CAG focus now moves to central schemes

If the policy passes muster, it will have a lot of ramifications for government spending.

Update: 2018-06-07 00:43 GMT
The Comptroller and Auditor General of India (CAG) on Friday indicated that Centre did not follow any rationale for distributing capital among state owned banks.

New Delhi: In a move that has huge ramifications for the all the government schemes, especially in the social and the health sectors, the Comptroller and Auditor General is mulling the possibility of extending its mandate to examining whether projects like Swachh Bharat Abhiyan, Namami Ganga, primary education schemes, vaccination drives etc are serving their purpose in letter and spirit and not just in achieving the target numbers.

“We are internally examining the possibility of measuring outcomes of the various government schemes. As a next step, we will call in experts and find out if such an effort is possible for various schemes and whether tools and parameters to measure outcomes can be built. After all, audit is a tool to assist governance”, said Rajiv Mehrishi, CAG said.

If the policy passes muster, it will have a lot of ramifications for government spending, selection of welfare schemes, their planning, manner of execution and follow-ups.

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