The Auditor-General Act establishes the position of the Independent Auditor, who may conduct a performance audit of the ANAO at any time. The ANAO is also committed to increasing external oversight and scrutiny over the ANAO Quality Framework, including external reviews of the quality framework and completed audits, as considered appropriate.

External audits

Section 41 of the Auditor-General Act 1997 establishes the position of the Independent Auditor. Under section 45(1) of the Act, the Independent Auditor may at any time conduct a performance audit of the ANAO. The Independent Auditor is appointed by the Governor-General on the recommendation of the Minister with the approval of the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit (JCPAA). The Act requires a vacancy in the position of Independent Auditor to be filled as soon as practicable, with a term of at least three but not more than five years.

In performing or exercising their functions or powers, the Independent Auditor must have regard to the audit priorities of the Parliament for audits of the Audit Office, as determined by the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit under paragraph 8(1)(n) of the Public Accounts and Audit Committee Act 1951.

The current Independent Auditor is Mr Shane Bellchambers.

The most recent Independent Auditor report — Performance Audit of Attraction, Development, and Retention of Capability — was tabled in Parliament on 15 August 2022. Status update.

Listed below are performance audits conducted by the Independent Auditor since April 2000.

Australian Securities and Investments Commission Audit Inspection Report of the ANAO

ANAO Audit surveillance report – July 2024

The quality of ANAO audit work is reliant on the strength of its independence and quality management framework. A sound quality framework supports delivery of high-quality audit products and enables the Auditor-General to have confidence in the opinions and conclusions presented in our reports to the Parliament. This facilitates confidence of the Parliament that the ANAO operates with independence and that the audit approach meets the auditing standards set by the Auditor-General. The ANAO Quality Management Framework is the ANAO’s established system of quality management to provide the Auditor-General with reasonable assurance that the ANAO complies with the ANAO Auditing Standards and applicable legal and regulatory requirements, and reports issued by the ANAO are appropriate in the circumstances. The ANAO is committed to external oversight and scrutiny over the ANAO Quality Management Framework.

The ANAO engages the Australian Securities and Investments Commission (ASIC) to conduct an annual review of financial statements audit files and reviews of the ANAO quality management framework on request, in a similar way to the review work conducted by ASIC on external auditors in the private sector.

ASIC conducts the reviews using the ASIC methodology used for its review of audit files and quality frameworks of private sector audit firms. The ANAO sees the methodology applied by ASIC as robust and fit-for-purpose and values the feedback and better practice recommendations that ASIC provide from its experience.

ASIC is a Commonwealth entity audited by the ANAO. ASIC and the ANAO determined that the following safeguards mitigated the threats to independence created by that relationship:

  • the reviews were undertaken by staff in ASIC’s Financial Reporting & Audit team (now Companies & Small Business) with no involvement in ASIC’s financial reporting;
  • these staff reported to the Auditor-General in relation to the reviews, not the Commissioners of ASIC; and
  • the ASIC Senior Executive Leader overseeing the review did not provide accounting advice to the Commission.

In July 2024 ASIC provided the Auditor-General with a report on the results of its review of key areas in two ANAO audits of financial reports for the year ended 30 June 2023. In 2024 a review of aspects of the ANAO’s quality management processes and quality management framework relating to financial statements audits was not conducted.

Two 2022–23 financial statements audits were reviewed by ASIC, and findings identified in the reviewed files were assessed using the same rating categories ASIC applies in reviews of private sector audits.  In accordance with established process, the ANAO subsequently performed its review on the areas identified by ASIC as a negative finding and other matters. The ANAO assessed that the negative finding raised was a significant finding and the audit team performed remediation procedures to obtain sufficient and appropriate audit evidence to ensure there were no material misstatements in the financial statements. Following the completion of the remediation procedures, the ANAO assessed that the conclusions in the issued auditor reports were appropriate.

As the Commonwealth’s statutory auditor, maintaining a focus on quality in our work is a key priority for the ANAO. Compliance with legislative requirements and policy, such as those in audit standards and methodology, is both mandatory and necessary to ensure the quality of our audit work. Further, the ANAO recognises the important role that openness to evaluation plays in building a culture focused on quality, learning and continuous improvement. To enhance organisation-wide learning from the review, senior ANAO staff have discussed the findings with financial statements audit staff to emphasise the need for teams to implement improvements in audit documentation and compliance with the ANAO audit methodology.

Listed below are the ASIC reports from reviews conducted since 2018, including the status of ANAO progress against the ASIC good practice recommendations:

Peer reviews

The ANAO and the New Zealand Office of the Auditor-General have a long-standing arrangement to conduct reciprocal performance audit peer-reviews annually, on a rotating basis. The scope of the review is not a comprehensive examination of the ANAO’s performance audit practices. Instead, this arrangement seeks to strengthen performance auditing, through the provision of constructive feedback and sharing of better practices. The peer review methodology includes examining two published audit reports against agreed criteria, drawing on information from related planning documents, audit working papers and discussion with ANAO staff. Download the most recent peer review: New Zealand Office of Auditor-General Quality Assurance Review Report August 2024.

The ANAO is satisfied that the findings and conclusions in the audit reports are supported by sufficient and appropriate audit evidence and are appropriate in the circumstances. The ANAO will consider the areas for improvement recommendations made in the report in the annual ANAO performance audit methodology review due for completion in June 2025. The results of the review have been shared with all performance audit staff to ensure that all teams can implement improvements in audit documentation.

The appendix to the New Zealand Office of Auditor-General Quality Assurance Review Report August 2024 has not been published. However, the information contained in the appendix has been summarised in the status updates page.

Listed below are peer review reports conducted by the New Zealand Office of the Auditor-General since 2016 including the ANAO’s response and progress against the opportunities for improvement and recommendations: