MFMA2020-21 Media-Release 15 June Final Approved
MFMA2020-21 Media-Release 15 June Final Approved
MFMA2020-21 Media-Release 15 June Final Approved
15 June 2022
PRETORIA – Auditor-general (AG) Tsakani Maluleke called on all role players in the local
government accountability ecosystem to diligently play their part to ensure accountability for
government spending, and for improving service delivery and quality of life for South Africa’s
citizens.
The AG made this call while launching the 2020-21 consolidated general report on the local
government audit outcomes.
Her office’s latest report reflects on the audit outcomes over the five-year term of the previous
local government administration, and she says the trends in the report demonstrate that the
fourth administration (2016-17) left municipalities in a worse financial position than when they
took office.
Therefore, the report “presents a not-to-be-missed opportunity for the new administration to
address the already reported audit findings,” and she called on all role players involved in local
The AG reports that, over the term of the previous administration, the national audit office was
consistent in its messages about the progressive and sustainable improvements required to
prevent accountability failures and how such failures should be dealt with.
Among other matters, the AGSA had emphasised the need to strengthen basic financial and
performance management disciplines, and to safeguard and maintain municipal infrastructure
to prevent mismanagement, transgressions, non-performance, fraud and financial loss.
“Unfortunately, these issues persist,” the AG notes. “Our message was always directed at the
leadership, imploring them to turn the tide in local government – the theme of our 2019-20
general report was, Ethical and accountable leadership should drive the required change.”
Maluleke says local government now has new political leaders, “elected by communities to
represent their interests and address their pressing need for services, economic opportunities,
and a safe and healthy living environment”.
“Following the 2021 municipal elections, new councils were formed, with a new electoral
mandate. It is now time to activate the accountability ecosystem to shift the culture in local
government towards performance, integrity, transparency and accountability. This can be
achieved through courageous, ethical, accountable, capable and citizen-centric leadership.
“Such a culture should be a shared vision for all involved in local government. We urge all role
players to fulfil their designated roles and to play their part effectively to the betterment of
people’s lives,” she says. These role players include mayors, municipal councils, municipal public
accounts committees, audit committees, provincial leadership, premiers, members of the
executive council (MECs) of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs (Cogta) and
Finance, coordinating national ministries of Cogta and Finance, provincial legislatures,
Parliament, citizens and community organisations.
“Active citizenry is crucial to ensure that the needs of communities are heard and acted on,
and that municipal leaders are held accountable for their actions. We call on all citizens to
always take part in the public participation processes for determining and reviewing the
In the 2020-21 general report, we renew our call that “capable leaders should demonstrate
change by strengthening transparency and accountability”.
The AGSA’s audit outcomes are based on the audits we perform on the quality of financial
statements and performance reports, and on compliance with key legislation. Maluleke says
some municipalities improved their audit outcomes, just to regress again in later years. Overall,
only 61 municipalities had a better audit outcome in 2020-21 than in 2016-17, with 56 now
having a worse audit outcome.
She states that it is encouraging to see the slight increase in the number of clean audits –
27 municipalities were able to maintain their clean audit status throughout the administration,
while 14 achieved a clean audit for the first time and six lost their clean audit status. However,
clean audit outcomes continue to represent less than a fifth of the local government budget.
“A clean audit outcome is not always an indicator of good service delivery and does not
always directly correlate to the lived experience of all the communities in a municipal area,”
explains Maluleke. “However, we have seen that municipalities that have the controls and
systems in place to plan, measure, monitor and account for their finances and performance,
and to stay within the rules, often also have a solid foundation for service delivery that will
benefit their communities. This provides these municipalities with opportunities to shift their focus
to ensuring the delivery of services for the benefit of all their residents.”
For example, Senqu – a small, rural Eastern Cape municipality – has received a clean audit for
five consecutive financial years, and reports show that the municipality has used its firm controls
and systems to benefit its community through effective service delivery. Western Cape
municipalities such as the Cape Winelands and West Coast have also achieved this outcome
for the past five years.
The graphic below shows the overall audit outcomes and movement since the 2016-17
financial year.
Despite the improvement in the number clean audits, the AG says that the substance of the
outcomes indicates that local government still has a long way to go before we can celebrate
improvements. The vast majority of unqualified audit opinions are only achieved after the
auditee was given an opportunity to correct the annual financial statements that were
submitted for auditing, which is not sustainable. This means that internal controls and financial
management disciplines are still lacking. There are also still municipalities with disclaimed audit
opinions, while municipal financial health continues to deteriorate and service delivery is
declining.
