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Strategic plan and budget of the Auditor General of South Africa for 2010 - 2013

Strategic plan and budget of the Auditor General of South Africa for 2010 - 2013. Version 1.0 16 October 2009. SCoAG presentation. page 1. Mission.

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Strategic plan and budget of the Auditor General of South Africa for 2010 - 2013

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  1. Strategic plan and budget of the Auditor General of South Africa for 2010 - 2013 Version 1.0 16 October 2009 SCoAG presentation page 1

  2. Mission The Auditor-General has a constitutional mandate and, as the Supreme Audit Institution (SAI) of South Africa, it exists to strengthen our country’s democracy by enabling oversight, accountability and governance in the public sector through auditing, thereby building public confidence. This is our reputation promise

  3. Table of contents • Strategic Plan and Budget 2010-2013 • Overview of AG Commitment • Simplicity, clarity and relevance of reports • Visibility of leadership • Strengthen human resources • Lead by Example • Funding • Detailed Budget • Conclusion • Audit tariffs • Audit directive

  4. Strategic Plan and Budget

  5. Overview of AG Commitment The AGSA remains committed to the following goals in order to impact positively on all aspects of public sector accountability: • ensuring simplicity, clarity and relevance of the messages contained in all our reports, including the quality, timeliness and deepening of stakeholders’ understanding of our reports • improving the visibility of our leadership through clear communication in championing the implementation of audit recommendations • strengthening the human resource strategy with particular emphasis on the comprehensive trainee auditor scheme • leading by example on matters of risk management, internal controls and transformation • focusing on the funding model with a view to stabilising our margins and cash flow situation

  6. Simplicity, clarity and relevance of our reports Regularity Audits • Regularity audits continue to drive achievement of clean audit opinions • Root cause analysis • Ensure simplicity, clarity and relevance of messages in AGSA reports • Quality and timeliness of our reports remain pillars of our reputation • Adopt best practice methodologies (incorporating roles and responsibilities) in order to achieve timeliness and quality of AGSA reports Auditing of Performance Information • Increase AoPI focus and visibility in order to expedite reporting on the achievement of service delivery goals in phased-in approach • National & provincial departments, constitutional institutions & trading entities • Municipal metropolitan councils & the related municipal entities

  7. Simplicity, clarity and relevance of our reports Performance Auditing • Performance auditing themes for 2010-11 are • Poverty reduction • The oversight and governance of State-Owned Enterprises • Government departments’ use of consultants

  8. Simplicity, clarity and relevance of our reports Objective: Continual improvement of the quality & timeliness of AGSA reports page 8

  9. Simplicity, clarity and relevance of our reports Objective: Continual improvement of the quality & timeliness of AGSA reports page 9

  10. Simplicity, clarity and relevance of our reports

  11. Visibility of our leadership • Our leaders will be more visible to external and internal stakeholders in order to drive the objectives of influencing improvement in audit outcomes • External interactions involve deepening of understanding of messages in our reports and monitoring of progress towards clean audit opinions • Understand & interpret audit outcomes • Discuss audit outcomes with the auditees, other stakeholders & escalate, where necessary • Monitor progress of implementation of audit findings, and analyse & escalate where necessary • Obtain feedback from stakeholders on the engagements with AGSA leadership Objective: Develop stakeholder relationships so as to influence improvement in audit outcomes

  12. Visibility of our leadership • Internal interactions will focus on leaders’ effectiveness in driving the • Performance-driven culture within the AGSA • Development of leadership competencies • Ongoing performance management system • Rolling out of values Objective: Achieve performance-driven culture within the AGSA

  13. Visibility of our leadership Objective: Develop stakeholder relationships so as to influence improvement in audit outcomes page 13

  14. Visibility of our leadership Objective: Achieve performance-driven culture within the AGSA page 14

  15. Visibility of Leadership

  16. Strengthen human resources • A skilled, motivated, high-performing & diverse workforce is a key enabler in delivering on our mandate. • Our focus will continue to be on • Reposition the recruitment process for strategic talent sourcing • Recognition-and-reward strategy and plan • Talent management strategy (grow talent from within) • The AGSA as a learning organisation • Reposition the TA scheme in line with agreed resolutions • Ensure Corporate Service MQF is applied Objective: Have a motivated, high-performing and diverse workforce

  17. Strengthen human resources Objective: Have a motivated, high-performing and diverse workforce page 17

  18. Strengthen human resources Objective: Have a motivated, high-performing and diverse workforce page 18

  19. Strengthen Human Resources

  20. Lead by example • As an institution we commit to continue to be exemplary by ensuring that • Our internal controls are observed and are in line with good practices • We monitor adherence by thorough internal & external audits • Implement the AGSA’s enterprise-wide risk management framework • Enhance the internal control environment through business process reengineering • Enhance Management Information Systems (MIS) Objective: Adhere to standards of excellence in all areas

  21. Lead by example • AGSA will contribute to the transformation agenda of our country • Develop and implement the broader transformation plan, focusing on • Economic development, • Poverty eradication and • Employment Objective: Maximise the AGSA’s contribution to transformation

