On page 2 of the deck, Mr. Chairman, I provide an overview of my presentation. I'll be talking about the mandate of the work of the Office of the Auditor General, our audit products, our processes, our accountability, and how we measure the impact of the work of the office.
On page 3 we set out the legislative framework within which the office of the Auditor General works. Obviously, the key piece of legislation that governs our work is the Auditor General Act. It outlines our powers and responsibilities. It provides the mandate for the financial audit work that we do in government departments and agencies. It provides the mandate for the performance audits, the value-for-money audits, that the Office of the Auditor General does. It also sets out the role of the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development.
Members may know that Mr. Scott Vaughan is Commissioner of the Environment. Mr. Vaughan's mandate is set out largely in the federal Auditor General Act. He operates within the Office of the Auditor General and conducts, on my behalf, all the environmental auditing work of the office.
Our mandate with respect to the audit work that we do in crown corporations is set out in the Financial Administration Act. The Auditor General of Canada is the auditor of record for all crown corporations, except for two. The Financial Administration Act also sets out the Auditor General's mandate for the performance audits known as “special examinations” that we do in crown corporations.
The Federal Sustainable Development Act requires the government to prepare a sustainable development strategy and submit it to the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development for comment. The commissioner comments on the government's draft sustainable development strategy and then he conducts audit work related to that strategy and to the individual departmental sustainable development strategies under that act. There are many other statutes that also govern the work of the office, but the key ones are those three: the Auditor General Act, for departments and agencies, including the Commissioner of the Environment; the Financial Administration Act for crown corporations; and the Federal Sustainable Development Act.
Slide 4 sets out how we fit into our system of parliamentary democracy. As members are well aware, Parliament authorizes government programs and government spending. The government provides an accounting back to Parliament of its results and spending, and the Office of the Auditor General provides a report to Parliament on how effectively government has managed these programs.
I should also point out, Mr. Chairman, that the Auditor General of Canada is also the legislative auditor of the three territorial governments in Canada: Nunavut, the Northwest Territories, and Yukon. We largely play the same role that we play for the federal parliament with respect to those three territorial governments.
My presentation today will focus on the work that we do on behalf of the Parliament of Canada. I won't be speaking very much about the work that we do in the territories, but I'd be pleased to answer any questions that you might have in that respect.
Slide 5 talks about how we differ from government departments. This slide illustrates the legal provisions in the Auditor General Act and other legislation that ensure our independence. First and foremost, the Auditor General is appointed for a 10-year mandate. As a result of recent amendments to the Auditor General Act, that appointment now has to be confirmed by resolutions of both houses of Parliament. The Auditor General can only be removed on address of both the House of Commons and the Senate, so the Auditor General has a great deal of security in the tenure of the position.
I would point out, however, that the interim Auditor General is only a six-month appointment, which—not to make too fine a point of it, Mr. Chairman—comes to an end on November 30, 2011, some six weeks from now.
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The Auditor General has a great deal of flexibility to choose what subjects to audit. I will talk about this a little more in our presentation. We have a fairly sophisticated audit planning system to choose what we are going to audit. One of the most important decisions we can make is the decision what to audit. We have a lot of processes and systems behind all of that.
I get cards and letters daily from Canadians. I get hundreds of requests for audits from Canadians and individual members of Parliament. We consider all of those requests. We feed them into our planning process. The ultimate decision as to what to audit is made by the Auditor General of Canada. We couldn't begin to respond to every one of those requests that we get for subjects to audit.
I will contrast that very briefly with the requests from a parliamentary committee. If we get a parliamentary committee request to do an audit, which has all-party support, that will obviously go right to the top of the list.
With respect to all of the other hundreds of requests we get for audits, we consider those in our planning. Sometimes we are able to accommodate them; often we are not able to.
The Auditor General, in technical terminology, is called a separate employer. That means the Auditor General has the freedom to recruit, classify, and compensate his or her employees separately from the processes of government. That provides the independence we need in the staffing of the office. As a matter of policy, we try to align our compensation policies with those of the government. However, obviously we have complete freedom within the legislation—the Public Service Employment Act—to hire our own staff.
Finally, as you know, Mr. Chairman, we submit our reports directly to the Speaker of the House of Commons. We do not report to Parliament through any ministers of the crown, as a government department would. We report directly to the Speaker of the House of Commons and submit our reports to him or her. As you know, Mr. Chairman, by the Standing Orders those reports are automatically referred to this committee.
Page 6 of the deck talks about our budget. You provide us approximately $89 to $90 million per year of funding for the work of the office. In the current fiscal year, that comprises about $84.5 million for main estimates, and then a supplementary estimate of $4.4 million, which is largely for technical adjustments and the carry-over of previous year's lapsed moneys.
