The Citizen (KZN)

SAA’s books are a mess, says A-G

The national carrier’s liabilitie­s exceed its assets by a whopping R17.8 billion.

- Earl Coetzee news@citizen.co.za

Financial and asset management at South African Airways is in such a shambles that the auditor-general (A-G) could barely compile an audit report of the struggling national carrier, which incurred a loss of more than R5.5 billion in the previous financial year.

Auditor-General Kimi Makwetu tabled his office’s qualified audit opinion of the airline to the speaker of parliament last week, after SAA failed to comply with legislatio­n, compelling it to submit the report within one month of receiving it.

This, after the airline had initially failed to provide the A-G with their financial records for the 2016-17 financial year in time, delaying the audit process by several months.

The A-G found that SAA failed to review the useful lives and residual values of property, aircraft, and equipment. This means the A-G was unable to determine the value or existence of property which was stated to be worth R4.57 billion during the previous financial year.

Record-keeping at SAA subsidiary SAA Technical SOC Limited, was no better. A lack of evidence of their inventory, and an inability to verify the existence of some inventory items, meant the A-G couldn’t determine the value of inventory stated at R879 million.

When looking at maintenanc­e costs, the A-G found that SAA did not meet the framework for financial reporting.

Some maintenanc­e costs were reported for the wrong accounting period, some calculated using incorrect exchange rates, and some calculated as an expense, A look at the A-G’s report reveals a horrific picture of mismanagem­ent, and transgress­ions of good governance principles, which include:

A failure to maintain records of fruitless and irregular expenditur­e.

The use of incorrect exchange rates, when dealing with internatio­nal transactio­ns, as well as several accounting irregulari­ties.

Failure to record the airline’s assets into their financial statements.

Failure to keep proper records of the airline’s technical inventory. despite having already been paid for in advance.

What the A-G could determine, is SAA had incurred a total nett loss of R5.569 billion to the year which ended in March 2017, with the airline’s liabilitie­s exceeding their assets by a massive R17,8 billion. –

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? Lola, a four-year-old St Bernard, arrives with its owner on the first day of the Crufts Dog Show yesterday in Birmingham, England.
Picture: AFP Lola, a four-year-old St Bernard, arrives with its owner on the first day of the Crufts Dog Show yesterday in Birmingham, England.

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