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Parliamentary Joint Committee on Parliamentary Budget Office
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Preliminary pages
Foreword
The Joint Select Committee on the
Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) was appointed following a commitment
negotiated between political parties and Independent Members of Parliament,
after the 2010 Federal election. That commitment formed part of the Agreement
for a Better Parliament: Parliamentary Reform and stated that a PBO ‘be
established, based in the Parliamentary Library, to provide independent
costings, fiscal analysis and research to all members of parliament, especially
non-government members.’ The Agreement for a Better Parliament further
stated that the ‘structure, resourcing and protocols for such an Office be the
subject of a decision by a special committee of the Parliament which is truly
representative of the Parliament.’
The membership of the committee consists of Senators and
Members of the Australian Labor Party, the Liberal Party of Australia, the
Nationals, the Australian Greens and an Independent Member of Parliament.
Committee members not only considered matters raised in submissions and public
hearings, but also represented the views of their party colleagues. Consistent
with its terms of reference, the committee looked beyond the scope of the Agreement
for a Better Parliament and examined the broader range of services and
possible structures for the PBO so that it could effectively serve the
Australian Parliament. Key values underpinning the committee’s recommendations
included incorporating mechanisms into the PBO which could enhance transparency
of process, ensure the principle of equality of access to its services and
maintain the separation of the Parliament from the Executive.
There is currently no independent body in
Australia that specialises in high quality research and analysis on fiscal
policy for the Parliament. The establishment of a specialised Office is
warranted as the most practical means to fill this critical role. The committee
recommended that the mandate of the PBO be to inform the Parliament by
providing independent, non-partisan and policy neutral analysis on the full
budget cycle, fiscal policy and the financial implications of proposals.
In line with this mandate, the committee has recommended
that the main functions of the PBO are to respond to requests of Senators,
Members and parliamentary committees, formally contribute to committee
inquiries, publish self-initiated work, and prepare costings of election
commitments.
The committee found that the election costings provisions of
the Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998 (Cwlth) (the Charter) have
significant shortcomings in enabling the electorate to be better informed about
the financial implications of election commitments. As a result, the quality of
political debate during the election period is lessened as voters go without an
independent and potentially very valuable source of information. The committee
has recommended new measures to provide incentives for parties to use a
costings process for the purpose of enhancing transparency and accountability
of policies and better informing the wider community. New measures include
amending the Charter to enable minor parties to access the existing election
costings process and providing an alternative source of costings through the
PBO.
In line with international best practice, the committee has
recommended that the position of Parliamentary Budget Officer be created as an
independent officer of the Parliament. In this way, the Parliamentary Budget
Officer and their office may more clearly serve the ongoing information and
scrutiny needs of the Parliament as a whole, therefore improving fiscal
transparency and Executive accountability. Related recommendations in the
report seek to further strengthen the ability of the PBO to provide independent
and robust analysis. These include provisions for the PBO to access information
held by government departments, the appointment, dismissal and remuneration
arrangements for the Parliamentary Budget Officer, and mechanisms for the
oversight of the PBO by the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit.
On behalf of the committee, I would like to acknowledge and
thank the government and parliamentary departments and other organisations and
individuals who contributed their expertise and time to this inquiry. I would
also like to extend my thanks to committee members for actively participating
in this inquiry and shaping the recommendations of this unanimous report.
Finally, I thank the Secretariat for facilitating the work of the committee.
Senator the Hon John FaulknerChair
Membership of the committee
Chair |
Senator the Hon John Faulkner |
|
Deputy
Chair |
Hon Christopher Pyne MP |
|
Members |
Ms Anna Burke MP
|
Senator Doug Cameron
|
|
Mr Nick Champion MP |
Senator Barnaby Joyce |
|
Mrs Yvette D’Ath |
Senator Christine Milne |
|
Mr Robert Oakeshott MP |
|
|
Ms Kelly O’Dwyer MP |
|
Committee secretariat
Committee
Secretary |
Mr David Brunoro
(from 3
February 2011)
|
|
Mr Russell Chafer (until 2
February 2011) |
Inquiry
Secretary |
Ms Stephanie Mikac |
Technical
Adviser |
Dr Mark Rodrigues |
Terms of reference
The Australian Parliament appointed the Joint Select
committee on the Parliamentary Budget Office to examine the proposal to
establish a Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) and report no later than 31 March
2011.
