The Commonwealth
Grants Commission has released its 2016
Update Report on GST relativities.
The NT Government
published a media
release reporting on the outcome for the Northern Territory. The headline commentary
was as follows:
The
Commonwealth Grants Commission (CGC) has recommended a reduction in the Northern
Territory’s share of total Australian GST revenue from 5.7% in 2015-16 to 5.4%
in 2016-17.
Treasurer
David Tollner said the recommendations contained in the CGC’s Report on GST
Revenue Sharing Relativities 2016, released today, will result in a significant
decline in GST revenue from 2016-17 ongoing.
“For
2016-17 the decline is estimated at around $145 million, compared to the
2016-17 estimate at the time of the 2015-16 Mid-year Report” he said.
The
release went on to contextualise the decision, pointing out it related to a
slowing in NT population growth rates relative to other jurisdictions, and somewhat
counter-intuitively given the slowing in population growth, above average
growth in the NT’s capacity to collect payroll tax, driven by robust employment
growth, which reduced its assessed requirement for GST revenue.
The CGC
explained the recommendations like this:
The Northern Territory remains
the State with the lowest fiscal capacity; however, its share of GST in 2016-17
has fallen from 5.7% to 5.4%. This is primarily due to a significant decline in
the Territory’s share of national population growth which reduced its need to
invest in new infrastructure. To a lesser extent, the fall was due to an
improvement in its payroll tax capacity. While the Northern Territory’s
increased fiscal capacity will see its GST share fall, its GST entitlement in
2016-17 will rise by $5 million, or 0.2%, due to growth in the pool.
It is worth
making a couple of high level points about the implications for the NT of this decision.
The NT is
consistently assessed as the jurisdiction with the lowest fiscal capacity and
thus in proportionate or per capita terms, it receives the highest level of subsidy.
According to the CGC, the NT’s fiscal capacity is ‘primarily due to its above average
assessed expenses which arise from of its above average shares of a range of
population groups, but in particular it has exceptionally high proportions of
Indigenous people and people in remote areas. This is compounded by the greatest
diseconomies of small scale in administration of all States’.
The NT
Treasurer made no mention of the admittedly small growth of $5m in the funds available
this year to the NT in his media release.
In terms of
the financial extent of the changes for the NT, see Table 27 of the CGC report.
The changes in relative population growth had an impact of $115m, the payroll
tax growth was $25m. However, not far behind driving a reduction of $19m was a decline nationally in outer regional and remote community
health service use and an increase in non-State sector service provision in the
Northern Territory between 2011-12 and 2014-15 has reduced the Northern
Territory’s assessed community health spending and thus its GST share. Interestingly,
there was an increase of $15m arising from new child protection data which
resulted in upward revisions to the measured share of substantiations
attributed to remote Indigenous children. The NT’s revenue increase was due to
its high proportion of remote Indigenous children. While these latter two
changes virtually cancel each other out, they point to the ongoing impact of
the Commonwealth’s Stronger Futures National Partnership and legislation in
driving change on the ground which then flows through into broader fiscal
relativities.
A further
interesting issue in the CGC Report is at paragraphs 89-91 and Table 2-5. It
reports on the treatment of Commonwealth Own Purpose Expenditure for Indigenous
affairs (in essence, the Indigenous Advancement Strategy). It shows that of
$64m in grants to state government instrumentalities, some $49m was included in
the relativity assessment process, in effect reducing the revenue of the
jurisdictions receiving that $49m (while not reducing the overall pool
available to jurisdictions). It does open up the question of why the Commonwealth
would fund state government instrumentalities under the IAS.
Paragraphs
92-97 dealt with the $1.08bn in payments to non-government entities for Indigenous
advancement by the Commonwealth under the IAS. The Commission decided that it
would not assess these grants as part of the relativity assessment process,
though this was more because of data issues than a substantive conceptual reason.
The NT
Treasurer’s media release included an interesting statement:
The reduction of the GST revenue has been slightly offset
by the partial exclusion of Commonwealth payments under the National
Partnership Agreement on Remote Indigenous Housing.
Paragraphs
98 – 134 of the Report include an extended assessment of the potential
treatment of NPARIH payments. The issues involved are complex and can’t be adequately
dealt with in this post. They go in part to the notion that the Grants Commission
assesses relativities in relation to capacities of jurisdictions to meet their
recurrent provision of services, and do not relate to capital expenditures of
jurisdictions. I will return to NPARIH in a subsequent post.
It is worth
noting however that the existence of longstanding and severe capital investment
deficits in remote communities is a fundamental structural problem which the
CGC and fiscal equalisation processes do not address.
Notwithstanding
the salience of remote and indigenous issues in the fiscal equalisation
process, it remains the case that it says nothing about how jurisdictions
actually spend the funds which are recommended and paid from the pool of GST
revenues. The internal allocation by states and territories of funds to remote
communities and Indigenous populations remains largely determined by political
processes which are quite separate to the arcane arts of fiscal equalisation.
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