Chapter 4 Strengthening the audit independence of the Auditor-General
Background
4.1
The independence of the Auditor-General is fundamental to public
accountability in Australia. In 1996, the Joint Committee of Public Accounts
in its report Guarding the independence of the Auditor-General stated:
If the Parliament cannot ensure the independence of the
Auditor‑General from the Executive, and if the Executive can effectively
inhibit the effective discharge of audit functions by starving the
Auditor-General of resources, then the chain of public accountability is
broken.[1]
4.2
The independence of the Auditor-General is clearly defined in Part 3 of
the Auditor-General Act 1997, which states in part:
- the Auditor-General
is an independent officer of the Parliament;
- subject to this Act
and to other laws of the Commonwealth, the Auditor-General has complete
discretion in the performance or exercise of his or her functions or powers. In
particular, the Auditor-General is not subject to direction from anyone in
relation to:
- whether
or not a particular audit is to be conducted; or
- the way
in which a particular audit is to be conducted; or
- the priority to be given to any particular matter.[2]
4.3
There were only two issues raised specifically under this term of
reference: the appointment of the Auditor-General and the Auditor-General’s
budget allocation.
Appointment of the Auditor-General
4.4
The appointment of the Auditor-General is set out in Schedule 1 of the Auditor-General
Act 1997. The Auditor-General is appointed by the Governor-General on the recommendation
of the Minister.[3] The Minister is required
to refer the proposed recommendation to the Joint Committee of Public Accounts
and Audit for approval. The legislation further states that the Minister must
not make a recommendation to the Governor‑General unless the JCPAA has
approved the proposed recommendation by absolute majority. The Act does not
provide any detail on the selection process for a candidate.
4.5
The Public Accounts and Audit Act 1951 outlines the role of the
JCPAA in the appointment of the Auditor-General. Specifically, the JCPAA has forty-four
days to approve or reject the recommendation and if a decision is not made within
the required time period, the Committee is considered to have approved the
proposal.
4.6
Whilst acknowledging the integrity of all current and former Auditors‑General,
the Institute of Public Administration Australia submits that when the position
of Auditor-General is not advertised it could be seen as a ‘grace and favour’[4]
appointment for someone from the central agencies of government. The IPAA is
also concerned that the appointment process is not transparent and appears
perfunctory.[5]
4.7
Additionally, the IPAA submits that the impact of the requirement to
consult the JCPAA is not clear, stating:
... the executive (the Finance Minister) routinely informs
the JCPAA of the name of the intended candidate possibly only a few days before
the announcement is made. There may be some private processes through which the
JCPAA indicates views on potential candidates and its acceptance of the name
that is eventually and formally brought forward by the Finance Minister, but
that is not at all clear.[6]
4.8
In the 2009 paper “Can the Executive influence the ‘independence’ of the
Auditor-General”, Dr Charles Lawson elaborates on the role of the JCPAA in the
appointment of the Auditor-General. Lawson maintains that selection of the
candidate is subject only to a veto by the JCPAA and states:
...the majority of members of the JCPAA are government
Members so that a majority decision about appointment ...will merely reflect
the Executive’s perspective.[7]
4.9
The Auditor-General told the Committee that there was no question that
there could be a more open process for the appointment of the Auditor‑General.
However, he also advised the Committee that at the time of his appointment a
recruitment consultant had been employed by government to find a candidate and,
although it was not advertised in the press, there was a lot of work done
behind the scenes to find a suitable candidate.[8]
4.10
Mr Glenn Poole, the convenor of the Australian Council of Auditors‑General
expressed the view that the appointment of the Auditor-General should be as
open and transparent as possible so that there cannot be any suggestions that
might impact on the independence of the person who is appointed.[9]
4.11
The IPAA outlined to the Committee a possible alternative to the current
appointment process. This involved a model similar to that within the
Executive arm, where ‘the Public Service Commissioner plays a significant role
in relation to a range heads of agencies and statutory authorities’.[10]
Under this model, the final decision still rests with government, however, it
involves a process of transparent merit protection arrangements, a selection
committee and advertisement of the position.[11]
4.12
Under the Auditor-General Act 1997 only the current
Auditor-General has been appointed to date.[12]
Committee comment
4.13
The Committee is satisfied that the current arrangements for the
appointment of the Auditor-General are appropriate and it therefore makes no
recommendation in this regard. In the interests of enhancing transparency around
the appointment process, however, the Committee notes the recent selection
process undertaken by the Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet to
re-appoint the Independent Auditor of the ANAO, Mr Geoff Wilson on 19 March
2009. In particular, the Committee welcomed the advice it received on the
selection process, including advice on the applications received and a briefing
on the reasoning behind the recommended appointment.