(1)
The Joint Select Committee will inquire into and report on:
- the appropriate mandate for the Parliament Budget Office (PBO);
- the nature of information needed to assist the Parliament in its
consideration of matters related to the Budget;
- the role and adequacy of current institutions and processes in providing
this information, and the areas in which additional support is required;
- the scope for a PBO to fulfil its mandate in a cost-effective manner;
and
- bearing in mind these considerations, the most appropriate structure,
resourcing and protocols for a PBO, including but not limited to:
- the PBO’s functions and lines of accountability and oversight;
- the routine work expected of the
PBO and the minimum reporting requirements;
- the protocols for members of
parliament requesting non-routine work of the PBO, including the types of work
and the rules for prioritising and carrying out these requests;
- the protocols around access to and
disclosure of the PBO’s work and any confidentiality requirements;
- the protocols around the PBO’s
relationships with other institutions and processes, including Government
departments and agencies; and
- an appropriate level of staffing,
appropriate qualifications for staff, and resources to allow the PBO to fulfil
its mandate; and
- in conducting its inquiry,
the committee may choose to consider the operation and effectiveness of similar
offices in other parliamentary democracies and their
relevance to Australian circumstances.
List of abbreviations
ACCI |
Australian Chamber of Commerce
and Industry |
ANAO |
Australian National Audit Office |
BCA |
Business Council of Australia |
BIS |
Budget Impact Statement |
CBO |
Congressional Budget Office |
CLA |
Civil Liberties Australia |
CPB |
Central Planning Bureau |
Cwlth |
Commonwealth |
DPS |
Department of Parliamentary
Services |
FOI |
Freedom of Information |
JCPAA |
Joint Committee of Public
Accounts and Audit |
MOU |
Memorandum of Understanding |
NABO |
National Assembly Budget Office |
NSW |
New South Wales |
OBR |
Office of Budget Responsibility |
OECD |
Organisation for Economic
Co-operation and Development |
PBO |
Parliamentary Budget Office |
PBS |
Portfolio Budget Statements |
PEPU |
Pre-Election Policy Unit |
PPI |
Public Policy Institute |
UK |
United Kingdom of Great Britain |
US |
United States of America |
List of recommendations
2 Rationale for a Parliamentary Budget Office
Recommendation 1
The committee recommends that the Australian Government
establish a Parliamentary Budget Office dedicated to serving the Australian
Parliament.
3 Role of the proposed Parliamentary Budget Office
Recommendation 2
The committee recommends that the Government establish the
mandate of the Parliamentary Budget Office as to inform the Parliament by
providing independent, non-partisan and policy neutral analysis on the full
Budget cycle, fiscal policy and the financial implications of proposals.
Recommendation 3
The committee recommends that the Government empower the
Parliamentary Budget Office to undertake the following functions, consistent
with its mandate:
- prepare responses to the requests of
individual Senators and Members, regardless of party or Government status, and
parliamentary committees, including the preparation of costings in relation to
proposed policies and bills outside the caretaker period,
- make formal contributions to committee
inquiries,
- initiate its own work in anticipation of
the interests of its clients, and
- prepare costings of election commitments
during the caretaker period.
Recommendation 4
The committee recommends that the Government amend the Charter
of Budget Honesty Act 1998 (Cwlth) to enable the leaders of parliamentary
parties with a minimum number of parliamentary members to access the election
costings provisions of the Act. The minimum number of parliamentary members
should be consistent with similar requirements set out in the Parliamentary
Allowances Act 1952 (Cwlth) and the Parliamentary Entitlements
Act 1990 (Cwlth), which is currently five members or more.
Recommendation 5
The committee recommends that the Government amend the Charter
of Budget Honesty Act 1998 (Cwlth) to enable the costing of election
commitments in the period starting from the issue of the writ for the election
and ending when the election result is clear or, if there is a change of
Government, until the new Government is appointed.
Recommendation 6
The committee recommends that the Government empower the
Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) to provide election costings on request, in
relation to publicly announced policies, starting from the issue of the writ
for the election and ending when the election result is clear or, if there is a
change of Government, until the new Government is appointed. Apart from the
conditions for who can make a request for costings, the caretaker period
costings service of the PBO is to be consistent with that of the Charter of
Budget Honesty Act 1998 (Cwlth).
Recommendation 7
The committee recommends that the election costing service of
the Parliamentary Budget Office be limited to requests from nominated
parliamentary party representatives and Independent Members originally elected
and seeking re-election, as Independent Members, without the endorsement of a
registered political party.
Recommendation 8
The committee recommends that the election costing service of
the Parliamentary Budget Office be limited to requests from nominated
parliamentary party representatives and Independent Members (as defined in
recommendation 7), in relation to their own policies.
Recommendation 9
The committee recommends that individual election commitments
are not able to be costed by both the Parliamentary Budget Office (PBO) and the
Departments of the Treasury and of Finance and Deregulation, and that to avoid
duplication, the PBO and Treasury and Finance confer prior to the preparation
of each costing request.
