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Inter-American Organizations: U.S. Agencies Support Oversight Mechanisms but Could Enhance Their Monitoring of U.S. Assistance Agreements

GAO-18-219 Published: Dec 29, 2017. Publicly Released: Jan 29, 2018.
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Fast Facts

The United States belongs to several organizations that promote health care, democracy, and other causes in the Americas. For example, the Organization of American States is investigating actions of the Venezuelan government against its citizens, and the Pan American Health Organization is fighting malaria in Haiti and elsewhere. U.S. assessed and voluntary contributions to four of these organizations totaled over $160 million in 2016.

We found that agencies' agreements with the organizations further U.S. strategic goals. However, we made recommendations for agencies to improve their oversight of financial and performance monitoring.

 

Photograph of Organization of American States headquarters.

Photograph of Organization of American States headquarters.

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Highlights

What GAO Found

GAO found that strategic goals of the Organization of American States (OAS), the Pan American Health Organization (PAHO), the Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture (IICA), and the Pan-American Institute of Geography and History (PAIGH) are predominantly aligned with the strategic goals of the Department of State (State), the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), and the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). For example, IICA's strategic goals of a productive agricultural sector, enhancing agricultural development, and food security are aligned with USDA's foreign assistance goals. State, USAID, HHS, and USDA fund activities in the form of assistance agreements (e.g., grants and cooperative agreements) with OAS, PAHO, and IICA, which in 2016 totaled $32 million. According to agency officials, the agencies employ mechanisms to ensure that these agreements align with U.S. strategic goals.

OAS, PAHO, IICA, and PAIGH have established mechanisms for overseeing their use of funds, such as external auditors, internal audit boards, and anti-fraud and ethics policies. State and USDA have directly supported these mechanisms. For example, State engaged in the selection process for OAS's Inspector General.

GAO's review of 12 selected assistance agreements found that USDA included no financial or performance monitoring provisions in one of its agreements and that State did not include two key monitoring provisions in one of its agreements, called for by applicable guidance. GAO found that the remaining 10 agreements it reviewed contained all key monitoring provisions and that State has since taken corrective action.

GAO found that U.S. agencies did not have full documentation of 18 of the 42 monitoring activities required by the 12 assistance agreements GAO reviewed (see table). For example, USDA did not have full documentation, such as for financial reports, of any of its 10 required monitoring activities and USDA officials did not explain their lack of documentation. USAID officials explained that their lack of full documentation was due, in part, to grant officers not always following their document management policies. State and HHS have since taken corrective action. If an agency does not have full documentation of monitoring activities, it may lack information needed to make appropriate budgetary and programmatic decisions.

Extent to Which U.S. Agencies Had Documentation of Monitoring Activities for Selected Assistance Agreements with the Organization of American States, Pan American Health Organization, and Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture

 

Not documented

Partially documented

Fully documented

Total

USDA

8

2

0

10

USAID

0

2

9

11

State

1

4

11

16

HHS

0

1

4

5

Total

9

9

24

42

Sources: GAO analysis of documentation from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), the Department of State (State), and the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). | GAO-18-219

Why GAO Did This Study

The United States is a member of the OAS, PAHO, IICA, and PAIGH, which promote democracy, health care, agricultural development, and scientific exchange.

GAO was asked to review U.S. assistance to these four organizations. In this report, GAO (1) assesses the extent to which the organizations' strategic goals align with those of U.S. agencies; (2) examines how the organizations oversee the use of their funds and the extent to which U.S. agencies have supported those efforts; (3) assesses the extent to which U.S. agencies included key monitoring provisions as part of assistance agreements; and (4) assesses the extent to which U.S. agencies had documentation of monitoring activities, including those called for by these provisions. GAO analyzed documents and interviewed officials from State, USAID, HHS, USDA, and the organizations. GAO also analyzed a nongeneralizable sample of 12 of the 60 assistance agreements that were awarded by State, USAID, HHS, and USDA to OAS, PAHO, and IICA and were active during calendar years 2014 through 2016. For each agency, GAO selected three agreements with the lowest, median, and highest dollar value.

Recommendations

GAO recommends that (1) USDA ensure inclusion of all monitoring provisions as part of agreements and (2) USAID and USDA ensure full documentation of monitoring activities. USDA and USAID concurred with GAO's recommendations.

Recommendations for Executive Action

Agency Affected Recommendation Status
U.S. Agency for International Development The USAID Administrator should ensure that USAID officials have full documentation of required monitoring activities in agreements with inter-American organizations. (Recommendation 1)
Closed – Implemented
USAID officials said that all official USAID policies and procedures are set out/found/articulated through the Agency Automated Directive System (ADS). While ADS 201 includes details on USAID monitoring and evaluation policies generally, ADS 308 focuses on policies related international organizations. USAID has also revised ADS 308 to institute critical safeguards and provide agreement monitoring guidance in line with USAID priorities. It clarifies roles and responsibilities for operating units and USAID/Washington Bureaus involved in the oversight and management of agreements with international organizations. ADS 308 includes a provision that agreement officer representatives are required to be certified before assuming their duties by taking a two-week training course, which includes training on maintaining the official grant files. USAID issued an agency notice in August 2018 to remind all agreement officer representatives of these responsibilities, including the requirement to maintain complete files for each grant agreement.
Department of Agriculture The Secretary of Agriculture should ensure that USDA includes all key monitoring provisions specified by applicable guidance as part of agreements with inter-American organizations. (Recommendation 2)
Closed – Implemented
In September 2021, USDA provided GAO with updated policies and procedures for initiating and administering federal assistance documents, specifically grants and cooperative agreements, with USDA recipients. These updated policies include monitoring provisions and additional recipient responsibilities for monitoring. For example, USDA's guidance states that recipients are responsible for conducting, managing, monitoring, and reporting program performance to ensure that adequate progress is being made toward achieving the objectives of the grant. In addition, the guidance states that grant recipients are responsible for submitting financial reports in a timely manner which are a reflection of project performance and proper tracking and timely obligation and expenditure of project funds.
Department of Agriculture The Secretary of Agriculture should ensure that USDA officials have full documentation of required monitoring activities in agreements with inter-American organizations. (Recommendation 3)
Closed – Implemented
Agency officials told us that the Foreign Agricultural Service, which manages the inter-American grants, follows federal guidance for monitoring and reporting program performance and is required to include monitoring documentation as part of its grant agreements . In February and March 2022, USDA provided examples of USDA assistance agreements with inter-American organizations, along with accompanying performance and financial reports. This documentation demonstrates that USDA is collecting required key monitoring documentation for its inter-American agreements. By requiring and collecting monitoring documentation for its inter-American grant agreements, USDA will have the information it needs to make appropriate budgetary and programmatic decisions.

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Topics

Assistance programsCompliance oversightDocumentationForeign assistanceInternal auditsInternational organizationsPerformance monitoringStrategic goalsUse of fundsAgricultural development