The Citizen (Gauteng)

‘Blame ANC for money lost’

R62BN WASTED: CADRE DEPLOYMENT, GREEDY LEADERS A MISTAKE – EXPERT

- Anastasi Mokgobu – anastasim@citizen.co.za

AG calls for immediate action to call government to task.

Despite the promises of accountabi­lity in managing public finances, the national and provincial government spent R62.60 billion in the 20182019 financial year in irregular expenditur­e, up from last year’s R51 billion – and cadre deployment is to blame, said an expert.

Auditor-General (AG) Kimi Makwetu yesterday called on political leaders, accounting officers and authoritie­s, as well as oversight structures, to take immediate action to restore government’s accountabi­lity to the people of South Africa.

Makwetu said the number of irregular expenditur­es could be even higher, as 34% of the audits were qualified because disclosed amounts were incomplete.

Political analyst Xolani Dube said it was time to stop relying on people aligned with political parties to fix SA’s crisis.

Ethics and morality were not relevant to political leaders, he said.

“We are in a failed state, led by selfish and greedy people. We can’t apply economics or say let’s change leaders to get better results.

“It is high time we promote people from rural areas who are not linked to the ANC to save the country. We have to be honest about how our leaders continue to fail us,” Dube said.

Electing ANC cadres to positions of power was the first mistake. “The 1994 elite project of making ANC administra­tors of the country has failed dismally.

“People who are put in public finance management offices are soulless and care less about poverty or the future. We are expecting the impossible by believing they can transform our country,” he said.

Makwetu painted a picture of administra­tors and authoritie­s who had largely failed to implement audit counsel and recommenda­tions from his office.

“Our recommenda­tions did not require more than what accounting officers and authoritie­s were legally obligated to do by existing laws,” Makwetu said. “We simply re-emphasised basic accountabi­lity measures such as proper planning and budgeting; establishi­ng internal controls.”

He said executive authoritie­s and oversight structures did not lead by example in setting the correct tone which “would enable accountabi­lity, transparen­cy and good governance”.

Makwetu’s revealed audit outcomes had regressed since 201415, with only 80 audits improving and 91 regressing.

“Only 100 (26%) of the auditees managed to produce quality financial statements and performanc­e reports and to comply with key legislatio­n, thereby receiving a clean audit. In 2014-15, 106 auditees had clean audits,” said Makwetu.

There were serious weaknesses in the financial management of national and provincial government that had not been addressed over the past five years, Makwetu noted in his report.

Unauthoris­ed expenditur­e remained high at R1.3 billion.

“There was an emerging risk of increased litigation and claims against department­s. Over a third of the department­s had claims against them above 10% of their next year’s budget,” Makwetu said.

Wasteful expenditur­e continued to rise, with 223 auditees losing R849 million in the current year. Over the past five years, R4.16 billion of government expenditur­e was fruitless and wasteful.

Number can be higher as 34% was qualified

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