Chapter 3 Issues and analysis
3.1
This chapter analyses the key issues that were highlighted during the
Committee’s inquiry. These issues are as follows:
n Composition of the National
Rural Advisory Council (NRAC);
n The future of drought
assistance;
n Social and support
services;
n Personal and business
finance; and
n Farming smarter.
3.2
The latter three topics stem from the package of drought reform measures
proposed by the Council of Australian Governments’ Standing Council on Primary
Industries.[1]
Composition of NRAC
3.3
As highlighted in Chapter 2, NRAC has a range of functions including the
review of existing Exceptional Circumstances (EC) declarations.[2]
The Committee was interested in the composition of NRAC in a period where no EC
declarations were current (as of 30 April 2013),[3] and while it undertakes a
significant program of work assessing a number of issues affecting the
agribusiness sector. .[4]
3.4
Under section 6 of the Rural Adjustment Act 1992 (Cth) (“the
Act”), the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry (“the Minister”) may
appoint no more than seven members to NRAC on a part time basis.[5]
Section 7 of the Act prescribes that members of NRAC may be appointed for a
period not exceeding three years and for a maximum of three periods of
appointment.[6]
3.5
The Act stipulates that NRAC’s membership must comprise a Chairperson
and members holding relevant qualifications as prescribed. Section 6(3)(a) of
the Act states that NRAC’s composition must include:
(a) at least one is to be appointed, after consultation with State Ministers, to
represent the States; and
(b) at least one is to be an officer of the Department
appointed to represent the Commonwealth; and
(c) one is to be appointed to represent the National Farmers'
Federation; and
(d) the others are to be appointed because of their expertise
in economics, financial administration, banking, sustainable agriculture,
regional adjustment, regional development, farm management or training.[7]
3.6
On release of NRAC’s 2011 – 12 Annual Report, the membership was
comprised as follows:
n Chairperson;[8]
n Two Australian
Government representatives;[9]
n State and Territory
representative;[10]
n Representative of the
National Farmers Federation;[11]
n Member with expertise
in farm management and training;[12]
n Member with expertise
in finance and banking;[13]
n Member with expertise
in regional development;[14]
n Member with expertise
in sustainable agriculture;[15]
3.7
At the time of producing this report, NRAC was composed as follows:
n Chairperson[16]
n Australian Government
Representative;[17]
n State and Territory
representative, with expertise in agricultural productivity/industry
development and operations;[18]
n Member with expertise
in health and safety research, education and service delivery;[19]
n Representative of the
National Farmers Federation;[20]
n Member with expertise
in sustainable agriculture/regional development;[21]
n Member with expertise
in finance and banking;[22] and
n Member with expertise
in government and primary industries.[23]
3.8
It should be noted that while the specific skills, qualifications and
experience of some members have differed over time, they remain consistent with
the composition of NRAC as prescribed in the Rural Adjustment Act 1992
(Cth).
Committee comment
3.9
NRAC has a significant program of project based work, as highlighted in
Chapter 2, rather than focusing primarily on exceptional circumstances
declarations. At present, this work is supported by NRAC members who are
appointed for three year terms by the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and
Forestry.
3.10
However, to ensure that relevant and timely expertise is available on
NRAC, the Committee considers there is a need for NRAC to monitor the alignment
between its composition and current work program. Should NRAC require specific
expertise to assist current priorities, NRAC should recommend membership
changes to the Minister for consideration. In order to ensure high quality
outcomes, the Committee notes that from time to time the decision to replace a
member of NRAC before their three year term has been completed may need to be
made.
Recommendation 1 |
|
The Committee recommends that the National Rural Advisory
Council monitor its composition and if necessary, make recommendations to the
Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry to ensure that its
membership adequately reflects the skills needed to deliver high quality
outcomes for its current work program.
