Thursday 4 April 2024

ANAO 2024/25 draft work program

 

And how his audit stands who knows save heaven?

Hamlet Act three, Scene three.

 

The ANAO has released its draft work program for next financial year’s performance audits (link here). Dan Holmes from the Mandarin provides a succinct whole of government overview (link here).

 

This post focusses on the Indigenous policy related performance audits, which fall under the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PMC) portfolio. OF course, many of the proposed mainstream performance audits will have a bearing on services delivered to Indigenous citizens. These include (to a greater or lesser extent) proposed performance audits of DSS’s programs Assisting the Long term Unemployed; a follow-on performance audit of the Management of funding of projects by the Northern Australia Infrastructure Facility (NAIF) in the Infrastructure, Transport, Regional Development, Communications and the Arts portfolio; and perhaps even Board Governance at the National Disability Insurance Agency.

 

For ease of access, I have included slightly edited summary extracts of proposed Indigenous specific performance audits from the PMC portfolio below:

Delivery of community-led justice reinvestment initiatives

This audit would assess the design and governance underpinning the National Indigenous Australians Agency and the Attorney-General’s Department’s joint establishment of an independent National Justice Reinvestment Unit and examine the effectiveness of the early delivery of up to 30 community-led justice reinvestment initiatives.

Around $100m was announced for investments in community-led justice reinvestment initiatives and First Nations-led legal assistance services in the October 2022 budget…

Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation’s management of non-financial assets

This audit would assess the effectiveness of the Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation’s (ILSC’s) management of non-financial assets.

The ILSC is a corporate Commonwealth entity established under the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Act 2005 (the Act). One function of the ILSC is to acquire land to grant to Indigenous corporations. Under section 191D of the Act, the ILSC must make a grant for an interest in land acquired for that purpose within a reasonable time after its acquisition. At 30 June 2023, the ILSC and subsidiary corporations held the Ayers Rock Resort valued at $435 million, other properties valued at $66 million, and livestock on properties valued at $6 million. While the ILSC holds properties, it is responsible for maintenance, statutory costs and the operation of related businesses. The audit would examine the ILSC’s asset management strategy and practices, including those related to the divestment of properties…

Management of the regional network - Follow on

The audit would assess the effectiveness of the National Indigenous Australians Agency’s (NIAA’s) management of the regional network, including whether the regional network is achieving its objectives…

…Auditor-General Report No. 7 of 2018-19 Management of the Regional Network found that management of the regional network was mixed, with the full potential of the network to facilitate the design and delivery of local solutions to local problems not being maximized.

Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations’ management of non-compliance

This audit would assess the effectiveness of the Office of the Registrar of Indigenous Corporations’ (ORIC’s) management of non-compliance with the Corporations (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) Act 2006 (CATSI Act)…

…In 2021, the NIAA released a final report of a review into the CATSI Act that recommended enhancements to the regulatory powers available to the Registrar under the Act. An amendment bill to the CATSI Act passed the House of Representatives in 2021 but lapsed at the end of the 46th Parliament. This audit would examine the use of the Registrar’s powers and functions to manage non-compliance with the CATSI Act.

The effectiveness of coordination of Closing the Gap target implementation

The audit would examine the effectiveness of the National Indigenous Australians Agency (NIAA’s) coordination activities.

The 2020 National Agreement on Closing the Gap (National Agreement) is a strategy that aims to improve the life outcomes of Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people. The National Agreement marks a shift in the approach to the Closing the Gap Strategy, with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander people determining what is important to them. The Closing the Gap Implementation Plan includes actions, the responsible minister and the delivery timeframe. The NIAA is responsible for leading and coordinating the development and implementation of Australia’s Closing the Gap targets in partnership with Indigenous Australians.

The Northern Territory Aboriginal Investment Corporation (NTAIC)’s administration of grants

This audit would assess the effectiveness of the governance of the NT Aboriginal Investment Corporation (NTAIC) and its governance and decision-making processes for allocating grants funding.

NTAIC was established as a corporate Commonwealth entity in November 2022. NTAIC’s purpose is to work with Aboriginal Territorians to achieve economic, social and cultural impact through innovative approaches to investments, beneficial payments and other financial assistance. It has initial grant funding of $180 million and an investment corpus of $500 million. Its Aboriginal-controlled board makes decisions to invest Aboriginals Benefit Account (ABA) funding, which was previously administered through the National Indigenous Australians Agency. The ABA receives monies from the Commonwealth based on the value of royalties generated from mining on Aboriginal land in the Northern Territory…

 

Commentary

The ANAO is an important, and in my view under-rated element in the array of checks and balances that comprise the architecture for government initiatives and actions. It is the financial auditor for all major government agencies, certifying that agencies financial accounts are compliant with the applicable accounting standards and fairly present the financial position of the entity at the audit date. Its performance audits are separate to its financial audits and in effect focus on the performance of agencies in delivering specific initiatives and programs. The span of performance audits is not comprehensive, and thus the selection of audit subjects is inherently a strategic choice.

