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Box 1: Specific Purpose Payments Made Directly to Local Government Authorities The Commonwealth pays current and capital specific purpose payments directly to local governments for purposes such as health and education. Examples of current payments are funds for the provision of residential and community-care services for the frail aged and services for people with disabilities. Examples of capital payments are funds for constructing community child care centres. The 2000-01 Budget allocated $1323.9 million towards general purpose assistance compared with specific purpose payments made directly to local governments of $125.5 million.(3) |
History of General Purpose Assistance(4)
As noted, the Commonwealth first provided general purpose assistance to local government in 1974-75 in line with the Labor Party's policy of providing assistance to local government to promote equality among regions, and to ensure adequate services and the development of resources at local and regional levels. The Grants Commission Act 1973 authorised the Commonwealth Minister to approve the establishment of regional organisations to represent local governments located in the region, and laid down procedures for the organisations to apply for financial assistance. The Act further provided for the Commonwealth Grants Commission to inquire into and report on applications. In the event, the Government distributed the grants among local governments in each State in accordance with the Commission's recommendations. In the following two years, the Commission assessed the applications and the Government again accepted the Commission's recommendations.
In 1975, the Liberal - National Country Party coalition adopted the provision of assistance to local government as part of its federalism policy. The arrangements the Whitlam Government had put in place changed with the election of the Fraser Government and its 'new Federalism' policy of sharing personal income tax revenue among the Commonwealth, State and local governments. Under the provisions of the Local Government (Personal Income Tax Sharing) Act 1976, local government received in 1976-77 the equivalent of 1.52 per cent of net personal income tax collections in the previous year. In November 1977, the Prime Minister, the Hon. Malcolm Fraser MP, announced the Government's intention to increase this proportion to two per cent over the following three years. In the event, the proportion was increased to 1.75 per cent in 1979-80 and to two per cent in 1980-81. The method of allocation of grants among the States was changed from the full equalisation to a method based partly on per capita grants (the so-called minimum grant) and partly on equalisation.(5) Responsibility for determining the intrastate distribution of grants of the part-equalisation component was passed to the newly-created local government Grants Commissions established by the States. The sharing of personal income tax receipts continued through to 1984-85.
The Hawke Government dropped these arrangements, arguing that the economy could not afford tax sharing with the States and local government. Instead, the Government increased local government assistance in 1985-86 by the change in the consumer price index and an additional two per cent growth factor over the 1984-85 level. The distribution among the States remained the same as that specified in the Local Government (Personal Income Tax Sharing) Act 1976.
On 10 May 1984, the Government announced the establishment of a Committee of Inquiry into Local Government chaired by Professor Peter Self. The Committee's terms of reference were wide-ranging including the level and form of Commonwealth funding. The Committee presented its report on 29 October 1985.(6) In April 1986, the Government announced that it had accepted the thrust of the report and that arrangements for the provision of assistance would change from 1986-87 onwards. The new arrangements closely followed the Inquiry's recommendations.(7) Key features of the new arrangements, contained in the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1986, were:
Local government benefited from the 'real terms' guarantee in 1986-87 and 1987-88 because grants to the States fell in real terms in those years, but suffered cuts in real terms in 1988-89, 1989-90 and 1990-91 when real State general purpose funding fell.
The interstate distribution of local government assistance in 1988-89 reflected the transition to equal per capita grants. In 1989-90, grants were distributed on an equal per capita basis.
Commonwealth Grants Commission Report on the Interstate Distribution of Grants
Despite the decision to allocate grants on an equal per capita basis, the 1989 Premiers' Conference agreed that the Commonwealth Grants Commission should report on the interstate distribution of general purpose grants to local government. The Commission's two main tasks were to comment on the desirability of adopting full fiscal equalisation (as distinct from the part-equalisation under the Fraser Government noted above) and to calculate what the distribution of grants would be if full fiscal equalisation were adopted. The Commission's report was released in March 1991.(10) The Commission supported, in principle, the adoption of fiscal equalisation:
In principle, we believe it would not be appropriate to continue indefinitely an interstate distribution of general purpose assistance for local government on a basis (equal per capita) which departs so markedly from fiscal equalisation.(11)
But the Commission recommended against using the per capita relativities that it had assessed for allocating assistance for local government among the States in 1991-92 because of data and methodology deficiencies.(12)
The Premiers' Conference of 31 May 1991 considered the Commission's report. Given the Commission's concerns, the Commonwealth announced in May 1992 that grants would continue to be distributed on an equal per capita basis. Hence grants have continued to be distributed on this basis since 1989-90.
