Thank you, Vice-Chair.
Yes, there certainly were. We actually make reference to some of these in the report, on page 17 of the English version.
Certainly, we think the way your committee and your Auditor General work together is a very high-level model and we are most interested in the strong and active relationship between the OAG and your committee. We have observed that already.
We like the clarity of the messages in the OAG reports. I think one of the challenges we auditors do have from time to time is that we perhaps use language that some others don't always understand. Clarity of message and clarity of communication are important. We think the reports that the OAG does are very good from that point of view, so we've taken on board that particular approach.
In regard to some of the collaborative audits the OAG does with other organizations, we found those very interesting. We in Australia have not worked collaboratively with other organizations in undertaking audits, but we do produce what we call here “better practice guides”, which basically seek to draw from the information we've learned from audits to articulate what is better practice, be it in grants, administration, or contingency planning, or even in how to prepare a set of financial statements; we have a series of better practice guides. In some cases we work collaboratively with other agencies to produce those better practice guides, so we're interested in those matters.
I think the last one was the area of the criteria for special examinations. We're interested in that.
I think it's like any other area of activity, in that we learn so much from international experiences, that is, speaking from here in Australia. In Canada, as has been mentioned by various committee members, the OAG is a great asset to your country. It's highly regarded. We learn a lot by just being in touch with the OAG. In this case, the whole review team flagged these four or five areas as areas where we could learn.
As Sheila Fraser mentioned, we do meet at international gatherings. We do contribute and learn from each other and share experiences. I, for instance, without taking much of the committee's time, am very focused on audit quality: trying forever to improve the quality of the products we produce, particularly the reports we produce. We have to do it in a fairly efficient manner because of resource considerations, but we are working very hard, particularly in our performance audits, to invest in quality in the early stage of the audits so that we're all aligned, and so that when it comes to producing the final report, we have a clear understanding of what the messages are likely to be and we are comfortable with how they're being produced.
I think every audit office is interested in improving the quality of its work. I think the positive thing, from the point of view of the OAG, is that the investment the office has in the quality management systems is a very good basis for producing quality work. The OAG faces the same issues that other audit offices do: it's about how to make sure the implementation of audits actually follows the management systems, the policies, and the procedures that the OAG has articulated.
The other final comment I'd make while I'm speaking is that there's no doubt that auditing these days does require a higher level of involvement. The risk-based approach does require mature consideration of risks to misreporting or to misperformance, and it does require a high level of senior management involvement, particularly in the planning and in the reporting phases and the review phases.
So it's gone from being.... In the old days, I used to send people out with lists of things to “tick and flick”, as we used to say, to check things off. Young auditors would be doing things, but they never understood exactly why they were doing them; a senior had told them to go do that. That's what you did, and you reported back, whereas what we're trying to do now is to make sure the whole audit team understands the risks there are to misreporting and to make sure the audit covers off those risks.
It requires a very thinking approach, a very intellectual approach, today, so I fully endorse what Sheila was saying about the importance of having more senior involvement in our audit teams, particularly in key stages.