|
The future of drought assistance
3.11
As stated in Chapter 2, the Australian Government has worked on
reforming Australia’s drought assistance program since 2008.[24]
These aim at better planning for farmers and their families affected by drought
rather than using the current Exceptional Circumstances (EC) model. These
reforms stemmed from agreement between Commonwealth, State and Territory
primary industries ministers that EC assistance programs as a feature of the
National Drought Policy that began in 1992 were no longer appropriate given
changing environmental conditions.[25]
3.12
In reforming drought assistance measures, the Australian Government
commissioned a review of the National Drought Policy.[26]
The review assessed drought policy at the time through economic, social and
climatic assessments, finding that:
… drought conditions in Australia were projected to occur
more often and be more severe. It also recommended that drought assistance
programs be restructured to help farmers better plan and prepare for drought
rather than waiting until they are in crisis to offer assistance.[27]
3.13
The economic assessment of the policy was conducted by the Productivity
Commission that released its final report in 2009.[28]
It found that a range of reforms were needed, including that the EC framework
did not assist farmers to improve their self-reliance, preparedness and climate
change management.[29]
3.14
The social impact of the drought policy was conducted by an expert panel
appointed by the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry.[30]
The panel found that ‘future policy should seek to move people towards an
acceptance that future dryness will occur and is not a crisis, and that
planning for dryness should be about personal, family, farm and community
wellbeing’. Its report made a range of recommendations to the Australian
Government based on a number of themes:
n observations on
values, attitudes and policy;
n planning for future
dryness;
n community;
n families; and
n delivering human support
services (including education and training; human capital; health and
wellbeing).[31]
3.15
The climatic assessment was undertaken jointly by the Australian
Government Bureau of Meteorology and the Commonwealth Scientific and Industrial
Research Organisation (CSIRO). The assessment examined ‘the implications of
future climate change for the current exceptional circumstances (EC) standard
of a one in 20-25 year event’.[32] The assessment found
that the current ‘trigger’ for an EC declaration was no longer appropriate
given changing climatic conditions.[33] As a result, the
assessment called for ‘user-friendly, reliable and up-to-date location-specific
information on historical climatic conditions and future climate variability’.[34]
The report cited a number of areas for improving the current flow of
information:
n further improvement
of drought monitoring capability and maintenance of networks for rainfall and
other key climate observations;
n an online climate
information system which readily integrates climate change projections with the
historical database;
n participatory studies
to more accurately identify the climate change information needs of the
different rural sectors;
n research to improve
climate change projections and seasonal-to-interannual forecasts, particularly
with respect to specific rural sectors and a localised scale; and
n more detailed
analyses of projected changes in exceptional climatic events in smaller regions
and beyond the next 20-30 years.[35]
3.16
Following the review, a pilot of selected drought reform measures was
conducted in Western Australia in 2010 and was subsequently reviewed by an
independent advisory panel. In October 2012, the Council of Australian
Governments’ Standing Committee on Primary Industries (SCoPI) agreed to a package
that would assist primary producers prepare and better manage the effects of
drought.[36] The Committee discussed
both the pilot and SCoPI agreement with NRAC at its public hearing.It should be
noted that the latter was formalised via an intergovernmental agreement some
weeks after the Committee’s public hearing.[37]
WA pilot
3.17
Following the review of national drought policy, the Australian
Government, in conjunction with the Western Australian Government piloted a
range of drought reform measures in that State under a National Partnership
Agreement in 2010.[38] This was subsequently
renewed the following year.[39] The measures were:
… designed to move from a crisis management approach to risk
management. The aim is to better support farmers, their families and rural
communities in preparing for future challenges, rather than waiting until they
are in crisis to seek assistance.[40]
3.18
Specifically, the measures assessed in the pilot were:
n Farm planning: courses
assisting farmers to develop or update strategic plans for their farm
businesses including identification of priorities to improve the management and
preparedness for future challenges;
n Building farm
businesses: provides grants to eligible farm businesses to prepare and adapt
for the impacts of drought, reduced water availability and changing climate.