Untying of Local Road Funds and Identified Roads Grants
Until 1990-91, the Commonwealth provided specific purpose grants to local government for local roads under the Australian Land Transport Development Act 1988. The grants were distributed on the basis of criteria in this Act. The October 1990 Special Premiers' Conference agreed that road funds would be untied with effect from 1 July 1991; that is, the conditions applying to road grants would be abolished and local government could spend the funds for any purpose. The untied grants are called identified road grants.(13)
In June 1991, the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1986 was amended to allow road funding to be added to financial assistance grants from 1995-96 and hence distributed on a per capita basis. But this would have been to the detriment of Western Australia, Tasmania, the ACT, the Northern Territory and Queensland.(14) The 1995 Premiers' Conference therefore decided that local road funds would continue to be distributed on the basis of the criteria in the Australian Land Transport Development Act 1988.(15) The effect of this decision has been to freeze the interstate distribution of identified road grants at the historical shares that applied in 1991-92 when grants were untied.
In June 1993, local government Ministers agreed to a review of funding arrangements to ensure an efficient and effective use of resources under the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1986 given the level of funding and distribution of funds among the States. The Australian Urban and Regional Development Review undertook the study.(16) The review's findings included:
Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995
Following consideration of the review and consultations with State and local governments, the Commonwealth undertook further reforms, which were contained in the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995. This Act retained most of the features of the 1986 Act. The main change was the requirement that national principles replace the arrangements whereby each State formulated principles. The main objective of the national principles (see Box 2) was to establish a more nationally consistent and transparent basis for the way State Grants Commissions determine the intrastate allocation of funds.
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Box 2: National Principles Relating to the Allocation of Grants 1. The national principles relating to the allocation of general purpose grants are: (i) Horizontal equalisation. General purpose grants will be allocated to local governing bodies, as far as practicable, on a full horizontal equalisation basis as defined by the Act. This is a basis that ensures that each local governing body in the State/Territory is able to function, by reasonable effort, at a standard not lower than the average standard of other local governing bodies in the State/Territory. It takes account of differences in the expenditure required by those local governing bodies in the performance of their functions and in the capacity of those local governing bodies to raise revenue. (ii) Effort neutrality. An effort or policy neutral approach will be used in assessing the expenditure requirements and revenue-raising capacity of each governing body. This means as far as practicable, that policies of individual local governing bodies in terms of expenditure and revenue effort will not affect grant determination. (iii) Minimum grant. The minimum general purpose grant allocation for a local governing body in a year will be not less than the amount to which the local governing body would be entitled if 30 per cent of the total amount of general purpose grants to which the State/Territory is entitled under section 9 of the Act in respect of the year were allocated among local governing bodies in the State/Territory on a per capita basis. (iv) Other grant support. Other relevant grant support provided to local governing bodies to meet any of the expenditure needs assessed should be taken into account using an inclusion approach. (v) Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islanders. Financial assistance shall be allocated to councils in a way which recognises the needs of Aboriginal peoples and Torres Strait Islanders within their boundaries. 2. The national principle relating to the allocation of the identified road component of the general purpose grants is: Identified road component. The grants should be allocated to local governing bodies as far as practicable on the basis of the relative needs of each local governing body for roads expenditure and to preserve its road assets. In assessing road needs, relevant considerations include length, type and usage of roads in each local governing area. |
Other changes to the 1986 Act included:
With respect to the review, on 1 June 2000, the Minister for Finance and Administration the Hon. John Fahey MP directed the Commonwealth Grants Commission to review the operation of the 1995 Act. The terms of reference are set out in Appendix 1.
The 25 March 1994 Premiers' Conference decided that financial assistance grants paid to the States would be maintained in real per capita terms over the next three years. This decision affected local government grants because the 1995 Act provided for local government general purpose assistance to be increased annually by an escalation factor that reflected the underlying movement in general revenue assistance paid to the States. The escalation factor for State grants reflected indexation for population growth and the consumer price index. The consequence of the Conference decision was to maintain the level of grants in real per capita terms and place a 'floor' under the value of assistance.