 

In 1985, I published an article (link here) arguing that the shift to embracing what were then termed ‘efficiency audits’  — the equivalent of the ANAO’s performance audits —  should be extended to embrace effectiveness audits. ‘Efficiency’ refers to the ability to accomplish something competently with the minimum level of resources and effort. ‘Effectiveness’ refers to the degree to which desired or positive outcomes are achieved. In my view the argument I made then still has merit.

 

In its wisdom, the ANAO has preferred the safe harbour of focussing on efficiency (effectiveness risks straying into the realm of politics) leaving issues of effectiveness to ad hoc evaluations. For their part, successive governments have avoided reforms that would ensure evaluations are undertaken independently, are always published, and are pitched at a level that ensures they are strategically relevant. Proposals for an evaluator general (link here and link here) have been studiously ignored. The point of this brief foray into history is to highlight that notwithstanding their considerable usefulness and benefits in opening a window onto the activities of government, ANAO performance audits are invariably limited and focussed more on process than outcomes. Perhaps it is time that that the ANAO commissioned an independent evaluation of its own operations!

 

Turning to the proposed audits listed above, I propose to make a series of brief comments aimed at highlighting specific issues of potential significance or salience. Due to limitations on length, I don’t propose to comment on the proposed performance audit of the NIAA regional network, nor the proposed audit of the Office of the Registrar of Aboriginal Corporations. I note however that both organisational units are crucial elements in the architecture of Indigenous policy and deserve constructive scrutiny.

 

Delivery of community-led justice reinvestment initiatives: While this program is jointly shared between NIAA and the Attorney Generals Department, there is no information on the NIAA website. The AG’s website lists a basic description of the program (link here) and includes a program design document drafted by Jumbunna Institute ‘to inform the design of the grants process and grant opportunity guidelines’ (link here). The design document is well constructed but is itself strongly focussed on process (particularly community control) rather than providing a targeted conceptual framework for reducing incarceration and interactions with the justice system.  While this is deliberate, the very flexibility of the program is likely to lead to questions regarding its efficacy and purpose, especially in the context of outbreaks of public violence such as recently occurred in Alise Springs.

 

At a more strategic level, the Commonwealth is essentially investing in a slogan as there appears to be no mechanism for operationalising the ‘reinvestment’ element of the program. To do this would necessarily involve robust engagement with the states and territories to shift resources away from activist policing, aggressive prosecutorial strategies and carceral options, something the Commonwealth is loathe to undertake. Of course, notwithstanding an extra $10m being allocated to Central Australia under this program in the 2023 budget, the reality is that governments’ actions (such as those announced after recent riots in Alice including a curfew and a decision to appoint 200 more police) are not in fact aligned with the justice reinvestment ethos, and they appear unwilling to advocate for such a strategy to the wider population. The bottom line is that even if the investments involved were effective, the investment of $100m nationally is unlikely to be adequate to turn around the worsening incarceration status of First Nations (link here). The fundamental question then for the ANAO is not whether individual grants are making a positive impact, but whether governments are merely engaged in an exercise of signalling concern (and buying political support) rather than aiming to address the substantive issues involved.

 

Indigenous Land and Sea Corporation’s management of non-financial assets: this proposed performance audit is timely and will no doubt raise several important issues. The elephant in the room is the ILSC’s ownership of the Ayers Rock Resort and the implications for its balance sheet of the current efforts (link here) to divest the resort to a new owner. I published a post on this issue some years ago (link here) and note that the issue has been raised in each of the last two estimates hearings. There was a sustained discussion at the February 2024 Hearings (pages 57 to 60) of the significant contingent liability carried by the ILSC in relation to ARR, and the actions being taken by the ILSC to divest the land to an Indigenous corporation and the operation of the resort to a commercial operator. I was particularly struck by Senator Liddle’s statement in the most recent Estimates hearing that ‘we all know that there was far too much paid for that investment at that particular time’ given that this proposition was vehemently rejected by Minister Scullion when the subsequent Dawn Casey led Board sought to unpack what had transpired and have the decision reviewed (link here).

