Title: PRIORITIZING IMPROVEMENT IN AUDITING PERFORMANCE
1PRIORITIZING IMPROVEMENT IN AUDITING PERFORMANCE
- A COUNTRY CASE STUDY FROM SOUTH AFRICA (strategy
translated into operational)
2BACKGROUND
The Auditor-General of the 1980s
- Seated within government
- The annual budget
- The Public Service Commission
- The Exchequers Act and Audit Circulars
- Reporting to segregated Houses of Parliament
- The quest for an identifiable public sector audit
profession - Shortage of skilled auditors and guidance
3WHERE DID WE WANT TO BE?
- Independent of government
- Self-funded
- Empowered to obtain skilled resources
- Auditable legislative requirements
- A credible accountability process
- Professionalism
- Healthy skills base and adequate tools
4INDEPENDENCE
- Auditor-General is now entrenched in the
Constitution of South Africa as an Institution
Supporting Constitutional Democracy - Auditor-General is appointed, effectively, by
Parliament - Has fixed, non-renewable term of between five and
ten years - Two thirds majority in Parliament necessary to
dismiss - May appoint an office separate of government
(Office of the Auditor-General) - CEO of this office reports only to
Auditor-General and Audit Commission - Auditor-General and office must display no
political agenda and report without fear or
favour may develop government auditing as seen
fit
5SELF-FUNDING
- Dependence on vote by National Treasury
compromised position - Various other models options available
- AG now invoices auditees legislation supports
recovery - Credit control is continuous management issue
- Prepares income and expenditure budget Audit
Commission approves independently of the executive
6PUBLIC SERVICE COMMISSION (PSC) AND HUMAN
RESOURCES
- Regulates and controls government human resources
- Auditor-General now independent of PSC
- Human resources are now an equation of budget,
market, needs and performance - Able to implement own systems and performance
management process specifically designed for
auditors
7AUDITABLE LEGISLATIVE REQUIREMENTS
- Constitutional mandate to audit and report on -
- financial statements
- financial management
- of all tiers of government
- to acquire resources, implement liaisons
processes as needed to do the above - without interference by anyone
8AUDITABLE LEGISLATIVE REQUIREMENTS (continued)
- Therefore, as is international best practice,
someone else to regulate - - requirements for financial statements
- requirements for financial management
- for all tiers of government
- Public Finance Management Act (1999)
- Municipal Finance Management Bill
- Accounting Standards Board only just commenced
operations
9A CREDIBLE ACCOUNTABILITY PROCESS
- Segregated houses of Parliament replaced by
integrated legislatures for each sphere of
government various Auditors-General negotiated
and amalgamated to one - Constitution and subsequent legislation spells
out competencies and accountability of each
sphere - Audits completed as per internationally
standardized process
10A CREDIBLE ACCOUNTABILITY PROCESS (continued)
- Includes queries management letters to top
management, obtains responses before reporting
externally - Final reports to relevant legislature,
discussions public hearings, corrective measures,
follow-up - Municipal process is complex due to number and
location of municipalities
11A CREDIBLE ACCOUNTABILITY PROCESS (continued)
- Municipalities amalgamated, elected 2001
- Public entities process under review
- Accountability for performance, environment etc.
is new
12PROFESSIONALISM
- Affiliation with INTOSAI and development of SA
Institute of Government Auditors laid the
foundation - Harmonisation with IFAC auditing standards
followed - Process not completed as many stakeholders
outside the office the following processes
underway - Accounting Professions Bill
- Standardisation of qualifications
- Institute for Public Finance and Audit
- The Auditing Standards Board of SA, linked to
IFAC
13SKILLED AUDITORS WITH ADEQUATE TOOLS
- Independence from government and PSC enabled
- demand-supply participation on HR market
- The development of the profession, and
international harmonisation enabled usage of
CAs article scheme - The promulgation of comprehensive legislation
enables compilation of proper programmes and
scheduling of audits, e.g. PFMA catch-up action
14SKILLED AUDITORS WITH ADEQUATE TOOLS (cont.)
- Audit software employed to standardise audits,
increase - cost-efficiency, enforce review of audits
quality control - Harmonisation of auditing standards improved
cooperation with private audit firms. - Technical committee process distribution by cd
intranet
15CONCLUSION
- The relationship with the tax-payer is a long
term one that evolves slowly - Auditing performance must first improve and
establish value and credibility - It has taken a long time to establish an image of
independence at least
16CONCLUSION (continued)
- SA has other historic issues of public trust that
are difficult to remedy - Further refinement and consolidation of
legislation is underway with the Auditor-General
Bill - Public communication roadshow process inside
outside office was continuous process throughout
17CASE STUDY OF HOW SA WENT ABOUT ABOVE PROCESS
GLOBAL HARMONISATION PROFESSIONAL DEVELOPMENT