Grants also assist strategic planning for natural resource management;
n Stronger rural
communities: measures assisting rural communities to prepare for and manage
hardship through the development of social capital and community and social networks;
n Farm social support: better
coordinated social support to meet the mental health, counselling and social
support needs of farming communities;
n Farm family support: income
support for farming families to help meet basic needs;
n Farm exit support: assistance
to owners of farm businesses exiting the agricultural sector once they have
managed to successfully sell their farm property;
n Beyond farming: putting
current and former farmers in contact to discuss opportunities outside of
farming;[41]
3.19
In 2011, the pilot was reviewed by an expert panel.[42]
The panel’s Terms of Reference tasked it to:
n examine the
efficiency, effectiveness and appropriateness, and preliminary outcomes of each
measure of the pilot against its objective;
n consider the
preliminary outcomes of each measure and the overall pilot in terms of making
progress towards long‑term reform outcomes;
n examine the
effectiveness of the delivery model of each measure; and
n make recommendations
about how individual measures could be designed and delivered more efficiently
and effectively.[43]
3.20
The panel’s review made 20 recommendations, concluding that a number of
measures would provide a robust future policy platform:
n an income support
safety net for farm families in hardship that is available based on demonstrated
individual need
n the permanent
presence of social support services delivered via outreach to people in rural
communities
n continuing
opportunities to engage in and implement strategic farm business planning
n ongoing access to the
Farm Management Deposit scheme and existing tax incentives for primary
producers.[44]
COAG reforms 2012
3.21
In progressing the Australian Government’s drought reform agenda, the
Council of Australian Governments’ Standing Committee on Primary Industries
(SCoPI) was tasked with ‘developing proposals for a future drought policy
package that moves from crisis management to a greater emphasis on risk
management and preparedness by farmers’.[45]
3.22
At its meeting in October 2012, SCoPI agreed to a new package of
measures designed to ‘help farmers better prepare for and manage business
risks, including drought’.[46] The elements of the
package, while still needing approval from individual governments, would be
activated from 1 July 2014 and include:
n a farm household
support payment;
n promoting Farm
Management Deposits and taxation measures;
n a national approach
to farm business training;
n a coordinated,
collaborative approach to the provision of social support services; and
n tools and
technologies to inform farmer decision making.[47]
3.23
At its meeting on 3 May 2013 SCoPI formally agreed to an
Intergovernmental Agreement on National Drought Program Reform.[48]
It reaffirmed all elements agreed to at its previous meeting.
3.24
SCoPI also approved a Farm Finance package as part of the overall
reforms. The package would ‘provide assistance to viable agricultural
businesses and help them prepare their businesses for the future’.[49]
The package consists of a number of elements as follows:
n concessional
loans to help restructure debt and invest in productivity;
n extra
rural financial counsellors to work directly with farm businesses;
n progressing
a nationally consistent approach to debt mediation across the country; and
n enhancing
the Farm Management Deposits Scheme.[50]
3.25
Each element of the Farm
Finance package is subject to either agreements being reached between the
Commonwealth, States and the Northern Territory or legislation being enacted in
the Commonwealth Parliament.[51]
Committee comment
3.26
The Committee is pleased to
see that seeking agreement on drought reform is a key plank of SCoPI’s agenda. It
is hoped that the announced reforms, and those still to come, will assist farming
families and rural communities better prepare for times of hardship, rather
than simply provide the traditional crisis based response.
3.27
Given that the implementation date of 1 July 2013 for some elements of
the Farm Finance package is imminent, the Committee
believes that it is imperative upon all stakeholders to finalise agreements and
necessary legislation to enact all elements of this package as soon as possible
to allow the benefits from this package to flow to farmers and communities
throughout Australia.
3.28
As an aside, the Committee acknowledges the Queensland Government’s
decision to declare drought areas in that State during the course of the
Committee’s inquiry.[52] However, this declaration
is not at the national level and is therefore not discussed further in this
report.
3.29
Noting the recent Intergovernmental agreement, the Committee hopes that
all governments maintain the commitment to implement these reforms by 1 July
2014. Also, the Committee believes that the Australian Government should ensure
that adequate measures are retained to support those in need where necessary prior
to this date.
Recommendation 2 |
|
Given that regions across Australia are once again
experiencing drought conditions, the Committee calls on the Australian
Government, States and Territories to finalise the Farm Finance Package so
that it can be implemented by 1 July 2013.
|
Recommendation 3 |
|
The Committee recommends that the Australian Government, through
the Council of Australian Governments’ Standing Committee on Primary
Industries, ensure that the complete new package of drought reform measures
is agreed and implemented by the stated target date of 1 July 2014.
|
Social and support services
3.30
In times of hardship for farming families and rural communities, the
adequacy and availability of social and support services is important. These
ensure that those affected can continue to make the best decisions for their
families, livelihood and communities.
3.31
The Committee, at its public hearing, discussed a range of social and
support services available for those affected by drought with NRAC. In
particular, the Committee asked NRAC about the provision of the Australian
Government’s ‘drought bus’ to assist affected communities.