Our main office is in Ottawa. We have probably over 450 people in our office in Ottawa. The rest are spread out in our regional offices. We have regional offices in Vancouver, Edmonton, Montreal, and Halifax. Our offices in Vancouver and Edmonton focus most of their work on the territorial legislatures. They do most of the work we do in the Yukon and the Northwest Territories. The work we do in the Nunavut territory is largely run out of our Ottawa office.
We have about 630 to 650 employees, depending on which day you count them. More than 400 of those employees are auditors. All our auditors are either professional accountants, chartered accountants, certified management accountants, or certified general accountants, or they hold at least a postgraduate degree in the discipline we've hired them in. They will have at least a master's degree.
Page 7, Mr. Chairman, outlines our audit products. In the interest of clarity, we do four types of audits. We do financial audits in government. We audit the Public Accounts of Canada, which are arguably the largest set of accounts in the country, with $280 billion of revenues and expenses depending on the year and whether or not the government has a surplus or a deficit. The audit we do of the Public Accounts of Canada is our single largest audit each year. It requires over 30,000 hours of audit effort. It involves audit work in each of the large departments that form part of the Public Accounts of Canada.
Then as I indicated earlier, we also do about 120 financial audits per year, including the audits of all parent crown corporations, which include CBC, Canada Post, Export Development Canada, Atomic Energy of Canada, and so on. The only two federal crown corporations that the Auditor General does not audit are the Bank of Canada—the central bank—and the Canada Pension Plan Investment Board.
The performance audits, Mr. Chairman, are what this committee is most familiar with. We do between 25 and 30 of those audits each year. We table those audits in the House of Commons, or the Speaker tables them in the House of Commons on our behalf, and they are referred here. The committee considers many of those audits in its deliberations.
I mentioned special examinations of crown corporations. Those are the performance audits that we do of a crown corporation under the Financial Administration Act, and the scope of those audits is set out in legislation. They basically ask the question, “Is this crown corporation well managed?” Under the legislation, crown corporations are required to submit to the board of directors of the corporation those reports that we present. The board of directors is required to submit those reports to the minister responsible for the corporation, as well as to the , and they're also required to disclose them on their websites.
As a practice, we in the Office of the Auditor General will present the summaries of those special examination reports in a report that we provide to Parliament. You'll recall that in the status report we tabled earlier this year we presented the summaries of four special examinations of crown corporations.
Finally, the fourth key area of activity in the office is obviously the work of the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development, Mr. Vaughan. He conducts all the environmental audit work of the office, the sustainable development monitoring and the reporting work of the office. Mr. Vaughan's section of the office comprises about 10% of the auditors in the office. His budget is about 10% of the overall budget of the office.
In financial audits, as I've indicated on page 8, we provide a professional opinion, not unlike what you would see in the private sector, on whether or not you can rely on the organization's financial statements, whether those financial statements are fairly presented. The biggest one of those audits is the audit of government's summary financial statements, the Public Accounts of Canada, as I mentioned earlier. This requires over 30,000 hours of audit effort in government each year. Also, we do the annual audits of all crown corporations, except for the two I mentioned, along with similar audits in the three territorial legislatures. So we do about 120 of these financial audits each year.
On page 9, you'll see the performance audits, formerly called value-for-money audits. These audits answer whether the particular program or area of government activity being audited is well managed. Is it managed with due regard for economy and efficiency? Do they have measures to determine the effectiveness of the programs? We basically conduct those audits using audit criteria. The audit criteria are the standard against which we assess management's performance.
For the most part, what we try to do is to audit government's management of government programs against its own rules, against the rules that are set by the Treasury Board of Canada. Are they complying with the government's own rules in the management of the program? Where there are no clear rules, we will refer to best practices that might exist in industry, but largely, in a good number of those audits, they are just audited against the government's own policies and rules.
The Office of the Auditor General does not have a mandate to conduct effectiveness evaluation. We do not determine if government programs are achieving their objectives; that's government's role. We determine whether government has the means to determine whether or not a program is effective, but we do not audit effectiveness in the first instance. The example I might use there is the work that the Auditor General's office did on the gun registry: we audited whether or not that registry was being properly managed. The Auditor General never expressed a view as to whether or not the gun registry was a good or a bad public policy initiative. That is not the role of the Office of the Auditor General.
On page 10, special examinations of crown corporations, as I've mentioned, are a type of performance audit of a crown corporation. The scope of the audit is set in legislation, the Financial Administration Act, to include the corporation as a whole.
We do those audits of the crown corporations at least once every 10 years. Parliament changed the cycle of those special examinations a few years ago; we were previously required to do them every five years. In discussions with government, we supported an amendment to that legislation to lessen the audit burden on crown corporations, such that audits are now required only once every 10 years, or at such additional times as the minister responsible for the corporation or the Auditor General of Canada determines are necessary.
I mentioned the fact that the crown corporations are required to make those reports public, including the sitting minutes of the President of the Treasury Board.