As part of A New Tax System (ANTS), the Howard Government proposed that the States assume responsibility for providing financial assistance grants to local government from 1 July 2000.(17) Payments were to be made under the terms of the Intergovernmental Agreement on the Reform of Commonwealth-State Financial Relations, which heads of government signed at the 1999 Premiers' Conference. But under the agreement between the Government and the Australian Democrats to modify the goods and services tax (GST) and implement a package of other proposals, the Government agreed to retain responsibility for assisting local government.(18)
The Howard Government's decision to replace financial assistance grants-and revenue replacement payments-(19)to the States with revenue from the GST from 1 July 2000 severed the link between grants to the States and grants to local government established in the 1986 Act. The Government therefore introduced the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Amendment Act 2000. The main purpose of this Act was to maintain the level of assistance to local government in real per capita terms.(20) Thus in 2000-01, the increase in general purpose assistance will be based on an escalation factor based on population growth and the increase in the consumer price index but excluding the estimated effect of the tax reform measures in The New Tax System.(21)
Local governments can claim input tax credits for the GST. It seems likely that local government will, overall, obtain savings from the implementation of the GST.(22)
Issues in Commonwealth Assistance
The Commonwealth Grants Commission's discussion paper, prepared for the review of the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995, lists 15 issues on which it has specifically sought views (see Appendix 2). The following examines some of these and other issues in Commonwealth assistance to local government.
In 1997-98, Commonwealth general purpose assistance accounted for around 12 per cent of local government revenue.(23) The terms of reference for the review state that it will not address the quantum of funds available under the Act. Nonetheless, local governments see the level of assistance as a major issue. The amounts of assistance since 1991-92 when road grants were untied are shown in Table 1.
Table 1: Commonwealth assistance to local government since 1991-92 ($m)
|
Year |
Financial assistance grants |
Identified roads grants |
Total grants |
Gross domestic product |
Total grants as share of GDP (%) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
1991-92 |
715.0 |
303.2 |
1 018.1 |
405 795 |
0.251 |
|
1992-93 |
730.1 |
319.0 |
1 049.1 |
426 708 |
0.246 |
|
1993-94 |
737.2 |
322.1 |
1 059.3 |
449 416 |
0.236 |
|
1994-95 |
756.5 |
330.5 |
1 087.0 |
473 180 |
0.230 |
|
1995-96 |
806.8 |
358.0 |
1 164.7 |
507 096 |
0.230 |
|
1996-97 |
833.7 |
369.9 |
1 203.6 |
532 401 |
0.226 |
|
1997-98 |
832.9 |
369.6 |
1 202.4 |
564 580 |
0.213 |
|
1998-99 |
854.2 |
379.0 |
1 233.2 |
595 716 |
0.207 |
|
1999-00 |
880.6 |
390.7 |
1 271.3 |
632 391 |
0.201 |
|
Est2000-01 |
914.8 |
405.9 |
1 320.8 |
na |
na |
Est: estimate
Sources: National Office of Local Government(24) Submission to the Commonwealth Grants Commission Inquiry into the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995, p. 45. Reserve Bank statistical series table G10.
Table 1 also shows that assistance has fallen as a proportion of GDP since 1991-92. The main reason is that the indexation arrangements have not provided growth in the real level assistance even though the economy is growing. As noted, indexing assistance for population growth and the consumer price index has maintained assistance in real per capita terms and in effect placed a 'floor' under the value of assistance. But the indexed value of assistance has not risen as fast as real GDP.
The Australian Local Government Association argues that assistance should be increased and fixed at one per cent of total Commonwealth taxation receipts.(25) In 1999-2000, application of this proposal would have resulted in assistance of $1.525 billion compared with actual assistance of $1.265 billion.(26) However, under this proposal, the level of grants would depend on the level of economic activity and discretionary changes to taxation rates.
The payment of $1.2 billion over five years under the roads to recovery program (discussed below under roads to recovery) will boost spending on local roads substantially. In annual average terms, the program is equivalent to additional road spending of $240 million, or 59 per cent of the $406.9 million allocated to identified road grants in the 2000-01 Budget. In contrast, the level of financial assistance grants will continue to fall relative to GDP in the absence of measures to boost funding. Further, it could be argued that the funds allocated to roads to recovery could be better used to increase financial assistance grants on the grounds that local governments are best placed to determine their priorities and can spend financial assistance grants as they wish.(27)
Interstate Distribution of Grants
The terms of reference for the review also state that the review will not address the interstate distribution of grants. However, the bases on which grants are distributed raise a number of issues, particularly their consistency with fiscal equalisation.