3.32
The ‘drought bus’ or mobile service centres are operated by the Australian
Government Department of Human Services to ‘provide personalised face-to-face servicing to individuals and families who may not have
easy access to government services’ such as those offered by Medicare and
Centrelink.[53] The drought bus, staffed by employees of the various government
agencies, travels through various regional, rural and remote communities in
Australia to provide services that are not immediately accessible in those
communities. Importantly, these services include assistance with accessing the
Australian Governments’ existing drought assistance measures.
3.33
At the Committee’s public hearing, NRAC noted that
there was a level of stigma associated with the ‘drought bus’:
… there is very mixed feedback on the bus … we hear some very
mixed views about some people going to another town to get on the bus, because
they do not want to be seen getting on it.[54]
3.34
To alleviate concerns of stigma, NRAC advised the
Committee that during the Western Australian pilot study of drought reform
measures, the drought bus made visits to individual farms to assist families.[55]
3.35
NRAC also told the Committee that during the pilot study, a trial to better
coordinate Australian Government and other service
providers in regional, rural and remote areas was conducted.[56]
NRAC stated that as part of the trial, government agency representatives
including counsellors and mental health coordinators would:
… go to a community and we won't go and have five meetings
one week at a time for different things. We will go to a community and have one
meeting. It will ostensibly be about where you can get help for drought, but at
the back of the room we will have a counsellor and a mental health coordinator
and we will have the various government departments all sitting around …[57]
3.36
This was found to be effective as those suffering hardship
could approach service providers personally and provide their details so
that assistance could be provided at a later time.[58]
Committee comment
3.37
The Committee believes that supporting farming families and communities
is paramount during times of hardship and crisis.
3.38
The Committee acknowledges that the Australian Government has made significant
efforts to ensure that services and support is extended to communities that
have suffered during times of drought. Initiatives such as the ‘drought bus’ have
increased the accessibility of services to some communities. The trial of
coordinated attendance of government service providers in affected communities is
also a welcome initiative which shows much potential for wider application..
3.39
The Committee believes however that while there is renewed focus on
reforming drought programs through SCoPI, some areas could benefit from
additional attention. In particular, while noting comments by NRAC relating to
the attendance of counsellors and mental health coordinators at forums in
communities suffering hardship, the Committee believes that there is some
stigma attached when accessing mental and physical health services in such
settings. To better manage this, the Committee believes that governments should
do everything they can to ensure that counselling and mental health services are
accessible confidentially, such as via telephone or personalised visits. Consideration
should also be given to improved access to local community structures,
including support groups, to ensure linkages are made with those in similar
circumstances if appropriate.
Personal and Business finance
3.40
An important issue to farmers, their families and communities
experiencing hardship during times of drought is the ability to navigate financial
difficulties and potentially access government support. However, evidence to
the Committee suggests that some 70 per cent of farm-based businesses survived
the drought without government assistance.[59]
3.41
NRAC, in its advice to the Committee, noted that analysis of the number
of farm-based businesses that survived the drought free of government
assistance showed that 40 per cent of these businesses had turnover of less
than $100 000 per annum.[60] A high percentage of these
businesses, many run at weekends and during the owners’ spare time, derived
income from ‘off-farm’ sources.[61]
3.42
Of those that are under the most pressure are farm businesses that have
annual turnover between $100 000 and $500 000.[62] NRAC identified a number
of sources of financial pressure during its public hearing with the Committee.
In the first instance, NRAC believes that financial pressure may stem from the
fact that these particular businesses are:
… too large to work part-time and probably do not have the
capital to buy equipment, machinery and that sort of thing of the scale that
the larger ones do.[63]
3.43
Additional pressure has also been felt from rising levels of debt
following the drought. A recent report by ABARES suggests that:
Average debt per farm business more than doubled in real
terms for broadacre farms between 2000–01 and 2006–07 from an average of $247
000 per farm in 2000–01 to $527 000 per farm in 2006–07. Debt for dairy
industry farms increased by even more and continued to increase until 2008–09
from an average of $328 000 per farm in 2000–01 to $739 000 per farm in
2008–09.[64]
3.44
This report also suggests that there a number of factors that have
contributed to the increase in debt levels:
… including the effects of lower interest rates, increases in
farm size, changes in commodities produced and reduced farm incomes in the
2000s as a consequence of widespread and extended drought conditions.[65]
3.45
NRAC cautions that some of this debt may also be the result of farm
businesses purchasing additional stock after the drought.[66]
3.46
To alleviate some of the financial pressures faced by farming families a
number of government-sponsored initiatives exist, including:
n the Rural Financial
Counselling Service (RFCS), which provides impartial support to primary
producers and others suffering hardship;
n payments and
taxation-linked programs help farming families manage the basic cost of living
and cash flow, such as the Transitional Farm Family Payment, and the Farm
Management Deposits Scheme; and
n exit assistance
programs, supporting farming families to consider if their agribusiness is no
longer viable.
