Voice in the wilderness

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| According to established procedure, PAC members are now likely to go on field visits to the units and formations where the audit took place, after which the defence secretary and the senior officer in charge of procurement could be asked to appear before the PAC. If the committee considers the matter serious enough, it could be raised for discussion in the House. Parliament could well use such a discussion to provide new impetus to the earlier group of ministers' recommendations to evolve a clearly defined system, tailor-made to respond to different situations, for buying foreign arms. Considering parliament's track record, however, it is more likely that the CAG's painstaking audit will be reduced to an hour or so of shrill accusations and mud slinging. |
| While a CAG report has on occasion driven change through the PAC, people inside the system are not optimistic in this case. They point to the excellent CAG report, tabled before parliament in 2001, highlighting an extra Rs 2,175 crore paid for purchases during the Kargil conflict. The follow-up to that report was getting nowhere until one Mr Dhananjay Kumar filed a case of public interest litigation in the Supreme Court, alleging that no action was being taken on the CAG report. The investigation thereafter came back to life, prompting a CAG auditor to remark that "the PIL is a better option than the PAC" in getting things done. The CAG carries out three different kinds of audit in an ascending order of intensity, with "performance audit" being the most rigorous. The latter samples a cross-section of transactions to monitor the performance of one dimension of an entire organisation based on the three Es: effectiveness, efficiency and economy. The CAG's performance audit of the army's capital acquisitions examines every procurement decision from 1993 to 1996. Thus, while the CAG does much to make its audits meaningful, it remains the job of others to transform its reports into substantive organisational changes. Parliament's job of ensuring that public money is well spent is entrusted to the PAC and it relies on the CAG's reports to discharge this function. At the end of the day the CAG can only report, it is Parliament that has to act. |
First Published: May 23 2007 | 12:00 AM IST