Title: PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND ACCOUNTING SYSTEM: Improved Service Delivery
1PUBLIC FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT AND ACCOUNTING
SYSTEM (Improved Service Delivery)
- ASSESSMENT AND ACTION PLANS
- J B DAUDA
- MINISTER OF FINANCE
- 11-12 March 2004
-
2Aims and Objectives
- To regulate financial management in the central
and local governments - To ensure that all revenue, expenditure, assets
and liabilities of those governments are managed
efficiently and effectively - To provide for the responsibilities of persons
entrusted with financial management in those
governments - To improve overall public service delivery
- To have greater clarity and understanding in
public finance documents
3Main Components of Public Financial Management
- Mobilisation of budgetary resources
- Management of public expenditure
- Management of Public debt
- Overall budget Process
- Procurement control
- Legal and Regulatory Framework
- Internal Control and Reporting Mechanisms
- Data Quality and reconciliation of data
- Integrated Financial Management Information
system
4Underlying Principles
- Transparency
- Accountability
- Efficiency
- Effectiveness
5REALITIES OF PFM IN SIERRA LEONE
- Weak financial planning
- Weak revenue base
- Focus on inputs and not on results
- Fragmented and unclear accountabilities and legal
frameworks - Poor quality and late information
- Wastefulness, inefficiency and corruption (fraud
and theft) - Poor compliance with existing legislation
- Substantial extra-budgetary resources and
extra-expenditure - Weak human resource and institutional capacity
- Weak financial management information system
- Weak public/private participation
- Weak centralised public sector payroll management
- Poor clarity of accounting documents
6PFM ASSESSMENTS/REPORTS
- The following consultative assessments/reports
have helped to map out the required PFM reform
agenda - A Country Financial Accountability Assessment
(CFAA) was carried out in 2001 with TA from the
World Bank and DFID - EU Evaluation in 2002 and Matrix of Corrective
Measures agreed - HIPC Expenditure Tracking Assessment ongoing
- Consultative workshop on PFM involving wide
ranging public/private stakeholders was organised
in February 2004 under the Institutional Reform
and capacity Building (IRCB) project of the World
Bank - Public Accounts Committee
- Auditor-General
- PETS
- Budget Oversight Committees
- Cabinet
7PFM REFORM VISION
- Establish a legal and regulatory framework with
clear definitions of financial management
accountability - Establish decentralised budget formulation,
execution, accounting, reporting processes and
controls - Implement personnel management measures to
undertake appropriate recruitment, reward
performance and sanction poor management - Intensive training of vote controllers,
programme/project managers, financial management
staff, so they can perform financial management
responsibilities devolved to them
8FMAS WEAKNESSES
- The present FMAS, a bespoke system, was designed,
managed and administered by one person, who also
acted as Accountant General. The system has been
recently evaluated by an external firm of
consultants (International Management Consultants
Ltd), with support by DFID. A number of major
weaknesses identified - Poor system design and inadequate functionality
- Incomplete development
- Lack of system data checks and controls
- Batch processing with reliance on front end
processes and controls - Lack of system design and maintenance
documentation - Poor system performance in terms of response
times - Lack of proper audit trail
- Weak security
- Inadequate link with Budget Bureau
- Lack of a comprehensive and integrated payroll
database system
9DESIRED OUTCOMES
- Transparent and participatory budgeting process -
budget formulation, budget execution, budget
reporting and procurement - Sound financial management systems and processes
- Effective management of revenue, expenditure,
assets and liabilities - Reliable and useful data collation, reporting on
performance, annual reports and annual financial
statements - Improved accountability of MDAs
- Improved understanding of Government activities
10REFORM AGENDA 1Legal and regulatory framework
- The Public Budgeting and Accounting Act
(PBAA)1992, Public Amendment Act 1996, Financial
Administration Regulations 1998 and the
Constitution provide the legal framework for the
budgeting, accounting, control and management of
public finances. - The PBAA is not comprehensive and technically
robust enough as legislation for financial
management - The 1996 decree resulted in the strengthening of
the executive in the execution and monitoring of
the budget. It had effect of diminishing the
oversight role of both the Legislature and the
Office of the Auditor General - Proposals for a new Government Budget Management
and Accounting Act will foster a new Organic
Budget Law to replace the PBAA. These proposals
arose following the CFAA.
11REFORM AGENDA 1Legal and regulatory framework
(contd)
- The new Government Budget Management and
Accounting Act is currently under preparation.
