A civic-technology organisation, Paradigm Leadership Support Initiative (PLSI), has said that the poor implementation of audit law is hindering transparency and accountability in 34 states.
The group, which carried out a Subnational Audit Efficacy on all the states of the federation, said it found out that citizens’ participation in the audit process was quite poor across 17 states.
The civil society also lamented the failure of 19 states to publish their full audit report for the 2020 financial year.
According to the organisation, this is limiting citizens’ ability to engage public officials using audit information
Executive Director of PLSI, Segun Elemo, noted that the Public Accounts Committees in 31 Houses of Assembly were not quite effective.
He said this during the presentation of the 2021 SAE Index report in Abuja.
Elemo also said that the lawmakers were found to lack the required capacity to perform their statutory oversight functions on public accounts or were unwilling to do so.
According to him, the methodology for the 2021 SAE Index was expanded to include six scoring criteria, including audit legal framework, audit mandate, type of audit document produced and published, type of audit conducted, citizens’ participation in the audit process and role of public accounts committees.
Elemo said: “The SAE Index 2021 ranked Bauchi and Osun State first, having scored 88 per cent while Akwa Ibom and Ekiti states occupied third and fourth places, scoring 86 per cent, respectively.
“Adamawa, Delta, Ebonyi and Gombe scored 70 per cent and graded 12th as Lagos and Benue States were rated 35th and 36th having got 41 per cent and 39 per cent in that order.
“While there is a visible improvement in enacting audit legal framework in virtually 36 states except for Anambra and Benue states, implementation of these laws has been disappointingly slow in most states despite issuance of letters by many state governments instructing relevant agencies to commence implementation.”
The PLSI director further outlined a few cross-cutting recommendations to improve public finance management practices at the subnational level, including the need for governors to enhance the implementation of new audit laws, especially the financial autonomy clause.
