Thank you very much.
I find your testimony quite positive, Mr. Kroeger. I share many of your sentiments. I think every organization or system is focused on providing a service or a product to ultimately a client or a customer, and government is no different. If we took some of the systems we've created in Ottawa and imposed them, let's say, on Toyota, I think it would take maybe a year before General Motors had completely surpassed them, and they'd be the ones in the financial pages with problems.
Generally speaking, in the private sector I think there are lots of case studies to show that companies that got to be dominated by number crunchers and accountants and audits are the ones that are going to hit the skids and fall behind the competition.
Another thing I recall from reading is that some of the really strong management people, such as Deming, said one of the keys in any organization is rooting out fear in the organization so that people can get on to do their jobs. In government I share your concern about risk-adverse things. There are so many rules and so many complications and cross-currents that it's darn hard for a lot of people to do their job, so that “when in doubt, mumble” might be the best strategy.
It leads me to one conclusion: what government should be doing is simplifying this excessive internal regulation, having fewer but more effective rules.
I'm pleased to see that you've come on board with our recommendation, which came out of our public accounts, to move toward the accounting officer concept, because a lot of the shenanigans we've seen in this committee over the years, it seems to me, we would have nipped in the bud right at the onset. So I appreciate your conversion to that; I see it as being one of the simplifying processes, so that we wouldn't need as many rules.
Another one that came up that intrigues me, because we saw it with the gun registry, is.... I think most of us suspect there were political overtones to the whole deal—that's another issue—but the Comptroller General and the rules made it quite clear, and the Auditor General made it quite clear, that you have to go to Parliament to get these expenditures approved. A deputy minister and her cohorts decided to find a creative way of getting around that.
We made a recommendation in this committee that if there were a disagreement between a deputy minister and the Comptroller General on a matter of accounting, basically the opinion of the Comptroller General should be final and conclusive and bring this thing to an end. I think that would have resolved the problem here, and the political masters would have had to face the music with Parliament on something that was really untoward in terms of Parliament and everything else.
What would be your reaction to our trying to simplify things and bringing in a rule like this, that if there's a fundamental difference over accounting between a deputy minister and the Comptroller General, the Comptroller General's opinion should be final on this matter?