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Finance Ministry Spent Rs 1,157 Crore Extra In FY18 Without Parliament Approval, Says CAG

The Ministry of Finance spent Rs 1,157 crore on various heads during 2017-18 without obtaining prior approval of Parliament. 

Arun Jaitley, India’s finance minister, center left, and other members of the finance ministry at the North Block leaving to table the budget in parliament in New Delhi. (Photographer: Anindito Mukherjee/Bloomberg)
Arun Jaitley, India’s finance minister, center left, and other members of the finance ministry at the North Block leaving to table the budget in parliament in New Delhi. (Photographer: Anindito Mukherjee/Bloomberg)

The Ministry of Finance spent Rs 1,157 crore on various heads during 2017-18 without obtaining prior approval of Parliament, the Comptroller and Auditor General report tabled in Parliament said.

Excess expenditure aggregating Rs 1,156.80 crore was incurred during 2017-18 without obtaining prior approval of Parliament, the report ‘Financial Audit of the Accounts of the Union Government’ said.

The report said the Ministry of Finance did not devise a suitable mechanism in respect of new service/new instrument of service, which led to the extra spending.

The Department of Economic Affairs under Finance Ministry failed to obtain legislative approval for augmenting provision (for extra expenditure), the report said.

“As per the guidelines, any augmentation of provision by way of re-appropriation to the object heads (i) grants-in-aid (ii) subsidies (iii) major works attracts limitation of New Service/New Instrument of Service and hence require prior approval of Parliament,” CAG report said.

The Public Accounts Committee, in its 83rd report, had also taken serious view on cases of augmentation of provision of object head “grants-in-aid” and “subsidies”.

The Public Accounts Committee noted that these serious lapses are a pointer towards faulty budget estimation and deficient observances of financial rules by the ministries/departments concerned.

There is an imperative need on the part of the Ministry of Finance to devise an effective mechanism for imposing financial discipline on all the ministries/departments so as to avoid recurrence of such serious lapses, the CAG report said.

“Despite the Public Accounts Committee recommendations, the Ministry of Finance had not devised a suitable mechanism, as result of which, during 2017-18 in cases across 13 grants, there was excess expenditure over total authorisation aggregating to Rs 1,156.80 crore without obtaining approval of Parliament,” the report said.

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