 

The effectiveness of coordination of Closing the Gap target implementation: this proposed performance audit addresses issues that are crucial to the future effectiveness of the closing the gap process. This element of NIAA’s management of the process is in dire need of reform. There are two elements to coordination of the implementation task. The first is across the Commonwealth: my informal understanding is that the NIAA does not see itself as taking the primary role in leading the implementation of the Priority Reforms under the National Agreement, but rather sees itself as a policy influencer. Of course, NIAA requires ministerial support to engage forthrightly, but it is painfully clear that the NIAA is effectively mute on many if not most of the issues that will make a difference to the ultimate success or failure of closing the gap.

 

The second essential element of successful coordination is for the Commonwealth to step up and provide a much greater degree of policy and even administrative leadership vis a vis the states and territories. The previous Government hid behind the convenient fig leaf that the Commonwealth was merely an equal partner in the intergovernmental National Agreement on Closing the Gap, but there was no necessity for the Labor Government to meekly and supinely follow suit. The Minister for Indigenous Australians must bear ultimate responsibility for this positioning, but NIAA and its leadership could have done much more to persuade the Minister to adopt a more robust and proactive stance.

I published a post on this and related issues in early March (link here) which I strongly recommend to readers.

 

The Northern Territory Aboriginal Investment Corporation (NTAIC)’s administration of grants: while this would be a marginally useful exercise given that NTAIC has been operating for less than two years, it strikes me that this proposed performance audit misses a much more strategically important issue, namely the efficacy (and ideally effectiveness) of the overall allocation of royalty equivalents to the Aboriginals Benefit Account (ABA), of which NTAIC grants are just one comparatively minor part. I was a critic of the NTAIC proposal as being a sleight of hand: it professed to shift control to Aboriginal interests in the NT, but in fact ensured that the Minister retained unilateral control over a significant element of royalty equivalents (managed by NIAA) without any Aboriginal oversight and with much less transparency that previously obtained (link here). Of course, the NTAIC is now a reality; I am not suggesting it be unwound. I am merely pointing to the fact that there is much more to the ABA than the slice that the NTAIC controls.

 

The most recent NIAA Annual Report (link here) incorporates the financial statements for the ABA which disclose that in 2023 it held financial assets totalling $1.47 billion, offset by liabilities (including provisions for establishment funds to transfer to NTAIC) of $625 million leaving net assets of $845 million. Annual appropriations to the ABA totalled $378 million. These funds are then allocated in a range of ways, including to fund the operations of the four land councils in the NT ($109 million in 2023), to fund the distribution of payments to corporations representing traditional owners affected by mining ($113 million), to fund the NTAIC (at the discretion of the Minister) and to make grants (usually approved by the Minister) for community purposes to residents of the NT ($62 million).  

 

In my view there is a much stronger case for assessing the performance of the whole ABA system including the grants that are not made by the NTAIC from a performance (and I would argue effectiveness) perspective than for assessing the comparatively small grants program currently operated by NTAIC. My recent posts in relation to Groote (link here and link here) are infused with a swirling whirlwind  of ABA funds. It is well past time that an independent oversight body undertook a close look at the operations of the ABA with the aim of ensuring the funding it distributes is meeting the statutory remit laid down in the Aboriginal Land Rights (Northern Territory) Act 1976.

 

Concluding Comment

The ANAO is to be commended for seeking comment on its proposed work program though I suspect that it may not attract much attention. In thinking about why and how these proposed performance audits were chosen, it struck me that there is no indication of the decision criteria, nor the process involved in setting the program. Further, given the interaction between efficiency (performance) and effectiveness, an ideal decision process would also consider the proposed evaluation program in each portfolio. These decisions are important because they fill a crucial gap in transparency and accountability in the current approach to public sector accountability.

 

Finally, one would have to assume that the ANAO (and perhaps also the Parliament) is beginning to consider how the developments in Artificial Intelligence (AI) might best be applied to assisting the development of more comprehensive and useful performance audit work program. As agencies increasingly adopt AI algorithms to drive their operations, it will be necessary for the ANAO to keep pace. A request to Chat GPT provided ten existing AI driven capabilities that could assist in improving the efficiency effectiveness of the ANAO’s performance audit system including Predictive Analytics for Risk Assessment; Automated Data Extraction and Analysis; Natural Language Processing (NLP) for Document Analysis; and Dynamic Audit Planning and Resource Allocation. It seems like the time is approaching when the ANAO will need to look very hard at how and why it does what it does. More importantly, Governments too will also need to begin consideration of how they might use these new capabilities to improve levels of transparency and accountability across the entire span of public policy.

 

4 April 2024

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