly Articles 171 and 222A.

Thursday’s amendments nullify changes that had been introduced by the former APNU+AFC Government in 2015.

Minister with Responsibi­lity for Finance, Dr Ashni Singh, who tabled the bill, said that it was “a simple bill which seeks to enact a few amendments designed to streamline the budget process to increase its efficiency and improve the effectiven­ess with which parliament can consider the budgets of these entities.”

The Fiscal Management and Accountabi­lity (Amendment) Bill 2021 repeals four parts of Section 80B of the principal Act, allowing for a review and approval of all appropriat­ions, estimates and expenditur­es for constituti­onal agencies.

This section had been added to the FMAA by the APNU+AFC government in 2015 and required that the proposed budgets of constituti­onal agencies be submitted to the Clerk of the National Assembly by the Agency while the Minister of Finance would also submit comments on these budgets to the Clerk.

According to the Bill, the amendment “corrects the anomaly which gave the Clerk…certain functions in respect of budget proposals and the presentati­on of those proposals to the…Assembly by returning those functions to the Minister with responsibi­lity for finance.”

According to the Explanator­y

Memorandum, the bill also amends Section 80B (5) by clarifying that not only must the detailed budget and appropriat­ions be reflected in the Annual Estimates together with detailed Estimates of Revenues and Expenditur­e of the Constituti­onal Agencies but that budgets, appropriat­ions, estimates and expenditur­es shall be reviewed and approved as part of the process of the determinat­ion of the national budget.

Previously, the budgets of these agencies were considered and approved as a lump sum prior to the debate on the National Budget.

Singh argued that “this two-stage process resulted in a fragmented and inefficien­t process for considerat­ion of the National Budget and denied the Parliament an opportunit­y to view and consider the budget in a comprehens­ive manner.”

Thursday’s bill comprised seven clauses.

Clause 2 introduces a definition of a constituti­onal agency which shall be an “agency listed in the Third Schedule to the Constituti­on.”

Clause 4 amends Section 80A to provide that the format for the annual report shall be determined by the official in charge of

the Agency in consultati­on with the concerned Minister and the Minister with responsibi­lity for Finance.

Previously the Head of the Agency was only required to consult with the Minister of Finance on the format of their annual budget.

The final clause, Clause 7, amends the Schedule of the Act by inserting a number of agencies as budget agencies. These are the Chambers of the Director of Public Prosecutio­ns, the Judicial Service Commission, Public Service Commission, Public Service Appellate Tribunal, Public Procuremen­t Commission, Office of the Ombudsman, Guyana Elections Commission, Parliament Office, Supreme Court of Judicature, the Ethnic Relations Commission, the Human Rights Commission, the Women and Gender Equality Commission, the Indigenous People’s Commission, the Rights of the Child Commission and the Office of the Auditor General.

Collided

Singh told the House that the 2015 amendments rather than enforcing Article 222A actually collided with the provision and Article 171.

Article 222A prescribes that the expenditur­e of constituti­onal agencies shall be financed as a direct charge on the Consolidat­ed Fund, determined as a lump sum by way of an annual subvention approved by the National Assembly after a review and approval of the entity’s annual budget as a part of the process of the determinat­ion of the national budget.

The finance minister stressed that since the framers indicated that the entity’s budget must be approved as “part of the process of the determinat­ion of the national budget,” it would be nonsensica­l to “carve” the appropriat­ions out of that national budget.

Article 171(1) directs that unless recommende­d by a Minister the National Assembly shall not approve a bill or motion which imposes any charge upon the Consolidat­ed Fund.

“The function of managing public finance, of achieving fiscal outcomes, rests with the Minister of Finance and government,” he stressed, while noting that the 2015 amendment violated that cardinal principle.

Singh repeatedly indicated that if the executive were to be held accountabl­e for fiscal outcomes, it must have the authority to ensure achievemen­t of those outcomes,

“If we want to exclude the executive from the considerat­ion of a part of the budget then we need to exclude that part of the budget from any ceiling applicable to fiscal outcomes,” he contended while stressing that proper fiscal management requires unity and comprehens­iveness which means the budget and its macroecono­mic impact must be considered as a whole since it originates from a process which prioritize­s competing calls on the public treasury.

Shadow Minister of Legal Affairs, Roysdale Forde disagreed with Singh’s rationale, telling the House that the bill clearly conflicts with the constituti­onal provisions which guarantee autonomy to Constituti­onal Agencies.

Speaking specifical­ly about the Judicature, Forde reminded that Article 122A provides that all courts and all persons presiding over the courts shall exercise their functions independen­tly of the control and direction of any other person or authority; and shall be free and independen­t from political, executive and any other form of direction and control.

“The bill seeks to turn back time…to revert to the days of executive control and abuse of constituti­onal agencies,” he maintained. A similar argument was raised by his APNU+AFC colleague Juretha Fernandes, who told the House that there is no justificat­ion for the bill other than the will of the governing party.

“This is not accountabi­lity. This is control,” she said, while specifical­ly referencin­g the new requiremen­t that both the subject minister and minister of finance shall have input into the budget of each agency.

Forde sought to differenti­ate between charges on the Consolidat­ed Fund as provided for in Articles 222A and 171, arguing that 171 applies to those charges for which an appropriat­ion bill is presented.

No appropriat­ion bill, he said, had been brought for these agencies over the last three years.

This argument was attacked by Attorney General Anil Nandlall, who told the House that it was a sign of Forde’s inexperien­ce with legislativ­e procedure.

“He totally misunderst­and how a lump sum operates. Totally misunderst­ands how an appropriat­ion act operates. Mr Forde says that lump sum cannot be withdrawn with an Appropriat­ion Act…Mr Speaker you can only get money from the Consolidat­ed Fund by legislatio­n. The legislatio­n is called an Appropriat­ion Act…it can only come from the treasury through an appropriat­ion act approved by this House,” he asserted.

Nandlall stressed that the Minister of Finance must maintain the power to approve the charges on the Consolidat­ed Fund.

 ??  ?? Roysdale Forde
Roysdale Forde
 ??  ?? Dr Ashni Singh
Dr Ashni Singh

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