Monday, 9 July 2018

Horizontal Fiscal Equalisation: a window into the Indigenous policy maelstrom




What we do determine, oft we break.
Purpose is but the slave to memory

Hamlet Act 3, scene 2.

The Productivity Commission report on horizontal fiscal equalisation (HFE) was released last week, along with a Government announcement that it would not adopt the Commission’s recommended approach and instead would be revising the HFE system to establish a floor of 70 and then 75 cents based on the injection of a billion dollars a year of extra funds to ensure that no jurisdiction would be worse off. While the Commission’s report was largely an exercise in devising a technical solution to the issues raised in its terms of reference, the Government’s decision is largely driven by political considerations. There has been plenty of media analysis, but this piece in The Conversation by John Freebairn is a good and succinct summary (link here).

In relation to Indigenous issues, the Commission’s draft report made brief reference to the issue in its last chapter, and recommended a process be initiated by COAG to allocate clearer responsibilities across the federal government and the states and territories, and in this context, to make clarity of responsibilities in relation to Indigenous policies a priority.

In response, I made a brief submission (link here) and included it in a November 2017 blog post (link here). I raised two broad issues: first that the nature of Indigenous disadvantage differed across the country and thus needed to be taken into account by the Commission in addressing HFE, and second, that there were structural impediments driving Indigenous disadvantage which meant that fiscal equalisation was not in itself sufficient to drive better outcomes for Indigenous interests. An example is the fact that there is no link between the adjustments made to address Indigeneity within each jurisdiction and the spending outcomes of each jurisdiction; a matter also raised by the Yothu Yindi submission to the Inquiry (link here). A second, and in my view more significant structural impediment is that while HFE addresses recurrent fiscal capacities between jurisdictions, there is a significant capital / infrastructure deficit in remote regions which is not addressed by HFE and which reinforces Indigenous disadvantage. To take just one simple example, many NGOs and Indigenous organisations do not have access to staff housing and this is the major constraint on their ability to deliver effective services.

In its Final Report (link here) the Commission made virtually no change to its draft report recommendations on Indigenous matters (refer pages 275-278 for the relevant discussion). In a discussion at the end of section 6.1 (pages 165-166), the Commission appears to argue that there is inadequate accountability on jurisdictions at present, that greater accountability is required and it makes a number of suggestions in section 6.5, but concludes that ultimately greater accountability will require more fundamental reform of federal financial relations.

Section 9.3 of the Commission’s Final Report is titled ‘Broader reforms to federal financial relations’, and has headings such as ‘A complex policy environment’ and ‘A web of Commonwealth transfers to the states’ reinforcing the general theme that jurisdictional accountability for the delivery of services is confused and blurred (to use terms which appear in the report). The Commission goes on to discuss a number of options which have been advanced by various players (such as replacing the indigeneity disability factor in the HFE process with specific purpose payments to the states), but ultimately falls back on the proposition that greater clarity of responsibilities between the Commonwealth and the states is required within a context of broader reform. In its last paragraph, the Commission concludes:

Reforming HFE in isolation will only go a small way to improving federal financial relations. Without addressing this broader environment, the system is likely to come under further strain. The sustainability of the GST pool as a source of funding for States will likely come under increasing pressure, due to Australia’s changing consumption patterns. Like many inquiry participants, the Commission considers there is a need to revisit the broader operating environment in which HFE takes place, and to renew efforts to reform federal financial relations in the broad.

It goes on to recommend:

RECOMMENDATION 9.1
Improvements to the HFE system can only go so far. The Commonwealth and State Governments, through the Council on Federal Financial Relations and recently formed Board of Treasurers, should work towards meaningful reform to federal financial relations.

 In the first instance, the process should:

· assess how Commonwealth payments to the States — both general revenue assistance and payments for specific purposes — interact with each other, given the significant reforms to payments for specific purposes that have occurred in recent years

 · develop a better-delineated division of responsibilities between the States and the Commonwealth and establish clear lines and forms of accountability. Policies to address Indigenous disadvantage should be a priority. (emphasis added)

Following this, options to address the vertical fiscal imbalance should be considered and advanced.

