Introduction
1.1
On 13 February 2008, the Senate referred to the Finance and Public
Administration Committee (the committee) for examination and report the
following documents:
- Particulars
of proposed additional expenditure in respect of the year ending on 30 June 2008;
- Particulars
of certain proposed additional expenditure in respect of the year ending on 30 June 2008;
- Final
Budget Outcome 2006–07; and
- Issues
from the Advance to the Finance Minister as a Final Charge for the year ended
on 30 June 2007.[1]
Portfolio coverage
1.2
The committee has responsibility for examining the expenditure and
outcomes of the:
- Parliamentary departments;[2]
- Prime Minister and Cabinet portfolio;
- Finance and Administration portfolio; and
- Human Services portfolio.
Appendix 1 lists the departments and agencies under the
portfolios mentioned above.
Restructure of portfolios
1.3
The committee notes that two portfolios under its purview have undergone
structural reorganisation since the committee last reported on estimates.
Prime Minister and Cabinet
1.4
The Administrative Arrangements Order of 3 December 2007 make a
number of changes to the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C) portfolio
structure including the:
- transfer of the Australian Institute of Family Studies to the
portfolio from the Families, Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs
portfolio;
- transfer of the Office of the Privacy Commissioner to the
portfolio from the Attorney-General's portfolio;
- creation of an Office of National Security within the department;
- creation of an Office of Work and Family within the department,
incorporating some functions formerly undertaken by the Department of Families,
Housing, Community Services and Indigenous Affairs;
- establishment of the Australian Social Inclusion Board and,
within the department, a Social Inclusion Unit;
- transfer of functions relating to freedom of information and
privacy policy from the Attorney-General's Department; and
- transfer of the central advertising function from PM&C to the
Finance and Deregulation portfolio. [3]
1.5
The revised output structure of the PM&C department is reflected in
the table below.[4]
Table 1.1: Changes to the PM&C
outcome/output structure
Outcome/Output
|
Previous Wording
|
Revised Wording /
Changes
|
Output 2.2
|
N/A
|
Office of Work and Family
|
Output 4.3
|
Government Communications
|
Deleted
|
Department of Climate Change
1.6
In addition to these changes, the Department of Climate Change was
established by the Administrative Arrangements Order of 3 December 2007 as a separate department of state situated within the PM&C portfolio.
Oversight responsibility for the Office of the Renewable Energy Regulator
(ORER) has also been transferred to the Department of Climate Change from the
former Environment and Water Resources Portfolio.
1.7
The climate change elements of the former Environment and Water
Resources Portfolio's outcome/output structure have been transferred unchanged
to the Department of Climate Change. ORER's outcome/output structure also remains
unchanged. The structure is reproduced in Appendix 2.
Finance and Deregulation
1.8
Under the Administrative Arrangements Order of 3 December 2007, the then Department of Finance and Administration was renamed the
Department of Finance and Deregulation (Finance).
1.9
Changes to the Finance portfolio structure include transfer to the
portfolio of:
- the National Archives of Australia from the former
Communications, Information Technology and the Arts portfolio;
- AUSPIC and the central advertising system from the PM&C
Department;
- the Office of Best Practice Regulation from the Productivity
Commission;
- regulatory reform policy from the Department of the Treasury.
1.10
A further Administrative Arrangements Order was issued on 25 January 2008, under which the following changes were made:
- the Commonwealth Grants Commission was transferred from Finance
to the Treasury portfolio.[5]
1.11
Changes to existing Finance outputs are presented in a table below.[6]
Table 1.2: Changes to the Finance outcome/output structure
Outcome/Output
|
Previous Wording
|
Revised Wording /
Changes
|
Output 1.2.1
|
Budgetary &
Financial Framework
|
Financial Framework
|
Output 1.2.5
|
N/A
|
Deregulation and
Regulatory Reform[7]
|
Output Group 2.3
|
N/A
|
Procurement Management
|
Output 2.3.1
|
N/A
|
Procurement Framework[8]
|
Output 2.3.2
|
N/A
|
Centralised Contracting[9]
|
Hearings
1.12
The committee held public hearings on Monday 18, Tuesday 19 and Friday 22 February 2008. Copies of the committee's transcript of evidence are tabled in
three volumes of Hansard. Copies of Hansard are available on the
internet at the following address: www.aph.gov.au/hansard.[10]
1.13
In accordance with Standing Order 26, the committee is required to set a
date for the lodgement of written answers and additional information. The
committee resolved that written answers and additional information be submitted
by Friday, 4 April 2008.
1.14
Further written explanations furnished by departments and agencies will
be tabled, as received, in the Senate. That information is also available on the
committee's internet page: www.aph.gov.au/Senate/committee/fapa_ctte/estimates/index.htm.
As a matter of Parliamentary Privilege, all information is 'tabled' on receipt.
