NSW and Victorian governments put embattled firm KPMG on notice
The NSW government demanded assurance from KPMG that people under investigation as part of a whistleblower scandal are not working on government contracts, while Victoria said it was reviewing contracts with the firm.
The NSW and Victorian governments are scrutinising their multimillion-dollar relationships with KPMG, after the consulting giant last week confirmed confidential client data had been shared, throwing the company into turmoil.
The NSW government on Wednesday demanded assurance from KPMG that people under investigation as part of a whistleblower scandal are not working on multimillion-dollar government contracts, while Victoria this week said it was reviewing contracts with the firm.
The growing pressure from governments came as another senior executive stepped aside from their duties at the embattled firm.
In a letter seen by this masthead, NSW Treasury secretary Michael Coutts-Trotter has told KPMG to reveal “as a matter of priority” what the firm will do to address issues revealed by its “ethical lapses”, and provide a list of active contracts it has with all NSW government agencies, irrespective of the procurement arrangement.
The NSW government has also sought written confirmation from KPMG that none its personnel under internal or external investigation are currently working on any NSW government engagements – and that all information obtained by KPMG while providing internal audit or other services for NSW government agencies has been appropriately managed.
Tender documents reveal the NSW government has current contracts with KPMG entities worth more than $70 million. Those contracts, with a range of state government departments, are mostly due to expire between later this month and October 2029.
A Victorian government spokesperson said the issues at KPMG were “a serious matter” and the government would review its contracts with the firm.
“We are considering our next steps to ensure government information has not been inappropriately used,” they said. “We will also review all contracts with KPMG.”
Data collected by the Victorian Auditor-General’s Office shows KPMG was the state government’s biggest consultancy vendor between 2017-18 and 2022-23. Over that period, it awarded KPMG $150 million worth of work.
KPMG has come under fire after the company confirmed confidential client data had been shared and potentially used to win new business with other clients, following explosive claims from a whistleblower. The scandal first came to light in March when Labor senator Deborah O’Neill revealed the whistleblower allegations in parliament.
On Friday, KPMG Australia boss Andrew Yates and senior partner Julian McPherson abruptly resigned after the company confirmed confidential client data had been shared and potentially used to win new business w
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