  22. Lead by example Objective: Adhere to standards of excellence in all areas page 22

  23. Lead by example Objective: Maximise the AGSA’s contribution to transformation page 23

  24. Funding • We will continue running the organisation economically, efficiently and effectively • We will focus on • Horizontal and sectoral auditing • Optimising contract work vs own hours mix • Managing working capital including debt collection • Ensure cost-effective operations • Implementing and tracking the impact of the revised funding model

  25. Funding

  26. Funding Objective: Execute the AGSA mandate economically, efficiently & effectively page 26

  27. Funding Objective: Execute the AGSA mandate economically, efficiently & effectively page 27

  28. Detailed Budget 2010/11

  29. Projected income statement

  30. Net surplus as % of audit income Note: The AGSA continues to strive to achieve the target net surplus % through continuous cost cutting measures and increasing own hours revenue

  31. Overhead analysis

  32. Overheads Movement Explanation • Staff Remuneration - Increase due to salary increase provision of 7% • Other Personnel Costs - Increase in bonus provision from 1.61% to 2.35% of payroll • Contract work irrecoverable - This cost is made up of various projects, for example, ICT, Human Capital, IRBA Firm Level Review etc • Accommodation - Increase in rental area of 3226 square meters due to increase in headcount and increase in electricity • Liaison - Decrease in planned expenditure on regional congresses • Professional Assistance - More internal training planned, as opposed to more external training • Technological Services - Increase in computer services (eg, networks, support etc) due to increase in headcount • Auxiliary Services - Increase in cleaning services, publications, stationery and printing etc • Other Expenses - Increase in (Afrosai secretariat costs, finance charges (more laptops), employee wellness program, insurance and legal fees

  33. Conclusion and Proposed SCoAG interventions

  34. Conclusion and Proposed SCoAG interventions • This strategic plan and budget outlines the AGSA leadership’s commitment to realising our mission and vision • We are confident that we will achieve the set targets • We request SCoAG’s intervention in the following areas • Encouraging robust leadership monitoring and oversight at auditees to address audit findings • Regularly reviewing the appropriateness of our funding model • Engaging political stakeholders to assist us in the collection of outstanding fees

  35. Audit Tariffs

  36. Recoverable hours

  37. Calculation of AGSA Hourly Tariff • Hourly Tariff = (Annual Salary/Annual Recoverable hrs) * mark-up factor • AGSA average mark-up factor = 2.2 • Utilised 7% salary increase assumption • For example: • An audit manager with an annual salary of R500000 has a charge out for 09/10 of R824 per hour. • Assuming a 7% salary increase for 10/11 an audit manager will earn a salary of R535000 and have a charge out of R884 per hour. • This means a fee increase of 7.28% for our auditees.

  38. Calculation of SAICA Hourly Tariff • SAICA mark-up factor = 2.86 • Aligned recoverable hours to AGSA hours • Where existing rate was higher, left at existing rate • Where new rate was higher, capped increase at 7% • There is a 30% differential between AGSA tariffs and SAICA tariffs • For example, if we take an annual salary of R405000 • The AGSA rate is calculated as (R405000/1320hours)*2.2 = R675 • The SAICA rate is calculated as (R405000/1320hours)*2.86 = R878 • So the auditees pay a premium of (R878-R675) = R203 per hour on this band • This equates to a premium of 30% (R203/R675)

  39. Audit Directive

  40. Broad consultation on audit directive • The Directive sets out the audit standards of the AGSA, therefore broad consultation is necessary • Environmental scanning: Directive addresses lessons learnt from previous audit cycles, including readiness assessments (consultation/scanning with: auditors, AGSA senior leadership, AGSA technical specialists, NT, CFOs) • Technical developments: Directive is aligned to developments in accounting and auditing (consultation with: ASB, NT, SAICA Public Sector Committee, IRBA, AGSA Technical Committee, AGSA EXCO. Also, IFAC and INTOSAI developments are considered) • Consultation with SCoAG in terms of s13(1) of the PAA (planned for 16 October 2009)

  41. Key elements in the Directive • Applicability: all auditors of publicly funded institutions, including those that the AGSA opts not to audit itself (s4(3) of the PAA) • Enforces consultation by Institutions on the appointment of auditors (s25 of PAA) • Emphasises that the Audit Directive must be complied with and outlines the consequences of non-compliance • Confirms that an opinion will be issued on the financial statements in terms of international auditing standards • Elaborates on the AGSA phased approach to the audit of performance information and indicates the key areas of focus to be included in audit reports • Confirms that while no opinion is issued on non-compliance, this remains a reportable matter • Confirms that Performance Audits are undertaken in terms of INTOSAI standards • Confirms that Investigations are undertaken in terms of the AGSA’s own standards and guidelines • Specifies the standards applicable to audit related services and to reports on donor funds • Explicitly provides details of the AGSA response in terms of International Standards on Auditing to the different accounting frameworks

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