Sleeping with the enemy: More pork to PwC amid inquiry fallout

July 9, 2024
Issue 
Price Waterhouse Coopers, in February, gave the Senate inquiry the finger, using their own forced sell-off to dodge accountability. Image: 91自拍论坛

The fallout from the聽Price Waterhouse Coopers (PwC) government-secrets-for-sale scandal聽continues, the recent release of the final report from the聽聽doing little to hose down the smouldering carcass of聽PwCs reputation.

Amid excoriating publicity and relentless pressure from the Greens, on March 9 last year the聽聽was announced.

It uncovered a catastrophic public integrity fail with PwC caught selling government tax-law secrets to private clients.

In May last year the Greens聽聽if it would refer PwC to the freshly-minted聽听听

In an astonishing abrogation of his聽聽Prime Minister Anthony Albanese declined, saying the Australian Federal Police (AFP) was already investigating.

聽labelled Albanese鈥檚 response 鈥渁 cop out鈥, with inquiry member South Australian Greens Senator Barbara Pocock noting that the AFP first saw the PwC matter 鈥渇ive years ago鈥 and still had no result.

It鈥檚 a bad look when the AFP have聽about conflicts of interest with PwC and, last week, raided and suspended a veteran AFP Commander over separate contracts-for-mates allegations.听听

Pork rorts reports

The first report into PwC,聽in June last year, titled聽聽gave a聽stretching back to PwC鈥檚 original 2013 contract.

It included PwC鈥檚聽聽to Questions on Notice that sought the name, rank and serial number of all those partners, executives and employees knowingly involved.聽 PwC refused to provide them.

By February, PwC was a dumpster fire.聽

While Labor scrambled for cover, PwC came up with a plan and agreed to sell off its government consultancy business for $1 to聽

Allegro Funds聽聽to take over PwC鈥檚 government consulting business.

The board and leadership of Scyne Advisory includes聽聽and executives. But, with no list of names, there is no way of knowing who is compromised.

On January 11, the Senate inquiry sought details of all public sector contracts PwC held with the APS and state and territory public sector from 2013鈥2023.

In its 聽PwC gave the inquiry the finger,聽using聽its own forced sell-off to dodge accountability and the Senate鈥檚 question.

It said: 鈥淚n November 2023, PwC Australia divested its federal and state government consulting business to Allegro Funds. As a result of this transaction, much of the information requested either relates to individuals no longer with PwC Australia, or is confidential and commercially sensitive information.鈥

The second interim report from March,聽,聽noted PwC鈥檚 leaking of new tax-law start dates to private clients.聽This time PwC gave the finger to both the committee and the taxpayer, again refusing to provide the names of the compromised.

New revelations overshadow final report

聽on May 6,聽the 鈥済ravy train鈥 had refuelled and again left the station, with a $700,000 contract to聽.听听

Then on May 30,聽investigation revealed PwC and Scyne Advisory are currently undertaking 46 federal government contracts, valued at $138 million, noting that figure only included contracts listed on the AusTender website, meaning the total is likely much higher.

Finally, on June 12, after 14 months, over 60 submissions and 10 days of hearings, the聽final report of the 聽inquiry聽was released.

It made聽starting with: 鈥淧wC publish accurate and detailed information about the involvement of PwC partners and personnel (including names and positions) in breach of confidential government information.鈥

Others include better disclosure data on consultancy spending, new rules about acting in the public interest and updating training and contract management manuals: presumably to include that treason is bad and how to not lie about an already lucrative public contract.

Not good enough

The report has been labeled a ,聽and there is聽speculation PwC may have consulted on the recommendations.

笔辞肠辞肠办听聽she remains disappointed the recommendations don鈥檛 go far enough. 鈥淭hey do not address the magnitude and scope of the problems this inquiry has uncovered聽鈥 they do not address the issue of political donations by big consultants, the revolving door 鈥 inadequacy of penalties for PwC, the pressing need for structural reform to cap big partnerships鈥 size, and to address conflicts of interest and the opaque nature of big partnerships.鈥

As partnerships, they are and聽with the聽corporate聽cop 聽it might not have helped if they were.

The government is now stuck in a toxic relationship with PwC, unable to extract even a basic list of names of significantly compromised people who may still be working directly for the government.

What happened at PwC is the entirely predictable result of the聽once-proud聽聽being sacrificed at the altar of the聽聽for the politically expedient, but false, economy of聽.

With PwC back on the public payroll there seems little hope of real reform, and the government finds itself sleeping with the enemy with nowhere else to go.

[Suzanne James has a background in writing policy, governance, risk management and regulatory compliance frameworks and in legislative compliance application.]

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