While the Commission’s analysis has some merit, it reflects the overwhelming bias towards incrementalism not only in day to day public policymaking, but also in the approach to ‘reform’ in public policymaking circles. Moreover, there is real doubt as to whether it is possible in today’s complex world to entirely differential the policy responsibilities of sovereign jurisdictions. While policy incrementalism has much to recommend it in terms of social and economic certainty and order, it becomes an almost insurmountable hurdle for interests who are not beneficiaries of the status quo such as Indigenous citizens.

One of the points that John Freebairn makes in his analysis mentioned above is that the losers of the GST compromise adopted by the Government are unknown, and as he puts it, are ‘left to the imagination’. One obvious set of losers are interests whose existing programs are being cut, and past readers of this blog will be unsurprised when I note the likely cuts of up to $300m per annum in remote housing by the Commonwealth provides an indication of at least one set of losers from the GST deal.

Saul Eslake in a 2017 Conversation article (link here) made a persuasive case for the proposition that the HFE system was not broken insofar as Western Australia was concerned. The key paragraphs in Eslake’s analysis are these:

Despite the sharp decline in its share of GST revenues, the WA government’s total revenue per head of population in 2015-16 was just A$67 (or 0.7%) below the average for all states and territories. By contrast, by 2015-16 the WA government was spending over A$1,000 (or 10.5%) more per head of population on “operating expenses”, than the average of all states and territories.
WA’s present fiscal woes are the result not of a flawed system of distributing revenue from the GST among the states and territories, but rather of its inability to control its own spending.

The Commission itself pointed to this issue in its report. See in particular pages 137-140, and in particular the Box 4.2 on page 139 which makes clear that the Barnett state Government ignored the advice of its Treasury and made an assumption at a political level that the HFE system would be changed in the future to justify continued spending beyond its means. The key paragraphs are these:

Consistent with this notion, the then WA Treasurer (Porter 2011, p. 3) stated in his 2011-12 budget speech:

What we reasonably anticipate is that in 2013-14 the CGC will have brought in a new GST system. We expect it will produce a floor of about 75 per cent of our population share of the GST. Therefore we expect extra revenue of $1.8 billion in 2013-14 and $2.5 billion in 2014-15. These amounts will allow for reduced borrowings and will be used to progressively reduce existing debt to less than $18 billion while maintaining strong infrastructure investment. … If that change does not occur in that year, the State Government will then have no choice but to wind back infrastructure investment to decrease debt.

In the 2011-12 budget papers, the WA Government’s spending over the forward estimates (2011a, p. 33) did not explicitly include additional GST revenue from the anticipated relativity floor. However, the asset investment program in the key budget aggregates (p. 6) is identical to that shown in the assumed budget aggregates if a floor of 0.75 were introduced (p. 64). This suggests the State was on a higher course of spending than would be the case if there was no expectation of a floor. A recent inquiry into WA Government expenditure (Langoulant 2018) reached a similar conclusion (p. 54), stating that ‘if the warnings Treasury provided that the policy settings of the day would cause major difficulties in the future had been heeded, it is highly likely that the State’s current budget and debt positions would have been mitigated, and in a material manner’ (p. 55).

So in 2011, the then West Australian Treasurer (and current federal Attorney General), Christian Porter ignored Treasury advice and blew the WA budget. Interestingly, his justification was that there was a ‘reasonable anticipation’ of a ‘fix’ effectively identical to the arrangements announced by Treasurer Morrison (ie a 75 cents floor on GST redistributions). Ironically, it was the huge fiscal disaster visited upon WA by those decisions which ultimately led to Porter’s anticipated changes occurring.

My point in traversing this depressing ground in a blog about Indigenous policy is to make two points:

First, the Barnett Government’s spending spree was not directed towards structural reform, and in particular was not directed to Indigenous structural reform. A cursory perusal of the Langoulant Review (link here) makes plain that instead, it was directed to significantly increased recurrent expenses in the roads, health and education portfolios, and huge increases in borrowings were used to fund a series of capital projects (refer pages 152 to 164). While Indigenous citizens would have benefitted to an extent from increased mainstream services, remote communities saw little of the ‘boom dividend’, and there was no explicit effort to ‘lift’ the state’s most disadvantaged citizens to a higher level.