3.47
Farming families also have the option to manage their financial
difficulties through the private banking system.
3.48
Each of these elements is discussed further below.
Rural Financial Counselling Service (RFCS)
3.49
The Rural Financial Counselling Service (RFCS) is administered by DAFF.[67]
RFCS provides grants to state and regional organisations to provide free rural
financial counselling to those in agribusiness suffering financial hardship and
who have no other means of impartial support.[68]
3.50
The objectives of services provided by RFCS are to:
n provide clients with
access to financial information, options, decision support and referrals to
other sources of industry, professional and government assistance;
n empower clients to
make their own decisions on how to most effectively manage change and
adjustment issues; and
n deliver effective,
flexible and responsive services to those in need of assistance.[69]
3.51
RFCS achieves these objectives through the use of qualified and
experienced financial counsellors. RFCS counsellors ‘cannot provide financial
advice, succession planning or family, emotional or social counselling, but
they can provide referrals to appropriate professionals and information on how
to prepare for discussions with succession planning experts’.[70]
3.52
The Committee was told that in relation to RFCS, there were two pressure
points, being new applications for the Transitional Family Farm Payment (this
is discussed below) and also an increase in clients seeking assistance from
RFCS.[71] The Australian
Government has recently recognised the additional pressure being placed on RFCS
by providing an additional 16 RFCS counsellors to support the current 110
counsellors.[72]
Transitional Farm Family Payment
3.53
The Committee was interested in the specific types of assistance
provided to farming families experiencing financial hardship. NRAC advised the
Committee that the Transitional Farm Family Payment provided eligible families
with a maximum of 12 months’ of income support payments. [73]
The payment, in line with other Australian Government income support payments,
aims to assist farming families to assess and improve their long-term financial
security. Eligibility does not require provisions of the reason for hardship or
of the recipient’s physical location. [74]
3.54
NRAC highlighted to the Committee that the Australian Government
Department of Human Services is responsible for assessment, determining
eligibility and administering the payment. [75] Under the payment,
personalised assistance is also provided by the RFCS, which:
… is responsible for providing individualised case management
assistance to farmers receiving the payment, and reviewing and reporting
progress in meeting program requirements.[76]
Farm Management Deposit Scheme
3.55
Another type of assistance provided to farming families experiencing
hardship is the Farm Management Deposit (FMD) Scheme. The FMD provides tax
incentives and also assists farming families to better manage their incomes in
difficult times.
3.56
In a submission to the Committee, NRAC advised that:
The FMD Scheme is a tax-linked risk management tool that
helps primary producers to be more self-reliant and better manage fluctuations
in their income due to climate variability and market changes. Farm Management
Deposits provide tax benefits if kept for at least 12 months, as tax is not
payable on the income until the financial year it is withdrawn, when primary
producers may benefit from a lower marginal tax rate. The FMD Scheme encourages
individual farmers to set aside pre-tax income in good years for use in low-income
years.[77]
3.57
As part of its current program of work, NRAC has been tasked with ‘evaluating
whether the scheme is meeting its policy objectives, and is supporting primary
producers’ abilities to manage their financial risk in preparing for future
challenges such as climate variability and market fluctuations’.[78]
In conducting its evaluation, NRAC considered a range of factors:
… including the appropriateness of the $400 000 FMD cap
and the $65 000 non-primary production income threshold. NRAC also
considered ways to increase participation in the scheme, including whether to
expand it to include farm business structures currently not eligible to
participate.[79]
3.58
NRAC’s assessment of the FMD scheme was released in April 2013 , noting that
it consulted stakeholders in reaching a number of conclusions. NRAC found that
there was a high level of awareness of the FMD amongst the farming community however
further action was needed to improve the ‘understanding of the scheme as a risk
management tool, especially with accounting peak bodies, financial institutions
and farm organisations’.[80]
3.59
NRAC also made a range of other recommendations aimed at improving the
FMD including:
n a temporary increase
