Audit Reports
An audit report is an official document that checks whether the money received and spent by an organization, like a Grama Panchayat, was done correctly, legally, and without misuse.
It’s a “financial health checkup” done by an independent auditor.
It answers: “Did they follow the rules? Was the money used for the right purpose? Any mistakes or fraud?”
1. What it contains
- Opinion on accounts: Whether the income and expenditure statements are accurate and true
- Compliance check: Whether rules of the Kerala Panchayat Raj Act, financial rules, and government orders were followed
- Irregularities: Any misuse, excess spending, missing vouchers, or unapproved expenses
- Recommendations: What needs to be corrected or improved
- Action taken: What the Panchayat did about past audit objections
2. Who does it
- Local Fund Audit Dept, Kerala: Main auditor for Panchayats
- CAG - Comptroller & Auditor General: Does sample checks and higher-level audits
3. Why it matters
- Accountability: Makes sure public money isn’t wasted or misused
- Transparency: Findings are public, so citizens can see if things are clean
- Correction: Helps Panchayat fix mistakes and improve financial management
- Legal requirement: Every Panchayat must be audited every year
### Difference from Budget & AFS Report:
| *Budget Report* | *AFS Report* | *Audit Report* |
| The plan for future income and spending | The actual record of what happened during the year | An independent check on whether the AFS is correct and legal |
So:
Budget = Plan → AFS = What actually happened → Audit Report = Was it done right?