The audit office has recorded successes and has made an impact in implementing our
enhanced powers. Through our expanded mandate, and especially the issuing of material
We issued MIs on matters relating to actual or potential financial loss, as well as those causing
substantial harm to institutions and their entities, and those causing substantial harm to
communities. For 81% of these matters, municipalities had not taken any action until we issued
the MI notifications to them.
On MIs with financial loss, our notifications led to the successful correction of municipal billing
systems, which led to an increase in revenue; prevention of further financial losses; improved
municipal systems; improved controls; and safeguarding of assets. In some cases, accounting
officers responded to our MIs by stopping supplier contracts where money was being lost or
where there was the potential for fraud, instituting criminal investigations by the relevant state
agencies and disciplining municipal officials where that was required.
For example, at the City of Tshwane (Gauteng) assets worth R3,9 million were stolen and
vandalised at the Baviaanspoort wastewater treatment plant. Of this, R174 716 has since been
recovered. The matter was reported to the South African Police Service and the perpetrators
were arrested, prosecuted and sentenced.
Nelson Mandela Bay (Eastern Cape) was losing millions of rands because it was not billing
customers for services. Through the MI, the municipality is now billing correctly and collecting
much-needed revenue. In addition, in 2018-19 the metro was not charging interest on long-
outstanding debts for customers who had entered into long-term payment arrangements,
resulting in financial loss of R11,2 million. The matter was resolved and, following the MI
notification, and from February 2020 the municipality has been charging interest, thereby
preventing further financial loss.
In another effort to prevent further financial loss, we issued an MI to King Sabata Dalindyebo
(Eastern Cape) for interest incurred due to late payments to Eskom and the South African
Revenue Service. In response, the accounting officer included cost-containment targets in the
performance agreements of managers and directors, and ring-fenced electricity income to
pay only electricity expenses. The municipality also implemented a revenue recovery plan.
Rustenburg (North West) entered into a contract for the provision of automated fleet and fuel
management solutions in June 2018. The scope of work was extended during the price
negotiation and items that were not part of the competitive bidding process were included at
higher than market-related prices. Disciplinary steps were taken against the responsible officials,
who either resigned or were dismissed. The contract with the service provider was terminated in
August 2019 based on a high court order, to prevent further financial loss. The matter was also
referred to the Hawks and legal action was instituted against the supplier to recover the
financial loss.
In the 2021-21 financial year, we issued MIs against repeatedly disclaimed municipalities. These
MIs were causing substantial harm to the institutions. Since then, our impact has been felt, with
firm actions having been taken. We noted that investigations have been performed or were
underway to determine the root causes for the lack of records, registers and reconciliations.
Accounting officers have now developed action plans – or are in the process of doing so – to
address the root causes, and financial recovery plans are receiving attention from
municipalities, the national government and provincial government.
In the past year, we also, for the first time, raised MIs where significant weaknesses in
infrastructure and environmental management resulted in pollution that caused harm to the
general public.
“We are convinced that by implementing our enhanced powers and being deliberate in
raising these MIs, we can encourage corrective action and enforce accountability. In this
regard, the successful resolution of the MI is when further financial loss is prevented, the loss is
Matjhabeng (Free State) paid an estimated R7,2 million between April 2017 and June 2019 for
the construction of an attenuation (flood-protection) dam on the Nyakallong stormwater
system after it had been certified as complete. However, a site visit by our team confirmed that
the attenuation dam had not been built, resulting in overpayments on the project. The matter
was referred to the Hawks for investigation in June 2021.
We issued remedial action for three of the MIs at Ngaka Modiri Molema (North West). If these
MIs are not appropriately dealt with, the AG will issue a certificate of debt.
A detailed report on the MIs is on page 46 of the report and on our website.
Financial statements are a key instrument for accountability. The municipal council uses
financial statements to call the municipal manager to account and to make financial and
related service delivery decisions. Creditors, banks and ratings agencies use them to determine
how much risk there is in extending debt to a municipality, and the public uses them to see how
well the municipality is using the rates and taxes collected to provide services.
Maluleke states that the expected benefits of using consultants to enable quality financial
statements were not always realised. The financial statements submitted for auditing by
When combining the money spent on finance units and consultants at municipalities, it is clear
that financial reporting carried a substantial price tag in 2020-21, coming to just over
R11,67 billion. Internal audit units and audit committees also reviewed the prepared financial
statements, while national and provincial coordinating departments deployed specialist
advisors to support finance units and provided tools to help ensure that financial reporting was
credible.
