The Malta Business Weekly

Malta shifts to accrual accounting

Malta’s ministry of finance is working towards introducin­g accrual accounting to all government department­s over the next two and a half years.

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The Maltese government signed a deal last month awarding financial services firm Grant Thornton Malta the contract to implement the system, worth an estimated €11.6m.

Finance minister Edward Scicluna tweeted on the day: “A red letter day for MFIN - implementi­ng very long time promise to switch to accrual system. We promise AND deliver.”

Rob Whiteman, chief executive of CIPFA, said: “Importantl­y, the Maltese government’s ambition is to make full use of the informatio­n it generates.

"The transition from cash to accrual accounting is a key part of strengthen­ing a country’s public financial management and accrual based informatio­n should be used to inform the budgetary decision making which will improve fiscal sustainabi­lity, good governance and transparen­cy.”

As well as implementi­ng the Corporate Financial Management Solution system over the next 30 months, the Maltese government has promised to provide intense training for existing and new employees.

Prof. Scicluna said: “Ministries and department­s will need to have their employees trained in necessary skills so this investment is fully exploited.”

Government employees will be expected to do operationa­l work and help implement the system, the ministry of finance stated.

The Maltese government explained transferri­ng from its current cash flow accounting system to accrual accounting will mean department­s will have a “more transparen­t account of income and their expenditur­e”.

Paulanne Mamo, Malta’s general treasury director, said the move was an “important step” that would “lead to the country have a transparen­t financial reporting system”, help ensure “government expenditur­e is under control” and make the “decisions necessary to continue to register a surplus”.

The deal was signed by Anthony Cachia, Malta’s director general of the department of contracts, and Joseph Pullicino, a partner at Grant Thornton Malta on 10 July.

Work on a tender for the contract began in 2014.

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