4.14
The Committee expects that a similarly transparent process including
full advice on the applications received and a briefing on the rationale behind
the recommended appointment would be followed with regard to the appointment of
the Auditor-General.
Budget resourcing
4.15
In its submission, the IPAA also suggests possible reforms to the budget
process for the ANAO. In particular, it suggests that the JCPAA could nominate
a preferred budget to the Department of Finance and Deregulation after the
Auditor-General has provided advice to the Committee. The IPAA assert that
this would require the Government to transparently accept or reject the JCPAA’s
preferred budget.[13]
4.16
The IPAA also made further suggestions that the ANAO be given a three
year one line budget with draw-downs and carry-forwards or for the ANAO’s
budget to be benchmarked against all other OECD Audit Offices on some pro-rata
basis.[14]
4.17
The Committee notes that the IPAA’s suggestion about the budget process was
based on the following assumption:
The budget of the Audit Office is supposedly separately
allocated and voted upon by the JCPAA but we understand that the budget is
provided by Finance and the Auditor-General is given no option but to state
that the resources are sufficient to perform his/her duties.[15]
4.18
At the hearing on 22 June 2009, the Auditor-General challenged this
assumption and reiterated that each year the JCPAA is provided with the
Auditor-General’s views about resourcing.[16]
4.19
For the sake of clarification, the Committee outlines its
responsibilities in this regard as follows.
4.20
Through the Public Accounts and Audit Committee Act 1951 (sub-sections
8(j) and (l)) the Committee is empowered to consider and make recommendations
to the Parliament on the draft budget estimates of the ANAO. As with other
public sector agencies, the ANAO is funded each year through the federal budget
process. However, over the second half of the financial year the
Auditor-General briefs the Committee on the funds he/she will be seeking in the
budget and why, and the ANAO’s informal understanding of which of its proposals
are likely to be successful or unsuccessful.
4.21
In support of this process the Auditor-General Act 1997 empowers
the Auditor-General to disclose to the JCPAA, before the federal budget, the
draft estimates for the Audit Office (effectively the ANAO’s budget submission).
The Committee then has the information it requires to make formal representations
to Government on behalf of the ANAO if necessary.
4.22
Immediately before the federal budget is delivered to the Parliament,
the ANAO briefs the Committee on its funding allocation for that year. The
Committee Chair then makes a statement to the Parliament, on budget day, on
whether the Committee believes the ANAO has been given sufficient funding to
carry out its functions.
4.23
This power is intended to discourage governments from trying to
influence the Auditor-General by unduly restricting his/her funding, and is
reinforced by the Committee having the information needed to make
representations to the Executive Government on behalf of the ANAO if necessary.
Committee comment
4.24
The Committee has a unique role in scrutinising the proposed budget for
the ANAO and it makes representations to Government when necessary in advance
of the federal budget.
4.25
The Committee takes its role very seriously and discharges this
obligation with great diligence. The Committee sees no need for any
legislative amendment to the current arrangements.
4.26
In the interests of transparency, however, the Committee accepts that it
may be prudent for any of its written representations to the Government to be
published unless there are compelling reasons for not doing so.
4.27
Further, with regard to the IPAA’s suggestion that the ANAO be given a
three-year one line budget, the Committee has publicly endorsed calls from the
Auditor-General for the ANAO’s funding to be placed on a more sustainable
long-term footing by indexing its budget to the rate of growth in the public
sector.[17]