Sowetan

State irregular spending rises

R265m tenders to employees

- By Thabo Mokone

Irregular spending by national and provincial government­s is continuing to rise‚ albeit marginally at 1%‚ from R45.3bn in March 2017 to R45.5bn in March this year.

This is according to a report presented to a joint meeting of the standing committees on public accounts and appropriat­ion yesterday by auditorgen­eral Kimi Makwetu‚ in which he detailed the audit outcomes of more than 434 government entities for the 2017/2018 financial year.

Makwetu said the number that received clean audit outcomes (those who accounted properly for public funds) had declined during the period under review and had been doing so in the past four years.

He told MPs that of the 295 department­s and entities that received unqualifie­d audits‚ only 99 (or 25%) obtained such audits with no findings at all, while 196 were unqualifie­d audits with findings.

“The current year‚ in terms of clean audits‚ has shown an all-time low in terms of that we have only 99 department­s that had clean audits‚ so the level of clean audits has unfortunat­ely regressed‚” he said.

“There are reversals of audits outcomes that were achieved in the previous year as well as the year before. So we’ve got a whole 75% of department­s and entities that still need to do a significan­t amount of work to be able to produce reliable financial statements that are without qualificat­ions.”

Makwetu said the bulk of the R45bn irregular expenditur­e was incurred by department­s such as water and sanitation‚ correction­al services‚ provincial department­s of health in KZN and Gauteng‚ roads and public works in the North West and the Free State.

The SABC (R571m)‚ airports operator Acsa (R544m) and arms maker Armscor (R12m) contribute­d the irregular expenditur­es incurred by stateowned enterprise­s.

Makwetu said the figures were likely to rise and that the financial statements of other SOEs such as SAA and its subsidiari­es and Denel were still outstandin­g. He did not expect them to paint a rosy picture.

He said poor procuremen­t management and the submission of erroneous financial statements were the root causes of irregular expenditur­e.

Makwetu also revealed they could not conduct an audit of government tenders to the tune of R6.4bn due to missing or incomplete documents‚ while tenders to the tune of R265m were to government employees‚ in breach of legislatio­n.

The AG also reported that there was an increasing tendency among government department­s to squabble with his staff about their audit findings.

“The audit environmen­t has become one of major contestati­on‚ and we do not shy away from those contestati­ons because they enrich the final outcome,” he said.

“But there are those contesting the audit because they don’t like [the results]‚ not because they’ve got evidence to support their assertions. Sometimes people can’t live with the fact that one plus one is two‚ sometimes they want it to be a different answer.”

Scopa chairperso­n Themba Godi said the state of financial management in government would not improve until cabinet ministers started taking action against errant officials.

Godi said this was the reason the Public Audit Act had been amended: to make the recommenda­tions of the AG legally binding in the same way as those of the public protector.

“We seem to be running away from the real culprits‚ the ministers and the directors-general. Those are people who must act‚ and we are always moving around them.”

 ?? / MOELETSI MABE ?? Auditor-general Kimi Makwetu says government department­s are at an all-time low in clean audits.
/ MOELETSI MABE Auditor-general Kimi Makwetu says government department­s are at an all-time low in clean audits.

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