Eskom's Treasury exemptions – Understanding both sides of the coin from an auditing perspective

Loading player...
GUEST Tshepo Mofokeng - Board Chair of The Institute of Internal Auditors South Africa

Eskom chairperson Mpho Makwana's quest to achieve an unqualified audit in the first year of the new board's tenure is what lies behind the unusual exemption from parts of the Public Finance Management Act (PFMA) granted by Finance Minister Enoch Godongwana last week. The exemption from parts of the PFMA that require that irregular, wasteful and fruitless expenditure, no matter the reason, be disclosed in notes to the annual financial statements has raised suspicion across the political spectrum that Eskom is seeking to cover up corruption. A similar exemption was provided to Transnet last year, but went unnoticed. Over the past 24 hours, bits of information have leaked out in dribs and drabs, creating further confusion. On Monday evening, the Treasury eventually provided an explanatory note and released the letters between Makwana and Godongwana over the past three weeks. In its explanation, the Treasury said that irregular expenditure or losses due to corruption will still have to be disclosed in Eskom's annual financial statements. But Eskom will not be obliged to disclose all irregular expenditure in the financials. It will still have to disclose the particulars of all irregular expenditure, losses, recoveries, and so on in the annual report.
4 Apr 2023 4PM English South Africa Business News · Investing

Other recent episodes

Paymenow data shows SA workers lose 40% of purchasing power.

A new Paymenow analysis shows South African workers have lost more than 40% of their purchasing power over the past decade—even as headline inflation stayed within target. Rene Richter, Reward & Benefits Lead Advisor at Paymenow, joins Kaya Biz to unpack why wages aren’t keeping up, how transport and utilities…
21 May 2PM 10 min

Oceana H1 Results: Lucky Star Shines as Fishmeal Stumbles

Oceana Group has delivered a resilient set of interim results despite a 6% drop in revenue. Lucky Star and Wild Caught Seafood carried the half‑year, while Fishmeal & Fish Oil struggled under weak catch volumes and global pricing pressure. CFO Zaf Mahomed joins Kaya Biz to break down margins, cash…
21 May 2PM 18 min

Inside Investec’s Strong 2026 SA Performance

Investec SA has delivered a robust full‑year performance in a tough macro environment. CEO Cumesh Moodliar joins Kaya Biz to unpack the 5.2% rise in SA operating profit, strong momentum in specialist banking, wealth inflows, digital transformation, and what the bank expects from the South African economy heading into 2027.
21 May 2PM 13 min

Stats SA Explains April’s Sharp Inflation Rise to 4%

South Africa’s inflation rate surged to 4.0% in April, driven by fuel, transport, and housing pressures. Stats SA’s Patrick Kelly unpacks the numbers, the 1.1% month‑on‑month spike, and what’s behind the dramatic swing in transport inflation. We explore regional differences, goods vs. services inflation, and what this means for households…
20 May 4PM 11 min

4% Inflation and the SARB’s Next Move

With inflation back at 4% and oil‑driven risks rising, the SARB faces a critical decision next week. Economist Sifiso Skenjana unpacks the April CPI print, the credibility of the new 3% target, and whether a rate hike is now on the table. We discuss real interest rates, global financial conditions,…
20 May 4PM 15 min