4 Authority and accountability
Recommendation 10
The committee recommends that the position of Parliamentary
Budget Officer be established as an independent officer of the Parliament
through dedicated legislation.
Recommendation 11
The committee recommends that the legislation establishing the
Parliamentary Budget Officer include provisions to establish the Parliamentary
Budget Office to support the work of the Officer.
Recommendation 12
The committee recommends that the legislation establishing the
office of Parliamentary Budget Officer include the Officer’s: mandate,
functions, maintaining confidentiality of information provisions, parliamentary
oversight, reporting requirements, appointment, dismissal, remuneration
determination arrangements, and term of office.
Recommendation 13
The committee recommends that the Parliamentary Budget Officer
access information from Government departments through a negotiated memorandum
of understanding with the Departments of the Treasury and of Finance and
Deregulation and other departments or organisations as necessary.
Recommendation 14
The committee recommends that the Parliamentary Budget Officer
be empowered to use the formal processes provided through the Freedom of
Information Act 1982 (Cwlth) without cost to the Parliamentary Budget
Officer, in the event that particular information is not provided by a
Government department in accordance with any established memorandum of
understanding, and the PBO is not satisfied by the rationale of the department
for declining to disclose information.
Recommendation 15
The committee recommends that the legislation establishing the
office of Parliamentary Budget Officer include specific provisions to maintain
the confidentiality of the sensitive information held within the Parliamentary
Budget Office.
Recommendation 16
The committee recommends that wherever possible, in the
interest of transparency and accountability the work of the Parliamentary
Budget Office be made publicly available.
Recommendation 17
The committee recommends that responses by the Parliamentary
Budget Office to requests from individual parliamentarians, outside the
caretaker period for general elections, be provided in confidence, where it has
been specifically directed by the client to do so.
Recommendation 18
The committee recommends that where possible, the work that
has gone into the preparation of a response to a client request be made
available to be included in the public reports of the Parliamentary Budget
Officer. This may involve negotiating, with relevant Senators and Members for
the public release of work prepared on their behalf, while withholding
information about the original request, such as the identity of the
parliamentarian and other substantive information requested, to remain in
confidence.
Recommendation 19
The committee recommends that the Parliamentary Budget Officer
be empowered to make public statements, in particular where they consider that
their work has been misrepresented in the public domain.
Recommendation 20
The committee recommends that the reporting provisions under
the establishing legislation require the Parliamentary Budget Officer to
formulate an annual work program, draft budget estimates and an annual report
in line with the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997
(Cwlth) and the Commonwealth Authorities and Companies Act 1997 (Cwlth).
Recommendation 21
The committee recommends that, with the exception of term of
office provisions, the appointment, dismissal and remuneration determination
processes of the Parliamentary Budget Officer be in line with similar
provisions contained in the Auditor-General Act 1997 (Cwlth).
Recommendation 22
The committee recommends that the term of office of the
Parliamentary Budget Officer be for a period of four years, with the option of
renewing the appointment.
Recommendation 23
The committee recommends that the Joint Committee of Public
Accounts and Audit (JCPAA) have oversight of the Parliamentary Budget Officer
and their office in regard to the annual work program, draft budget estimates,
and annual report, in line with similar provisions in the Auditor-General
Act 1997 (Cwlth). This includes a formal role for the JCPAA in endorsing
the workload protocols applicable to the Parliamentary Budget Office.
Recommendation 24
The committee recommends that an independent body be engaged
to undertake an operational evaluation of the Parliamentary Budget Office,
completed within nine months after the result of a Federal election is
notified. On completion, the evaluation report should be tabled in the
Parliament and referred to the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit for
possible review.
Recommendation 25
The committee recommends that the proposal to engage an
independent body for the purpose of undertaking the operational evaluation of
the Parliamentary Budget Office be referred to the Joint Committee of Public
Accounts and Audit for consideration and endorsement.
5 Resourcing and physical location
Recommendation 26
The committee recommends that the Office of the Parliamentary
Budget Officer be provided with ongoing funding of no less than $6 million per
annum with consideration being given to additional resourcing for election
years.
Recommendation 27
The committee recommends that the annual draft budget of the
Office of the Parliamentary Budget Officer be considered by the Joint Committee
of Public Accounts and Audit, and that this committee explicitly review the
adequacy of additional funding provided for election years.
Recommendation 28
The committee recommends that the Australian Government
explore locating the Parliamentary Budget Office within close proximity to
Parliament House or co-locating it with an established organisation for the
purpose of gaining administrative efficiencies.
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