Second, the West Australian budget experience points to the ubiquity of political motivations in driving policy processes, and the toxic combination of political hubris, absence of countervailing accountability and the absence of transparency in producing policy outcomes which are not in the public interest.

In other words, Indigenous interests (and particularly remote communities) failed to benefit during the WA boom when the state was in the best position to drive structural reforms. Now the Commonwealth Government is bailing out West Australia for its mismanagement and once again Indigenous interests are positioned at the margin of the debate, with little prospect of structural reform emerging, and are amongst the most prominent losers in terms of the funds found to ensure no state is worse off.

If, as the Commission suggests, reform of HFE on its own will not be adequate in driving greater jurisdictional accountability and thus addressing Indigenous exclusion in public policy outcomes, and fundamental reform of federal financial relation is required, the question becomes, what would effective reform look like?

 I have two practical suggestions:

First, the current Thodey Review of the Australian Public Service should take a close look at the Western Australian experience as laid out in the Langoulant and PC Inquiries, and in particular explore options to introduce greater transparency into the policymaking process generally, but particularly in relation to Indigenous affairs.

The Langoulant review identified (among others) the following systemic issues in play in WA between 2008 and 2017:

• temporarily high recurrent revenue growth was used to pay for permanent expenditure promises, leaving behind structural budget deficits;
 • decision makers lacked the capacity to act upon signs of unsustainable growth in net debt;
• the quality of financial information supporting Cabinet Submissions deteriorated;
• capability gaps emerged in the public sector especially around project planning and evaluation; and
• the Government defaulted to confidentiality around major projects rather than transparency (page 8).

Fifty years ago, Bill Stanner in the 1968 Boyer Lectures, After the Dreaming, referred to a ‘history of indifference’ in attitudes to Aborigines. In other lectures, he referred to a ‘cult of forgetfulness’ and a ‘cult of disremembering’ in relation to the nation’s history. Australia continues to shift Indigenous issues to the margins, and to conveniently overlook our incapacity to address deep disadvantage. The lack of a culture of transparency plays a large and under-appreciated role in allowing such indifference and forgetfulness to flourish, to the point where it becomes impossible to mount a persuasive case in favour of the fundamental structural reforms which would be in the public interest.

Second, there is a pressing need to develop a detailed reform agenda focussed on structural changes to the broader Australian political and policy systems which will reverse the embedded nature of Indigenous disadvantage. In this context, it may be time for a comprehensive review of the structural underpinnings of Indigenous disadvantage. While increasingly Indigenous leaders are pointing to the need for structural change, the complexity of the Australian public policy realm is such that there is a need for rigorous analysis and understanding of how the nation might proceed if reform is to be effective. While a parliamentary inquiry might be considered, or perhaps the Productivity Commission, the best model might be a Commission of Inquiry along the lines of the Coombs Royal Commission into Australian Government Administration which was established by the Whitlam Government with four or five Commissioners and expansive terms of reference.

It is past time the nation understood and ‘remembered’ that Indigenous disadvantage is a product of the complex array of mainstream institutional and policy structures which either explicitly or implicitly drove dispossession and extermination, then assimilation, later child removals, welfare dependence, and the inter-generational transfer of disadvantage into the present where we have adopted the rhetoric of closing the gap, but as a nation have failed to design and resource the policy to ensure it makes a difference.

Monday, 2 July 2018

Remote Housing Watershed: rampant political chicanery.




The ten year National Partnership on Remote Indigenous Housing, renamed the National Partnership on Remote Housing has completed its ten year course, and expired on 30 June. I won’t present a barrage of statistics, as my previous posts have done all that (link here and here) but will merely assert that the National Partnership over its ten year life made a substantial difference to the levels of overcrowding, community infrastructure and quality of housing in scores of remote communities and town camps on the edges of major towns across remote Australia.

The Commonwealth has failed to renew the ongoing financial investment directed at improving social housing for the most disadvantaged citizens in the nation. Instead, it decided to cut a deal with the NT Government where it allocated $110m per annum for five years to match the NT Government’s earlier decision to commit a billion dollars over ten years. The Minister has apparently been in negotiations with South Australia, Queensland and the Western Australian Government, but so far no agreements have been announced.