However, Maluleke notes that “despite the resources and support municipalities have available
for financial management and reporting, the key financial management controls were not
adequate to prevent material misstatements or major mistakes in the financial statements
submitted for auditing”.
The AG reports that local government finances remain under severe pressure due to non-
payment by municipal debtors, poor budgeting practices and ineffective financial
management.
She says the financial position of 28% of South Africa’s municipalities is so dire that there is
significant doubt about whether they will be able to continue operating in the near future. This
effectively means that such municipalities do not have enough revenue to cover their
expenditure; they owe more money than they have; and they can no longer pay salaries and
other obligations as they fall due, or maintain infrastructure assets such as roads and provide
water and other basic services. Many of these municipalities have been in this dire financial
position multiple times over the course of the administration.
The AGSA’s assessment of the financial health of 230 municipalities and 18 municipal entities
based on their financial statements revealed increasing indicators of a collapse in local
government finances and continued deterioration over the term of the administration.
Maluleke paints a picture of municipalities often depending on the money they receive from
the national government (in the form of an equitable share) to stay afloat. In 2020-21, this
amounted to R80,26 billion, up from R67,83 billion in the previous year.
The financial health of metros is particularly concerning, as they serve the largest segment of
the population and account for more than half of the local government expenditure budget.
The City of Tshwane (Gauteng), City of Johannesburg (Gauteng), City of Ekurhuleni (Gauteng),
City of Cape Town (Western Cape) and Nelson Mandela Bay (Eastern Cape) were all
downgraded to below investment grade by 30 June 2021.
“The downgrades put pressure on some of the metros to raise funding for capital expenditure,
and they had to use internal savings from operational budgets to fund shortfalls. Most of the
metros were put on review for further downgrades by the credit-rating agencies, meaning that
they could plunge deeper into sub-investment territory if economic conditions worsen.
“Although some of these metros have cash reserves, its further use to make up revenue
shortfalls will reduce the metros’ capacity to meet future debt obligations as they fall due,”
cautions the AG.
She adds that while the economic downturn does affect revenue collection, “municipalities do
not always play their part either”. Not all revenue owed is billed and poor debt-collection
practices are common. In addition to highlighting these concerns through audit findings, the
AGSA also issued MI notifications where municipalities were suffering material financial losses as
a result of revenue owed not being billed or debt not being collected.
Service delivery
Most municipalities had inadequate systems to collate and report on their performance
information, and officials did not understand or could not apply the performance management
and reporting requirements.
There is a correlation between a good performance management system and service delivery,
which weakens if the incorrect performance measures and targets are managed.
Four metros have consistently submitted poor performance reports since the start of the
administration, namely Buffalo City, City of Johannesburg, Mangaung and Nelson Mandela
Bay.
The National Treasury introduced common indicators for reporting and planning on which all
metros should report from 2018-19, but implementation has been slow, with only City of
Ekurhuleni and eThekwini having fully implemented the requirements. The other six metros are
phasing in the implementation because they do not have the required systems and processes
in place to report on all the required indicators.
Maluleke says that “weaknesses in metro performance planning and reporting not only affect
service delivery and reliable reporting, but reduce the council’s ability to monitor and make
meaningful contributions to the fulfilment of the promises made to communities in the
integrated development plan”.
In 2020-21, there were 25 municipalities that received disclaimed audit opinions – the worst
audit opinion possible. This is almost 10% of all municipalities in the country. Only Gauteng and
the Western Cape did not have municipalities with disclaimed opinions during this period. Most
of the municipalities that repeatedly received disclaimed opinions are in North West.
A disclaimed opinion is the worst audit opinion a municipality can receive, as it means that the
municipality could not provide auditors with evidence for most of the amounts and disclosures
in its financial statements. Therefore, the AGSA could not express an opinion on the credibility of
these financial statements or determine what was done with the funds the municipality
received for the year towards service delivery.
Says Maluleke, “In spite of all our messages, as well as initiatives by national and provincial
government, and even municipalities being placed under administration / provincial
intervention, there was little improvement over the term of the previous administration. Only
In her office’s 2019-20 general report, Maluleke told the story of the 10 municipalities (Maluti-A-
Phofung, Masilonyana, Tokologo, Govan Mbeki, !Kheis, Joe Morolong, Lekwa Teemane,
Madibeng, Mamusa and Ramotshere Moiloa) that had received disclaimed audit opinions for
years. The latest report shows that these municipalities have still not improved.
She says that at most of these municipalities, the auditors observed leadership instability (both
at political and administrative level), poor oversight by councils, significant financial health
problems, protests and strikes, a lack of consequences, and interventions that were not
effective.
One of the key matters that plague the disclaimed municipalities is the lack of proper asset
registers and records, which limited the AGSA’s ability to confirm that the values and
information disclosed on municipal infrastructure assets in the financial statements of most of
these municipalities were correct.
The AG says this is not only related to financial statements. “It means that these municipalities
could not properly account for the existence and state of their infrastructure assets, which
should be used to provide water, sanitation, electricity, refuse removal and roads to
communities.”
“Our audits of key water, sanitation and roads infrastructure projects funded by conditional
grants found that half of these municipalities struggled with project management, resulting in
delays in project completion, overspending on contract amounts and contractors being paid
for substandard work. These municipalities already struggle financially and cannot afford to
waste the limited resources available to manage basic service delivery initiatives. Poor project
management was largely due to a lack of technical skills and to vacancies in the technical
departments and in positions responsible for signing off on work done in the project
management units.”
Some of these municipalities have been issued with MIs for causing substantial harm to the
institution.
In our 2019-20 general report, we shared our concern that disclaimed municipalities receive
funding from national government through an equitable share and conditional grants, but that
the lack of proper records makes it difficult to confirm what had been done with this money
since it was received and reconcile this with what was left in the bank account at year-end. This
year, we did additional work in this area. We noted that six municipalities did not use unique
identifiers such as payment descriptions and descriptive references for bank payments to
enable meaningful matching and analysis between the bank statements and the financial
system. This will make it difficult for these municipalities to perform bank reconciliations, which
are an important internal control to detect payments of which municipalities may be unaware.
In such cases, fraudulent activities could go undetected, and funds meant for service delivery
could be misappropriated without being picked up.
At four of these municipalities, we did further analysis and could trace between 67% and 89% of
the expenditure recorded in the financial system to bank statements. The R6,03 billion spent by
these municipalities was used for employee costs, bulk purchases, payments to service
providers, and statutory and other payments. Payments to service providers pose the biggest
risk for fraud, as the lack of supporting documents mean that we could not confirm whether
municipalities had actually received the goods and services they had paid for.
See page 37in the report for the service delivery impact – municipalities with disclaimed audit
opinions.
Infrastructure assets
Findings on infrastructure
Municipal infrastructure plays a key role in supporting service delivery. A lack of the
infrastructure required to provide basic services, combined with inadequate maintenance not
only negatively affect service delivery, but often also caused harm to communities and the
Maluleke also notes that communities could be negatively affected by municipalities not
properly maintaining the infrastructure and managing the environment for which they are
responsible.
“After inspecting some of the wastewater treatment works and landfill sites controlled by
municipalities, our experts identified poor or ineffective environmental management, limited
environmental monitoring and enforcement, as well as defective management and delivery of
wastewater and solid waste services at municipalities.
“When these sites are not properly operated, there is a significant likelihood that both service
delivery and the environment could be negatively affected. This is the case when untreated
sewage is discharged into water sources or refuse is illegally dumped or not properly
compacted and treated at suitable sites,” the AG warns.
See page 41-432 in the report for the impact of infrastructure neglect on service delivery
Conclusion
The new administration must instil a culture of performance, accountability, transparency and
integrity
“As the national audit office, we have a vision, shared by many, for this new administration to
make significant strides towards instilling in local government a culture of performance,
accountability, transparency and integrity. This is what the Constitution envisaged –
municipalities that perform by delivering services and that are transparent about their level of
performance and how municipal finances are managed. This, in turn, will enable these
municipalities to be accountable to the communities they serve. Above all, communities want
to see their elected representatives and municipal officials act with integrity, including being
honest, ethical and incorruptible, and complying with legislation.
“Our role and mandate as the country’s supreme audit institution is to audit every municipality
and municipal entity, report on what we found and share the insights to strengthen
transparency and enable accountability. It is not mere compliance for us, but a genuine effort
to ensure improvement and enforce accountability where it is lacking. This is especially
“This report is therefore not intended only for local government leaders; it is equally important
for national and provincial leadership and community organisations. We have engaged with
critical stakeholders in the accountability ecosystem and called upon them to be effective and
deliberate in executing their mandates in order to transform local government and improve
service delivery to citizens. We will monitor the implementation, effectiveness and impact of the
commitments made by various leaders over the term of the new administration,” concludes
Maluleke.
End.
Media note: The Consolidated general report on the audit outcomes of local government is available on
www.agsa.co.za.
About the AGSA: The AGSA is the country’s supreme audit institution. It is the only institution that, by law, has to
audit and report on how government is spending taxpayers’ money. This has been the focus of the AGSA since
its inception in 1911.