No central government ministries or organisations immune from malpractices, annual report says
Rampant financial malpractices, ranging from budgetary abuses to spending state funds on staff housing, expensive villas and bankrupt, shut-down coal mines, have been revealed in the annual audit of 42 government institutions by China's National Audit Office.
The annual report was published by the National Audit Office early this month but only released through state media yesterday.
No central government ministries or organisations were immune from financial misconduct, according to the 2005 annual report published on the audit office website.
The National Development and Reform Commission, the keeper of the country's macroeconomic control regime, seems beset by problems that bring its competence into question, with delays or failures in deploying 23.5 billion yuan of national treasury bond investments, more than a fifth of its work schedule last year, topping the list.
Other funding misappropriations by the commission uncovered in the report include handing out construction funds worth 27.41 million yuan to 10 already bankrupt and defunct coal mines, starting bogus businesses and paying for staff welfare from official funds.
Various budget management irregularities were also uncovered involving more than a billion yuan.