As noted, financial assistance grants have been distributed among the States on an equal per capita basis since 1989-90, and the Commonwealth Grants Commission concluded that it would not be appropriate to continue indefinitely this method of distribution as it departs from fiscal equalisation. This raises the question of whether the basis of distribution should be changed to one that results in fiscal equalisation.
A number of factors would have to be taken into account when considering moving from an equal per capita basis. The Commonwealth Grants Commission noted that these considerations included:
(i) The per capita basis of distribution is simple and predictable. An equalisation basis would be much more complex and would deliver less predictable outcomes, particularly in the early years.
(ii) A change to an equalisation system would entail extra administrative costs for both the Commonwealth and the States. These costs have to be considered in relation to the relatively small size of the pool.
(iii) A move to an equalisation basis would be very disruptive to local authorities in New South Wales and Victoria.(28)
As noted, the interstate distribution of identified road grants is still based on the shares that prevailed when the grants were untied in 1991-92 and is thus increasingly anachronistic. Moreover, this distribution is likely to be inconsistent with the fiscal equalisation principle since the distribution was based on the criteria in the Australian Land Transport Development Act 1988. The national principle requiring local government Grants Commissions to take account of road needs and asset preservation further moves the distribution of identified road grants away from a distribution based on fiscal equalisation.
Another issue is whether identified road grants should continue to be identified separately or combined with financial assistance grants. As noted, the proposal that identified road grants be absorbed into financial assistance grants with effect from 1995-96, and distributed among the States on an equal per capita basis, was rejected. No timetable has subsequently been proposed to absorb identified road grants into financial assistance grants.
Views on the desirability of combining the two grants differ. On the one hand, the National Office of Local Government, for example, believes that:
... local road infrastructure warrants separate identification because of the importance placed on it by local communities particularly in regional and rural Australia as well as the States and the Northern Territory and the Commonwealth Government.(29)
The Australian Local Government Association also does not favour combining the two pools:
... combination of the two pools would see large changes in the distribution of the funding between the States. This would lead to volatility in the grants provided to local governing bodies. Separation of the funds is symbolic and continues to demonstrate a Commonwealth commitment towards road funding.(30)
Moreover, local governments spend more on local roads (in excess of $2.5 billion annually) than is funded by identified road grants (estimated at $407 million in 2000-01) so that much of any additional funds in the form of financial assistance grants would be likely to be spent on roads.
On the other hand, the South Australian Government favours combining the funds and allocating them on a per capita basis on the grounds that South Australia is disadvantaged under existing arrangements.(31)
Roads to Recovery Grants
The Commonwealth began providing grants under the Roads to Recovery Act 2000 for the construction, upgrading and maintenance of roads in 2000-01. Roads to recovery grants are paid directly to local governments. As noted, the program will boost spending on local roads substantially. Roads to recovery grants are paid directly to local governments.
The Government decided against using the shares used to distribute identified road grants for the roads to recovery program. But the distribution of roads to recovery grants is similar, in the case of the most populous jurisdictions, to the distribution of identified road grants because both are based on similar methodologies. The distribution of roads to recovery grants-which is based on 50 per cent road length and 50 per cent population 'adjusted to achieve some equity and fairness'(32)-is also unlikely to be consistent with fiscal equalisation.
The differences between the proposed roads to recovery distribution and the distribution of identified road grants are shown in Table 2.
Table 2: Distribution of roads to recovery and identified roads grants
|
State |
Roads to Recovery (%) |
Identified road grants (%) |
|---|---|---|
|
NSW |
28.3 |
29.0 |
|
VIC |
20.8 |
20.6 |
|
QLD |
20.8 |
18.7 |
|
WA |
15.0 |
15.2 |
|
SA |
8.3 |
5.5 |
|
TAS |
3.3 |
5.3 |
|
NT |
1.6 |
2.3 |
|
ACT |
1.6 |
3.2 |
Sources: The Prime Minister Hon John Howard MP and the Hon John Anderson MP, Deputy Prime Minister and Minister for Transport and Regional Services, joint press release, 27 November 2000. Budget paper No. 3, 2000-01.
Table 2 shows that Victoria, Queensland and South Australia gain under the roads to recovery program compared with the distribution of identified road grants.
