Corporate News
By EDWIN MUTAI
In Summary
- The report, which was submitted to Parliament last week, further indicates that Mr Ouko could not ascertain the accuracy of books of accounts for seven public universities – a pointer to the financial management mess in the institutions that are run by some of the country’s best brains.
The auditor general has declared three public
universities and a government-owned hospitality training college
technically insolvent, shining the spotlight on a ballooning financial
crisis in Kenya’s institutions of higher learning.
Mr Edward Ouko says in the audit report for the year ended
June 30, 2013 that Maseno University, the University of Eldoret, Maasai
Mara University and Kenya Utalii College are technically insolvent,
casting a shadow over the long term survival of the state-sponsored
institutions.
The report, which was submitted to Parliament last
week, further indicates that Mr Ouko could not ascertain the accuracy of
books of accounts for seven public universities – a pointer to the
financial management mess in the institutions that are run by some of
the country’s best brains.
Mr Ouko returned a qualified audit opinion on the
financial statements of Maseno University, University of Kabianga, Meru
University of Science and Technology, University of Eldoret, and Rongo
University College – meaning he did not get a complete picture of the
state of their finances.
Utalii College tops the list of public institutions
in financial distress with Sh1.5 billion deficit for which it is
seeking government relief. During the year under review, the college’s
current liabilities of Sh1.7 billion were nearly eight times more than
current assets of Sh202.3 million, resulting to a negative working
capital position of Sh1.5 billion.
That position led Mr Ouko to conclude that the
“Kenya Utalii College is technically insolvent and its continued
existence as a going concern is dependent on financial support from
government and its creditors.”
Like in the previous year, the college did not
comply with a loan agreement it signed with the government in February
1996. Under the deal, the government extended a Sh140 million loan to
Utalii for purposes of refurbishment but the college had paid only Sh6
million by the close of financial year ended June 2013.
“Accumulated interest and principal amounts as at
June 30, 2013 stood at Sh1.67 billion,” Mr Ouko says in the report,
adding that no meaningful progress had been made in ongoing efforts to
have the government write off the loan.
The audit report shows that Maseno University had
accumulated a Sh141 million deficit in the year under review, having
sunk deeper into the red from the Sh100.1 million deficit it returned in
the 2011/12 financial year.
“The university’s current liabilities of Sh161.5
million exceeded the current assets of Sh47.3 million by a large
margin,” Mr Ouko says, adding that the university is technically
insolvent and may face serious financial difficulties in future
operations “as its continued operation is dependent on the support of
government and creditors.”
And in a show of how shambolic financial management
is at Maseno, the report says the university’s comprehensive income
statement for 2012/13 had included “the council’s expenses of Sh21.7
million and other amounts totalling Sh5.9 million for other payments,
hotel accommodation, contingencies, payroll payments, undescribed
payments and payments to three officers that were not supported by any
documentation.”
Maasai Mara University reported a Sh4.9 million
deficit resulting in the decrease of revenue reserves from negative
Sh29.8 million the previous year to negative Sh34.7 million in June
2013.
“In addition, its current liabilities of Sh146.9
million exceeded the current assets of Sh90.9 million by Sh56 million,”
Mr Ouko says, reaching the conclusion that the university is technically
insolvent.
The audit report also questions the university’s
non-current assets balance of Sh846 million which included undetermined
value of land measuring 129 acres it inherited from the former Narok
Teachers Training College.
Maasai Mara also reported trade and other payables
balance of Sh95 million. The amount includes payroll creditors’ balance
of Sh50.6 million in respect of unremitted pension scheme deductions,
making the auditor general to conclude that “the university is therefore
exposed to penalties and interests charged for non-remittance of these
deductions.
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