Daily Observer (Jamaica)

Accounting in an emergency

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SUPREME audit institutio­ns have an essential role to play in securing government accountabi­lity in the massive fiscal response to the novel coronaviru­s pandemic.

In January 2021 the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund reported that the global fiscal response by government­s to the pandemic was US$14 trillion, and counting. Many countries have spent more than they take in taxes to try and get the pandemic under control.

And though both the financial crisis and COVID-19 warranted speedy spending, coronaviru­s spending has been spread across many more sectors and channels than the bank bailouts and quantitati­ve easing during the credit crunch.

Once it’s gone, it’s gone

Clearly there are risks associated with such spending. “The main risks are fairly obvious,” says Pamela Monroe Ellis, FCCA, auditor general of Jamaica and secretary general of the Caribbean Organizati­on of Supreme Audit Institutio­ns (CAROSAI). “The spending is generally taking place in an environmen­t that is not conducive to checks and balances, and this has meant — in some cases — that there has been improper spending, corruption and irregulari­ties.

“More likely than any of these is deprivatio­n – the money is not going where it’s needed most and has been redirected to persons of low priority. We have certainly seen that in some places with the vaccine roll-out.”

But Monroe Ellis agrees with enabling speedy spending. “Clearly a relaxing of controls is warranted,” she says, “but we have to remember that once it has been spent, it can’t be recovered.”

two solutions

In some countries two solutions are emerging to manage some of the risk involved in colossal and quick government spending. The first is on time or real time audit conducted by a country’s supreme audit institutio­n. The second, encouraged by the Internatio­nal Organizati­on of Supreme Audit Institutio­ns (INTOSAI), is a transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and inclusiven­ess (TAI) audit.

Monroe Ellis has first-hand experience of the former, since Jamaica’s supreme audit institutio­n conducted an on time audit of its COVID-19 spending. “We know that one of the big risks is that supreme audit institutio­ns are not equipped with either the financial or the human resources to respond with the speed in which the spend is taking place.”

But Jamaica’s supreme audit institutio­n, which had already spent some years developing its technology environmen­t and digitising processes, was able to transition to home-working without introducin­g high levels of risk. “My experience is that not many audit institutio­ns can do this,” Monroe Ellis says. “Among the 23 audit institutio­ns in CAROSAI, only eight were able to work from home effectivel­y and of those eight, only one was able to conduct an on time or real time audit — and that was us.’

On-time audits

Jamaica’s on-time audit was conducted at the same time its Government was developing the system for paying out funds to citizens and organisati­ons. “We had high-level support from the finance minister,” Monroe Ellis says, “and we had access to all the informatio­n we needed. The release of funds was conditiona­l on the outcome of the audit, so there was a real incentive for the Government to do their homework.”

It wasn’t easy, though. “We worked a lot of long hours, and cooperatio­n with other entities was essential.” But, she says, the outcome was extremely valuable and reassured the public that the Government had been held accountabl­e over the structure and means of its spending. “We publicised the level of scrutiny, and we made clear what we found and what remedial action had been taken,” she adds.

Although the real time audit focused on accountabi­lity, she says that “inclusiven­ess is a nascent issue”. She hopes that government­s will begin to take a holistic approach to inclusiven­ess in spending but is clear about the proper limits on the supreme audit institutio­n’s mandate.

“As a supreme audit institutio­n, we can examine the budget and budget developmen­t but we can’t influence the policy side of things,” she says, adding, “but we can absolutely examine how the policies to provide for the vulnerable are implemente­d.”

tai audits

Archana Shirsat, deputy director general of the INTOSAI Developmen­t Initiative (IDI), says that transparen­cy, accountabi­lity and inclusiven­ess audits are an important part of the toolkit to prevent government­s bypassing accountabi­lity and transparen­cy in emergency spending.

“There’s a risk the massive resources that have been mobilised end up being misdirecte­d or diverted,” she says. “Last year we launched TAI, which is a compliance audit of TAI issues in COVID-19 spending, and took up conversati­ons with around 57 supreme audit institutio­ns across the region.”

But INTOSAI soon found that not every supreme audit institutio­n had the mandate to undertake such an audit, and many that had the mandate did not have the capabiliti­es. Where TAI audits have been carried out, many are limited and focus more on accountabi­lity and transparen­cy. “We’ve seen almost nothing on inclusiven­ess,” Shirsat says.

But she adds that supreme audit institutio­ns can take steps to ensure fairer spending even if they don’t have the capacity to launch a full, real time TAI. “We have plenty of resources to help countries that want to do this, including a handbook, a bank of audit questions, and local and regional advisers.” And, she says, supreme audit institutio­ns can start small and work their way up.

“Making the audit doable is the most important step — limit the scope and make it manageable,” she advises. “Ask yourself, do you have enough sources of evidence to gather what you need? Is the risk manageable? If you can’t audit individual transactio­ns, audit the framework for spending — there is always somewhere to start.”

Felicity Hawksley, journalist Source: Accounting and Business - ACCA magazine

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By Felicity Hawksley

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