1.15
Over the course of the three days' hearings—totalling over 29 hours—the
committee took evidence from the President of the Senate, Senator Alan
Ferguson; Minister for Immigration and
Citizenship, Senator Chris Evans, representing the Prime Minister; Cabinet Secretary and Special Minister of State,
Senator John Faulkner, representing the Prime Minister;
Minister for Superannuation and Corporate Law, Senator Nick Sherry,
representing the Finance Minister; Parliamentary
Secretary for Social Inclusion and the Voluntary Sector, Senator Ursula Stephens,
representing the Finance Minister; Minister
for Human Services, Senator Joe Ludwig; Minister for Climate Change and Water,
Senator Penny Wong, together with officers of the departments and agencies
concerned.
1.16
The following agencies were released from the hearings without
examination: Office of National Assessments; Office of the Official Secretary
to the Governor-General;[11]
National Archives of Australia; Office of the Privacy Commissioner; Office of
the Commonwealth Ombudsman; Office of the Inspector-General of Intelligence and
Security; Australian Hearing; and Health
Services Australia.
General issues
1.17
The Committee also availed itself of the Friday 'spill over day' to
allow time to examine the Future Fund Management Agency and the Department of
Climate Change, and to complete the examination of the Human Services
portfolio. Some of the more significant issues discussed with departments and
agencies are detailed in the following chapters.
1.18
The sections of the report that follow list various issues considered by
the committee and discuss some of these in detail. The order is not based on
hierarchy but rather the order in which those issues arose during the hearings.
Efficiency dividend
1.19
A common theme that ran throughout the hearings was the requirement for
an additional efficiency dividend saving of two per cent annually between 2007–08
to 2010–11.[12]
The efficiency dividend applies broadly to all agencies, across all portfolios.[13]
1.20
The Secretary of Finance summarised the efficiency dividend in the
following terms:
Remember, there are three components to the efficiency
dividend...[t]here is the existing dividend, which was already in our base, as
it is for all agencies, of one per cent going forward for 2008-09 and beyond,
there is the additional quarter of a percentage point that was announced by the
previous government, which starts in 2008-09; and then there is the additional
one-off dividend of two per cent announced by the then opposition and then
phased in in 2007-08.[14]
1.21
The committee heard evidence that some agencies' outcomes and core
services will be impacted by the efficiency dividend. One issue that the
committee believes warrants further investigation, is the lack of any
substantive analysis concerning the long term implication of efficiency
dividends on agency budgets.
Australian National Audit Office
1.22
The Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) presented evidence to the
committee that there maybe some difficulty for the agency in achieving its
outcomes due to the efficiency dividend. Officials stated that the agency
stands to lose up to $1 420 000 in the forthcoming 2008–09 financial year.
Complicating this matter, is the fact that the agency is attempting to deliver
an audit of the top 20 defence acquisition projects at a cost of $1 500 000.
The ANAO is also expecting to receive the funding for these audits in the
forthcoming budget.[15]
1.23
The Auditor-General stated that if the additional funding of $1 500 000
is provided, then the majority of the funding will have to be returned, leaving
only $80 000 of the original funding in place.[16]
In regards to the overall outcomes and services that the ANAO provides, the
Auditor-General stated that 'there will be a potential reduction in the work
that we do'.[17]
1.24
On the question of the long term impact of continual efficiency
dividends Senator Ray noted the irony that if the efficiency dividends remain
ongoing, and are continually implemented by successive governments, then
eventually agencies will run out of money, and would technically have to '[pay
the Parliament] to exist.'[18]
1.25
Senator Ray also questioned the gap in analysis on the effect of the
efficiency dividends on 'big service departments, advice departments and
[statutory authorities]'. In response, the Auditor-General stated that he was
not aware of any studies.[19]
Finance
1.26
Notwithstanding evidence from the Finance Department that the usefulness
and viability of such dividends had not been reviewed, the committee heard that
they had become a normal and recurrent feature of public administration.[20]
1.27
In response to questioning about the effect of the efficiency dividend
on the outcomes and core services of Finance, the Secretary stated:
...In 2008-09 we will be looking for an additional 2.25 per cent
reduction in the resources which we use to deliver our outcomes, and that will
result in some things that will not be delivered.[21]
1.28
The Secretary of Finance went on to say that he was not aware of any
studies into the effect of efficiency dividends on different sized government
agencies.[22]
Centrelink
1.29
Centrelink officials informed the committee that it is their expectation
that staffing numbers will need to be reduced, partly as a result of the
additional savings required by the additional efficiency dividend. While
officials stated the reduction in staff numbers is also due to a reduction in
the number of people seeking assistance of the services provided by Centrelink,[23]
the CEO of Centrelink stated:
...My best estimate for next financial year [2008-09] is that we
will have a reduction of between $150 million and $300 million...We will have to
pull down our staff significantly. My best estimate at the moment is¾and this can swing, significantly¾some 2,000 staff.[24]
Conclusion
1.30
The committee notes the comments made by agencies about the effect of
the efficiency dividend on their outcomes and services. The committee is
concerned that with the continuing pattern and use by governments of efficiency
dividends, that there have been no studies to examine their effect on the
outcomes and services on different types of government agencies. The committee
is of the view that future efficiency dividends should be introduced with a
clearer picture of the potential impacts to government services and programs.
