The Public Financial Management Act states that the Minister of Finance can hold the salary of the head of the entity who is not reporting on time.
Summary
Finance Minister Samuel D. Tweah claims that he has the power granted to him by the PFM law to hold salaries of head of ministries and agencies who are not reporting their financial activities on time. We checked and found his statement to be mostly correct.
Evidence
Finance and Development Planning Minister Samuel Tweah recently claimed that the Public Financial Management Act of 2009 gives the Minister of Finance the authority to withhold salaries of heads of government ministries and agencies who delay in submitting their (financial) reports.
Minister Tweah speaking at the signing ceremony of four new support programmes from the European Union in Liberia said: “The law says if a minister is not reporting on time, that’s a law, we have not exercised the law. The minister of finance can hold the salary of the head of the entity”.
Local Voices Liberia Fact Checking Desk verified the claim made by Minister Tweah and found that there were amendments made to the Public Financial Management Act of 2009.
Section 11 of the Amended PFM Act which was approved and published in October 2019, gives the Minister of Finance and Development Planning the authority to develop regulations, instructions and guidelines to ensure proper management of public finances.
Section 11 of the Amended PFM Act reads: “The Minister may issue regulations, instructions and guidelines as the need arises, to further clarify specific responsibilities and tasks related to the implementation of this Act and its regulations consistent with the Administrative Producers Law and the Executive Law”.
Conclusion
Based upon this authority which Section 11 of the Amended PFM Act gives Liberia’s Finance Minister the authority to regulate the public finances by setting regulations, instructions and guidelines. Therefore, Minister Tweah is mostly correct by saying that the PFM law grants him the power to hold salaries of heads of government ministries and agencies who are delaying the submission of their financial reports.
Local Voices Liberia, in partnership with the United Nations Development Programme, has implemented the iVerify Liberia system with the objective of strengthening capacities to address threats to information integrity, especially in view of the upcoming 2023 elections, to ensure all Liberian citizens have access to credible, reliable and verified information, everywhere and at all times.
This initiative is funded by Irish Aid, Embassy of Sweden in Monrovia, European Union Delegation in Liberia and the United Nations Peacebuilding Fund. The donors have no say in the production of this fact check report.