Showing posts with label Consolidated Fund. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Consolidated Fund. Show all posts

Friday, May 13, 2016

2012 Accounts and Report



Commentary on the recently published Government of Anguilla 2012 Accounts
The latest Report on the Government’s Accounts by the Chief Auditor of Anguilla has now been published.  You can download it from the Government of Anguilla’s website: http://www.gov.ai/documents/hoa/Government%20of%20Anguilla%20Accounts%202012.pdf.  This Report relates to the income and expenditure of the Government of Mr Hubert Hughes in the year 2012.  It is over 75 pages long, but you don’t need to read all of it.  It is sufficient to read his Summary Report on the first 13 pages to have a full understanding of what a disaster zone the government’s accounts for 2012 appear to be. 
The Internal Audit Department must be congratulated on the hard work they have obviously done.  They have enabled the Chief Auditor to get the 2012 Report out a mere six months after the 2011 Report was published in November 2015.  The 2011 Report was the first report on Anguilla’s public accounts published in the nearly 50 years that Anguilla has managed its own finances.[1]  This is nothing short of remarkable.  It took 50 years for the first set of public accounts and auditor’s report to be published, and now the second one has been put in the public domain in a matter of a few months.
As in his 2011 Report, the Chief Auditor’s Certificate on the 2012 Report is a “qualified” one.  The use of this word “qualified” by an auditor is a serious matter.  It indicates that the opinion he expresses is not a clear or a clean one.  In his Certificate at pages A, B and C of his Report, he explains why his Certificate has to be a qualified one.  I summarise his reasons below, in case you don’t get a chance to read it for yourself.
The Consolidated Fund:  All money received by or paid out by the government of Anguilla is required by law to be paid into the Consolidated Fund.  The law is the Financial Administration and Audit Act (the Act).  The purpose for this provision is obvious.  If all money is paid into and paid out of one account, it makes it easy for an auditor to check what money was received, and what money was paid out.  If the money is paid into multiple accounts, or not deposited at all, it becomes impossible to say with certainty what money was received.  Chaos will reign in the accounts.  The law requires that this not be done.
Role of House of Assembly:  All money paid out on government expenses is required to be authorised by the House of Assembly.  The Assembly does this each year by approving the estimates of government’s income and expenses in what is called the Appropriation Act.  Each government department puts together its estimates for its income and expenses, and the Ministry of Finance puts them all together in a budget called the Estimates.  When the House of Assembly approves government’s total income and expenditure, it passes the Appropriation Act.  If, half-way through the year, a department discovers it needs to increase its estimate of income, or of its expenses, it puts together a request to the Assembly to approve this variation, and the Assembly passes a Supplementary Appropriation Act.  Without the approval of the Assembly, any payment of public funds is illegal.
Contingency Warrants:  The Minister of Finance is permitted in an emergency to authorise a department to make a variation from the amount approved, but he is expected by the Act to seek and obtain the approval of the Assembly from time to time.  Only the Minister, not a public servant, can sign the authorisation varying the amount approved for a particular purpose.  General Orders, the contract signed by every public servant in the employ of the government, provides that if any Permanent Secretary authorises an expense or payment that is not approved in an emergency by the Minister of Finance, or more generally by the Assembly, he will be made to reimburse the public funds out of his own pocket.  This is all set out in the law and in General Orders.
Chief Auditor’s Qualified Certificate:  You don’t have to be an accountant or even qualified as a book-keeper to understand what the Chief Auditor is describing in his Qualified Certificate.  What he sets out in his Summary Report at the four pages marked H, I, J and K appears to show that the public service of Anguilla treats the Consolidated Fund as a gigantic ‘slush fund’.  One definition of ‘slush fund’ is “money earmarked for a loosely defined, but legitimate, purpose that is instead surreptitiously used for an illegitimate purpose.”
The Chief Auditor’s Certificate is qualified for a number of reasons, all which he sets out.  In summary, some of the payments made by government departments, or exemptions from payments that were supposed to be made by taxpayers, were not legal.  In his opinion, a number of matters were not regular or in compliance with the legal requirements.  These are some of them.
Company registrations:  The Companies registration law sets out the fee to be paid to government for forming a company.  During 2012, government entered into arrangements with certain company registration agents to form companies in bulk at a discounted fee.  These discounts amounted to EC$2.3 million.  However, these discounts were not authorised by law.  They were illegal.
Reallocation warrants:  The Minister of Finance is allowed by law to reallocate surpluses enjoyed by a department to be spent even though in excess of the amount authorised by the Assembly.  He does this by way of what is called a “reallocation warrant”.  However, all reallocations issued in 2012 were authorised by the Permanent Secretary and not by the Minister.  The reallocations made during 2012 were not authorised in the manner required by the Act.  Not some of them, but all of them.
Tax revenue:  He reports that the Government of Anguilla has not been able to satisfy him that all payments due for property tax, the interim stabilisation levy, or taxes on goods and services have been paid.  So, government cannot show it has collected all the tax revenue it is supposed to collect under existing legislation.
Advances:  The law permits the Minister by an “advance warrant” to authorise the Accountant General to make advances to a government department from the Consolidated Fund.  However, advances made in 2012 were not authorised by the Minister.  This practice of unauthorised advances continues to be made despite our reading in the earlier report his warning that the practice must stop.
Remissions:  Once the Assembly has said what amount is to be paid in tax, no government official may excuse a particular taxpayer from paying the amount due.  Any forgiveness of a tax requires approval by the Assembly for it to be lawful.  That is so basic that it should not need emphasising far less repeating.  But, yet again, the Chief Auditor reports that Executive Council continues its practice of selectively excusing certain taxpayers from payments due under the law.  This amounts to ministers illegally granting favours to selected taxpayers.
The Chief Auditor expresses a “qualified” opinion on the government’s financial statements for the year 2012 for several reasons.  The illegal discounts, unauthorised reallocations, incomplete records on property and other taxes, unauthorised advances from the Consolidated Fund, and illegal approvals of remissions, cause the Chief Auditor to find that the accounts are irregular or not regular.
His opinion is “qualified” further because government does not maintain adequate accounting records to support the completeness, accuracy, and validity of advances, deposits, arrears of revenue, remissions, and gifts made to government.
The question we all ask is whether his report on the coming 2013 Accounts will show any significant improvement.  Or, will the Consolidated Fund continue to be nothing but a gigantic slush fund manipulated by senior public servants on a whim?



[1]     Government has recently put this 2011 Report up on its website, and it may be downloaded or read at: http://www.gov.ai/documents/hoa/Government%20of%20Anguilla%20Report%20and%20Accounts%20of%20the%20Consolidated%20Fund%202011%20New.pdf. 

Thursday, October 22, 2015

Anguilla Public Finance Order 2015

AN EXERCISE IN HERMENEUTICS
A draft Order in Council, proposed to be made by the British Government to apply to Anguilla, has been widely and publicly circulated in Anguilla in the past days.  I have now read it, and can explain that its essential provisions are contained in 12 sections as follows:
·        By section 1, the Order replaces and supersedes any Act of the Legislature or Order in Council which is in conflict with it.  This expressly includes the present Anguilla Constitution, 1982.  If any provision of the Constitution were to conflict with this Order, the Order would prevail.
·        Section 2 deals with interpretation and definitions.
·        By section 3, certain General Principles are set out.  Principally, the Government will be obliged to formulate a new Fiscal Framework which will set limits on levels of public debt.  This Fiscal Framework will be agreed with the Secretary of State before its adoption, and which will replace the existing Fiscal Responsibility Act, 2013.
·        Any decision of the Government, or any Government policy, or any Act of the House of Assembly which would, in the opinion of the Governor, exceed the Fiscal Framework will require prior approval of the Secretary of State.
·        The Minister of Finance will be required to report to the House of Assembly every 6 months on the performance of Government in implementing the Fiscal Framework and on the state of public finances and the state of the economy of Anguilla.
·        When any proposed Appropriation Bill (the Government’s annual budget) would not be balanced, the Minister shall explain the reasons for the failure to the House of Assembly.
·        Where, in the opinion of the Secretary of State, Government is likely to be in breach of the Fiscal Framework then the following consequences arise.  (i) The Governor will have the power to enact any legislation, by Order published in the Gazette, thought fit to ensure compliance.  (ii) Government shall agree with the Secretary of State a Medium Term Fiscal Plan to meet key debt ratios.  And, (iii) the Governor may appoint a Chief Financial Advisor who shall be obliged to comply with any direction given to him or her by the Governor.
·        By section 4, no variation of any tax, rate or other levy shall be made by any Minister or the Government except under the authority of an Act.  Where an Act authorizes any person to vary a tax, rate or levy, that person shall report to the House on such exercise of power not less than every 6 months.
·        By section 5, the Minister shall ensure that all contingent liabilities of the Government (including pensions and healthcare) are subjected to independent actuarial assessment every 2 years and shall report to the House within 2 months.
·        By section 6, all monies received by the Government shall be paid into the Consolidated Fund.
·        By section 7, no money shall be withdrawn from the Consolidated Fund except to meet expenditure charged on the Fund by a law in force in Anguilla.
·        By section 8, the Minister of Finance shall at least 6 weeks before the beginning of each financial year lay before the House the estimates of revenue and a document setting out targets for revenue and expenditure, and the House shall publish them without delay.
·        By section 9, the Minister is required to introduce into the House an Appropriation Bill and any necessary Supplementary Appropriation Bills, and the Governor may refuse to assent to any such Bill if it would be inconsistent with the Fiscal Framework.
·        Section 10 limits Government’s power to borrow except as authorized by an Act and in accordance with the Fiscal Framework.  If the UK’s Department for International Development (DfID) guarantees any borrowing by the Government of Anguilla, the guaranteed borrowing shall be repaid as quickly as possible.  The Governor may on behalf of Government enter into counter-indemnity arrangements with HMG in connection with any borrowing by Government and shall ensure compliance by Government with any obligations under any such arrangements.
·        By section 11, the Governor may act contrary to any advice by Executive Council if compliance with such advice would be inconsistent with the Fiscal Framework.  The Governor may give directions to any Minister or public officer to ensure compliance with the financial obligations of Government, and the recipient shall be obliged to comply.  The Governor may after consultation with the Chief Financial Adviser make legislative proposals to Executive Council and may establish an independent review of the performance and functioning of any statutory body and may dissolve the Board of any statutory Board and reconstitute it.
