We’re here to Assure, Explain and Inspire.
Our Executive Leadership Team is responsible for directing the organisation
Governance and oversight at Audit Wales
We work with others from across the Welsh public sector and beyond
See our current and previous consultations
This section sets out how you may request information from us and provides some direct links to information of wider public interest.
The Auditor General is responsible for auditing most of the public money spent in Wales.
Access our data tools and useful data sources
Our commitment to high audit quality underpins all our work and decision making
The NFI matches data across organisations and systems to help public bodies identify fraud and overpayments.
Our programme of shared learning events focusses on topics that are common across public services
Our forward work programme for performance audit
See our latest news, blogs, events and more
Find out the latest news
See our blogs on many different topics
View our videos on our YouTube channel
Our events bring together individuals from across the Welsh public sector
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The cost of failure in governance and financial management is not only significant in terms of the cost of consultancy and legal services, but also in thousands of hours of time from many different public bodies when responding to the underlying issues.
But the biggest detrimental impact comes from how these issues can deflect an organisation from their core objectives and services to the public.
As financial and human resources become stretched, the risk of governance and/or other service failings increases. This is not just about systems and processes; it is also about behaviours and the importance of demonstrating a clear commitment to the Nolan principles of Selflessness, Integrity, Objectivity, Accountability, Openness, Honesty, and Leadership.
Every time the public see the kind of behavioural and governance failures that Audit Wales have reported on, trust in those leading our public services is damaged. That in turn makes it harder to win public support where more radical changes need to be made.