PassedOut, on 2017-May-19, 14:53, said:
I doubt that anyone disagrees that poor accounting is a problem, and there are lots of other problems with US military spending too. But why should that mean other problems should be swept under the rug? When you start by exaggerating the accounting problem by two orders of magnitude, you don't give the impression that you're looking for a serious discussion.
???
How did I exaggerate the problem? It is a $6.5 trillion problem now. It was a $2.3 trillion problem then in 2001. This is not just a "fix the computer" type of situation. The entire internal control structure at DoD contains so many material weaknesses that internal auditors are rendering disclaimers of opinions over our consolidated US government financial statements. The internal auditors specifically call out DoD as the "serious" offender.
Government Accountability Office Report -- Inspector's General Report
http://www.gao.gov/p...cts/GAO-15-341R
Quote
Certain material weaknesses in internal control over financial reporting and other limitations on the scope of its work resulted in conditions that prevented GAO from expressing an opinion on the accrual-based consolidated financial statements as of and for the fiscal years ended September 30, 2014, and 2013. About 32 percent of the federal government’s reported total assets as of September 30, 2014, and approximately 19 percent of the federal government’s reported net cost for fiscal year 2014 relate to three Chief Financial Officers Act agencies that as of the date of GAO’s audit report, either received disclaimers of opinion on their fiscal year 2014 financial statements or had not issued their audited fiscal year 2014 financial statements.
Three major impediments prevented GAO from rendering an opinion on the federal government’s accrual-based consolidated financial statements: (1) serious financial management problems at the Department of Defense (DOD), (2) the federal government’s inability to adequately account for and reconcile intragovernmental activity and balances between federal entities, and (3) the federal government’s ineffective process for preparing the consolidated financial statements. Efforts are under way to resolve these issues, but strong and sustained commitment by DOD and other federal entities as well as continued leadership by the Department of the Treasury (Treasury) and the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) are necessary to implement needed improvements.
Material weaknesses, including those underlying these three major impediments, continued to (1) hamper the federal government’s ability to reliably report a significant portion of its assets, liabilities, costs, and other related information; (2) affect the federal government’s ability to reliably measure the full cost as well as the financial and nonfinancial performance of certain programs and activities; (3) impair the federal government’s ability to adequately safeguard significant assets and properly record various transactions; and (4) hinder the federal government from having reliable financial information to operate in an efficient and effective manner.
This is a nice way of saying that the Department of Defense, which gets some of the largest federal budget appropriations, can not issue reliable financial statements (including balance sheets) which will help it to reliably report a significant portion of its assets, liabilities, and costs. If you can't reliably report what assets you truly own, then how can you take a legitimate detailed physical inventory of them? I don't even want to see how DoD manages the cash accounts it has at the Treasury, if it can't even handle its own inventory and property, plant, and equipment accounts.
Again, list one company on the stock exchange that could perform this kind of accounting alchemy over 15 years and still be in business? Sure, the U.S. government and its subsidiaries are sovereign entities (which is different than corporate business entities), but both entities need decent internal controls to function properly. And to call it a problem of the size of $6.5 trillion in adjustments when our debt is about $19.8 trillion just shows you how "out of control" the problem is emanating from ONE department. The scale and scope of this problem is simply undeniable.
I am not anti-military. I am, however, anti-mismanagement, anti-graft, anti-corruption, and want to see reasonable internal controls in our DofD. This will help the DoD provide meaningful reports that Congress, internal auditors, and the public at large can review to determine if the DoD is efficiently and effectively managing resources to conduct "the people's business".
This is what our forefathers wanted. It is supposed to be part of the checks and balances system that makes our government the envy (and not the laughing stock) of other nations.
Stay tuned.