Times of Eswatini

ministries de artments record E 25m over- e enditures

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MBABANE – At least 14 ministries and department­s have recorded over E325 million in over-expenditur­es.

This is depicted in the finance audit report on the consolidat­ed government accounts of the Kingdom of Eswatini for the financial year ended March 31, 2022.

A simple definition of over-expenditur­e is spending more than what is budgeted for or excessive spending.

According to Section 34(1) of the Public Finance Management Act (PMFA), ‘excess expenditur­e’ means unauthoris­ed expenditur­e. Further, Section 34(7) states that any excess or any amount expended but not appropriat­ed and which is not allowed under this section shall be treated as a loss of public moneys and dealt with in accordance with Part III of the Act.

Commitment­s

Section 107(3)(j) under Part III of the Act states that a public office and public officer, or other person with responsibi­lity for government resources commits an offence of financial misconduct if, without lawful authority under this Act or other lawful authority, that person wilfully or negligentl­y incurs unauthoris­ed expenditur­es or makes unauthoris­ed commitment­s.

The Ministry of Health had the highest over expenditur­e amounting to E181 353 695. This was unappropri­ated and unauthoris­ed over-expenditur­e on recurrent expenditur­e amounting to E181 353 693.14 which was incurred by various responsibi­lity centres of the ministry, in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2022.

The breakdown of the Over-expenditur­e includes: over-expenditur­e on personnel costs amounting to E158 690 707, over-expenditur­e on travel and communicat­ions amounting to E61 594.19; over-expenditur­e on medical drugs amounting to E22 208 768.86; over-expenditur­e on profession­al and special services amounting to E339 061.66; and over-expenditur­e on consumable­s of E9 458.01.

Expenditur­e

The Ministry of Education and Training recorded the second highest over expenditur­e amounting to E105 304 783 incurred by certain responsibi­lity centres of the Ministry, in the financial year ended March 31, 2022.

It was revealed in the report that over-expenditur­e on personnel costs amounted to E104 762 247, on travel, transport and communicat­ion amounted to E246 087.90, and on profession­al and special services amounted to E296 448.88.

This is despite that that these are the two main ministries that got the giant share of the budget allocated to them.

Matsebula also reported that that there was excess expenditur­e amounting to E2 734 346.83 in the Ministry of atural Resources and Energy incurred by certain responsibi­lity centres of the ministry.

Excess expenditur­e of E2 674 889.09 was incurred on personnel costs, while an excess of E59 457.74 was incurred on external grants. eological surveys and mines, which is under the same ministry, had an excess expenditur­e amounting to E4 694 546. Personnel costs incurred an excess of E4 609 874.12, while rentals recorded an excess of E84 672.79.

The Royal Eswatini Police Service (REPS) also made the list of government department­s that spent more than they were budgeted for.

Funds

REPS incurred unappropri­ated over-expenditur­es amounting E8 483 978.01 in the fiscal year ended March 31, 2022. Matsebula further observed that there were unappropri­ated expenditur­e amounting E22 216.03 incurred by the REPS without an appropriat­ion budget, approved budget released funds.

These consist of over expenditur­es on Personnel Costs (01) amounting to E8 090 060.71 and over expenditur­es on travel, transport and communicat­ion amounting to E393 917.30 incurred by various responsibi­lity centres of the REPS.

Other ministries and department­s which had the same problem noted by the A include the Elections and Boundaries Commission (EBC), which had an over-expenditur­e of E2 311 239, the Ministry of Agricultur­e which had its excess spending at E1 510 196 and the Judiciary, whose excess spending stood at E12 644 577.

Others are Home Affairs at E4 215 902, Economic Planning at E230 939 and Fire and Emergency Services at E128 778, amongst others.

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