Turning to page 11, the environmental auditing is lead by the Commissioner of the Environment and Sustainable Development, Scott Vaughan, who focuses his efforts on the government's management of environmental issues. He does a lot of work on the government's sustainable development strategies, and monitors the government's implementation of those strategies.
He also administers an environmental petitions process. Under the Auditor General Act Canadians can submit petitions dealing with environmental issues to the Office of the Auditor General. The Office of the Auditor General forwards those petitions to the responsible minister, and the legislation gives the responsible minister 120 days to respond to those petitions. We monitor the minister's responses to those petitions and we present, once a year, in our report to Parliament a summary of the petitions we have received from Canadians. These petitions also help us to determine which audit subjects dealing with environmental issues we might select in the future.
Turning to page 12, I'm going to start talking about our audit process. The next few slides refer to this process. The key messages I want to leave with you here are about what we do to ensure that we are relevant to Parliament, that our audit work is important to Parliament, and about what we do to satisfy all parliamentarians--this committee in particular--that our reports can be taken for granted, that you can trust our reports and have confidence in what we report to Parliament.
Page 13 refers to how we select the audit topics. Obviously, one of the most important decisions we can make in doing an audit is deciding what to audit in the first place. Government is incredibly large and complex, with many business lines. We can't profess to audit all of it every year, and it's even difficult to cover the enormity of government activity over a 10-year period of an Auditor General's mandate. So we have quite a sophisticated risk-based planning system for choosing what to audit. The key factors are the risks to the achievement of the organization's objectives, the significance to Parliament, and adequacy of the level of our coverage of government activities.
We invest significant resources in this planning exercise. And as I indicated earlier, Mr. Chairman, we pay particular attention to the requests we get from parliamentary committees. The hundreds of other requests that we get for audits, we feed into that planning process and do the best we can to accommodate all of those—but we're not able to do so.
As I indicated earlier, there are some limits to the mandate, limits that I believe are entirely appropriate. I have no concerns with these limits. The Office of the Auditor General does not comment on policy issues, which are the prerogative of Parliament and of the government. We are the auditors of the federal government: we do not audit municipalities, we do not audit first nations, we do not audit the private sector. We focus our activities on how the federal government manages its affairs.
Page 14 asks how do we ensure audit quality? One of the most important things that we have to do when we present our reports to Parliament is to give you the assurance that you can have confidence in that report, that you can rely on the findings of the Office of the Auditor General.
How do we do that? First and foremost, we follow auditing standards set by the accounting and auditing profession in Canada. We do not set our own auditing rules; we follow the standards that are set by independent standard-setters. We have highly trained professionals, highly qualified professionals, who conduct the work. I mentioned earlier that all of our auditors are professional accountants and have at least a master's degree in their particular discipline.
We have quite a sophisticated and, frankly, Mr. Chairman, quite expensive quality management system in the Office of the Auditor General. We have a comprehensive set of audit manuals, audit methodology, and tools. For those who were members of this committee in the previous Parliament, you'll be aware of a project that we're about to complete in the office that we call our revised audit methodology. We are updating all of our audit manuals for each of our product lines to bring them into line with state-of-the-art practices in the private sector. Our financial audit practices, I believe, are among the best in the world. When we roll them out this fall, our performance audit practices and performance audit manuals, I believe, will be the best in the world.
I'm very proud of the quality of the methodology we have behind our audit work. But that said, it's expensive. We have a code of values and ethics in the office to which all staff are expected to adhere. In particular, coming back to my theme about independence, all auditors in the office are required to certify they are independent for every audit they work on, and they have to certify their independence once a year through a formal annual certification process.
We use a lot of experts or outside advisers in our audits, including for virtually every one of our performance audits and special examinations. We engage experts from outside the office to give us advice on what to audit and how to report, and we subject the office to external reviews. I'll talk about that in a few minutes, but the Office of the Auditor General has been reviewed at least three times by external people to confirm the quality of the work we do.
Next is page 15, with six to go, Mr. Chair.
How am I doing? I'll go more quickly.
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The Auditor General has a number of advisory bodies that provide advice to the Auditor General personally. We have a panel of senior advisors made up of former politicians--very credible and senior politicians. Mr. Broadbent is a member of our panel of senior advisors. Mr. Joe Clark is a member of our panel, as is Gordon Ritchie. We meet with them once or twice a year to get advice on our performance audits.
I have an independent advisory committee, made up of the most pre-eminent accountants in Canada, to give us advice on our financial audit practices. We have a panel of advisors on aboriginal issues. We'll be talking about aboriginal issues later on this week.
The Commissioner of the Environment has his own advisory panel on environmental issues.
We have an audit committee chaired by a retired private sector public accountant who is very familiar with the public sector. We've had that audit committee in place for the better part of two decades. It advises me on the management of the office.