in the threshold in the FMD’s application to non-primary production income to
allow farming families to diversify income streams during downturns;[81]
n a retention of the
current $400 000 individual cap on the FMD scheme to be reviewed every three
years;[82]
n retention of the
capability for farmers to withdraw FMD funds early in cases of natural disaster
without losing tax benefits;[83]
n that an exemption
against the loss of taxation benefits, similar to that applicable to farmers
currently operating under EC declarations, be developed as part SCoPI’s
reforms;[84]
n to ensure a reduction
in administrative burden as a result of operating multiple FMD accounts (each
with a cap of $400 000), FMD legislation should be amended to allow ‘matured
funds to be consolidated into a single account, under conditions that would not
conflict with scheme objectives’;[85] and
n to improve
collection, analysis and reporting of FMD scheme data, the Department of
Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry should continue to work with the Australian
Taxation Office in relation to taxation data and Treasury in relation to
taxation policy. [86]
3.60
In responding to the issues highlighted by NRAC’s assessment, the
Australian Government has developed a number of measures under its ‘Farm
Finance’ package.[87] In particular, it has
announced that it will support NRAC’s recommendations pertaining to increases
in the non-primary production income threshold, the consolidation of existing
FMD accounts from 1 July 2014.[88]
Agribusiness exit assistance
3.61
In some circumstances and for some farming families, there may no longer
be a viable benefit in remaining in the agricultural sector. In such
circumstances, the Australian Government provided assistance for this purpose.
Assistance to exit the agribusiness sector was:
… available for farm businesses whose owners are willing to
leave the industry. This little used package (around $10 million has been paid
since 2007) consists of an Exit Grant, which provides a taxable one-off payment
of up to $150 000, an Advice and Retraining Grant, and a Relocation Grant.[89]
3.62
Citing results of the program in the context of the Western Australian
pilot of drought assistance measures, NRAC stated:
There were certain eligibility criteria and you could receive
up to $150,000. Then there were additional payments to either retrain or
relocate. The outcome of the pilot was interesting. Previously, when they had
had exceptional circumstances declarations, no-one in WA had actually ever left
the farm. In the pilot there were 14 individuals who sold up through that
mechanism. Exit programs have had mixed success, historically. They were used
in exceptional circumstance areas, but they are only available to a certain
cohort. They have to meet a range of criteria.[90]
3.63
In assessing the effectiveness of the program, the review of the Western
Australian pilot of drought assistance measures concluded that:
… the panel is of the view that exit packages alone are not
an inducement to leave farming for most farmers because they do not address the
non-monetary reasons why farmers prefer to remain on their farms.
The panel noted that Beyond Farming was being trialled as
part of the pilot to help address non-monetary reasons for staying on-farm. The
panel also sees value utilising other programs such as Farm Planning and Farm
Family Support to further support farmers who are considering their options
outside farming.[91]
3.64
In recommending that the Australian Government abolish exit packages for
those involved in the farming sector, the Productivity Commission highlighted
the low number of applications received from prospective participants. The
Commission also stated:
One reason for the low uptake of the package is the grant’s
strict eligibility requirements. The program also fails to address the
non-monetary reasons why many farmers remain on the farm — the lack of formal
recognition and portability of the skills learned during farming and the
reluctance to move away from the family home and local community.[92]
Private banking
3.65
In times of financial hardship, an obvious source of relief is through
the private banking system. The role of private banks in the agribusiness
sector, in addition to their traditional roles of providing financial
solutions, has also included assisting farming families to access interest rate
subsidies provided by the Australian Government.
3.66
As part of the current National Drought Program arrangements, the
Australian Government provided farming families affected by EC declarations
with an EC Interest Rate Subsidy. The Productivity Commission, in its report on
Government Drought Support, described this subsidy as being:
…provided to farm businesses and farm dependent rural small
businesses that are in financial difficulty but deemed viable in the long-term.
