We commence agenda item 2. I ask Robert Black to make an opening statement.
My statement is essentially to do with end-year flexibility, as our proposed autumn budget revision seeks approval for a matter relating to EYF.
Thank you, that was helpful. Before I throw open the discussion to members, I have a question.
The answer to both questions is yes.
Excellent—thank you.
Page 3 of the budget revision document states that £173,000 of the end-year flexibility arises as a capital variance. Section two explains how the revenue budget variance has resulted in revenue EYF, but it does not explain the capital variance.
I confirm that it is money that we requested, but have not used. As I think we have discussed with you, we have been reviewing our property portfolio and making provision to reshape and change our accommodation. We did not proceed with that in this period, but we made some provision in case we were able to exit early from our properties. We have made savings on our capital budget, which primarily funds information technology investment and adjustments to our properties. We have made considerable savings in our IT investment programme and the underspend that you see is a result of that.
Thank you. On an entirely different strand, if you made savings on IT investment, please pass on how you achieved that. Some of us would like to achieve it elsewhere.
On page 3 of the autumn budget revision it states that end-year flexibility had arisen due to a
The explanation is partly the result of the bandings that we use. The pay freeze applied to all the scales in the organisation. There were still pay awards based on contribution. All pay was frozen and all pay scales were frozen, but employees who had, in line with their remuneration scheme, made sufficient contribution were still eligible for very small contribution-based payments. In addition, for the latter part of the year, some colleagues were undertaking additional responsibilities as a result of the secondment of the deputy Auditor General. The pay that you see attached to the assistant Auditor General job is not a like-for-like comparison with the previous year, because the role had changed.
Okay. I thought that a pay freeze would apply right across the board, but I think I understand the explanation.
I will build on what Diane McGiffen said. Across the public sector as a whole, the pay freeze has been in operation for some time now. We went into the pay freeze a year earlier than other bodies; we decided to do that and we are seeing the benefit of it in the flow-through of the efficiency savings. Across the public sector as a whole, people are still entitled to what used to be called incremental progression, so there will be a cost. In fact, we highlighted that in our recent report on Scotland’s public finances.
Would it be correct to describe it as an acting allowance, as opposed to an actual salary increase?
Yes, indeed. It is to do with the extra responsibilities taken on during the past 12 months.
Do members have any other questions that they would like to ask?
The rebate to the audited bodies will be more than welcome, but you emphasised clearly that it will not be recurring. You identified that the underspend came from things such as the recruitment freeze and the pay freeze. When you outsource your work to public bodies, you are charged a fee. Is that fee reflected in what you charge local authorities or is there a difference between that fee and what you charge, which may have accounted for some of your underspend?
The fee that we are charged by the firms is one part of the total charge to the audited bodies. The audited bodies also pay a contribution towards some of the performance audits and the best-value audits in local government, for example. We do not apply a mark-up to the element that comes from the firms. Yes, the total charge to the audited body is greater than the fee from the firm, but that reflects the other costs that we are required to bill the audited bodies for.
Could you identify what the difference is, percentage-wise?
It varies significantly between sectors, depending on the elements of our work that are paid for through the Scottish consolidated fund. For example, local authorities pay for every part of their audit work: the financial audit, the performance audit, the best-value audit and their contribution to the national fraud initiative are all paid for directly. In central Government, the audited bodies pay for the financial audit, but the cost of the performance audit comes out of the money that is provided from the consolidated fund. In health, it is a mixture. In further education, it is purely the financial audit that is paid for.
As there are no more questions from members, I thank the witnesses very much for their attendance. I have no doubt that we will see you back here again soon.