As to our accountability, members of this committee will be aware that we appear at least once a year before the PACP to explain the management of the office and to talk to you about our report on plans and priorities and our performance report. So we are held accountable once a year before this committee.
We have been working to encourage the formulation in the Standing Orders of an advisory panel on the funding of officers of Parliament. As officers of Parliament, we think our funding should be determined primarily by parliamentarians. I like Michelle d'Auray, but I don't think she is the person who should be determining the funding of the Office of the Auditor General. So we have been working toward the creation of an advisory panel that would oversee the funding and administration of all officers of Parliament.
The Office of the Auditor General is subject to an annual financial audit by a private sector accounting firm. We are subject to the scrutiny of the other officers of Parliament. The Privacy Commissioner and others can come in to look at the work of the Office of the Auditor General. The Office of the Auditor General is proactive in its disclosure of all the administrative functions in the office. I would point out that under the Access to Information Act, we are prohibited from disclosing audit information. The audit information we collect is not subject to access to information requests, which I believe is appropriate to protect the integrity of the audit process.
I mentioned that we've had three peer reviews. In 1999 an accounting firm reviewed our financial audit practice. In 2003 the national audit office of the U.K. led a review of our performance audit practice. In 2010 we had a review done of all of the work of the office, led by the Australian national audit office. That report was discussed with this committee in the previous Parliament. The conclusion of that report was that Parliament could rely on our work, but there were some things that we needed to improve as well.
As for the impact that we have, there are a number of performance measures reported in our departmental performance report. The key one has to do with the implementation of our recommendations. The good news is that if you look at our status reports on the follow-up of our previous work for the last three years, we've reported satisfactory progress in implementing the Auditor General's recommendations in seven of thirteen areas. That's not bad, but it could be better. We will continue to work to improve our own follow-up and reporting on the implementation of our recommendations.
Members will be aware that the government is undertaking a strategic review, or deficit reduction action plan, looking to achieve savings of $4 billion by 2014-15. The Office of the Auditor General has voluntarily decided to conduct its own review. We are in the process of finalizing that review now. I would like to present the results of the strategic review that we have done of the Office of the Auditor General and discuss them with this committee in the coming weeks. I'll be sending you and the chair of the advisory panel on funding of offices of Parliament a letter shortly on how we propose to proceed with our strategic review.
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Thank you for that, Mr. Chairman, and for the opportunity to appear before the committee.
It's my first appearance in its new constitution, so congratulations to you all. I'm sure I'll be back a few times.
Given your interest, I will give a brief overview of the roles and responsibilities of the Treasury Board Secretariat. But given your expressed interest in the expenditure management system, especially the estimates and supply processes, the public accounts audit, and financial management, my colleagues, Jim Ralston, the Comptroller General, and Bill Matthews, the assistant secretary of expenditure management at the Treasury Board Secretariat, will be picking up on my presentation to talk about their areas of responsibility.
[Translation]
I will start by setting out the functions of the Treasury Board and its secretariat.
The Treasury Board is a committee of cabinet which was established in 1867 and given statutory powers in 1869. It sets the government's administrative and management policies; authorizes and reports on expenditures and sets program and other authorities; and establishes the workplace and workforce policies for the government, including the terms and conditions of employment for the core public administration. It is in essence the government's management board, the budget office, and the people management office. Given the committee's mandate and interests, I will focus my remarks on the management board and budget office roles.
[English]
The secretariat is the departmental arm of the Treasury Board. It supports the board in fulfilling its mandate by performing an enabling function, as we call it; a challenge and oversight role; and a leadership role in driving and promoting management excellence. By working with senior officials in departments and agencies and with various communities of practice, as we call them, such as deputy heads, financial officers, information officers, and heads of human resources, it enables organizations to develop the tools, the capacity, and the processes they need to fulfill their management responsibilities.
In driving and modelling management excellence, we support effective management of people and the development of leadership practices. In exercising our challenge and oversight role, we review and assess requests for expenditure and other authorities that are brought to the Treasury Board. We assess government-wide expenditures against priorities, and we provide Treasury Board ministers with our recommendations and advice. We aim to ensure that government is well managed and accountable and that resources are allocated to achieve results.
[Translation]
With regard to the management board function, there has been a significant shift in the way in which the Treasury Board Secretariat exercises its roles and responsibilities. We have moved away from the prescription of centrally-driven and detailed rules, policies and directives, to principles-based frameworks and policies, focused on the appropriate allocation of resources (human, financial, and material) to achieve planned results, with the concomitant reporting mechanisms. The accountability for implementation, compliance and reporting rests with each organization and its deputy head.
[English]
The secretariat uses a variety of tools to assess an organization's management capacity, the most comprehensive of which is the management accountability framework, or MAF. Through this process organizations self-assess, or report, against 14 areas of management; and secretariat officials play a challenge role and rate the organizations against their expected performance. These areas of management cover the most important elements of financial, human resources, and material management, but they also include management of information technology and security, for example, as well as values and ethics.