The main aims are - To secure transparency, accountability and sound
management of budget, assets and liabilities of
GOSL - Need to make legal structure of the laws to
further conform to the requirements of an
effective institutional framework - Need to increase the degree of comprehensiveness
and technical robustness of the recent financial
management related legislation - To reconcile the major divergence between the
current laws and the requirements of a
transparent and accountable budget management and
control system
12REFORM AGENDA 1Legal and regulatory framework
(contd)
- Additional implementing regulations
- Extending the mandate for external audit purposes
- Empowering the internal audit function
- Government borrowing and debt management
including contingent liabilities - Government stores management
- Liability and offences
- Rules of Virement
- Budget Oversight Committees
- Linkage with the Local Government Act
13REFORM AGENDA 2Overall Budgetary Process
- Mobilisation of budgetary resources
- The primary objective is to mobilise budgetary
resources, aimed at well over 16 of GDP. To
achieve this, principal measures to be taken
include - Widen the tax base by reforming the system for
controlling exemptions and tax evasion, and for
granting incentives and fiscal benefits to
investment - Consolidate all public resources into the budget
as required by the Constitution - Ensure greater coordination and sharing of
information and data between the MOF and NRA - Ensure maximum collection of budget revenues from
all sources including internally generated funds,
the extraction of natural resources,
particularly non-renewable resources - Create a more efficient, broad-based, fair,
simple and predictable tax system - Strengthen the capacity and efficiency of tax
administration - Integrate project funds into national budget
14REFORM AGENDA 2Overall Budgetary Process (contd)
- Management of Public Expenditure
- The main objectives are
- To improve the programming, execution, control
and transparency of the budget process - Ensure that public expenditure is more efficient
in its impact on poverty reduction - Ensure that public expenditure creates favorable
conditions for economic growth - Ensure the recording of public expenditure
enables the devolution of relevant functions to
local councils
15REFORM AGENDA 2Overall Budgetary Process (contd)
- Principal measures to be undertaken include
- Strengthen the public accounting process. This
requires - finalising the new Government Budget Management
and Accounting Law - Developing computerised systems to control and
register expenditure, allowing for more timely
reporting of activities - Changing classifications used in the budget to
allow for the registration and control of
expenditure at the central and local government
levels - Improving auditing and inspection of accounts
- Incorporate off-budget expenditure and revenue
into the budgeting process, including resources
and expenditure controlled by the donor community - Continue and strengthen the MTEF, PETS and
oversight processes
16REFORM AGENDA 3Public Debt management
- The main objects are
- To develop a medium and long-term strategy for
management of both domestic and external debt
leading to a lasting exit from debt burden - Strengthen the system for control and management
of the public debt - Principal measures to be undertaken include
- Prepare a medium and long-tern strategy setting
overall parameters for debt policy and post-HIPC
sustainability domestic arrears, commercial
creditors, non-HIPC official creditors - Prepare a medium and long-term strategy on
capacity to incur and sustain domestic debt.
This should integrate the use of public debt as
an instrument for monitoring management, taking
into account the link between issuing debt and
the need to manage domestic interest rates to
stimulate investment and growth - Evaluate the foreign debt of state enterprises
and the private sector to identify risks and
vulnerability to accumulation of contingent
liabilities, destabilising the external sector
including capital flight and fluctuations in the
exchange rate
17REFORM AGENDA 4Procurement Reform
- The main objective is to develop an efficient
procurement system that promotes competition,
transparency, and value-for-money (economy,
efficiency and effectiveness). The key measures
include - Improve procurement competition and control
- Implement a new legislative and regulatory
framework for procurement - Implement a standard procurement policy
(government and donor procurement rules and
procedures) - Disseminate the new policy and law and promote
transparency and accountability of procurement - Undertake intensive training of procurement
oversight institutions, tender boards, and
procurement staff - Ensure that vote controllers maintain effective
procurement and inventory management systems - Promote value-for-money
18REFORM AGENDA 5Integrated Financial Management
Information System (IFMIS)
- The objective is to design, procure and implement
a new IFMIS which is able to meet the control and
information requirements of the decentralised
system of financial management. Measures to be
undertaken include - Acquire new IFMIS to replace FMAS
- Set up IFMIS for new design and pilot Ministries
- Prepare Ministries for roll-out of IFMIS
- Introduce new Chart of Accounts
19REFORM AGENDA 6Integrated Payroll Management
- Objective To improve the quality and management
of payroll database. The Public Service wage bill
(civil servants, teachers military, police and
other sub-vented agencies), comprising wages and
salaries, pensions, gratuities, allowances and
contributions to Social Security represents 8.3
of GDP or 52 of total domestic revenue or one
third of total recurrent expenditure. Key
measures include - Effective payroll management photo
verification, issuance of ID cards - Alignment of payroll cycles with the budget
cycle, especially recruitment of teachers ie
academic year - Predictability of payroll database in terms of
recruitment, promotions, retirements, etc - Integrate payroll into IFMIS
- Timely payment of wages and salaries
- Strengthen the Office of the Establishment
Secretary computerised personnel records
20BETTER FINANCIAL MANAGEMENT
- Where do we want to be?
- Real national strategy
- Real national standard
- Real national pride
- Real operational plans
- Real financial plans
- Real income generation strategies
- Real improvement for the poor
21WHAT STOPS US FROM GETTING THERE?
- Indecisiveness and fear of change
- Lack of law and order
- Society disgruntlement
- Social injustice
- Poor governance and corruption
- Low self-esteem
- Insecurity
- Low objectivity and professionalism
- Weak human resource and institutional framework
22DONOR SUPPORT TO PFM REFORM
- PFM reform has and will continue to receive
varied donor assistance, in particular - World Bank PSMS, IRCB
- EU MOF/Accountant Generals Office (IFMIS)
capacity and institutional building - DFID Audit Service, IFMIS
- AfDB Public debt management, support to
selected MDAs - Commonwealth Public debt management
- Various PIUs
- Agree a multi-donor budgetary support mechanism
in the context of the PRSP
23I THANK YOU ALL