Business Day

Crossed lines

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Treasury did itself no favours with hopelessly late communicat­ions for the release at the weekend of a government gazette which seemed to grant Eskom exemption from reporting on corrupt, fraudulent, irregular or wasteful expenditur­e.

With no explanatio­n forthcomin­g, the inevitable assumption was that the government planned to use the state of disaster to give the power utility carte blanche to hide any dodgy deals.

As it turns out, the exemption has more to do with the dysfunctio­ns caused by the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) and the auditor-general’s often nit-picking approach to stateowned enterprise audits than it does with any desire for secrecy on the part of Treasury or Eskom.

The PFMA requires public entities to declare any “fruitless and wasteful” expenditur­e, along with any that’s “irregular”. They also have to declare fraud or corruption, as any company would.

The auditor-general tends to treat any of these as grounds for a qualified audit, even purely technical irregulari­ties where there’s no fraud or misconduct. For Eskom or Transnet, a qualified audit risks breaching covenants with lenders and causing a default and makes it all but impossible to borrow new money. That’s the problem the limited exemption was designed to address. It applies only to fruitless, wasteful or irregular spending, which would now not attract a negative audit finding. Fraud or misconduct still would. Transnet was granted a similar exemption last year. Both entities still have to report transparen­tly on spending.

Why Treasury took its time to issue a statement explaining this in the first place is a mystery. It sure needs to step up its comms.

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