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| Please note: This research note is undergoing a scheduled annual update. The updated publication will contain information current from 1 July 2005 - (Web Manager 23 June 2005) |
Until the Parliament otherwise provides, each senator and each member of the House of Representatives shall receive an allowance of four hundred pounds a year, to be reckoned from the day on which he takes his seat.
Since 1901, the Parliament has enacted legislation to define the annual
allowance for the purposes of Section 48 of the Constitution. Schedule
3 subclause 1(3) of the Remuneration
and Allowances
Act 1990 describes the annual allowance payable as equal to:
(a) the minimum annual rate of salary payable to an employee with a classification of Senior Executive Service (SES) Band 2 of the Australian Public Service (APS) or
(b) if the regulations prescribe a percentage (not more than 100 per cent) of a reference salary—that percentage of the reference salary (see below).
Report 1999/01 by the Tribunal recommended that the annual allowance be linked to a reference salary under the Principle Executive Office (PEO) Classification Structure.(8) The Government accepted this recommendation and made the Remuneration and Allowances Regulations 1999 to create the link. The Regulations provide for the reference salary to be 100 per cent of the rate determined by the Remuneration Tribunal for Band A of the PEO Classification.
|
The annual allowance for senators and members is Refer to Determination
1999/15, Principal Executive Office (PEO) |
Table 1 compares increases in the annual allowance to movements in the WCI and the Consumer Price Index (CPI) since 1984.
One of the first things to be done by the parliament of the commonwealth in its first session would be to settle the salaries of ministers, and a great number of other matters of that kind. We have, therefore, given them power to deal with this subject. We did not think it necessary to make this is any sense a payment of members bill. We lay down, however, the principle that they, are to receive an annual allowance for their services, and we thought that it should start in the first instance at £500.(11)
At the Adelaide Convention, however, the draft constitution bill debated specified an amount of £400 and this was the annual allowance subsequently enacted in the Constitution.(12)
In 1907 parliamentarians made themselves liable to the payment of State income taxes.(13) Tax concessions for electorate expenses were allowed from 1925.(14)
Between 1901 and the establishment of the Remuneration Tribunal in 1973, Parliament adjusted allowances following decisions of executive government or as the result of recommendations from committees of inquiry.(15) Justice Kerr in 1971 noted that during this time there was ‘no fixed pattern of approach’ to the timing and method of reviewing annual allowances—a process that invariably attracted criticism.(16)
In 1971 the Kerr Inquiry suggested the establishment of a ‘Salaries Tribunal … authorised by legislation to review salaries and report at regular stated intervals.’
Kerr also wrote:From its establishment in 1973, the Remuneration Tribunal, using a range of evidence and indicators, determined the annual allowance with reference to second division officers of the Commonwealth Public Service.(18) Adjustments were then made by applying National Wage Case decisions. In 1979 the government legislated to remove the Tribunal’s recent determination that these adjustments be automatic.(19) In 1987 the Tribunal convened a conference for interested parties to examine parliamentarians’ salaries.(20) An independent review was consequently conducted for the Tribunal in 1988. The resulting report recommended increases based on work value and community pay standards. The review strongly recommended that there be no linkage between the annual allowance and APS salaries.(21) Increases determined by the Tribunal at that time were deferred. With the Remuneration and Allowances Act 1990, the government removed the Tribunal’s power to determine annual allowances and allowed a phased increase to the allowance over three years. The legislation also provided a link with SES Band 1 salaries in the APS—in contrast to the recommendation in the 1988 review. Adjustments to the allowance were made by means of national wage case decisions and, from 1992, agreements between the government and public sector unions. Legislation enacted in 1994 ensured that the annual allowance was equivalent to the minimum APS SES Band 2 salary level. The Workplace Relations Act 1996 enabled SES salaries to be set through individual Australian Workplace Agreements (AWAs), thereby removing the standard against which the annual allowance was determined. With the expiry of the final APS Enterprise Agreement at the end of 1996, the mechanism by which adjustments were made to the annual allowance ceased. Legislative changes to the APS in 1999, among other matters, amended the Remuneration and Allowances Act 1990 and the Remuneration Tribunal Act 1973 to establish the current arrangements.Nothing … should prevent the Parliament or the Government from rejecting recommendations or from taking action not in accordance with what is recommended.(17)
Queensland, New South Wales, Victoria, South Australia, Tasmania and the Northern Territory have each enacted legislation linking the salaries of their parliamentarians to the federal annual allowance. Tribunals in Western Australia and the Australian Capital Territory determine parliamentarians’ salaries independent of the federal annual allowance. State and territory salaries and the link to the annual allowance are given in Table 2.