The MAF's objectives are to clarify management expectations of deputy heads and support an ongoing discussion on management priorities and best practices; to provide a comprehensive perspective on the state of management practices and challenges in the federal government; and to identify government-wide trends in order to help deputy heads set priorities and resolve core issues.
[Translation]
For example, as you will hear from the Comptroller General with regard to internal audit, our audit policy requires that organizations have an internal audit function, with appropriate professional certification, that reports directly to the deputy head to establish its independence from the daily operations of the organization; an organization must also establish an audit committee made up in large part of people independent from the public service. Beyond using the MAF to assess whether these elements are in place, the OCG also assesses, for example, whether the organization's audit plan offers sufficient coverage and is aligned with its stated risks.
[English]
In taking a more risk-informed approach to our policies and compliance requirements, we've also been consciously reducing the reporting burden on organizations. For example, we have significantly streamlined many of our policy reporting requirements by combining them in large part with the annual assessment of organizations through the management accountability framework.
[Translation]
We are also increasingly moving to electronic and web-based reporting and publications—as evidenced by the new quarterly financial statements and detailed tables in the Public Accounts. Our minister is strongly encouraging us to reduce the paper burden on organizations and parliamentarians, and we will be piloting the move away from paper tabling to electronic or virtual tabling. With regard to our budget office role, we have also made significant changes—focusing on the allocation of resources to the government's priorities, and reporting on expenditures against performance and results.
[English]
Organizations are required to have a resource management and program activity reporting framework against which resources are attributed and indicators measure performance. These are the elements that members of Parliament will see in organizations' reports on plans and priorities, and which are set out every year in the performance reports on how we achieve those results.
More recently, as I just mentioned, organizations have also been required to post on the web their quarterly financial statements outlining actual expenditures against planned expenditures, and to set out any significant risks or issues that could effect their plans. The first quarterly financial statements were posted on each organization's website on August 31, and the next posting will be at the end of November.
We are one of the few countries in the world with such a comprehensive and public results-based reporting system.
[Translation]
In keeping with our budget office role, and with our goal to align resources to priorities, over the past four years, the secretariat has overseen the strategic review process, during which organizations’ program expenditures were reviewed to reallocate funds from low to higher priorities and to reduce overall program expenditures. Starting in 2007 and concluding in 2010, 98% of the government’s program expenditures have been reviewed, and ongoing savings of $2.8 billion have been achieved. This year, we will be reviewing all direct program expenditures with a goal of achieving savings of at least $4 billion by 2014, as part of the government’s deficit reduction action plan.
[English]
Mr. Chair, we've seen the changes and evolution in the enabling, leadership, and challenge roles played by the secretariat, as reflected in the way the Office of the Auditor General sets its priorities in auditing organizations and in its appreciation of the government-wide responsibilities of the secretariat. We've been pleased to note the OAG's increasing openness to relying on the work of internal audit in organizations, in recognizing the roles and responsibilities of deputy heads in the management and oversight of their organizations, and in the secretariat's movement away from prescription to more results-based and risk-informed management policies and directives.
All in all, Mr. Chair, we are seeing, and have seen, significant improvements in the management of public resources.
My colleagues will further elaborate on how the secretariat supports organizations in Parliament with regard to expenditure management and internal audit.
[Translation]
This concludes my remarks and I will ask Bill Matthews to continue with his presentation on the estimates process.
[English]
Thank you for inviting me here today to speak about the process of supply. What we mean by “supply” is the process used to actually resource departments. In this case, we're talking about estimates and all that goes on behind them.
You should be looking at a deck entitled “An Overview of the Supply Process and Public Accounts”. I will be walking you through the first part of this deck that covers supply, and then I will turn it over to the Comptroller General to wrap up the story, which ends with the presentation of the public accounts.
First, when you're dealing with supply, understand that it starts with the law. Both the Financial Administration Act and the Constitution Act state that no money can be spent out of the consolidated revenue fund without the authority of Parliament. That's our starting point.
I'll provide some background on how we get there. We have something called the expenditure management system. It governs how things actually make it into the estimates, which turn into appropriation acts approved by Parliament, which then resources departments.
Departments can get authority to spend money in one of two ways: either Parliament approves an appropriation act, or there's specific legislation that gives departments the authority to spend money. In most cases, you'll see us refer to voted appropriations. That is what an appropriation act is.
If a department has specific legislation that allows it to spend money, it's called a statutory spending authority. You'll see an “S” next to it in the main estimates or in the supplementary estimates. That basically tells you that the department has the legal authority to spend money without the appropriation act. Parliament does not vote on those dollars; it's for information purposes only. I'll expand on that a little bit later on.
