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New regulations require federal government agencies to report on consultant expenditure

Mathias Cormann has approved new rules requiring federal government agencies to report on total contracts and consultant expenditure.
Shannon Jenkins
Shannon Jenkins
Mathias Cormann
Finance Minister Mathias Cormann at Senate estimates hearings. Source: Mick Tsikas.

Finance Minister Mathias Cormann has approved new rules requiring federal government agencies to report annually on total spending on contracts and consultancies.

The rules, introduced as part of the governmentโ€™s Tuesday budget, officially come into effect from the 2020-21 year onward.

Cormann said agencies must also report the amount spent on the largest contracts โ€œto ensure consistency across all agenciesโ€.

The Department of Finance would also establish a whole-of-government procurement panel for consultancy services to increase transparency through improved data and reporting.

The panel would help strike a โ€œbalanceโ€ between the governmentโ€™s use of the permanent public service workforce and selective external expertise, Cormann noted.

โ€œThe government recognises that access to skills can come through training, recruitment and procurement,โ€ he said.

โ€œThese different approaches all have their time and place to give the public the best possible support.

โ€œThe appropriate use of external specialists is an efficient way to bring in cutting-edge skills, technological advances and a wider diversity of views, at the best possible cost for taxpayers.

โ€œThose partnerships with the private sector over recent years enabled the APS to respond with unprecedented agility during the bushfires and the COVID-19 pandemic.โ€

The mandatory panel would leverage the federal governmentโ€™s buying power โ€œto ensure best value when it engages with businessesโ€, and would consolidate a range of existing agency arrangements to provide a consistent framework and reduce administration and tendering efforts for industry.

โ€œIt is anticipated the first phase, for financial management advisory services, will commence by 1 July 2021, with the other phases for corporate and commercial services, operational by mid-2022,โ€ Cormann said.

The budget papers noted that the new procurement reporting rules would ensure the public service can continue to be open and transparent in its operations, despite the budget alsoย cutting funding from one of the governmentโ€™s main transparency and accountability agencies, the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO).

Earlier this year, the ANAO found that the big four consultancy firms โ€” Deloitte, Ernst & Young, KPMG and PwC โ€” collectively make up $800 million a year in government contracts, with only 20% of that money spent on consulting.

This article was first published by The Mandarin.

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