Chapter 2 Strategic Reform Program
Background
2.1
The Strategic Reform Program (SRP) was initiated in the 2009 Defence
White Paper ‘Defending Australia in the Asia Pacific Century: Force 2030’.
The SRP comprises a “comprehensive set of reforms that will fundamentally
overhaul the entire Defence enterprise, producing efficiencies and creating
savings of about $20 billion” over the next 10 years.[1]
2.2
As outlined in Defence’s ‘The Strategic Defence Program – Delivering Force
2030’ document the reform program has three key elements:
n Improved
Accountability in Defence. Providing much greater transparency – that is,
visibility of how Defence manages the close to $26 billion annual budget – will
strengthen the accountability of Defence, and individuals within Defence, to
the Government, to Parliament and the Australian taxpayer.
n Improved Defence
Planning. Improving our strategic and corporate level planning will
strengthen the link between strategic planning and the definition and
development of military capabilities; better control the cost of military
preparedness; and tighten governance and systems to ensure that Defence
accurately forecasts and manages major acquisitions.
n Enhance
Productivity in Defence. Implementing smarter, tighter and more cost
effective business processes and practices will make sustainment and support
management more efficient and effective; improve cost effectiveness for
military capability and procurement processes; and create the basis for a more
efficient Defence Estate footprint.[2]
2.3
Defence anticipated cost reductions of $797 million in 2009-10; and
intends that the SRP will deliver more than $1 billion in cost reductions in
2010-11 as part of the $6.4 billion in planned cost reductions across the forward
estimates.[3]
2.4
The Committee asked about the impact of the SRP savings for the last two
financial years if the Australian dollar was 75c, not parity. Defence replied:
Exposure to foreign exchange movements is managed in
accordance with the Australian Government Foreign Exchange Risk Management
Guidelines.
Under this arrangement Defence is protected from the risk of
foreign exchange movements on a no-win/no-loss basis.
Defence is required to return to the Government any surplus
foreign exchange supplementation for an appreciation of the Australian dollar
relative to other currencies.
Defence is supplemented by Government for foreign exchange
losses incurred due to depreciation of the Australian dollar relative to other
currencies.
Under this arrangement Defence’s purchasing power is not
impacted by fluctuations in foreign exchange rates and therefore there is no
impact on SRP savings resulting from fluctuations in the value of the
Australian dollar.
In addition, the SRP savings are mainly derived from Australian
based activities and are therefore not impacted by foreign exchange movements.[4]
Current Status
2.5
Documentation and hard evidence of the outcomes of the SRP were hard for
the Committee to find. The Committee notes comments by the Australian Strategic
Policy Institute (ASPI) as follows:
. . . the scarcity of information about the SRP makes it
difficult to be precise about what is going to happen.[5]
. . . the level of disclosure surrounding the SRP is
surprisingly slight.[6]
In most areas we will probably never know whether the planned
savings are delivered or not.[7]
2.6
The Committee also notes that:
Defence ceased disclosing actual expenses by item in the
2006-07 Annual Report. It is impossible to check for reduced spending in an
area in the absence of a baseline figure.[8]
2.7
What these statements point to is the difficulty, in an organisation as
big as Defence of tracking savings. The Committee, therefore, spent much of its
questioning of Defence on the idea of a ‘cost conscious culture.’
A cost conscious culture
2.8
Regardless of savings expected or imposed by government in any given
budget year or funding cycle, Defence will be well served with having a ‘cost
conscious culture.’
2.9
The Committee asked how Defence was progressing on achieving a ‘cost
conscious culture’. Defence stated that the SRP would require Defence to:
... produce cost reductions in Defence expenditure by $20
billion over 10 years. That is a fairly substantial amount, even with a budget
of our size. It is a very substantial amount, when you realise that a large
number of areas are off limits for cost reductions. For example, military
manpower and costs of that manpower are set and we cannot reduce those in order
to meet our savings targets or our cost reduction targets, so it is requiring
us to operate very differently.[9]
2.10
Defence then went on the explain that:
We have a number of specific cost reduction targets and
specific cost reduction means which we are using, but the reality is that we
will only achieve and sustain the cost reductions we are being asked to make if
we change to an organisation which is much more cost conscious in what we do.[10]
2.11
Defence further responded that in order to change to a more cost
conscious culture there needs to be a change in people’s behaviour.[11]
Defence gave the example of a specific cost reduction measure they have
implemented in relation to reducing the Defence travel budget
We are trying to reduce it both by travelling less and by
being more cost conscious on air fares. Can we video con; can we not make the
trip; can we send fewer people?[12]
2.12
In addition to this, cost reduction measures have been taken in the ICT
area where there has been:
... a lot of work to create a system where our technologies
are more integrated. We have different sorts of contracts with industry and we
get more capability out of the ICT systems, so what that leads to is more
value, in the form of more capability, and more functionality, but it also
means that we get more value in terms of greater efficiency and less cost.[13]
2.13
Defence went on to add that they have regular reporting responsibilities
to government and the Defence Strategic Reform Advisory Board which is a group
of “public and private sector people experienced in change management,
including the secretaries of Finance, Treasury and PM&C.”[14]
2.14
Defence explained that in terms of achieving those cost reductions they
are:
... one and two-third years into it. We achieved our cost
reduction targets last year. Looking on the basis of everything so far, we are
certainly well on the way to achieving them this year and we expect to do that.