Before something can get into the estimates and into an appropriation act for Parliament's approval, it has to go through a process inside government. That starts with departments making proposals to cabinet. Cabinet will assess spending proposals against the direction of the government, the Speech from the Throne. If they get endorsement there, when you are accumulating items for the next budget, there'll be a decision made by the Minister of Finance and the Prime Minister on whether to include something in the budget. That's then tabled in Parliament by the Minister of Finance.
Once there is a hook to the budget, departments can go away and develop detailed proposals on new programs. That's where Treasury Board comes in. If there is a new program, one has to put some thought into the resources required for the program, how one will evaluate the results, and the timing of the expenses. That results in a Treasury Board submission.
Once you get Treasury Board approval, that's when you can get into the estimates for approval by Parliament, either through the supplementary estimates or through the main estimates. But you need to understand that when we're talking about estimates, this is not just a case of departments thinking that they need some more money. There's a very complex, rigorous process, which we call the expenditure management system, that occurs before an item can be included in an appropriation act for approval by Parliament.
What are the main estimates? Estimates are provided to Parliament to enable its study of the appropriation act. This is a key point. Parliament does not approve the estimates; the estimates are provided to Parliament to assist in its study and ultimate approval of the appropriation act. When we're talking about what Parliament approves, it's the appropriation act itself. These estimates documents are provided to assist in the study of that legislation.
Estimates, both the main and supplementary estimates, are tabled in the House of Commons by the President of the Treasury Board and referred to the appropriate committee. From a House of Commons perspective, the committee on operations and estimates as well as the Senate finance committee will spend some time studying these things.
Another key point on estimates that I would leave with you is that these are not expenses; these are authorities to spend up to an amount. Departments make their best estimates as to what they'll spend. There is no requirement to spend it all; it's an up-to amount. It's a largely cash-based number based on actual expenditures. There is no requirement that you spend the entire appropriation. One should really read what's being asked for in the main and supplementary estimates, along with the departmental reports on plans and priorities, to see what the plans are for those moneys.
Why are we providing this? There are two bits to elaborate on here. First is information items. Where we have a statutory expense that has been provided for the information of Parliament, we will use both the main and supplementary estimates to update parliamentarians on what the latest forecasts for those items are. If you're wondering what an example of a statutory payment might be, think of the interest on the public debt. We just pay that. We pay what is due. There is no voted amount from Parliament.
You could also think about EI payments. If someone qualifies for employment insurance and meets the requirements, there are no checks made to ensure that there's enough money left in the vote. The person either meets the eligibility requirements or doesn't. We're just providing parliamentarians with an estimate of what we think will be spent on that front, but Parliament does not vote on that type of expense.
If you're looking for rough estimates, generally speaking on an annual basis one-third of the total spending of the government is voted; two-thirds is statutory. So it's one-third voted and two-thirds statutory.
Turning to slide 4, I will speak a little bit about what's actually in the estimates. There are three parts that we should speak about when it comes to the main estimates. Part I of the main estimates is the overall government expenditure plan. That will provide you with an analysis at a very high level of key changes between the main estimates of the current year and the main estimates of the previous year.
We then get into part II of the main estimates, and that is where you see the information that directly supports the appropriation acts that Parliament will ultimately approve. What you will see in there is information by department on what they're planning to spend. Both part I and part II must be tabled in Parliament by or before March 1. If you think about that, it makes perfectly good sense because the fiscal year starts April 1. It's important that departments have authority to spend money when the new fiscal year begins, so the requirement is that those documents get tabled on or before March 1.
Part III is the departmental expenditure plans. There are two pieces there. One is the report on plans and priorities, which outlines what the department is planning on accomplishing for the upcoming year. Typically these plans are tabled by March 31. If you think about last year, they were tabled in June because of the election and the House was not in session, but generally speaking they are tabled by March 31.
Typically in the November timeframe, departments table their departmental performance reports, which outline what was actually accomplished against their report on plans and priorities.
I'll speak about the supplementary estimates later, but they are tabled as required through the year. There are three supply periods that are possible. The government can table up to three sets of supplementary estimates (A), (B), and (C). In the last few years the government has attempted to do supplementary estimates for (A), (B), and (C). Last year supplementary estimates (C) were not approved. The appropriation act was not approved by Parliament—again because of the election—but the estimates were actually tabled.
Slide 5 gives a little bit about the cycle. This will show the linkages between the estimates and the public accounts, with which this committee is more familiar. If you think of the start of the fiscal year being April 1, the budget typically comes before that, usually in the February-March timeframe, and main estimates will get tabled and discussed before the fiscal year starts. We want to give sufficient time to committees and Parliament to study the main estimates and the appropriation act that goes with them. The process that is actually in place is what's called interim supply. Essentially, to provide adequate time for the committees to study the main estimates, Parliament typically approves an appropriation act that covers departments for the first three months of the fiscal year, and that's interim supply. Once parliament has completed its studies--typically before the end of June--we will get full supply for the following year or the entire year. When you're into the June timeframe, we are typically tabling supplementary estimates (A). They typically come not too far behind the main estimates.
