Sowetan

Office of A-G needs more teeth to bite

-

The auditor-general (A-G) continues to play a critical role in ensuring politician­s and civil servants account for how public funds are managed.

It is heartening that at a time when the auditing profession has come under the spotlight following lapses in ethical judgments among some of its practition­ers, our supreme audit institutio­n is still seen to be doing its work without fear or favour.

This is in line with the role the constituti­on sets out for it as one of the independen­t state institutio­ns to strengthen our system of democracy.

It is cause for concern that the unauthoris­ed and wasteful use of public funds continues unabated. It has grown from R25.7-billion in the 2014/2015 financial year and is expected to balloon to R65-billion once all the audits for 2016/2017 are concluded. When funds that are allocated for the delivery of services end up being spent on programmes they are not intended for, it is the poor who suffer the most.

Lest we forget, budgets acquire the status of law once they are passed by the legislatur­e. Deviation from them, unless condoned by the legislatur­e, amounts to a violation of the law. Yet offenders hardly face any consequenc­es for spending public funds irregularl­y or vainly.

We welcome the mooted changes to the Public Audit Act of 2004 to give powers to the A-G to refer irregular expenditur­e to investigat­ive agencies. We hope parliament’s standing committee on the auditor-general moves with speed to give Kimi Makwetu the powers he needs to hold state department­s and entities accountabl­e for their use of public funds.

The supreme audit institutio­n cannot make enforceabl­e decisions. It relies on the co-operation of the auditees to implement its recommenda­tions. The act only empowers the A-G to rope in the National Assembly when its recommenda­tions are ignored, but this is not enough to remedy the crisis of noncomplia­nce we are facing.

We hope giving the A-G more teeth will lead to clean audits becoming the norm rather than the exception . We can ill-afford the wastage of our limited public resources when we are borrowing more and more to balance our R1.56-trillion national budget.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa