Auditor-General cautions about poor performance information in municipalities

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Auditor-General cautions about poor performance information in municipalities
Auditor-General cautions about poor performance information in municipalities

Africa-Press – South-Africa. Cape Town – Auditor-General Tsakani Maluleke says they are concerned that few municipalities have presented credible and useful performance information during the audit period.

She told the National Council of Provinces, during a workshop on local government on Wednesday, that if 24% of municipalities can present credible performance information it showed there was a lack of discipline of performance planning, monitoring and oversight.

She said this was also the case where 28% of municipalities submitted credible financial statements for audit.

These issues must be addressed in municipalities.

Maluleke said these problems also point to the fact their recommendations as the office of the auditor-general are ignored.

The last audit report of the AG, which was released last June, showed that there were a number of problems in municipalities.

“If you turn to performance information a very similar picture emerges. Only 24% of municipalities were able to present credible, useful, reliable performance information for audit. Yes, a number of them corrected misstatements but the fact that only 24% could give us credible performance information tells us that again the disciplines of performance planning, monitoring, oversight and reporting those disciplines are not yet in place. We have reported again on persistence (of) high level non-compliance findings, which indicates that our annual recommendations largely remain unheeded. In our report we largely set out in great detail that the financial health of municipalities continued to deteriorate and we highlighted that the indications of this were that there was significant doubt about the ability of a number of municipalities to continue to operate to the future, Maluleke, said.

“We indicated that some of the indicators were the inability to pay creditors, the inability to collect revenue and the inability to collect outstanding debt. We also talk about how a number of them were continuing to rely on the equitable share to run their affairs, to pay salaries and council remuneration, which then took away funding that should be available for service delivery, for the maintenance of infrastructure and for the ongoing provision of services to citizens,” said Maluleke.

Many municipalities have over the period of time struggled to deliver services and are owed billions of rand by households, businesses and government departments.

The debt was sitting at R45 billion in 2010 but it has now shot up to more than R120bn.

The National Treasury has warned most of the debt would not be recovered.

Maluleke also said they need to instil discipline in the management of finances in municipalities.

“While many reasons can be cited for the poor financial health in local government, what we see is that the challenge tends to arise out of the inability to manage the funds that local government have. Our view is that we have got to insist on instilling those basic disciplines of financial management so that we can make sure that the funds we do have available are used in the most optimal manner,” she said.

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