Thank you, Mr. Chair. We thank you for this opportunity to meet with the committee to discuss three chapters from our November 2006 report.
The first chapter is an overview of the federal government's expenditure management system. The other two chapters are audits. Chapter 1 looked at the expenditure management system at the centre of government, and chapter 2 looked at the expenditure management system in departments.
As you mentioned, I am accompanied by Doug Timmins, Richard Domingue, and Tom Wileman, who are responsible for these audits.
Before I speak about these expenditure management system chapters, I should mention that we were unable to audit certain aspects of government operations managed by the Treasury Board Secretariat because we were denied access to information we needed. We attempted to determine whether the secretariat had adequately fulfilled its challenge and oversight responsibilities related to government spending. In the audit of the expenditure management system at the government centre, we were denied access to the analysis conducted by the secretariat, on the basis that they were cabinet confidences. I would like to inform the committee that since the completion of the audit, the Auditor General's access to this information has been clarified by a new order in council.
The Expenditure Management System is at the heart of government operations, because every government activity involves spending. Over the last six years, federal spending has grown from $162 billion a year to $209 billion.
An effective system to manage spending is essential to getting the results the government wants and to being accountable to Canadians for what is done on their behalf.
We found that there are two expenditure management processes: one for reviewing new spending initiatives and one for recommending ongoing funding for existing programs.
New spending proposals therefore are not normally assessed against existing programs. As a result, trade-offs and reallocation of funds between existing and new programs are not considered systematically.
Spending on existing programs essentially moves forward automatically through the Annual Reference Level Update exercise. The current system does not routinely challenge ongoing programs to determine whether they are still relevant, efficient and effective. The process is not designed to take into account past performance and results of programs.
I am concerned that the system focuses on challenging new spending proposals and, in effect, ignores ongoing spending, which accounts for the bulk of total spending.
Instead, existing programs are reviewed usually when a government wants to cut spending, yet the three departments we discussed in chapter 2, “Expenditure Management System in Departments”, have not developed the capacity to respond to reallocation requests from the centre of government.
In many cases, the amount of funding allocated to a program, the length of the funding period, and the distribution of funding over that period are not aligned with what is needed to deliver the program. This affects how programs are managed and delivered to Canadians.
Finally, we found that departments rely on supplementary estimates to get funding for items that could have been included in the main estimates, largely because of the timing of the budget decisions. This means that Parliament does not see the full range of proposed spending at one time. Little has been done to reduce this reliance on supplementary estimates, which has more than doubled in recent years to 10.5% of the total estimates from 1999 to 2005, as compared to 4.5% during the previous eight years.
Departments also start to spend, using existing appropriations, before the supplementary estimates are approved. This puts program spending at risk because Parliament could reduce or reject the supplementary estimates. It also undermines parliamentary control because money is spent before Parliament has examined and approved the spending proposal.
Late last year, the government announced a series of reforms to the Expenditure Management System. The proposed reforms appear generally consistent with the recommendations made in our audits for improvements to the present system. However, the government has not yet released the specific details. The committee might want to ask the witnesses for more information on these reforms, including the implementation plan, in order to assess the extent to which the plan to reform the Expenditure Management System addresses our observations.
Mr. Chairman, this concludes my opening statement. We would be pleased to answer the committee's questions.