The National Audit Office (NAO) has published a series of
recommendations for tackling fraud and protecting propriety when
spending public money during a national emergency.
Drawing on its reporting on public spending during the COVID-19
pandemic, the UK’s independent public spending watchdog says
there is more government can do now to ensure that it is better
prepared to protect taxpayers’ money in future crises.
Emergency spending can carry a higher risk of fraud and
impropriety, whether this is to support individuals and
businesses or to purchase goods and services to support
government's emergency response.
Achieving propriety in public spending means meeting high
standards of public conduct, including robust governance and
meeting relevant parliamentary expectations, especially in terms
of transparency. This includes managing the risk of fraud and
ensuring that the right amount of money reaches the right people
and businesses.
The amount of fraud reported in the accounts the NAO audited rose
from £5.5 billion in the two years before the pandemic to £21.0
billion in the two years after. £7.3 billion of the £21 billion
related to temporary COVID-19 schemes, with the bulk of the rest
of the rise attributed to benefit fraud.
The impact of actual or perceived impropriety may persist for
some time after the emergency. This is true even if perceived
impropriety is proven to be incorrect, undermining public trust.
By the time an emergency has started, it is usually too late to
take all the steps needed to respond in a way that protects
propriety.
The lessons learned report published today by the NAO sets out
seven lessons with recommendations on what the government can do
now to better prepare for spending in the next emergency.
The seven lessons are:
- Be clear on governance and rules - public bodies may need to
streamline their usual decision-making and governance
arrangements so they can make faster decisions, but they need to
do so in ways that still allow for robust oversight and are
within normal public spending rules.
- Prioritise, but be open about when you will come back to
obligations. Accounting Officers cannot forgo responsibilities to
protect propriety, and need a framework to make decisions on
competing issues.
- Embed the fraud risk management cycle, as it is crucial that
the government sets a clear tone from the outset as to how the
risk of fraud will be managed during a crisis.
- Create flexible counter-fraud capability with the right
people and skills across government, who can be deployed at pace.
- Plan for the data you will need as there can be insufficient
time to collate or agree how data can be shared during an
emergency. Consider what inter-departmental data sharing
arrangements can be set up now.
- Increase transparency as emergencies require the need to know
who has been the recipient of funding via grants and contracts.
- Plan how to buy in a seller’s market. In emergencies,
government will have reduced leverage and may have to deal with
many suppliers they are not used to dealing with. A clear
playbook is needed for buying in this situation.
, head of the NAO,
said:
“There is evidence of the government learning lessons from recent
emergencies and improving its approach to better prepare for
future emergency spending. However, there is more to do to
complete this analysis and bring it together.
“The NAO has set out lessons where action can be taken now by
government to prepare for future emergency spending. This
includes clearer communications around rules and decision-making,
improved management of staff and data, and increased
transparency.
“If government makes these changes now, it will be better placed
to protect public spending, and public confidence and trust in
it, the next time we face an emergency.”
ENDS
Notes for Editors:
- A summary of the seven lessons and supporting recommendations
can be found in Figure 1 of the report.
- Propriety is one of the four fundamental standards that
public spending should meet, along with regularity, value for
money, and feasibility. HM Treasury defines propriety as meeting
high standards of public conduct, including robust governance and
the relevant parliamentary expectations, especially transparency.
- This report focuses on protecting propriety in an emergency.
It does not look at wider aspects of responding to an emergency.
It draws on lessons from our work and what the government has
already done to identify lessons itself. The report does not seek
to repeat our previous audit findings to assess how well
government managed recent emergencies. Instead, it sets out
lessons and recommendations for how the government can go further
to improve its approach for protecting propriety in future
emergencies.