A subsidy of up to 50 per cent of the interest payable on loans (excluding
recent property purchases) is provided in the first year and up to 80 per cent
in subsequent years. Recipients’ payments are capped at $500 000 over five
years.[93]
3.67
The Productivity Commission suggested that this scheme had proven highly
divisive in rural communities. This is because evidence suggested that the
subsidy reduced self-reliance strategies by farmers such as earning ‘off-farm’
income and also made recipients less responsive in times of drought. [94]
NRAC provided further evidence on this view, with one representative who held
experience in the banking industry noting:
There was plenty of talk that the bank would make sure that
the viability of a farm enterprise was not reliant upon an interest subsidy and
so forth. It was always drummed into us to make that clear. But, at the end of
the day, there were recipients who became dependent on it. From a banking
perspective it was welcome, but, at the end of the day, it did not solve the
problems in many cases—especially where it became longer term assistance rather
than just short, sharp assistance.[95]
3.68
The Commission recommended that the subsidy program be terminated
subject to transition arrangements. The Australian Government subsequently did
so in April 2012. [96]
Committee comment
3.69
The severity of recent drought-like conditions in Australia has placed a
significant burden on those farming families and rural communities for whom
agribusinesses is a way of life. The Committee understands that these
conditions placed many agribusinesses in difficult financial circumstances and
left some owners’ questioning the viability of their operations.
3.70
The Committee is encouraged by SCoPI’s recent announcement of measures
that will underpin Australia’s response to drought in the future. While it is
likely that many farming families will benefit from these reforms, the issue of
immediate relief from financial difficulties may be more pressing. This is
particularly so as levels of debt carried by some agribusiness continues to
rise.
3.71
The Committee is of the view that where farmers and their families
experience financial difficulties, assistance they would benefit from seeking RFCS
counsellor assistance in the first instance. These counsellors bring an
understanding of current assistance measures that can be applied to individual
family circumstances. RFCS can also begin the process of assisting farming
families apply for available assistance. The Committee commends the Australian
Government response to the need for additional RFCS counsellors in its recent
announcement of the Farm Finance package.
3.72
The Committee understands that farming families face difficult decisions
in regards to their financial or agribusiness futures. In many cases, these
decisions will not only be difficult but will require that timely decisions are
made in order to maximise the assistance available to families and also
minimise additional financial burdens. Timely decisions also minimise
government funds being supplied sometimes over several years. The Committee
believes that the Australian Government should do more to assist in encouraging
timely decisions by farmers; but should also provide assistance to these
families in making these tough decisions. Decisions by families should be supported
by transitional advice, training and if necessary, financial assistance. The
Committee hopes that once farming families are well informed about the options
available to them that they will be able to make the difficult decisions
required about their futures with as much confidence as possible.
Farming smarter
3.73
Improving farming practices to ensure that the maximum agricultural
yield is obtained will greatly enhance opportunities for farmers and rural
communities. The following section will consider a number of issues concerning
how farmers can benefit from improved yields through the use predictive tools
and will also consider workforce planning issues.
Improved tools for decision-making
3.74
Making informed decisions that consider the impact of changing
environmental conditions on agricultural production assists farming families
and rural communities to better plan operations. A range of tools exist that
allow farmers to not only better manage risks associated with environmental factors
but also increase agricultural productivity.
3.75
In managing risk, NRAC highlighted the weekly climate update provided by
ABARES.[97] The update, a useful
planning tool, provides ‘access to up to date climate, water and commodity
information in a single report’ and is available online and free of charge to
farmers. [98]
3.76
NRAC also cited another aspect of the Western Australian drought reform
pilot study where predictive tools were used to assist farmers. In conjunction
with the Commonwealth Bureau of Meteorology and the Western Australian
Government, participants in the study could access:
… a bulletproof weather station that collects humidity, wind
direction, rainfall et cetera and transmits it back to a central location.[99]
3.77
NRAC told the Committee that the outcomes for farmers through the use of
tools such as the weather station meant that they could:
… track where they are in terms of rainfall deciles, in terms
of crop maturity. We heard examples of people saying, 'We got to a point where
we knew that, if we put in any put more inputs, it was going to be a waste of
time, so we actually sprayed the crop out.' So it is a much more informed
decision-making process. It was really just a quite simple thing. I think the
farmers were actually involved in populating the country with another 120 or so
weather stations so that data was more localised and readily available. I
thought it was a quite simple example of a little bit of information and a bit
of technology suddenly changing the way farmers went about their business.[100]
3.78
Finally, NRAC cited the example of minimum tillage cropping systems
that:
… now allow very opportune cropping operations in areas you
would never have considered viable for cropping, simply because you can sow the
crop within a matter of days and take advantage of rainfall as it occurs,
rather than having to have the crop committed well before you know what the
situation is.[101]
Workforce planning
3.79
Ensuring that an agribusiness maintains a willing and well-skilled
workforce is vital to its success. The Committee was interested in hearing from
NRAC about how workforce planning can impact agricultural businesses.