You might wonder why we are tabling supplementary estimates right after the main estimates. The reason is the tight timeframe between the budget and the main estimates; there's not enough time to include new budget items in the main estimates. If there's an urgent item that was included in the budget and that's read to go, we typically include it in supplementary estimates (A). More often than not, you'll see another group of items coming in supplementary estimates (B) in the fall timeframe.
So there is a well-established calendar in the House of Commons that establishes the supply period and what has to happen. Supply gets voted on the last opposition day of each of the three supply periods. The final period of the year is when the public accounts are tabled, the current time period, when you'll get the results from the previous fiscal year. The Comptroller General will speak more to that. You will also see Canada's performance as well as the departmental performance reports, so you will have knowledge of what happens there.
Next, I'll discuss a little bit about what Parliament can actually do with estimates. When both the main and supplementary estimates are tabled, they are referred to committee for study. What committees can actually do is to decide whether to approve the votes. They can decide not to approve, or negative, the votes, so that the amount will be zero. Or they can decide to reduce an amount. A committee cannot recommend an increase in a vote. A committee cannot recommend that an amount be transferred from one vote to another. So there are limits on what the committee can actually recommend. There is a vote to concur with main or supplementary estimates on the last opposition day in the supply period. Once that vote occurs the appropriation act must be passed. That then turns into royal assent. Once we have royal assent, departments can go ahead and start spending money.
If you're wondering what happens when Parliament is not in session, there is a process called the Governor General's special warrants, allowing the proper approval of spending if Parliament is not in session due to an election. I'm happy to take questions about just how that process works, because departments did start this fiscal year operating on Governor General's special warrants.
I will flip ahead to slide 8. I've already touched on this, but interim supply is the first appropriation act of the year, and generally gives departments 3/12 of their requests in the main estimates, just to allow them to get the year going while Parliament complete its study of the appropriation acts. If an organization has an uneven spending pattern, i.e., they have to make a lot of contribution payments early in the year, there is a process whereby they can request more than 3/12. But our approach going in is that we give them 3/12. If they have a justified request for more than 3/12 to get them through the first three months of the year, we include that where warranted.
We have to have full supply approved as it relates to the main estimates, typically before the House rises for the summer to allow spending to occur beyond that period.
Turning to slide 9, the supplementary estimates are largely misunderstood. People tend to assume they're the result of inaccurate estimates by the government in the main estimates because they are tabled in addition to the latter. This is all about when the appropriate approvals have been received. So if you're not ready for main estimates because, although something was in the budget, there was insufficient time, it's perfectly fine to come forward in the supplementary estimates to get approval. So it's all about when a certain initiative has received the requisite cabinet and Treasury Board approvals, and it is then included in the next available set of estimates. So that could be supplementary estimates (A), (B), or (C), or it could be main estimates in a following year.
You will see things in the main estimates from this year that were part of Budget 2010, but it just took that time to go through the requisite approvals, to do the due diligence, and to make sure that all was ready to go for inclusion in the next set of supplementary estimates.
Just for a frame of reference, supplementary estimates (A) for the current fiscal year were tabled in Parliament in June. Supplementary estimates (B) will be tabled at some point in early November, with supply granted in mid-December.
Slide 10 makes the point about the link between the main estimates and budgets. If there is insufficient time to get the requisite cabinet and Treasury Board approval for items in the budget, then they are included in the main estimates.
In the 2011-12 main estimates, you will see items that were part of Budget 2010, as an example, the extension of the first nations water and wastewater action plan. You'll also see funding for the Canadian Space Agency to develop RADARSAT. Those items were in this year's main estimates as part of Budget 2010. You may see items from Budget 2011 coming in supplementary estimates (B), or even in subsequent main estimates.
Before I pass the mike over to my colleague, the Comptroller General, I will summarize the key points. One, items within the main and supplementary estimates are not just a matter of departments having made requests. There is a process called the expenditure management system to make sure the requisite cabinet, budgetary, and Treasury Board approvals are in place. Two, appropriations are an up-to amount. It is not a must that you spend that amount, but the authority to spend up to a certain amount on a cash basis. Three, Parliament does not approve estimates. Parliament approves legislation, which in this case is the appropriation acts. The estimates are tabled to assist Parliament and committee study of the appropriation acts. Finally, no money can be spent from the CRF without the approval of Parliament. That's a key point in both the Financial Administration Act and the Constitution Act.
With that I will turn to the Comptroller General to speak about how estimates then flow into public accounts.
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As Bill pointed out, the estimates aren't about spending, but about authority. So they are prospective. By contrast, the public accounts are about spending and are retrospective. Once we've been through the supply process and the money has been spent, it comes time for the government to account for how that money was spent and to make it transparent to Parliament and Canadians. That's where the public accounts kick in.
