Extravagance of Public Finance vis-à-vis curbing the power and
duties of C&AG.
The constitution of India
provides that the Comptroller and Auditor General of India shall be appointed
by the President by warrant under his hand and seal who shall not be removed
from Office, except in the like manner and on the like grounds as a Judge of
Supreme Court. The term of appointment shall be for a period of 5 years and the
condition of service and salary of the Comptroller and Auditor General of India
shall be such as may be determined by Parliament by Law and until they are so
determined, shall be as specified in the second schedule of the constitution.
The Comptroller and Auditor General shall perform such duties and exercise such
powers in relation to the accounts of the union and of the states and of any
other authority or body as may be prescribed or under any law made by
Parliament. The report of the Comptroller and Auditor General relating to the
accounts so maintained of the union shall be submitted to the President who
shall cause them to be laid before each house of Parliament . The report
relating to the accounts of the states shall be submitted to the Governor who
shall cause them to be laid before the legislature of the states.
That the present accounting system
applicable to most Ministries and departments in essentially external to
Financial management function in that the payment made by the treasuries and
accounts are compiled by audit and accounts offices under the control of the
Comptroller and Auditor General on the basis of initial and subsidiary accounts
received by them from the treasuries. This system worked fairly well when
Governmental business was limited. With the increase ion the volume and variety
of Governmental business and the continual set-up of developmental outlays,
this system has proved inadequate to the administration task.
The scheme of separation of
accounts from audit was to be implemented in selective ministries e.g
communication, civil aviation, tourism, industries and civil supplies w.e.f
April 1976, where the expansion regarding the expenditures and its audit was
felt to be providing certain constraint and thereby resulting into the delay in
implementation of the schemes at the relevant time. However by the gradual
increase of the power with these ministries, the similar laxity in relation to
the procedural safeguard was further provided the other ministries resulting
into the defeat of the very purposes for which the office of the Comptroller
and Auditor General was given the power through checks and balances. The effect
of the aforesaid process has resulted in the departmentalisation of union
accounts enacted in 1976 and the transfer of personnel was given effect by the
enforcement of the Act no 59 of 1976 from Indian Audit and Accounts departments
which was earlier under the control of C.& AG to the newly formed
department of Civil Accounts under the Controller General of Accounts under
department of Expenditure ministry of Finance. In this manner the office of
C& AG which was constituted under the scheme of the constitution of India
to provide the restraint to the expenditure disproportionate from its own
discretion by the relevant ministries was brought under the ministry of Finance
and thereby giving the unbridle powers to the ministers and thereby
overthrowing the constitutional mandate securing the safeguard over the
whimsical expenditure. According to the legal opinion of the constitutional
experts, the diversification of the financial powers to be utilised by the sole
discretion of the bureaucrats without taking into consideration the Audit
objections, which could have been made under the original constitutional
scheme, was directly resulting into the notion of conferring the absolute power
to the respective ministry. This was against the democratic, federal and
republic set-up of our Constitution. The aforesaid concept of the
parliamentarian democracy, providing the fraternity to an individual in
preamble of the constitution, was an attack on its basic structure. This has led
to an inadequate financial control which would have been benefited to the
nation if such power were remained with C&AG in India
That it would be relevant to
point out that the office of the Auditor General of India was created under the
Government Of India Act 1935 for exercising the control over expenditure
incurred by Central And State Governments and for proper accounting thereof in
such forms and in such manner as may be prescribed by him and he was also
responsible for rendering a complied account of receipt and expenditure to the
Centre and State Governments and he was also required to submit report on the
result of Audit in his Audit report to the Governor- General and
the Governor of the States for
laying it before respective legislatures . That after coming over the
constitution of India the Auditor General was designated as Comptroller Audit
General of India under chapter V of the constitution.
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