Chapter 1 Introduction
People might say that a billion here or there does not
matter too much but, actually, $1 billion is $1 billion.[1]
1.1
In 2006 the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) conducted a
performance audit of the Department of Health and Ageing’s (‘Health’) administration
of state and territory compliance with the Australian Health Care Agreements
(AHCAs). The report of the audit was tabled on 25 January 2007.[2]
1.2
On 7 February 2007 the House of Representatives Standing Committee on
Health and Ageing (‘the committee’) resolved to review the audit report. The committee
held two private briefings with the ANAO to examine the report and then held a
public hearing on 28 March 2007 to take evidence from both the ANAO and
Health.
Australian health care agreements
1.3
State governments are responsible for providing hospital services, for
public patients, either through ownership or funding of public hospitals or
contract arrangements with private hospitals.[3] The Commonwealth
contributes to the costs of state public hospital services on the condition
that the states will comply with certain principles and conditions.[4]
1.4
The principles and conditions are set out in the AHCAs, which are bilateral
five-year agreements between the Commonwealth and each of the states.[5]
The principles and conditions are the same in each agreement, although the agreements
do differ in the levels of funding provided to each state.[6]
The present AHCAs commenced on 1 July 2003 and are due to expire on 30 June 2008. The 2008-2013 agreements were being negotiated as the committee conducted
its inquiry.
1.5
The Commonwealth is contributing an estimated $42 billion during the
life of the 2003-08 agreements while the states are collectively contributing
some $58 billion.[7] Thus total
government expenditure on public hospital services under the AHCAs over the
five years will be some $100 billion.[8]
1.6
Clause 6 of the AHCAs sets out their primary objective, which is to
secure community access to public hospital services, based on three principles
drawn from the Health Care (Appropriation) Act 1998. The principles are that:
n eligible persons are
to be given the choice to receive, free of charge as public patients, health
and emergency services of a kind or kinds that are currently, or were
historically, provided by hospitals;
n access to such
services by public patients free of charge is to be on the basis of clinical
need and within a clinically appropriate period; and
n arrangements are to
be in place to ensure equitable access to such services for all eligible persons,
regardless of geographical location.
Commonwealth responsibilities
1.7
Under the AHCAs, Health administers three main responsibilities on
behalf of the Commonwealth:
n ensuring that the
terms of the AHCAs are complied with by the states before Commonwealth funds to
them are disbursed;
n providing policy
development for national program activities initiated under the auspices of the
AHCAs; and
n publishing the annual
The state of our public hospitals, which ‘considers how the states…are
performing in the delivery of public hospital services and records their
expenditure on public hospitals’[9].
State and territory responsibilities
1.8
In turn, to obtain the full level of funding available from the
Commonwealth, each state government must:
n adhere to principles
set out in clause 6 of the AHCAs;
n increase their own
source funding at a rate which at least matches the estimated cumulative rate
of growth of Commonwealth funding under the AHCAs; and
n meet the performance
reporting requirements outlined in the AHCAs.[10]
1.9
If the Commonwealth Minister, currently the Minister for Health and
Ageing (‘the Minister’), is satisfied that a state has met all the compliance
requirements, it will receive in addition ‘a compliance payment’ equivalent to
approximately four per cent of its base health care grant entitlement.[11]
1.10
AHCA payments are transferred directly to the state governments, so
states are responsible for ensuring that their hospitals (or other providers) comply
with the agreements.
Committee report – The Blame Game
1.11
During the period of the audit, the committee was conducting a broad-ranging
inquiry into health funding. The report of the inquiry, entitled The Blame
Game, was tabled in the Parliament on 4 December 2006.[12]
1.12
That report commented directly on the function and future of AHCAs. The committee
recommended, among other things, the adoption of a national health agenda. As
part of that agenda, the committee wanted a rationalisation of the roles and
responsibilities of governments, including their funding responsibilities. In
turn, several recommendations were made to change the current AHCA model of
public hospital financing.
1.13
At the tabling of this report, there was still no government response to
the recommendations of The Blame Game. Accordingly, the committee
considered it prudent to review the audit report on the assumption that the
2008-2013 AHCAs, at least, will be similar to the current ones. However, Members
recognise that the recommendations in this report may become redundant if those
in The Blame Game become government policy.
Structure of the report
1.14
The next chapter reviews the ANAO’s findings and Health’s response to the
ANAO recommendations. The following three chapters discuss key issues arising
from the audit report and the committee’s inquiry.
1.15
Chapter three focuses on the states’ compliance with their obligations
to provide public hospital services to the standard specified in clause six of
the AHCAs.
1.16
Chapter four examines the difficulties associated with measuring whether
the states have matched the growth rate of the Commonwealth’s recurrent
expenditure under the AHCAs.
1.17
In Chapter five, the committee discusses performance reporting and the
need for greater public accountability for hospital performance.
1.18
The final chapter returns to the recommendations in The Blame Game
and concludes by encouraging all levels of government to consider adopting a
national health agenda.
1.19
The appendices list the witnesses who appeared at the single public
hearing for the inquiry, relevant recommendations from The Blame Game
report, State and Territory Auditors-General reporting, and contain the New South Wales agreement as an example of an AHCA.