Recommendation 1
1.31
The committee recommends that the Department of Finance and Deregulation
report to the government and the Parliament on: the long term effect of
efficiency dividends on the outcomes and services provided by different types
of government agencies. This report should be completed by the last Parliamentary
sitting fortnight of 2008.
Improving the transparency of Portfolio Additional Estimates Statements
1.32
A key component of the Estimates process is the examination of Portfolio
Budget Statements (PBS) and Portfolio Additional Estimates Statements (PAES).
The relationship between Appropriation Bills and PBS or PAES is an essential
aspect of the committee's examination of the expenditure and performance of
departments and agencies.
1.33
The primary function of the PAES is to assist members of parliament in
the scrutiny of changes to proposed expenditure. This is clearly outlined at
the beginning of each PAES:
The purpose of the Portfolio Additional Estimates Statements
(PAES), like that of the Portfolio Budget Statements, is to inform Senators and
Members of Parliament of the proposed allocation of resources to government
outcomes by agencies within the portfolio...The PAES include new measures, and
summarise the changes by Appropriation Bill, and, where relevant, by Special
Appropriation and Special Account.
The PAES facilitate understanding of the proposed appropriations
in Appropriation Bills (Nos. 3 and 4) 2007–08. In this sense the PAES is
declared by the Additional Estimates Bill to be a 'relevant document' to the
interpretation of the Bills according to section 15AB of the Acts
Interpretation Act 1901.[25]
1.34
The relationship between the PAES, the PBS and relevant Budget Papers
was discussed in detail in a previous report of the committee: Transparency
and accountability of Commonwealth public funding and expenditure.[26]
In relation to the level of information provided in these budget documents,
the committee made the following recommendation:
The committee recommends that expenditure should be reported at
the levels of programs in the budget documents, including in the schedules to
the Appropriation Acts.[27]
1.35
As part of the Estimates process, the committee seeks to determine
whether funding for newly established programs has been correctly
allocated in Appropriation Bill No. 4 (bill no. 4), and not in Appropriation Bill
No. 3 (bill no. 3) which is for the ordinary annual services of government as
specified in the Compact of 1965.[28]
Disclosure of appropriations in the PAES is an important component of overall
government transparency and disclosure to Parliament. For this reason, understanding
the PAES is central to the Estimates process.
1.36
In scrutinising the most recent PAES of the three portfolios under the
committee's purview, insufficient information appears to have been provided,
making it unclear to which appropriation bill funding for new programs had been
allocated. There was little detail provided of appropriations in bill no. 4
across all portfolio areas. In many instances, such information was limited to
equity injections. This may indicate that newly established programs (not
considered to be ordinary annual services of government) had been
inappropriately placed in bill no. 3.
1.37
Furthermore, the appropriation bills for each portfolio were highly
aggregated, posing further difficulties for the committee in ascertaining
whether funding had been correctly appropriated or not.
1.38
The committee has identified the following list of programs or projects
that may have been inappropriately placed in bill no. 3. Because of the lack of
information provided in PAES, the list below is somewhat uncertain and
certainly incomplete.
Prime Minister and Cabinet
- Council of Australian Governments (COAG) Reform Council ($3.57 million
over four years to establish a Reform Council as part of new initiatives
arising from the COAG);[29]
- Community Cabinets ($8.4 million over four years to conduct
regular community cabinet meetings);[30]
- Homeland and Border Security – review ($114 000 over one year to
conduct a review of homeland and border security arrangements in Australia);[31]
- Lobbyist Register – establishment ($1 million over four years to
establish and maintain a register of lobbyists);[32]
- Office of National Security – establishment ($3.8 million over
four years to provide coordinated and integrated whole-of-government advice on
national security policy and strategic implementation oversight);[33]
- Office of Work and Family – establishment ($6.3 million over four
years to provide policy coordination and advice on work and family matters);[34]
- Review of recognition for the battle of Long Tan ($161 000 over
one year to meet the costs of the Independent Review Panel into Recognition for
the Battle of Long Tan);[35]
- Social Inclusion Unit – establishment ($6.7 million over four
years to establish the unit within the department);[36]
and
- Design of the Emissions Trading Scheme ($6.3 million for the
2007–08 financial year).[37]
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