Close X
Saturday, September 21, 2024
ADVT 
National

B.C. auditor general says government should report all revenues when received

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Mar, 2016 11:00 AM
    VICTORIA — British Columbia's auditor general says under-reported government revenues can potentially cloud the province's true financial health.
     
    Carol Bellringer made the comments Tuesday after releasing a report on the government's public financial statements for the 2014-15 budget, which included a surplus of almost $1.7 billion.
     
    Bellringer said B.C. should have reported an extra $191 million in revenues from the federal government to build infrastructure projects in last year's budget.
     
    Her audit estimates B.C.'s practise of deferring revenues over a period of decades amounts to more than $4 billion.
     
    "Why should this matter?" Bellringer asks in her report. "For one, deferring the revenue means that government is not recording revenue in these good years. When that revenue is eventually recorded, maybe in years when financial results could otherwise be less favourable, it may cloud the true financial health of the province."
     
    She said the issue revolves around how the government records money it receives from the federal government or others to build capital projects, such as hospitals and roads.
     
    Bellringer said the government should record the money as revenue the year it is received, but B.C. spreads out the revenue reporting over the life of the project.
     
    "For example, if a bridge is constructed over two years, and has a life of 50 years, the standards require the revenue to be recorded in the two years that the asset is built," says her report. "Instead, government records the revenue over the 50-year life of the bridge, a little bit each year." 
     
    The province's office of the comptroller general says it records the revenue as a liability when it is first received and adds it as revenue as the asset is developed and used.
     
    The Finance Ministry said in a statement that deferral of restricted government transfers continues to be an area of debate among standard setters and auditors not just in Canada, but internationally.
     
    "We, like other provinces, have not adopted the change recommended by the Auditor General on this issue," the statement said.
     
    "The long standing principle in public sector accounting has been to account for these revenues over the lifespan of the program or asset they fund, if they are restricted for that specific purpose."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter
    oronto author Rosemary Sullivan is behind "Stalin's Daughter: The Extraordinary and Tumultuous Life of Svetlana Alliluyeva," which has won the $40,000 British Columbia National Award for Canadian Non-Fiction and the $60,000 Hilary Weston Writers' Trust Prize for Nonfiction.

    Toronto Author Up For RBC Taylor Prize For Book On Joseph Stalin's Daughter

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy
    The B.C. and Yukon Lifesaving Society awarded 10 people the Governor's Gold Award on Saturday.

    Ten Honoured For Saving Lives In Tofino, B.C., Whale-Watching Tragedy

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash
    A female passenger in the back seat of the car was pronounced dead at the scene.

    One Dead, Three Injured In Mission, B.C., High-Speed Crash

    Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit

    Finance Minister Joe Ceci has already announced that with no end in sight to bargain basement oil prices, the budget he unveils in early April will be about double the original deficit estimate of $5.4 billion.

    Alberta Legislature To Begin Session Under Shadow Of Looming $10 Billion Deficit

    Deciding On Assisted Death In Context Of Mental Illness Highly Complex: Experts

    The court made no specific pronouncement about medically assisted dying for those with a psychiatric illness, and that has left mental health experts wondering how its  decision might be interpreted — and what that could mean for such a vulnerable segment of the population.

    Deciding On Assisted Death In Context Of Mental Illness Highly Complex: Experts

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan
    "After living somewhere else for all these years she returned to her village along with her three-year-old daughter to meet her family and in-laws." 

    Seven Held For Burning Alive Woman In Rajasthan