3.80
NRAC advised that smaller businesses were the most impacted by workforce
planning difficulties, particularly when it came to providing development
opportunities for its employees and succession planning for business
continuity.
3.81
In addressing these issues, NRAC highlighted to the Committee its
current project assessing the workforce planning capabilities of agricultural
employers. NRAC’s assessment will:
n Identify the role and
benefits that workforce planning and human resource capacity play in the
retention and skilling of agricultural employees.
n Identify and assess
the extent to which agricultural employers currently engage in workforce
planning and human resource activities.
n Identify the pathways
agricultural employers use to access information on training, development, and
recruitment for their workforce.
n Assess agricultural
employers' experience and ability to access existing skills, training and
development programs.
n Investigate what
qualifications and skills agricultural employers may need to acquire in order
to improve their approach to the training and development needs of their
workforce.
n Identify and assess
whether agricultural employers' needs and approach to workforce planning
differs between sectors and between geographic regions.
n Identify options for
improving any shortcomings in agricultural employers' use of training and
development.
n Canvas the views of
key stakeholders.[102]
3.82
NRAC advised the Committee that its assessment had not yet been
completed, but that in conducting its assessment:
… three of the members of the council, plus the staff, went
to northern New South Wales and spoke to quite a range of different groups:
individual farmers, cotton gins and Aboriginal employment services …. A second group of us went to South Australia and went to
Murray Bridge and a range of different centres there and had interviews with a
whole range of groups. A third group went to Tasmania and went through the same
process there for a couple of days …[103]
3.83
NRAC’s extensive consultations had found that larger employers
encouraged career pathways for younger employees.[104]
NRAC suggested that difficulties arose:
… at the individual farm level, the family farm level, where
there might be one or two employees—or in fact the employee might be the son
and the father and the workforce development program consists of a kick in the
backside at the appropriate time.[105]
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NRAC suggested that succession planning, in addition to career
development, was also a challenge for smaller agribusinesses.[106]
To address this challenge, NRAC again cited the WA drought reform pilot study.
Part of the study involved a training program that included a component on
succession planning. Involvement in this program required all members of the
business to participate. It was noted that involvement by all members of often
smaller businesses:
… made a quite substantial difference. It was not the wife or
one partner in the business going in, getting all these bright new ideas,
coming back and getting kicked around the shearing shed because it was
'stupid'. The fact that they brought all partners into that process and said,
'Where is your plan for succession?' I think created a different dynamic, which
was quite useful.[107]
Committee comment
3.85
The Committee considers that improved workforce planning practices,
including the development of employees’ skills and agribusiness succession
planning, are vital in ensuring the success of smaller agricultural businesses.
The Committee also considers that improved risk management practices,
accounting for environmental conditions will increase the longer-term viability
of these businesses.
3.86
The Committee acknowledges that workforce planning issues are challenging
and can significantly impact on operations. The Committee understands that
smaller businesses may encounter issues such as the retention of staff either
through the lack of training, development and progression opportunities or
through competition from other sectors such as mining, that offer attractive
benefits. Smaller businesses may also encounter issues of succession planning,
particularly where a younger generation may wish to leave the sector. In moving
to address these issues, the Committee looks forward to the results of the
assessment currently being conducted by NRAC. Based on information provided on
NRAC’s website, the Committee anticipates this report to be released in the
near future. The Australian Government, through SCoPI, should ensure that these
findings are considered in the development of their drought reform package
where appropriate.
3.87
The Committee’s inquiry also provided it with further information on
some of the tools available to agribusiness in managing the risks associated
with farming. In particular, the Committee encourages operators of
agribusinesses to consider in the first instance easily accessible
environmental planning tools such as the free weekly updates as produced by
ABARES. The Committee would also encourage the Australian Government, via
SCoPI, to ensure that as part of the drought reforms the agricultural sector is
well appraised of other risk management tools, such as advanced weather
stations.
Hon. Dick Adams
MP
Chair