Section 6(2) of the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995 provides that each local government is entitled to receive a minimum grant. This section provides that the Minister, in formulating national principles, must ensure that the allocation of funds is made, as far a practicable, on a fiscal equalisation basis. But the Minister also must ensure that a local government in a State must not receive less than the amount that the local government would receive if 30% of the amount to which the State is entitled were allocated among local governments in the State on a per capita basis.
The purpose of the minimum grant is to compensate local government for the narrowness of the tax base, namely, municipal rates. The minimum grant also provides a measure of funding certainty. The number of local governments receiving the minimum grant rose from 35 in 1995-96 to 67 in 1999-2000, while the proportion receiving the grant rose from 19 per cent in 1997-98 to 30 per cent in 1999-2000.(33)
Views differ on the desirability of retaining the minimum grant. The Australian Local Government Association argues that the grant should be retained because it recognises the existence of vertical fiscal imbalance between the taxing and spending powers of the Commonwealth and local government and because it provides funding stability.(34) On the other hand, the National Office of Local Government believes that the grant requirement is no longer appropriate on the grounds that it improves the financial capacity of relatively wealthy local governments to the detriment of poorer local governments. The National Office of Local Government therefore recommends that the minimum grant provision be removed.(35)
Intrastate Fiscal Equalisation and Grants Commission Methodologies
The principle of fiscal equalisation underlies the intrastate distribution of grants, and is contained in the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995 and the national principles. Section 3 of the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995 defines fiscal equalisation as that allocation of funds that:
(a) ensures that each local governing body in a State is able to function, by reasonable effort, at a standard not lower than the average standard of other local governing bodies in the State; and
(b) takes account of differences in the expenditure required to be incurred by local governing bodies in the performance of their functions and in their capacity to raise revenue.
But it is questionable to what extent equalisation is being achieved. The State Grants Commissions do not use consistent methodologies to determine the intrastate allocation of grants. Moreover, it is questionable whether some of the methodologies meet the objective of fiscal equalisation:
The Act does not appear to be meeting its goal in promoting consistency in the grant distribution methodologies employed by the State and Territory Grants Commissions.(36)
It would be unreasonable not to expect grant outcomes to reflect the unique situation of each State and Territories' Local Government structure. However, it appears that the differences in grant outcomes are not solely explained by these State and Territory differences and reflect aspects of State and Territory Grants Commissions methodologies which according to the Local Government National Report are difficult to defend and not consistent with the objective of horizontal equalisation.(37)
The National Office of Local Government therefore advocates that:
The Commonwealth Grants Commission assess the feasibility of developing, in consultation with State and Territory Local Grants Commissions, a standard framework that could be adopted by all State and Territory Grants Commissions to guide them in their application of the National Principles and their general purpose and local road grants methodologies. This standard framework would seek to promote, as far as is practical, greater consistency in methodologies between State and Territory Grants Commissions and greater consistency in the application of the National Principles.(38)
Since the provision of Commonwealth assistance is not linked to specific performance requirements, local governments have an incentive to seek higher levels of funding from the Commonwealth. On the other hand, the fall in Commonwealth assistance relative to GDP may have encouraged local governments to rely more on own-source revenue and raise efficiency. As the National Office of Local Government observed:
The provision of financial support may have a negative impact on the financial capacity of Local Government over the longer term. In the absence of financial assistance grants Local Government may have been more inclined to investigate other revenue sources and pursue efficiency gains through resource sharing, amalgamations and improved financial and work practices. The 1994 Review found that where there was a significant reduction in financial assistance grants, councils typically focussed on rate substitution in the first few years and later focussed on greater efficiencies and rationalisation of services in order to keep annual rate increases in line with community expectations. This negative impact is likely to be small.(39)
The provision of Commonwealth assistance also provides State governments with an incentive to limit their grants to local government. The 1985 review of the Local Government (Personal Income Tax Sharing) Act 1976 found that some reduction in State assistance was associated with Commonwealth assistance but that it was difficult to attribute the reduction to increased Commonwealth assistance.(40) Whether or to what extent 'burden shifting' from the States to the Commonwealth now occurs is unclear.
Successive Commonwealth governments have been content to maintain the level of assistance to local government in real per capita terms and so allow assistance to fall relative to GDP. Reversal of this fall would require a change to the method of determining the level of assistance.