The WA Government has recently mounted a public campaign directed at gaining the Prime Minister’s attention (link here) but the likelihood of a major breakthrough appears low.

The Commonwealth has successfully framed this issue as a fight between the Commonwealth and the States. In its most recent manifestation, Minister Scullion’s reaction has again been to play the man and not the ball (link here) and provide the Western Australian media with a media release directed squarely at WA Treasurer and Minister for Aboriginal Affairs Ben Wyatt and titled ‘Little Wyatt lies on remote Indigenous housing’. Dated 29 June 2018, as of today (2 July, 3.30 pm) it has yet to appear on Minister Scullion’s media release web site. I cannot remember seeing a ministerial media release which included such personal and vitriolic abuse, which literally attempted to belittle the Western Australian Minister and merely succeeded in squandering the little credibility Minister Scullion retains. As a public service, I have transcribed it in full in the previous post (link here).

To his credit, Minister Wyatt has gone public and called out the Minister on his bullying behaviour. See the Guardian article on the issue by Calla Wahlquist (link here).

But turning to Minister Scullion’s media release, it is a long time since I have seen a media release so redolent of flagrant hypocrisy, disingenuousness, and outright policy chicanery. Of course we haven’t seen the relevant correspondence, but according to the West Australians, the Commonwealth ‘offer’ is for $60.9m over three years, down from the $360m it would have received from the Commonwealth had NPARIH been rolled over. Minister Scullion states:

 As I have always said, the Commonwealth remains committed to future investment in remote Indigenous housing,

The pathetic combination of a ‘commitment’ to some unspecified level of future investment is breathtaking in its hypocrisy. Here is a minister who has allowed a $550m per annum ten year program to lapse and replaced it with a $110m per annum commitment for five years in the NT, and ‘ongoing negotiations’ with three other jurisdictions claiming the moral high ground. His rhetoric is disgraceful. As I have previously noted, given that the NT represents about half the outstanding remote housing need, the Commonwealth appears unlikely to offer more than $220m per annum in total, and not for ten years. Such an outcome would represent a $300m per annum cut to the Commonwealth’s remote housing funding.

Minister Scullion’s media release goes on to cite as evidence of Commonwealth effort vis a vis State efforts, the Commonwealth investments over ten years which were committed and allocated by the Rudd / Macklin administration, and which he spent years attacking in Senate Estimates. As I have stated before, the area of social housing is a joint federal/state responsibility, but it is the Commonwealth which is moving to abrogate its responsibility. The comparisons made in the last two paragraphs of Minister Scullion’s media release, where he accuses the WA Government of racism for not using mainstream funds from the Commonwealth and thus not pulling its weight in remote communities ignores two salient facts. The first and most obvious is that the state allocated mainstream funds to urban and regional social housing which itself includes higher than pro rata levels of Indigenous tenants. In a situation where a remote housing program existed, it was not inappropriate for the states to allocate mainstream funding to urban and regional centres.

Second, the largest housing assistance expenditure program in the nation is Rent Assistance. It is administered by the Commonwealth and totals $4.4bn per annum. It assists low income tenants in private rentals and community housing. In remote Australia, this program has very little traction for the simple reason that there is a very limited private rental housing market. The result is that remote Indigenous citizens are effectively excluded form the Commonwealth’s largest housing assistance program. This fact in itself provides a substantive policy rationale for the continuation of the remote housing program by the Commonwealth.

Minister Scullion’s criticism of the State and its Minister is not only unwarranted and thus unfair, but applies to the Commonwealth and arguably to the Minister himself, since notwithstanding much rhetoric, he has made virtually no headway on land reform which would facilitate the expansion of a private ownership and community housing options in remote communities, and thus open up access to the Rent Assistance program. For Minister Scullion to accuse the Western Australian Government of ‘racism at its worst’ is both wrong, and deeply ironic given the actions of the Commonwealth on this issue to date.

Of course what is lacking from the Commonwealth is any considered and cogent explanation for its decisions on remote housing. It has been a rolling maul of delays, misinformation, non-information, promises, threats, and now straight out abuse. Why is it too much to ask that a Commonwealth Minister lay out in a considered and careful manner the basis for the Government’s decisions, and how they see those decisions contributing to closing the gap?

