OMB: Give CFOs more responsibility

Chief financial officers are ready to go beyond data collection, said Danny Werfel, acting controller at the Office of Management and Budget.

Now that they have achieved dramatic progress in financial reporting, agency chief financial officers must look beyond their traditional roles as data collectors. Agencies now produce financial statements in a short closing period and increasingly obtain clean audits with few or no major weaknesses, said Danny Werfel, acting controller at the Office of Management and Budget.Last year, 19 agencies earned clean audits, meaning their financial data was accurate and reliable. Overall, the federal government halved its major accounting weaknesses to 39.“The CFO community has come a long way in achieving these,” Werfel said Jan. 30 at the CFO Summit sponsored by the Association for Federal Information Resources Management. “CFOs are looking around and saying, ‘Now what is my role?’”CFOs need a strategy for doing more with the financial data and integrating financial management more tightly with information systems and agency missions, he said. For example, chief executive officers should collaboratively identify the agency’s business goals and risks and work to add value and mitigate risks. CFOs could also turn to other parts of the organization to help reduce their workload in noncore responsibilities. “CFOs need more capacity to move beyond compliance,” Werfel said. To gain that capacity, CFOs should centralize and standardize activities and move to shared-services providers, both of which OMB has directed agencies to do under the Financial Management Line of Business initiative.OMB and oversight agencies should reconsider what’s required of CFOs, including how to better align those requirements with internal controls for managing risk. CFOs could combine accounting and business intelligence software to help manage risk and accomplish agency objectives. For example, they could develop systems to track progress and benchmarks against which to measure their activities, he said.CFOs also want to improve the usefulness of their financial reports for agency managers, Congress and the public.CFOs have improved financial reporting despite challenges, Werfel said. For instance, they are overwhelmed with compliance activities for numerous regulations, such as the Federal Information Security Management Act and Circular A-123 on internal controls for financial reporting. CFOs are also responsible for collecting compliance data, but they don’t have the authority to compel program and division leaders to supply such data if they don’t report to the CFO. Many financial operations, such as transaction processing, are complex and decentralized, and resources are shrinking, Werfel said.He said he hopes the next presidential administration will not abandon the simplicity and clarity of the President’s Management Agenda score card.“Agencies during this administration have taken financial management light years ahead from where it was,” Werfel said.