Philippine Daily Inquirer

Salary hike at SEC illegal – COA

- Marlon Ramos and Doris Dumlao

THE SECURITIES and Exchange Commission (SEC) spent more than P241.5 million on illegal salary increases for its personnel and on the unauthoriz­ed hiring of additional employees in 2013, according to the Commission on Audit (COA).

In an audit report released Friday, the COA said the SEC should have sought permission from President Aquino and the Department of Budget and Management (DBM) before approving the additional wages for its officials and employees.

As for the creation of 61 new plantilla positions, the state auditors said the SEC should have first secured the approval of the DBM.

The COA said the issue of unlawful salary increases of SEC personnel, which amounted to P174.3 million from January 2012 to December 2013, was brought to the attention of the commission in 2012.

“The unauthoriz­ed increase in salaries and wages of the officials and employees of the SEC was continuous­ly implemente­d… thereby resulting in excessive payment of personal services for two years,” the COA said.

Reiteratio­n

“This is a reiteratio­n of the previous year’s audit observatio­n whereby the [SEC] failed to secure the approval of the President on the compensati­on plan [it] approved… before implementi­ng the salary increase,” it added.

Auditors recommende­d that the SEC stop the salary increases until it gets the approval of the President upon the recommenda­tion of the DBM.

It also said that one of the conditions for the release of a $200-million loan from the Asian Developmen­t Bank to the Philippine government was the “implementa­tion of the action plan for the organizati­onal restructur­ing of the SEC, including salary adjustment­s of the staff.”

COA replies

In a text message to the INQUIRER, SEC Chair Teresita Herbosa said:

“We have responded to COA on this several times. The salaries were in accordance with the 2000 Pay Plan approved by SEC and the then President.”

The Securities Regulation Code provides that salaries at the SEC shall be comparable to the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas and the Monetary Board.

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