Mail & Guardian

Consultant­s a fruitless waste

Despite spending more on external services to plug gaps left by mismanagem­ent and a shortage of skilled workers, data shows that municipali­ties are underperfo­rming and underspend­ing their budgets. Sabelo Skiti and the Mail & Guardian Data Desk sift throug

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After spending more than R3.4-billion on consultant­s to close critical skills and capacity gaps, South African municipali­ties have little to show for it. Instead, they have underspent on their budgets by more than R44-billion.

This is happening as Finance Minister Tito Mboweni averted what looked to be a standoff with the South African Local Government Associatio­n (Salga) over a raft of municipal austerity measures, which include limiting the use of consultant­s.

The Mail & Guardian analysed the consultanc­y spend of 23 of the biggest local and metropolit­an municipali­ties. The data shows that the biggest spender on consultant­s and outsourced work was the ethekwini municipali­ty, followed by Nelson Mandela Bay and then the City of Cape Town, spending R2.2-billion, R738-million and R224-million respective­ly.

umsunduzi (which includes Pietermari­tzburg, Kwazulu-natal), Mahikeng (North West) and Polokwane (Limpopo) local municipali­ties spent close to R20-million in the 2017-2018 financial year on consultant­s.

Although the expenditur­e on consultant­s is on the rise, the auditor general, Kimi Makwetu, noted that consultant­s have been ineffectiv­e and this can be seen through the M&G’S analysis of the under-expenditur­e in many municipal budgets.

According to data provided by the treasury, a total of R44.2-billion was underspent by all municipali­ties at the end of last year’s fourth quarter. Underspend­ing was the most prevalent in the North West at 43% (R9.6billion), the Free State at 26.9% (R5.4-billion) and Mpumalanga at 26.2% (R5.5-billion).

William Gumede, an associate professor at the School of Governance at the University of the Witwatersr­and who has been studying the auditor general reports for the past 10 years, says there is a clear trend.

“The more patronage there is, the more consultant­s are used,” he says.

He found that in places where consultant­s have been used, the problem they’re tasked to fix shows no improvemen­t.

“The problem with consultant­s is that they don’t really fix the problem. It’s kind of like applying a Band-aid to the problem. You don’t change the behaviour or change the issue. You have to change the people and the system — enforce compliance.” Makwetu’s findings pointed to:

O Auditee ineffectiv­eness in 66 municipali­ties;

O Poor project management in 31 municipali­ties;

O Twenty-two cases of non-delivery by the consultant­s;

O Lack of records and documents in 19 instances; and

O Consultant­s being appointed too late in 15 cases.

In 43 cases where consultant­s were appointed, proper procuremen­t processes were not followed, resulting in R181-million of irregular expenditur­e.

Data, contained in the auditor general’s latest consolidat­ed general outcomes on municipal finances, reveals that, despite spending nearly R1-billion on consultant­s to help them prepare their financial yearend reports, 66% of the 197 municipali­ties’ reports contained material misstateme­nts in areas where the consultant­s did the work.

Of the municipali­ties that used consultant­s to compile their financials, 104 recorded qualified, adverse and disclaimer outcomes, meaning that in 32 instances the auditor general could find no evidence or documents to make an audit finding.

Limpopo, one of three provinces where no municipali­ty achieved a clean audit (the others being the North West and Mpumalanga), had the highest expenditur­e on consultant­s at R177-million. This was followed by the Eastern Cape (R166-million), Mpumalanga (R134-million) and the North West (R124-million).

The Eastern Cape had just two municipali­ties that achieved a clean audit.

Speaking specifical­ly about Limpopo when releasing his report on Wednesday, Makwetu said leadership in municipali­ties should play a close oversight role on expenditur­e and on consultant­s.

“One of the observatio­ns we’ve made is that there are a couple of municipali­ties there that have limited technical knowledge in so far as the expected role of the CFO [chief financial officer] is concerned, and they go out and seek the support of external service providers.”

He added: “We think that there is something to be said about the role of leadership in monitoring that type of expenditur­e because there are people who are in roles but do not have the adequate training and competence to carry out their responsibi­lities.”

Makwetu’s report showed an overall decline in the audit results of 257 municipali­ties and 21 municipal entities audited.

The number of municipali­ties that achieved a clean audit declined from 33 in the 2016-2017 financial year to 18 in the period under his review.

Although irregular expenditur­e declined from R29.7-billion to R25.2billion, a clearly frustrated Makwetu highlighte­d the dearth of accountabi­lity and consequenc­e management as concerning, saying: “Sufficient steps were also not taken to recover, write-off, approve or condone unauthoris­ed, irregular and fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e as required by legislatio­n.

“As a result, the year-end balance of irregular expenditur­e that had accumulate­d over many years and had not been dealt with totalled R71.1billion, while that of unauthoris­ed expenditur­e was R46.2-billion and that of fruitless and wasteful expenditur­e was R4.5-billion,” he said.

Whereas municipali­ties are failing to provide services, or use their budgets properly, City Press reported that Salga was up in arms over the municipal cost containmen­t regulation­s. These include getting rid of credit cards and clamping down on catering, mayoral vehicle expenditur­e and the use of consultant­s.

The regulation­s were to be implemente­d without treasury seeking consensus from the department of co-operative governance and traditiona­l affairs.

Salga chairperso­n Thembi Nkadimeng, who is also the mayor of Polokwane, labelled the measures as unfair, adding that it made it look as if councillor­s were extravagan­t. She also said some councils relied on consultant­s because they struggled to attract and retain skills in critical areas.

On Wednesday, Mboweni tweeted that he had met Salga this week and reached an agreement that municipal credit cards were out and mayoral vehicles will be capped at R700000. They also agreed that the measures will be implemente­d from July.

On Thursday, treasury said the cost containmen­t regulation­s should be read in the context of giving effect to the National Developmen­t Plan strategy to build a capable state.

“This also requires the municipali­ty to develop a plan to reduce the reliance on consultant­s. The measures also require that transfer of skills from consultant­s to officials take place. So, if there are vacancies, the municipali­ty is required to advertise such positions and fill them with the appropriat­e skilled officials.

“The AGSA [auditor general] had raised findings on the excessive use of consultant­s and the associated cost to municipali­ties over a number of years. The quality of service is something that municipal managers must manage, which speaks to the monitoring of contracts and quality of services received, as well as value for money. The AGSA has also commented on the quality of services offered.”

 ??  ?? Uphill battle: Only two municipali­ties in the Eastern Cape achieved clean audits. This is despite millions being spent on consultant­s, employed to improve finances and other problems. Photo: Delwyn Verasamy
Uphill battle: Only two municipali­ties in the Eastern Cape achieved clean audits. This is despite millions being spent on consultant­s, employed to improve finances and other problems. Photo: Delwyn Verasamy

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