Internal audit outsourcing practices in the South African public sector

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Authors

Plant, Kato

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

African Consortium of Public Administration

Abstract

This article explores internal audit outsourcing practices in the South African public sector. It examines the extent of outsourcing, the rationales for outsourcing, the preferred external service provider(s) for an outsourced internal audit function (IAF), as well as the status of outsourced IAFs. Data were gathered using questionnaires to interview the heads of IAFs, namely chief audit executives (CAEs), and the users of internal audit services, namely the chairpersons of the audit committees (CACs), as well as the accounting officers (AOs) of national government departments in South Africa. The findings indicate that the respondents preferred in-house IAFs to outsourced IAFs, because of the perceived commitment to governance by in-house IAFs. However, due to a lack of technical expertise and a shortage of competent internal auditors, the IAF is often outsourced to external audit service providers. These results provide public sector authorities with insight into the status of internal audit practices in the public sector and will enable internal audit stakeholders to optimise their sourcing practices and meet stakeholder expectations.

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Keywords

Public sector, Internal audit function, Internal auditors, South Africa (SA)

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Plant, K 2014, 'Internal audit outsourcing practices in the South African public sector', African Journal of Public Affairs, vol. 7, no. 3, pp. 73-87.