
The Senate Finance and Public Administration References Committee has uncovered explosive evidence about the PricewaterhouseCoopers (PwC) secrets-for-sale scandal.
Senate Estimates has heard an avalanche of Bergin-like revelations of and a litany of enforcement failures.
But beneath the outrage and sensational headlines聽lies a : once government accountability was privatised, it was only ever going to end one way.
Every election the campaign machine trots out the :聽that 鈥渢rimming the fat off the public service鈥 and more outsourcing of government services increases productivity and decreases costs.
It is : that 鈥渂loated鈥 public servants who are 鈥渂ludgers鈥 on an 鈥渆asy wicket鈥 are the reason they themselves are underpaid, overworked and unable to pay their rent.
In reality, the perceived cost savings and allegedly superior technical skills of were not only grossly overstated, the 鈥渇at鈥 was never cut from where it really lay.
It was not cut from senior executives on six-figure salaries, the board room wine or the chauffeur driven Comcar fleet, but from the public servants鈥 intellectual muscle.
It was cut from the very in-house expertise that once protected self-interested politicians from themselves, protected democracy from politicians, and protected taxpayers money from corruption 鈥 specialist skills such as contract compliance and internal audit.
Forensic in skill and incorruptible by design, used to be on the state or federal payroll, their independence protected by law and union.
by verifying accounts and stress-testing the integrity of policies, contracts and procurement.
But integrity costs and talk is cheap, especially during election campaigns, and audit functions became a juicy target for ruthless politicians who knew public service cuts are always popular with misinformed electorates.
In the profit-driven feeding frenzy that followed, corporate advisory firms began swallowing each other whole until only four were left:聽KPMG, Deloitte, Ernst and Young and PwC.
The cuts to publicly-owned integrity protection services continued.聽Catastrophe was only a matter of time.
The long game
The issue of the so-called 鈥淏ig 4鈥 accounting firms being government contractors complicit in private corporate tax evasion has been reported by since 2016.
罢丑别听 reported that in 2019, Peter Collins, PwC鈥檚 then head of international tax in Australia, was de-registered by the Tax Practitioners Board (TPB) for misconduct.
Collins did not walk until two years after his de-registration, and an initial referral to the Australian Federal Police (AFP) found the matter unworthy of further investigation.
The 16-executive, 53-partner PwC was happy for Collins to take the fall and even happier the conduct causing his de-registration was not publicly disclosed.
At the current inquiry, led by 聽and supported by Greens Senator David Shoebridge and Labor Senator Deborah O鈥橬eill,聽the reason Collins was de-registered finally came to light when the committee obtained .
罢丑别听committee heard the TPB聽had been advised that wider disclosure would have been illegal under its own confidentiality laws.聽It was the first of many enforcement failures, including the initial .
Pocock told聽the ABC鈥檚 7.30 on June 7聽that events in PwC since Collins lost his tax agent registration amounted to a 鈥済o slow鈥 protection racket that went on for more than seven years.
Now we know why.聽In 2016, PwC was 鈥斅燼t a cost to the taxpayer of hundreds of millions of dollars 鈥斅燼dvising the government on amendments to tax law to minimise tax avoidance by multinationals.
The emails revealed that Collins was advising the government on tax law in the morning, then shopping out that classified confidential government intelligence to PwC鈥檚 own multi-national, tax-avoiding clients in the afternoon.
What鈥檚 more, at least 50 other people at PwC knew about it.
Worst of all, witness after witness at the inquiry outlined just how ingratiated PwC had become in government processes: including Treasury, the Tax Office, Defence, the Robodebt scheme and the AFP 鈥 the same now investigating a fresh Treasury referral into possible criminality at PwC.
Shoebridge called it 鈥渁 complex mess鈥, saying having PwC staff embedded in top secret defence areas is 鈥減utting Dracula in charge of the blood bank鈥 and questioning how the AFP can plead no conflict of interest in investigating its own internal auditor.
whether AFP Commissioner Reece Kershaw鈥檚 personal friendship with former New South Wales Commissioner Mick Fuller, who now works for PwC, presents a conflict of interest given the size of the contracts involved, He described PwC as being like 鈥渁n octopus鈥, with tentacles everywhere.
By any measure it鈥檚 a dumpster fire.
Calls for PwC to be banned from all future government contracts have revealed just how baked into the government鈥檚 own auditing and advisory services PwC is.
Finance minister she did not know how big the hole really is, or how many of the numerous PwC staff are still working in secure government areas and may have been in on it.
What now?
for new government contracts聽however, for all the recriminations, Collins remains the only one to actually lose his job.
PwC鈥檚 CEO has stood down, but remains a partner.聽The board鈥檚 entire risk and governance committees voluntarily stood aside, but the individuals remain on the payroll at PwC.
Nine other senior staff have been 鈥渟tood down鈥 pending an internal PwC investigation, the findings of which already have zero credibility.聽Both PwC and the government remain in catastrophic-damage control, despite being appointed.聽No doubt talkback radio can help with that, too.
[Suzanne James has a background in writing policy, governance, risk management and regulatory compliance frameworks and in legislative compliance application.]