Table 1:Annual Allowance 1984–2004
|
Year |
Date of effect |
Annual Allowance $ per annum |
Wage Cost Index (WCI) (ordinary time hourly |
Consumer Price Index (CPI) |
|
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
Current $ |
Real $ |
WCI was compiled |
|||
|
1984 |
1.5.1984 |
41 802 |
90 592 |
– |
65.2 |
|
1985 |
1.7.1985 |
42 889 |
86 947 |
– |
69.7 |
|
1986 |
1.7.1986 |
45 543 |
85 122 |
– |
75.6 |
|
1986 |
10.3.1987 |
46 065 |
79 963 |
– |
81.4 |
|
1987 |
1.7.1987 |
47 815 |
81 795 |
– |
82.6 |
|
1988 |
1.7.1988 |
49 180 |
78 521 |
– |
88.5 |
|
1989 |
1.1.1989 |
55 000 |
84 473 |
– |
92.0 |
|
1990 |
16.11.1989 |
55 000 |
78 342 |
– |
99.2 |
|
1990 |
1.7.1990 |
58 300 |
80 369 |
– |
102.5 |
|
1991 |
1.1.1991 |
61 798 |
82 378 |
– |
106.0 |
|
1991 |
1.7.1991 |
64 768 |
86 337 |
– |
106.0 |
|
1991 |
15.8.1991 |
66 387 |
87 997 |
– |
106.6 |
|
1992 |
17.12.1992 |
67 715 |
88 676 |
– |
107.9 |
|
1993 |
11.3.1993 |
68 663 |
89 092 |
– |
108.9 |
|
1994 |
1.1.1994 |
68 663 |
88 201 |
– |
110.0 |
|
1994 |
10.3.1994 |
69 693 |
89 199 |
– |
110.4 |
|
1994 |
15.12.1994 |
74 460 |
93 273 |
– |
112.8 |
|
1995 |
12.1.1995 |
75 949 |
95 138 |
– |
112.8 |
|
1995 |
6.4.1995 |
77 438 |
95 397 |
– |
114.7 |
|
1995 |
13.7.1995 |
78 987 |
96 049 |
– |
116.2 |
|
1996 |
7.3.1996 |
80 251 |
95 290 |
– |
119.0 |
|
1996 |
17.10.1996 |
81 856 |
96 305 |
– |
120.1 |
|
1999 |
7.12.1999 |
85 500 |
97 350 |
86.9 |
124.1 |
|
2000 |
1.7.2000 |
92 000 |
103 008 |
88.1 |
126.2 |
|
2001 |
1.7.2001 |
95 600 |
100 959 |
91.3 |
133.8 |
|
2002 |
1.7.2002 |
98 800 |
101 457 |
94.2 |
137.6 |
|
2003 |
1.7.2003 |
102 760 |
102 760 |
97.6 |
141.3 |
|
2004 |
1.7.2004 |
106 770 |
104 189 |
101.0 |
144.8 |
|
% increases |
|||||
|
1984–2004 |
155.4 |
15.0 |
– |
122.1 |
|
|
1999–2004 |
24.9 |
7.0 |
16.2 |
16.7 |
|
Wage Cost Index
An index which measures changes over time in wage and salary costs
for employee jobs, unaffected by changes in the quality or quantity
of work performed. Changes in wages and salaries resulting from changes
in the composition of the labour market are excluded from WCI movements.
Consumer Price Index
An index which measures changes in the price of a 'basket' of goods
and services which account for a high proportion of expenditure by metropolitan
households.
Source: Tony Kryger, Statistics Section.
Table 2: Parliamentary salary—states and territories
| Parliament |
Salary is— |
Current |
|---|---|---|
|
|
|
Salaries have effect |
| Australian Capital Territory |
Determined
annually by the |
$87 826 |
| New South Wales |
$500 less than annual allowance. |
$106 270 |
| Northern Territory |
$3000 less than annual allowance. |
$103 770 |
| Queensland |
$500 less than annual allowance. |
$106 270 |
| South Australia |
$2000 less than annual allowance. |
$104 770 |
| Tasmania |
85.19
per cent of annual allowance. |
$87 541 |
| Victoria |
$1442 less than annual allowance |
$105 328 |
| Western Australia |
Determined
annually by |
$109 816 |
Source: L. Manthorpe from relevant legislation, determinations and gazettals.
For copyright reasons some linked items are only available to members of Parliament.