New Era

Namibia scores lower in fiscal accountabi­lity

- N Maihapa Ndjavera - mndjavera@nepc.com.na

ACCORDING to the Institute for Public Policy Research (IPPR), Namibia unfortunat­ely, scored poorly on overall fiscal transparen­cy and accountabi­lity. This is according to a recently released report by the institute focusing on public fiscal management and oversight in Namibia.

In the Open Budget Survey (OBS), which ranks individual states according to budget openness, countries require a minimum score of 61 out of 100 overall points to be classified as budget transparen­t. However, Namibia, as well as many other countries, did not score well in the latest OBS survey conducted in 2019. Furthermor­e, the OBS revealed that Namibia performed poorly in other subcategor­ies, especially in fiscal oversight by the legislatur­e and public participat­ion.

“Stakeholde­r engagement opportunit­ies in Namibia on public finance management and oversight are very limited, and primarily consist of basic consultati­ons. Public engagement­s in general are non-existent apart from occasional public parliament committee meetings questionin­g representa­tives of public entities on use of monies,” reads the report.

Public and stakeholde­r engagement opportunit­ies have been attributed to improving governance outcomes in many areas of public concern.

However, the IPPR study found a clear demand among stakeholde­rs for more and meaningful public engagement opportunit­ies with state entities that manage public finances.

IPPR recommende­d that in the medium to long-term, regulators should consider revising and strengthen­ing the legislatio­n governing the management and administra­tion of public finances. It added that legislator­s should consider mechanisms to compel public entities to improve fiscal management and controls: “In the same vein, the Audit Bill should be revised,” the report recommende­d.

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