·        By section 12, the Governor’s functions under the Order do not have to be in accordance with the advice of the Executive Council.
These provisions of the draft Order indicate that the following problems exist in connection with the finances of the Government of Anguilla:
·        The macro-economic and fiscal policies of the Government are not being formulated and conducted for the sustained long term prosperity of the people of Anguilla.
·        Anguilla’s public funds are not being managed according to established principles of value for money, affordability and regularity and in the interests of long term financial stability.
·        The Government has no framework document setting limits on the levels of public debt relative to public revenue.
·        The Minister of Finance does not report regularly to the House on the financial performance of Government or the state of the public finances and the state of the economy of Anguilla.
·        The Governor does not presently have sufficient power to ensure that Government does not breach the existing fiscal framework and the Governor needs power to enact law to ensure compliance with the new Fiscal Framework.
·        The Governor needs a Chief Financial Officer, who will be under the Governor’s control, to carry out any functions which may be prescribed by the Governor (which will, presumably, mean enforcing compliance by Ministers and public servants with the government’s legal and financial obligations).
·        Ministers of Government are imposing, waiving and varying taxes, rates and levies without the authority of a law, and this needs to be stopped.
·        Where Ministers waive and vary taxes, rates and levies, they do not report or account to the House of Assembly.
·        There has not been any actuarial assessment of Anguilla’s contingent liabilities.
·        The public monies of Anguilla are not being paid as required by existing law into the Consolidated Fund but are being paid into unauthorized accounts.
·        The public funds of Anguilla are not presently being invested or used according to law, but are being kept or handled in unauthorized ways.
·        Monies are presently being withdrawn from the Consolidate Fund contrary to law.
·        The Minister of Finance is not placing the Estimates promptly before the House as he is expected by law to do, nor is he setting targets for government’s revenue and expenditure, nor are the Estimates being published promptly, as is presently required by law.
·        Excessive expenditures by government departments, over and above that authorised by the annual Budget, are not being legalised by an appropriate Supplementary Appropriation Act as required by law, and government’s spending of public money needs to be better regulated.
·        The Anguilla Government is not complying with its existing undertakings to the British Government to regulate borrowings by the Government.
·        DfID may, as a consequence of mishandling of public funds by the Government of Anguilla, be required to lend money to the Government of Anguilla, and there is a need to ensure that such borrowing is repaid promptly.
·        Ministers and public servants are acting against the interests of the public of Anguilla, and they need to be further regulated.
·        The statutory boards of Anguilla (such as the Social Security Board, and the Anguilla Health Authority), which are appointed by Ministers, are not reporting accurately on their financial performance, and they need further regulation, including giving the Governor the power to dissolve and reconstitute such Boards.
All of these errors and weaknesses described above are a terrible indictment on the management by successive governments of Anguilla of the public finances.  We have evidently for decades been mis-managing Anguilla’s public monies.  It should hardly be necessary to point out that all such mis-management has been conducted under the scrutiny of the FCO and by a cabinet of Ministers headed by the FCO-appointed Governor who chairs their meetings in Executive Council.  I think we would all agree that it is high time that someone brought the Executive Council to its senses and insisted that the island’s public finances be properly managed. 
The only proposed provision that I can see that will result in bad governance is the imposition of a Chief Financial Officer.  The creation of a ‘finance tsar’ with power to consult with the Governor in overturning decisions of not just ExCo but also the laws of our House of Assembly, is anti-democratic.  It is much to be preferred that, instead, Ministers and senior public servants be held accountable under the law for their management of our funds.  The existing laws are more than adequate for ensuring good governance.  All that is necessary is that they be enforced.  
Besides that caveat, all the other provisions of the Order are appropriate and belong in our Constitution to govern our government.
Revised 9 April 2018 to improve formatting