The targets get harder to achieve. We are looking to make cost reductions of
about $1 billion next year. I think in two years time it rises to nearly $2
billion.[15]
2.15
The Committee expressed the concern that Defence overachievement on some
savings is related to one-off costs with a consequent negative impact on
capability.
2.16
Defence responded that:
There has been no effect on capability as a consequence of
the strategic reform program, and that is our intent as we go forward. It is a
fundamental principle that underpins everything that we do.[16]
2.17
The Committee expressed concern that in order to meet the increased cost
reductions associated with the SRP efficiencies in personnel costs would have
to be considered.
2.18
Defence explained that “In terms of retention, we are seeing
historically probably the best retention we have ever experienced in the last
20 years.”[17] However:
In terms of reducing personnel costs, one of the things that
we are looking at, as part of the strategic reform program, is the support
areas which are currently done by military people and contractors and basically
creating those positions within the Australian Public Service. The reason we do
that is, if you have a look at a military person and an APS person doing the
same job, it is much more expensive to use a military person to do that job.[18]
Part of our reform program is civilianising some of those
support areas where the people are not required to deploy and where the
changeover to a civilian position will not affect things like the Navy’s
ship-to-shore ratio.[19]
2.19
The Committee asked the Department to look at the cost of civilianisation
of every position in 2005. That is, for example, for every military role turned
into a civilianised role, how many people at what cost have now filled those
roles.
2.20
Defence replied:
Over the period FY 2005-06 to FY 2009-10 there were a total
of 153 enduring civilianisations excluding Navy military positions that were
temporarily civilianised during this period. This resulted in an approximate
saving of approximately $18m . . .
Based on actual expenditure in FY2009-10, including
remuneration and on-costs, the average total cost of a military member
(excluding Star ranked officers) was $150,375 which is higher than the average
total cost of $119,077 for a civilian employee.
The higher cost for military members arises from remuneration
including allowances and additional on-costs for health, housing, removals and
other costs that are not typically incurred with civilian employees.
The 2008 Audit of the Defence Budget also acknowledged that
the full costs of civilian employees are significantly lower than their
military equivalents.[20]
2.21
The Committee also notes the following assessment by the Parliamentary
Library:
. . . the success of the SRP could be difficult to gauge,
especially for those outside Defence. Over half of the initiatives are not
targeting direct cost reductions, but aim to promote a cost-conscious and
business-like cultural change across the Defence organisation. There is also
little indication on the public record of how any actual cost reductions will
be measured or reported over the next decade, and no guarantee that the method
used will remain consistent and thus allow valid comparison.[21]
2.22
The Committee is also concerned to note the following statement from the
Australian National Audit Office’s Audit Report No. 57 2010-2011 Acceptance
into Service of Navy Capability:
. . .the overall picture is of a capability development
system that has not consistently identified and responded, in a timely and
comprehensive way, to conditions that adversely affected Navy capability
acquisition and support. Opportunities to identify and mitigate cost, schedule
and technical risks have been missed, resulting in chronic delays in Navy
Mission Systems achieving Final Operational Capability.[22]
2.23
As one example of a practice that is not indicative of a ‘cost
conscious’ culture the Committee notes the levels of fraud within Defence and
the way in which Defence chooses to report this with the focus on activity
rather than results.
2.24
The Fraud and Ethics Section of the Annual Report states that:
216 fraud and ethics awareness presentations were delivered
to over 12,000 Defence and DMO personnel across Australia. In addition over
16,000 personnel completed fraud and ethics awareness training through the
Defence e-learning platform, CAMPUS.[23]
2.25
These figures on training levels seem impressive but the figures show
that fraud recovery fell from approximately 43.56% or $300,796 recovered from a
loss of $690,452 in 2008-09 to 34.56% or $359,393 recovered from a loss of
$1,039,721 in 2009-2010.
2.26
Losses due to fraud also increased by 50.58% in 2009-2010. An increase
of $349,269 from $690,452 in 2008-2009 to $1,039,721 in 2009-2010.
2.27
Defence explain these figures with detailed footnotes pointing to
recovery times and difficulty in recovery from an offender but the true picture
remains that, for 2009-2010, regardless of the impressive levels of “awareness
presentations” Defence have lost over $1 million to fraud which has been an
increase over 2008-2009 of 50.58%.
Committee conclusions
2.28
The Committee acknowledge the difficulty in any organisation creating
‘cultural change’. However, the Committee is concerned that:
n Defence will not be
able to institute the cost conscious culture necessary, not only for the SRP,
but for the Defence organisation long past 2030.
n The SRP relies more
on cultural change than rigorously costed savings plans.
n Creativity and
innovation should be the norm in any Department. Labelling this as some kind of
“new” and special program (ie. the SRP) is illusory.
2.29
However, the Committee is supportive of the SRP and endorse the
following observation by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI):
. . . the Strategic Reform Program deserves to be supported.
The best advice from the private sector has been melded with the ideas and
experience from across Defence to create a comprehensive program of reform. And
all signs are that the senior leadership of the organisation is committed to
making the reforms work. This is as good as it gets.[24]