Identifier
Created
Classification
Origin
04SANTODOMINGO6564
2004-12-07 20:57:00
CONFIDENTIAL
Embassy Santo Domingo
Cable title:  

DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: TRANSPARENCY OF

Tags:  DR EAID EFIN MARR 
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This record is a partial extract of the original cable. The full text of the original cable is not available.
C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 SANTO DOMINGO 006564 

SIPDIS

TREASURY FOR OASIA/MDM:J. FRANCO
STATE FOR WHA/CAR, PM, EB/IFD/OMA:L. GALLAGHER

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/29/2014
TAGS: DR EAID EFIN MARR
SUBJECT: DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: TRANSPARENCY OF
BUDGETS/MILITARY SPENDING

REF: STATE 239929

Classified By: DCM Lisa Kubiske. Reason: 1.4 (b) and (d).

C O N F I D E N T I A L SECTION 01 OF 03 SANTO DOMINGO 006564

SIPDIS

TREASURY FOR OASIA/MDM:J. FRANCO
STATE FOR WHA/CAR, PM, EB/IFD/OMA:L. GALLAGHER

E.O. 12958: DECL: 11/29/2014
TAGS: DR EAID EFIN MARR
SUBJECT: DOMINICAN REPUBLIC: TRANSPARENCY OF
BUDGETS/MILITARY SPENDING

REF: STATE 239929

Classified By: DCM Lisa Kubiske. Reason: 1.4 (b) and (d).


1. (SBU) SUMMARY: The Dominican Republic,s military budget
is determined in the national budget process overseen by the
Office of the Budget, resulting in an annual national
government budget bill considered and voted by Congress and
signed and promulgated by the President. The military budget
is subject to audit by civilian authorities and by the audit
office of the armed forces. The new president's appointments,
his policy of austerity measures and his adamant call for
"zero tolerance" for corruption are taken as policy
guidelines by the Secretary of the Armed Forces Vadm Sigfrido
Pared Perez. Defense expenditures at a reported 0.4 percent
of GDP will not be a priority for this administration.

General Overview of Military Budgeting and Spending
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


2. (SBU) Government budgeting has achieved limited
improvements in transparency over the last five years. In
2003, the government set up an Integrated Financial
Management System (SIGF) designed eventually to integrate all
budgetary, financial, and public debt management of
government spending under the Finance Ministry. Several new
draft law proposals are pending in the Congress that should
further enhance good governance. These potential laws would
address budget, the Treasury, public borrowing, and
government procurement.


3. (SBU) The Dominican military's annual 2004 budget was
approximately 5.2 billion Dominican pesos (about USD 180
million at current rates). It had sustained minimal growth
during the previous 4 years. Its primary function has been,
and continues to be, to provide employment for the estimated
42,000 personnel currently on the Armed Forces, rolls.
Payroll and associated personnel benefits have accounted for
the bulk of budget expenditures (between 88 to 91 percent
depending on service branch) known locally as &carga fija8
(fixed load expenses).


4. (SBU) Budget trends are likely to continue without a
reduction in human resources. Despite the military's request

for a 2005 budget increase, the defense budget probably will
not grow during this administration. Newly elected President
Leonel Fernandez has announced plans for general austerity
as part of an IMF standby program under negotiation, putting
all institutions on notice of short funding until economic
conditions improve significantly. Reduction in the number of
uniformed personnel is seen as politically difficult, in part
because about 30 to 35 percent of the uniformed force is
actually employed in civilian government offices or in the
private sector, often as private residence guards,
chauffeurs, and other personal service assistants. Therefore
the remaining discretionary portion of the budget leaves
little for operational requirements and acquisition of
supplies needed to maintain the Armed Forces. Inflation and
the currency fluctuation from early 2003 trough mid-2004 have
further compounded the erosion of the military,s operational
capabilities, forcing it to seek off-budget requests to
conduct some of its day-to-day operations, delay payment of
rations to soldiers, or postpone the payment of other
mandated fringe benefits to personnel and materiel suppliers.



A. General Overview of Auditing Procedures
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


5. (SBU) All Dominican institutions are technically subject
to audit by the &Camara de Cuentas,8 a five-member
independent civilian body attached to Congress. The Camara
de Cuentas reports to the Congress, presenting on the first
ordinary legislature of a fiscal year an annual account of
expenditures of the previous fiscal year. In early 2004
President Mejia signed and promulgated Public Law 10-04
giving the Camara de Cuentas broad authority to look into any
public institution,s finances. Reports and examinations by
the Camara are generally considered to be pro forma.


6. (SBU) The "Contraloria General de la Republic" or
Dominican General Accounting Office (DGAO) has the authority
to audit any government office or operation and concentrates
principally on cases of suspected fraud and abuse. For
example, in April 2003 the DGAO delivered an audit of "Plan
Renove," a program to support procurement public transport
vehicles to be used by transport union members; in November
2004 the Attorney General of the new administration (in
office since mid-August) lodged formal charges of fraud and
embezzlement against 12 persons. The DGAO is currently
auditing the administration of a financing agreement with the
U.S. EXIMBANK approved in 2001 in the amount of approximately
USD 10 million for the purchase of helicopters for the
military. As is the case for all foreign financing to
official agencies creating government debt, the contract was
approved by both the Senate and House. The military
leadership and the responsible office of the Presidency used
a generally worded "amendments" clause in the agreement to
increase the amount of the loan from USD 10 million to USD 76
million, using certifications from the then presidents of the
Senate and House, who did not refer the amended terms of
contract to committee or to the full legislature for approval.


