The Accounts of Canada
The financial role of the House of Commons
does not end with voting supply or authorizing measures to raise revenue. The
House also acts as a “watchdog” to ensure that federal money is
spent in the amounts and for the purposes authorized by
Parliament. [398]
This
monitoring function (often described as “closing the loop”) is
delegated largely to the Standing Committee on Public Accounts, which examines
and reports on the Public Accounts of Canada, as well as on all reports
of the Auditor General of
Canada. [399]
The Public Accounts of Canada
Under the Financial Administration
Act, the Receiver
General [400]
is
responsible for ensuring that accounts are kept for each department and agency
of the Government of Canada. These accounts must show all expenditures made
under each appropriation, all government revenues, and all other payments into
and out of the Consolidated Revenue
Fund, [401]
together
with whatever assets, liabilities and related reserves are deemed necessary to
present a fair picture of the country’s financial
position. [402]
The
accounts of each individual department and agency are rolled up into the
Accounts of Canada.
Each year, the President of the Treasury
Board tables a detailed report of the financial transactions of all government
departments and agencies, entitled the Public Accounts of Canada. The
report must be
tabled [403]
on or
before December 31 next following the end of the fiscal year to which the
accounts apply; or, if the House is not sitting, on any of the next 15 sitting
days of the
House. [404]
As a
matter of tradition only, the Public Accounts are addressed to the Governor
General.
The fundamental purpose of the Public
Accounts of Canada is to provide information to Parliament, and thus to the
public, which will enable them to understand and evaluate the financial position
and transactions of the government. Two constitutional principles underly the
public accounting system: that duties and revenues accruing to the Government of
Canada form one Consolidated Revenue Fund, and that the balance of the Fund
after certain prior charges is appropriated by the Parliament of Canada for the
public service. [405]
Responsibility for the form and content of
the Public Accounts of Canada rests with the President of the Treasury
Board [406]
and the
Minister of
Finance. [407]
The
financial statements are prepared under the joint direction of the President of
the Treasury Board, the Minister of Finance and the Receiver General for
Canada. [408]
By law,
the Accounts must include, for the fiscal year to which they apply, a statement
of all the government’s financial transactions; a statement of all
expenditures and revenues; a statement of the assets and direct and contingent
liabilities of Canada; the Auditor General’s opinion on the Accounts,
pursuant to the Auditor General Act; and whatever other accounts and
information the President of the Treasury Board and the Minister of Finance deem
necessary to represent fairly the financial position of Canada at the close of
the year. [409]
Currently, the Public Accounts of
Canada are divided into two volumes published in three separately bound
books. Volume I contains the opinion of the Auditor General; the
financial statements of Canada on which the Auditor General has expressed an
opinion; a 10-year summary of the government’s financial transactions;
analyses of revenues and expenditures, and of asset and liability accounts; and
a variety of government-wide summaries of revenues, expenditures, loans and
investments. Volume II is divided into two parts: the first gives details
of the government’s financial operations, segregated by ministry; and the
second provides additional information and analyses, such as the financial
statements for revolving funds, transfer payments and public debt
charges. [410]
Until 1993, the Public Accounts included a
third volume which contained financial information on Crown corporations.
Volume III has been replaced by the Annual Report to Parliament: Crown
Corporations and Other Corporate Interests of Canada, a consolidated report
on the businesses and activities of all parent Crown corporations and other
corporate interests of the Government of
Canada. [411]
The
Annual Report is prepared by the Treasury Board Secretariat for the President of
the Treasury Board, who tables it in the
House. [412]
The Auditor General of Canada
The Auditor General of Canada is an officer
of Parliament, appointed by the Governor in Council under the Auditor General
Act, to audit the accounts of Canada and investigate the financial affairs
of the federal
government. [413]
The
Auditor General holds office for a period of 10 years, or until the age of 65,
whichever comes first. The term is not renewable. The position was first
established in the Audit Act,
1878. [414]
That
legislation was replaced in 1886 and in 1931 by the Consolidated Revenue and
Audit
Act, [415]
which, in turn, was repealed by the Financial Administration Act,
1951. [416]
Initially, the Auditor General was responsible only for auditing expenditures;
before they were made (pre-payment audit) and after they were made (post-payment
audit). In 1977, Parliament enacted the current Auditor General Act which
broadened the Auditor General’s mandate beyond attesting to the accuracy
of the government’s financial statements, to examining how well the
government managed its financial
affairs. [417]
As auditor of the Accounts of Canada, the
Auditor General examines the government’s financial statements to ensure
that the information is presented fairly, in accordance with stated accounting
policies, and on a basis consistent with the previous accounting year.
