Redactive pricing audit and the CAG’s duties
The Hindu
Dated May 14,2019
K P Shashidharan
Dated May 14,2019
K P Shashidharan
The Supreme Court’s observations in connection with
the Rafale fighter aircraft deal by citing the Comptroller and Auditor General
of India’s (CAG’s) report on redacted pricing, and subsequent media reports and
the controversy over “stolen files” brought back into the spotlight the role of
the supreme audit institution of India.
Many questions arise before the stakeholders: What
is redactive pricing? Does the constitutional mandate provide redactive pricing
to be included in the CAG’s audit reports submitted to the President to be
placed before Parliament? Do any supreme audit institutions (SAIs) such as the
National Audit Office, the Government Accountability Office or Commonwealth
countries follow redactive pricing in audit reports?
Redaction is the selection or adaption by
‘obscuring or removing sensitive information’ from a document prior to
publication. The CAG is mandated to audit all receipts and expenditures of the
three-tier governments in India and report to the legislature judiciously,
independently, objectively in compliance with applicable laws, rules and
regulations, without fear and favour. He conducts financial compliance and
performance audits and submits his reports to the legislature to help people’s
representatives in enforcing legislative oversight and public accountability of
the executive. Legislative committees such as the Public Accounts Committee and
Committee on Public Undertakings examine the CAG’s selected reports.
Not transparent
In the preface of the audit report, the CAG stated
that redactive pricing was unprecedented but had to be accepted due to the
Ministry’s insistence citing security concerns. Consequently, the full
commercial details were withheld and the figures on the procurement deal were
blackened. It was unprecedented that an audit report submitted by the CAG to
the President under Article 151 of the Constitution suppressed relevant information. Whether the
Ministry’s insistence citing security concerns could have been accepted by the
CAG can be examined only by the Supreme Court in the light of the
constitutional provisions on the CAG’s duties and parliamentary privileges and
prerogatives.
Redactive pricing is nowhere used in SAI audit
reports. It does not seem to have been used in a government audit by any SAI of
any country. Redactive pricing in the ‘Performance Audit Report of the
Comptroller and Auditor General of India on Capital Acquisition in Indian Air
Force (Union Government – Defence Services, Air Force, Report No. 3 of 2019)’
suppresses more than it reveals. For example, in the Rafale deal, Parliament, its committees, the media and other
stakeholders of the CAG’s reports cannot obtain complete, accurate and reliable
information due to redactive pricing. The reduction in the original
requirement, to 36 aircraft, a waiver of the earlier decision to involve
Hindustan Aeronautics Limited, observations of the Indian Negotiating Team,
cost escalation due to inclusion of bank guarantee and performance guarantee
were not compared properly to arrive at the audit conclusion.
Pivotal to procurement
Pricing is the quintessence of any procurement
decision. Along with quality and quantitative specifications, comparative
merits and demerits are ascertained, and the pricing of comparable products are
compared in decision-making. Pricing is an integral part of the procurement
decision-making process of any equipment, product, goods or service. A
strategic competitive advantage of a product, how best it should be procured,
how many at a time are to be purchased and at what price and under what
conditions, terms, instalments, along with after-service conditions, discounts,
commissions and other conditions are evaluated to arrive at a purchase
decision. Therefore, price integrity and comparative competitiveness are at the
heart of any procurement decision.
The CAG is mandated to get into the nitty-gritty of
procurement terms, procedures, comparative advantages and disadvantages without
fear and favour to form an objective, independent and judicious audit opinion.
An audit is expected to analyse the facts and comparative pricing charts to
highlight the financial propriety and prudence of the procurement decision. The
institution is constitutionally mandated and empowered to do its duties
covering all essential factors about the procurement, customised end-to-end
pricing assessments, legal requirements, escrow accounting, terms and
conditions and arbitration clauses in compliance with legal and other
regulations.
The executive procurement decision is expected to
be completely analysed in the CAG’s audit to pinpoint inaccuracies,
non-compliance of essential procurement procedures, conditions and pricing
errors which may have a negative financial impact and cause potential damage to
the country’s interests.
Complex audit
Given the dynamics of international competition in
competitive products and pricing in today’s modern market scenario, pricing,
delivery and post-delivery service and other conditions are essentially covered
in an SAI audit. It is a complex audit, demanding exceptional insight,
expertise, knowledge and skills. In case the CAG’s office lacks expertise to
conduct a performance audit, expertise can be sought from the pool of resources
or credible organisations to be coopted in the audit team.
Pricing decisions must be subjected to detailed
analysis, without resorting to redactive pricing. Parliament is
constitutionally privileged to know what the executive had done and how and
under what conditions a procurement was decided. The CAG’s audit is expected to
highlight value for money in purchase decisions.
A performance audit is done to establish whether
the procurement activity was executed keeping in mind economy, efficiency,
effectiveness, ethics and equity. Only a thorough pricing audit can bring out
the credibility and integrity of a purchase decision, thereby achieving an
SAI’s constitutionally mandated responsibilities.
Reference:- https://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/redactive-pricing-audit-and-the-cags-duties/article27119997.ece
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