Minister Wyatt’s comments as to the ‘unsuitability’ of Minister Scullion to resolve these issues appear to be well directed. One might even go further and ask whether a person who directs accusations of racism at the WA Government while seeking to explicitly belittle an Indigenous man and political opponent is up to the job of Minister for Indigenous Affairs in the Commonwealth Government.

To sum up, I will merely set down a letter I sent to the Prime Minister earlier today:

Prime Minister
Your Government's decision to substantially cut funding for remote housing following the cessation of NPARIH /NPRH will impact the most disadvantaged citizens in the nation. It will cause ongoing social, economic and health stress for individuals, families including children, and whole communities.

What exacerbates this decision is that your Minister has deliberately set out to obfuscate, to confuse, and to blame rather than set down a set of reasoned and rational explanations for the Government's decision.

I call on you to reverse the Government's decision and reinstate a substantial ten year program to underpin the provision of social housing in remote communities.

sincerely Michael Dillon

I think that says it all. I am not holding my breath for a substantive reply.



Personal Disclosure: I worked as an adviser to Indigenous Affairs Minister Jenny Macklin between 2008 and 2011.

Lies, damned lies, and remote funding statistics





The following media release was issued in Western Australia by the Commonwealth Minister for Indigenous Affairs on 29 June 2018.  As it has not so far been placed on the Ministerial media release web site by the Minister’s Office, I have posted it here. 

The following post provides a critique of the Minister’s actions in issuing this media release.



MEDIA RELEASE

Senator the Hon. Nigel Scullion
Minister for Indigenous Affairs

 Little Wyatt lies on remote Indigenous housing
 Friday, 29 June 2018

Ben Wyatt’s lies on remote Indigenous housing show that the McGowan Labor Government is more interested in playing politics than delivering outcomes for Aboriginal people in Western Australia.

 Ben Wyatt said on radio this week that I have stopped responding to questions from the State Government.

This is not correct. It is wrong. These are more Labor lies.  

 As I have always said, the Commonwealth remains committed to future investment in remote Indigenous housing.

 I have always been the Minister responsible and have had carriage of the remote housing negotiations on behalf of the Commonwealth.

I wrote to Minister Tinley on 24 May with an offer of Commonwealth investment and I welcomed Minister Tinley’s response on 11 June that this offer reflected our positive discussions and that he would take it to Cabinet.

 Negotiations with Minister Tinley were progressing well but unfortunately it seems Ben Wyatt has now got involved.

 A day after Ben Wyatt’s media release I received a new letter signed by Minister Tinley but clearly written by Ben Wyatt that takes a whole new approach – one in which the Western Australian Government is willing to walk away from the Commonwealth’s investment we want to provide to residents of remote communities.
 I have since responded re-stating the Commonwealth’s commitment and asking for proper discussions to commence.

There is no truth in the statement that I am not responding to the Western Australian Government.

 I am concerned Ben Wyatt is more interested in walking away from the Commonwealth investment on the table to support his push to close remote Indigenous communities.

 I will not stand by and allow Ben Wyatt to do that.

The Commonwealth is committed to providing new investments in remote Indigenous housing in Western Australia on the condition the Western Australian Government also commits funding, just as other governments have done.

 I call on Peter Tinley to re-engage with me, re-engage in good faith and directly with me, not via the media and to get a deal done so Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people in Western Australia can benefit from the funding that the Commonwealth has put on the table.

 Since 2008 the Commonwealth has invested $1.16 billion to build 854 houses and 1,705 refurbishments in Western Australia across 94 communities. During this same time the WA Government has invested virtually nothing.

Over the past decade, and outside of the remote Indigenous housing deal, the Commonwealth has also invested $1.502 billion to address housing and homelessness in Western Australia through Special Purpose Payments for social housing as well as through the National Partnership on Homelessness and it appears WA Labor have no intention of utilising these significant funds for their remote Indigenous citizens. This is racism at its worst.

 ENDS

 Media Contact: Brett Chant, 0477 744 614