Additional responsibilities for special examinations of Crown corporations are
set out in the Financial Administration
Act. [418]
The
Auditor General is empowered to undertake whatever examinations and inquiries
are deemed necessary to produce the reports required under the terms of the
Auditor General
Act. [419]
The Office of the Auditor
General carries
out three types of audits — attest audits, compliance audits and
value-for-money audits. Attest auditing verifies that the government is keeping
proper accounts and records and that it is presenting its overall financial
information
fairly. [420]
Compliance auditing ensures that the government collects and spends only those
amounts of money authorized by Parliament and only for the purposes approved by
Parliament. Finally, value-for money auditing assesses whether or not government
programs were run economically and efficiently, with due regard to their
environmental effects. They also assure Parliament that the government has the
means in place to measure the effectiveness of its
programs. [421]
Since
1995, the Office has been responsible also for evaluating the extent to which
department activities meet their environmental and sustainable development
objectives. [422]
Where such an assignment does not interfere
with the primary responsibilities of the office, the Auditor General may also be
asked by the Governor in Council to inquire into and report on any matter
related to the financial affairs of Canada or to public property, or to inquire
into and report on any person or organization that is seeking or has received
financial aid from the Government of
Canada. [423]
The Annual Report
The Auditor General must report annually to
the House of Commons, drawing the House’s attention to any cases
where:
- accounts have not been properly maintained or money not properly accounted for;
- the accounting procedures used are insufficient to safeguard the collection and spending of public
money;
- money has been spent without due regard for economy and efficiency, or other than for the purposes appropriated
by Parliament; or
- appropriate procedures to measure and report program effectiveness have not been
implemented. [424]
The Auditor General Act requires
that each annual report be submitted to the Speaker of the House of Commons on
or before December 31 in the year to which the report relates and that, upon
receipt of the Report, the Speaker table it forthwith. If the House is not
sitting at that time, the Annual Report is tabled on any of the next 15 sitting
days of the
House. [425]
At the
request of the Auditor General, the Speaker has frequently agreed to table the
Report in the House at a predetermined time, usually just before
“Members’ Statements”, although there is no requirement that
it be tabled at that
time. [426]
Once
tabled, the Report is automatically referred to the Standing Committee on Public
Accounts. [427]
Prior
to the tabling of the Report in the House, the Auditor General typically gives a
briefing on its contents to members of the Public Accounts Committee, at an
in camera session. In addition, the Chairman of the Committee will
normally invite Members to a
“lock-up”, [428]
during which they may examine the Report to be tabled later in the day and be
briefed in advance by officials. A lock-up for the media is also normally
arranged.
Changes to the Act introduced in 1994
authorized the Auditor General to make up to three reports each year over and
above the Annual Report, any special report on matters of pressing
importance or urgency, or any special report on the funding of the Auditor
General’s
Office. [429]
Where
such an additional report is to be tabled, the Speaker must be advised in
writing of the subject matter, and the report itself is submitted to the Speaker
30 days after the notice is sent, or after any longer period which may be
specified in the
notice. [430]
The
Speaker is required to table the report forthwith or, if the House is not
sitting, on any of the next 15 sitting days of the House.
Since the enactment of the 1994 provisions,
the Auditor General’s Annual Report has been submitted to the House
in several volumes; the first of which has been tabled in the spring, a second
in the fall and a final volume in November or
December. [431]
The
final volume tabled continues to be known as the “annual” report and
contains the sections on “Matters of Special Importance”, as well as
follow-ups to previous audits. Each volume contains a foreword from the Auditor
General, in addition to the individually numbered
chapters [432]
reporting on the various studies undertaken and the value-for-money audits of
departments and agencies. Audit notes and observations may be included in any or
all of the volumes, where deemed appropriate.
The Standing Committee on Public Accounts
Under the Standing Orders, all reports of
the Auditor General, as well as the Public Accounts of Canada, are deemed
permanently referred to the Standing Committee on Public Accounts as soon as
they are tabled in the
House. [433]
Since
1987, the Committee has also been responsible for scrutinizing the annual
Estimates for the Office of the Auditor General.
Since 1958, the Committee has been chaired
by a Member of the Official Opposition, while the parties are represented in
proportion to their voting strength in the
House. [434]
The
Committee’s main functions are to ensure that public money is spent for
the purposes authorized by Parliament, that extravagance and waste are minimized
and that sound financial practices are encouraged in estimating and contracting,
and in administration generally. The Committee does not concern itself with the
appropriateness of government policy; rather, it focusses on the economy and
efficiency of its administration. The Committee regularly reports its findings
to the House. The reports typically state conclusions and recommendations on
matters pertaining to the improvement of managerial and financial practices and
controls of government departments, agencies and Crown
corporations.