- Enacted
- 20 June 2007
- Last amended
- 2012
- Sponsoring body
- National Assembly of Bhutan
The 2007 statute that governs Bhutan's public financial management, the budget process, the Consolidated Fund, public debt, government procurement and audit by the Royal Audit Authority.
The Public Finance Act of Bhutan, 2007 is the principal statute governing public financial management in the Kingdom. The Act was passed by the National Assembly on 20 June 2007 and regulates the preparation and execution of the national budget, the Consolidated Fund, public debt, Government accounting and reporting, and the audit of public bodies.[1]
The Act gives statutory effect to Article 14 of the Constitution, which prescribes the constitutional framework for taxation, the Consolidated Fund and parliamentary control over public expenditure. It is the operational link between the Constitution's fiscal provisions and the day-to-day machinery of the Ministry of Finance, line agencies and the Royal Audit Authority.[1][2]
The Act was amended in 2012 by the Public Finance (Amendment) Act, which adjusted procurement, debt and reporting provisions to reflect operational experience under the original Act and the requirements of donor-funded reform programmes.[3]
Background
Before 2007, public financial management in Bhutan was governed by the Finance and Accounting Manual, executive notifications and ministerial circulars. The Constitution under preparation between 2001 and 2008 required a clear statutory framework for fiscal management, parliamentary appropriation and audit. The Public Finance Act was drafted by the Ministry of Finance in consultation with the World Bank and Asian Development Bank and was tabled in the National Assembly in 2007.[2]
It replaced the Financial Manual approach with a binding statute that defined the legal status of the Consolidated Fund, the role of the Ministry of Finance as central fiscal authority, and the audit jurisdiction of the Royal Audit Authority.[1][2]
Key provisions
The Act requires the Ministry of Finance to prepare the annual budget for presentation to Parliament, accompanied by a medium-term fiscal framework, revenue estimates, expenditure proposals and debt projections. Parliament approves the budget through an Appropriation Act, and the Consolidated Fund of Bhutan receives all public revenues and meets all approved expenditures.[1]
It sets out rules for re-appropriations within approved heads, supplementary estimates for unforeseen needs, contingency funds and emergency expenditure. Each of these mechanisms requires Ministry authorisation and, in most cases, parliamentary ratification.[1][2]
The Act regulates public debt by setting parliamentary control over external and domestic borrowing, requiring the Ministry of Finance to publish debt strategies, and requiring sustainability assessments for new borrowing. It places limits on advances and overdrafts from the Royal Monetary Authority in line with the RMA Act.[1]
It prescribes Government accounting standards, financial reporting timelines and the duty of accounting officers in each agency to maintain accurate records. The Act mandates audit by the Royal Audit Authority as the constitutional supreme audit institution and requires Annual Audit Reports to be submitted to Parliament for review.[1][2]
Public procurement is governed by the Act in conjunction with the Procurement Rules and Regulations issued under it. State-owned enterprises and statutory bodies are required to file annual financial statements, comply with audit requirements and report to Parliament through the Ministry of Finance.[1]
Implementing institutions
The Ministry of Finance is the principal implementing authority. Within it, the Department of Public Accounts, the Department of National Budget, the Department of Macroeconomic Affairs and the Central Coordinating Agency for Internal Audit operate under the Act. The Royal Audit Authority audits compliance and reports to Parliament. The Royal Monetary Authority interacts with the Act on debt and reserves, and the Anti-Corruption Commission investigates fraud and corruption in public expenditure.[2][4]
Amendments and reform
The Public Finance (Amendment) Act of 2012 modified procurement provisions, public-debt rules and reporting timelines. Subsequent reforms have come through subsidiary regulation, including revised Procurement Rules and Regulations (2009 and successor versions), Public Expenditure Management Manuals and updated debt management procedures. Public Expenditure and Financial Accountability assessments commissioned by donors in 2010 and 2016 evaluated implementation and recommended further refinements.[2][4][3]
Implementation and impact
The Act has formalised Bhutan's budget process and brought it into line with internationally accepted public-financial-management standards. PEFA assessments rated Bhutan's PFM systems comparatively well within South Asia, particularly on budget credibility and revenue administration, while flagging weaknesses in cash-flow forecasting, internal audit, fiscal-risk reporting from state-owned enterprises and procurement transparency.[2][4]
Successive Royal Audit Authority Annual Audit Reports have documented persistent weaknesses in compliance with the Act — irregularities in procurement, weak project monitoring and irregular advances — across line ministries and dzongkhag administrations. Critics have also faulted the limited transparency of state-enterprise reporting and the difficulty of obtaining detailed fiscal data on hydropower projects financed under intergovernmental arrangements with India.[5]
See also
References
- Public Finance Act of Bhutan 2007 — full text (Office of the Attorney General)
- Bhutan Public Financial Management Accountability Assessment, June 2010 — PEFA
- Public Finance (Amendment) Act of Bhutan, 2012 — National Assembly of Bhutan
- Bhutan PFM Performance Assessment, September 2016 — PEFA
- Royal Audit Authority — Annual Audit Reports
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