1904 Items found
Published: Thursday 17 February 2000
Published

Industry levies play a significant role in the provision of many public services and fund a range of activities undertaken by regulatory bodies such as the Australian Prudential Regulation Authority (APRA), through to financing reform of the Australian waterfront labour force. The objectives of this audit were to assess:

  • the coverage, revenue and expenses of non-primary industry levies;
  • the effectiveness of selected entities' financial management of non-primary industry levies; and
  • areas of better administrative practice relating to the financial management of non-primary industry levies.
Entity
Across Agency
Published: Tuesday 23 December 1997
Published

The objectives of the audit were to assess the cost-effectiveness of the management and administration of the accounts receivable function in the ‘general government' sector and to identify, develop and report better practice to promote overall improvements in the management of accounts receivable. The audit was limited in scope to agencies whose accounts receivable consist of trade debtors (normally for goods and services), levies, other charges and recoveries from staff.

Entity
Across Agency
Published: Wednesday 25 November 1998
Published

Simulators are devices that provide personnel with training and practice by reproducing the behaviour of operational equipment. Defence records indicate that since 1960 the Defence Organisation has spent about $1 billion on acquiring simulators for training purposes. Over the next five years Defence proposes to spend a further $1.1 billion on simulation. The objective of the audit was to assess whether Defence had developed appropriate policies to provide guidance to personnel in the acquisition and use of aerospace simulators and the effectiveness of its procedures in achieving best value for the Commonwealth in relation to aerospace simulators.

Entity
Department of Defence
Published: Tuesday 29 October 2002
Published

Pursuant to a request from the Senate Finance and Public Administration References Committee and the Auditor - General's response to the Committee, the objective of this performance audit was to examine and report on the selection of the preferred tenderer in the Health Group IT outsourcing process. In particular, the audit examined the circumstances surrounding OASITO's administration of the: - disclosure to a tenderer of information provided by other tenderers; - subsequent acceptance of a late re-pricing offer from a tenderer: and - advice to the decision- maker leading to the selection of the preferred tenderer. The audit focused particularly on assessing the administrative processes undertaken in the selection of the preferred tenderer for the Health Group. Audit emphasis was placed on the management of the probity aspects of the tender process, particularly in regard to events that occurred between June 1999, when the tenderers provided their penultimate pricing, and the selection of the preferred tenderer in September 1999.

Entity
Department of Finance and Administration
Published: Tuesday 23 June 1998
Published

The objectives of this audit were to assess, with respect to guarantees, indemnities and letters of comfort:

  • changes in the size and nature of the Commonwealth's reported exposure since 30 June 1995;
  • the extent of improvement in agencies' management and monitoring of the Commonwealth's exposure to these instruments;
  • the approach of agencies to effective risk management and control of Commonwealth exposures to these instruments; and
  • whether current reporting practices provide a sufficiently comprehensive coverage for public accountability purposes, at both the agency and whole of government levels.
Entity
Across Agency
Published: Wednesday 27 November 2002
Published

The audit reviewed the management of trust monies in five Commonwealth organisations. The objectives of the audit were to:

  • assess whether selected Commonwealth organisations were managing trust monies in accordance with legal and administrative requirements and better practice principles;
  • identify better practices in the management of trust monies; and
  • recommend improvements in the controls and practices relating to the management of trust monies.
Entity
Across agency
Published: Wednesday 11 December 1996
Published

The objective of the audit was to review the Department of Veterans' Affairs' management of the outsourcing of its data centre in Sydney from February 1992, specifically with respect to the management of its contractual arrangements. The audit sought to identify the extent to which DVA achieved its objectives of outsourcing and the effectiveness of its management of the arrangement with the supplier.

Entity
Department of Veterans' Affairs
Published: Thursday 9 November 2000
Published

The objectives of the audit were to examine:

  • the effectiveness of agencies' implementation of the current GBEs governance framework;
  • the extent to which agencies and GBEs comply with the Governance Arrangements and legislative requirements; and
  • whether the GBE monitoring system provides an effective level of accountability to Ministers and to the Parliament.
Entity
Across Agency
Published: Wednesday 15 November 1995
Published

Audit Report No.5 1993-94, Explosive Ordnance, Department of Defence, was tabled in the Parliament in September 1993. The report was structured in three parts. The first part covered explosive ordnance (EO) issues common to all three Services; the second part focused on the management of explosive ordnance by the Navy; and the third part was a follow-up of the 1987 audit report on Air Force explosive ordnance. The report made 39 recommendations. Defence agreed to implement most of them.

It was considered timely to undertake a follow-up audit into key issues of the recommendations contained in the audit report, given the elapsed time since the report was tabled and the issues associated with public safety.

Entity
Department of Defence
Published: Thursday 2 February 2023
Published

The purpose of this information report is to provide transparency of, and insights on, Commonwealth entities’ self-reporting of procurement contracts on AusTender. This information report is neither an audit or assurance review and presents no conclusions or opinions. The report is presented in a variety of ways, including tables, figures, and publicly available data from public sector procurement activity recorded in AusTender.

Entity
Across Entities
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