It seems unlikely that the interstate distribution of general purpose assistance will be changed soon. The distribution was debated in 1999 during the negotiations between the States and the Commonwealth over the ANTS package but nothing was resolved.(41) Moreover, political considerations seem to militate against changing the methods of distribution as the Federal Minister for Regional Services, Territories and Local Government, Senator the Hon. Ian Macdonald, pointed out to a meeting of the Local Government Association of Queensland:
... the political reality is this: that there is no purpose in the Federal Government re-examining interstate distribution until the States and the Territories can agree on a common approach or until the peak body of Local Government in Australia - the Australian Local Government Association, to which you all belong, can put forward a whole of Local Government submission to the Federal Government. And until you can get the States to agree, until you can get Local Government to agree, the political reality is that there is no purpose in the Federal Government re-examining that issue.(42)
A major change to the basis of distribution, such as a move to fiscal equalisation, would entail disruption, with some States-and hence some local governments-losing funds and others gaining.
Scope exists for improvement in areas such as greater consistency in the methodologies the State Grants Commissions use. The review of the 1995 Act now being conducted by the Commonwealth Grants Commission will contain recommendations for such improvements. The final report is to be presented to the Minister for Finance and Administration late in June 2001.
Terms of Reference for the Review of the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995
The review under Section 17 of the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995 will examine and report on:
(a) the effectiveness of the current arrangements under the Act to achieve the
purposes of the Act and the goals in providing the grants that are referred to in
Section 3 of the Act;
(b) the appropriateness of the current National Principles and, in particular, the
retention of or variations of the minimum grant for the general purpose
component in Section 6 of the Act;
(c) the consistency with the National Principles of the methodology and policies used
by each of the State and Territory Grants Commissions in distributing funds to
councils;
(d) As required by Section 17 of the Act, the review shall also examine and report on:
(i) the effectiveness of the arrangements under this Act in relation to ensuring
that the allocation of funds for local government purposes is made on a full
horizontal equalisation basis as mentioned in paragraph 6(2)(a); and
(ii) the impact of the Act on the raising of revenue by local governing bodies and
on the assistance provided by the States to local governing bodies; and
(iii) the implications of any changes in the functions or responsibilities of local
government bodies; and
(iv) the eligibility for assistance under this Act of bodies declared by the Minister
under Section 4 to be local government bodies.
The Review will not address the interstate distribution of the general purpose and local road grants or the quantum of funds available under the Act.
Issues Raised in the Commonwealth Grants Commission Discussion Paper on the Review of the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995
(i) Are the objectives of the Commonwealth in providing assistance to local government fulfilled through the operations of the Local Government Grants Commission in your State? Are there other objectives that should be considered?
(ii) Are the National Principles (the guidelines for the distribution of Commonwealth financial assistance to local government) fulfilled through the operations of the Local Government Grants Commission in your State? Are there other principles that should be considered?
(iii) Is equalisation still a relevant objective of the Commonwealth in relation to financial assistance for local government, and why?
(iv) What is the purpose of the minimum grant? Is the concept of a minimum grant still relevant to the distribution of funds, and why? What would happen if it were changed?
(v) Are the current arrangements surrounding the allocation of Commonwealth assistance sufficiently transparent? Are the National Principles sufficiently understood?
(vi) Do you understand how grants are calculated by your State Grants Commission? What do you consider are the shortcomings/strengths of your State Grants Commission's allocation method? What additional information should your State Grants Commission provide?
(vii) How important is stability in the size of grant funding for councils as an attribute of the grant distribution system?
(viii) To what extent do the methods of your State's Local Government Grants Commission take account of the special circumstances of indigenous communities?
(ix) Should consideration be given to combining the general purpose and roads funding pools?
(x) What has been the impact of the Commonwealth assistance on the level of State assistance to local government?
(xi) What has been the impact of the Commonwealth assistance on the efforts made by local government to raise revenue from its own sources?
(xii) What Commonwealth and State assistance for specific purposes is provided for local governments? Is the assistance based on an assessment of individual submissions or a broad assessment of the needs of local governments in a field?
(xiii) What limitations are imposed on local government revenue bases, eg rate-capping and other (limiting) State legislation?
(xiv) What major changes have there been since the Act was passed in 1995 in the distribution of service provision responsibilities or revenue capacities between the Commonwealth, State and local spheres of government? Are any other changes under active consideration?
(xv) To what extent do the administrative arrangements imposed by the Act need re-examination or amendment?