On page 11 of the deck, the public accounts are defined as the annual report of the Government of Canada for the fiscal year ending March 31. They gets presented in three volumes. The financial statements are contained in volume 1, and continued in volumes 2 and 3 are many other disclosures required by law, policy, or convention. All of these are tabled in the House of Commons.
On page 12, the source of the authority is the Financial Administration Act, sections 64.(1) and 64(2). It is basically there. The authority goes to the Receiver General of Canada for the preparation of the public accounts, and to the President of the Treasury Board for tabling it. It is for the President of the Treasury Board and Minister of Finance jointly to determine the form and content.
On page 13 of the deck, there is a little more detail. Volume 1, as I mentioned, contains the financial statements of the Government of Canada, the report and observations of the Auditor General, financial statements discussion and analysis, and then details on certain financial statement components.
The financial statements are prepared in accordance with the public sector accounting standards, which are promulgated by the Public Sector Accounting Board in Canada. Essentially that's what the Auditor General is talking about when he issues an opinion, whether the financial statements are fairly presented, as the term “fairly presented” would be defined or implied through the application of the public sector accounting standards.
The financial statement, discussion, and analysis, as anyone who has looked at any set of financial statements, corporate or public sector, would know, is fairly dense and technical. The financial statement discussion and analysis is very helpful, because it tries to comment on the financial statements and interpret them and make them a little more accessible to those who are not qualified accountants as such. That is its purpose.
Volume 2, as I mentioned, has more details. It includes comparisons of actual spending, by ministry, to that in the estimates. This raises another point. The estimates documents that Bill was talking about are done ministry by ministry. The public accounts do provide a consolidated view of government in volume 1, and detailed views, ministry by ministry, in volume 2. Volume 3 contains financial statements of revolving funds and other information required by the Financial Administration Act, treasury board policies, or various sources.
All of the public accounts are available in their entirety on the web, and most of the public accounts are also printed. There is an exception, in that a portion of volume 3 is not printed because of its voluminous nature. Nevertheless, it remains part of volume 3 and is available on the web.
On page 14, there is a bit of a discussion about the actual process for producing the public accounts. It's a huge coordinated effort that involves the Treasury Board Secretariat, the Receiver General of Canada, all departments and agencies, and the Office of the Auditor General. We really do have to plan and coordinate together to make all of the pieces come together in accordance with the tight timeframes dictated by tabling and whatnot.
The OCG's role, my role, is the determination of the application of public sector accounting standards and comes into play largely with the treatment of new or unusual transactions. Much of what goes on is routine, but we'll get involved in those kinds of things also.
The Receiver General performs the physical consolidation of all of the material that individual departments produce. All of that material is done in prescribed format. There are many entities, something like 165 entities, if you added them all up. So there is a need for a certain amount of standardization to be able to pull the accounts together, and that's the job of the Receiver General.
Moving to page 15, the Department of Finance is the author of the financial statement discussion and analysis piece that appears in volume 1. They also prepare an annual financial report, which is a summarized version of what goes in the public accounts.
We've already heard from John about the Auditor General's role, and of course this committee's role, in reviewing the public accounts once they're ready.
In terms of the whole process, Bill and I have mentioned part of it. On page 16 you will see it all laid out. The interesting thing is that just because of its duration, it ends up spanning a number of calendar years, and even fiscal years.
If you see a particular cycle, starting with the budget.... Here we used Budget 2010 to illustrate this, a budget that appeared in March 2010. The main estimates appeared in March 2010 and the supplementary estimates in May and November of 2010. When Budget 2011 rolls around, a portion will be an update or a forecast of how the 2011 year is appearing, because that will inform the setting of next year's budget. Then in the fall, the annual financial report and the public accounts come out. So as you can see, the whole process, from when granting authority is provided to when final accountability is rendered, is a fairly lengthy cycle.
From page 17, I just want to mention that something new has occurred this year. It's not strictly speaking part of public accounts, but it's certainly part of the same family. Here I refer to the production of quarterly financial reports. In the past, as I have said, there's been annual information at the consolidated level, and at the individual department level for year ends. For interim or in-year financial information, the Department of Finance did produce, on a consolidated basis, information about how the year was progressing. What was missing was the ability to look at individual departments in-year to see how the year was progressing.
The innovation we now have is quarterly financial reports, which requires departments and crown corporations, for the first three quarters of the year, to produce a quarterly financial statement. Then in the fourth quarter, of course, we have the appearance of the public accounts, which wraps up the year.
Treasury Board policy instruments were used to prescribe the form and content of the reports, and the first publication of QFRs came this past August.
That concludes our discussion of the supply and accountability process. I also have a deck, which you should have, on internal audit.
Do I have permission to pass to that topic?