7. (SBU) New Comptroller of the Armed Forces Rear Admiral
Betances has a clear mandate from the Secretary of the Armed
Forces, Vadm Sigfrido Pared Perez. Betances is a formally
trained financial manager/accountant who is highly regarded
and knowledgeable about the budget submission process. The
Comptroller is charged with submitting the services, budgets
and tracking their expenditures. He has a team of internal
auditors who work for him in the respective branches of the
service. They in turn are charged with tracking the
expenditures of the respective services. In application of
new policies of budgetary restraint, the Comptroller intends
to prohibit discretionary purchases for sums that involve
more than 2 million Dominican pesos (USD 75,000),subjecting
these instead to prior approval from the Presidency and the
Secretary of Defense. Service chiefs have in the past had

SIPDIS
the autonomy to seek exterior financing without concurrence
from the MOD for such acquisitions or expenditures, provided
there was political support for such purchases.


8. (SBU) The Dominican military,s budget is formulated
annually in September by the respective services, which
submit it in October to the Comptroller General of the Armed
Forces. The Comptroller,s office further compiles and
submits the budget to the civilian-staffed Presidential
Office of Budget Planning. Negotiations follow before formal
submission of the budget authorization and appropriations
bill to the Congress in December or early January for
approval, presidential signature, and publication in the
Official Gazette. While items for military pay and
allowances are relatively easy to establish, the operations
and maintenance portions of the respective service branch
budgets are archaic and, in the case of maintenance and
operations expenditures, formulated without verification of
the existence or operability of equipment.


9. (C) Military expenditures are not audited on a routine
basis, as there are no formal regulatory requirements
requiring them or setting schedules for them. Past
Comptrollers have only occasionally carried out special
audits, and these have generally appeared to be motivated at
least in part by political considerations or in-house
rivalries -- as in cases when a given commander or staff
leader has been targeted for misappropriation of public
funds. The results of these audits are not publicly
available and weaknesses of the judicial system mean no one
to date has been incarcerated or punished severely for
abusing the public,s trust. Transfer or dismissal from the
service are the most severe sanctions employed.


10. (SBU) Treasury exercises ad hoc controls on military
spending through the mechanism of the period release of funds
to military components. Each service component commander
must request allocations or checks for payment, a form of
control for the outflows of funds from the Treasury.


11. (SBU) The nerve center for military finances is the
office of the Director of Logistics (J-4),which serves more
as a paymaster and disbursement office than as an office for
logistics planning and policy making. Its director has been
at the helm for more than ten years, apparently immune from
politics because of his specialized expertise.


B. The Military Budget and On-Budget and Off-Budget Revenue
and Expenses
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


12. (C) During the last decade, major military equipment
acquisitions have not appeared in the military,s budget.
This changes with the 2005 budget just submitted to Congress,
which includes specific line items for acquisition of vessels
(two coast guard vessels and reconstruction of six more, for
a total of aprox USD 5.7 million) and aircraft and associated
training (not detailed, for approx USD 23.9 million).
Financing for these acquisitions is identified as coming from
"external resources" (loans). Any such transaction creating
government endebtedness must be authorized by the executive
(in practice, either the Technical Secretary of the
Presidency or the Minister of Finance) and approved by vote
of both the Senate and the House of Representatives.
Justification and planning for such acquisitions has been
poor and it is widely believed that intermediaries and
approving officials receive under-the-table commissions.

13. (SBU) Off-budget requests are the end-around for
resolving budget shortfalls, generally to secure funds for
special activities or operational needs. For example, during
a two-month troop buildup on the Dominican/Haitian border
during the Haitian domestic crisis of the spring 2004, the
Presidency provided operational funds from the President,s
discretionary account, known internally as the &14018
account. The funding covered for fuel, maintenance and
rations. Another example of off-budget financing from other
parts of the government was the payment of 2,000 excess Air
Force personnel shorted pay due to the service,s lack of
funds at the end of the fiscal year.

14. (SBU) Military leaders resort to canvassing the private
sector for donations when other methods fall short.
Historically, vendors and wealthy private sector businessmen
who need favors from the military have provided funds for
special needs, without the expectation of repayment. One
recent example was the return from Iraq of the batallion of
302 Dominican soldiers. The decision was taken abruptly to
curtail them by two months from their commitment in order to
get them home by the date of the mid-May presidential
election. When it became evident that U.S. strategic airlift
would not be available in time to meet that deadline, the
President persuaded Air Europa, a major operator in Dominican
tourism, to fly the troops back from Spain, presumably at no
charge.


15. (SBU) Military and Police budgets are independent of one
another. Law enforcement efforts and public safety fall
under the Secretariat of Interior and Police. Its budget of
roughly USD 130 million is completely independent of the
military budget.

The Military Component of the National Budget
- - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -


16. (SBU) As noted above, on-budget military expenditures
amount to approximately 0.4 pct of GDP and consist for the
most part of a "jobs program" for the 42,000 members of the
Armed Forces. The 5.2 billion peso budget represents
approximately 6.3 percent of the central government current
operating budget of 82 billion, or 4.8 percent of the
non-financial public sector budget (current capital
expenditure). The fiscal year runs from January 1 to
December 31; the administration proposes a budget to
Congress, generally in December, for general debate. Both
houses must pass the annual Budget Law, which becomes law
when it is signed by the President and published in the
Official Gazette.

KUBISKE