Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Structural reform in Australia (and the role of the Productivity Commission) Gary Banks Dean/CEO, The Australia and New Zealand School of Government Former Chairman, Productivity Commission, Australia Athens 18 April 2013 2 The Australian Federation Northern Territory Queensland Western Australia South Australia New South Wales Australian Capital Territory Victoria Tasmania 3 Australia’s Federal system of Government • Powers and responsibilities divided between the central and state governments • Westminster-style Parliamentary System −two dominant parties (but minor parties growing) • Governments cooperate, but also compete – The ‘Council of Australian Governments’ is a forum for cooperation on national reforms 4 The Australian economy: a snapshot • Population 22.6 million (as at 3 April 2013) • GDP − Primary − Manufacturing • GDP per Capita ($) • GDP growth rate • Inflation • Unemployment • Current A/C deficit: GDP • Public Deficit: GDP $1336bn 10.3% 9% $59 629 3.1% 2.2% 5.4% -2.2% -3.7% 5 The previous 'protection for all’ regime • Centralized prescription of ‘fair’ wages • ‘Made-to-measure’ tariff protection • Extensive regulatory barriers to competition • Government monopolies in infrastructure and human services 6 Australia’s relative productivity performance was poor 6.0 Australia OECD 5.0 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 0.0 1960-65 1965-70 1970-73 7 Fall of Australia’s economic ranking Per capita GDP ranking in OECD 1 Australia ranked 4th in 1950 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Australia ranked 14th in 1983 14 15 n 2006 2008 2000 2002 2004 1996 1998 1990 1992 1994 1986 1988 1980 1982 1984 1974 1976 1978 1970 1972 1964 1966 1968 1960 1962 1954 1956 1958 1950 1952 16 Source: The Conference Board and Groningen Growth and Development Centre, Total Economy Database, January 2009 8 Wide-ranging structural and competition reforms • Trade liberalisation (from early 1980s) • Capital market liberalisation (from early 1980s) • Pro-competitive infrastructure reforms (from late 80s) • Labour market ‘deregulation’ (from late 80s) • Human services administrative reforms (from early 1990s) • A coordinated ‘National Competition Policy’ (from 1995) • ‘National Reform Agenda’ (from 2007) 9 Some features of Australia’s reform implementation strategy • We reduced barriers at the border first • We liberalised unilaterally • Reforms were implemented gradually • We acted on a broad front • We assisted adjustment in sensitive sectors. 10 Import protection and industry assistance are greatly reduced Effective rates of assistance (per cent) 40 40 35 35 30 30 25 25 20 20 15 15 10 10 5 5 0 0 1970-71 1976-77 1982-83 1988-89 1994-95 2000-01 1970-71 1976-77 1982-83 1988-89 Manufacturing 1994-95 2000-01 Agriculture 11 Increased trade intensity Trade-to-GDP ratio 12 A surge in productivity and innovation Business R&D share of market value added per cent Average MFP growth 2.5 1.2 2 1 1.5 0.8 2.3 0.6 1 0.5 1.2 0.7 0.9 0.4 0.2 0 1984-85 to 1988-89 1988-89 to 1993-94 1993-94 to 1998-99 1998-99 to 2003-04 0 1968-69 1976-77 1984-85 1992-93 2000-01 13 Fall and rise of Australia’s economic ranking Per capita GDP ranking in OECD 1 2 3 Australia ranked 4th in 1950 Australia back to Australia back 5th to 5th in in2008 2010 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 Australia ranked 14th in 1983 14 Source: The Conference Board and Groningen Growth and Development Centre, Total Economy Database, January 2009 2006 2008 2002 2004 2000 1996 1998 1992 1994 1988 1990 1984 1986 1980 1982 1976 1978 1972 1974 1968 1970 1964 1966 1960 1962 1958 1954 1956 1950 1952 15 14 “There is nothing more difficult to carry out … than to initiate a new order of things. For the reformer has enemies in all who profit from the old order, and only lukewarm defenders in those who would benefit from the new.” (Niccolò Machiavelli; The Prince, 1513) 15 Political obstacles to reform • Costs are often immediate, but benefits can take time • Costs from reform are concentrated, benefits are more widely spread • Potential winners tend to be poorly informed (compared to losers) • Bureaucratic structures are fragmented, with variable capacity and often aligned with sectional interests • Multiple jurisdictions complicate progress 16 Some Australian institutional innovations within government to support reform (and good policy) • Standing review bodies − The Productivity Commission • Regulatory assessment processes − The Office of Best Practice Regulation • Monitoring of public sector performance − Government Services Review − COAG (National) Reform Council 17 What is the Productivity Commission? • An independent government agency to publicly review policies, programs and regulation −and provide research and advice on reforms that are in the long term national interest. • It evolved from a statutory body to advise government on import tariffs (the Tariff Board, 1922). −Re-vamped in 1973, 1990 and 1996 – progressively widening its mandate. −Currently around 200 staff and $US30m annual budget. 18 Three core design features • Independence −Government funded, but arm’s length from the Executive −underpinned by Act of Parliament (role, tenure) • Transparency −public processes (submissions, draft reports) −published outputs • Economy-wide perspective −‘to achieve higher living standards for the Australian Community’ 19 How the Productivity Commission ‘fits’ within Government Parliament Cabinet Public ... Treasurer Productivity Commission ... 20 Steps in the Commission's Inquiry Process Reference from Cabinet PC calls for submissions Initial consultations and Issues Paper First round of hearings or roundtables Draft Report publicly released Second round of submissions and hearings/roundtables Final Report to Government (subsequently publicly released) Cabinet submission by relevant Minister Decision and implementation 21 The Commission’s advisory activities range widely • Industry assistance and trade policy • Regulatory frameworks for infrastructure and utilities • Competition and consumer regulation • Labour market reform • Social and environmental programs/regulation • Reducing ‘Red Tape’ on business • Productivity trends and drivers 22 How has the Commission supported reform in Australia? • Impartial advice in the ‘national interest’ • Findings publicly scrutinized and evidence-based • An opportunity for government to test public reactions • Ammunition for government in ‘selling’ reform • Greater community awareness of the costs of existing policies and benefits from reform −Facilitating pro-reform coalitions 23 Some recent inquiry topics • • • • • • • • • • Regional Trade Agreements R&D Support Regulatory impediments in key industries Urban Land Planning and zoning Water policy and regulation Airport regulation Retail sector performance Carbon ‘pricing’ international comparisons Education workforce Aged Care policy framework 24 Other ingredients in Australia’s reform story • Ad hoc policy review processes on specific issues (tax, labour market,….) • Coordination and oversight mechanisms within and across governments • Political leadership −strong ‘technocratic’ support 25 Implications for others? • Countries differ, but face similar reform needs and obstacles • Structural reform in Australia benefited from institutions that provide independent research and advice • Scope to adapt such approaches to other countries’ institutional circumstances? 26 Some Australian innovations in policy development and review (continued) • Standing review bodies − The Productivity Commission • Regulatory assessment processes − The Office of Best Practice Regulation • Monitoring of public sector performance − Government Services Review − COAG Reform Council 27 The key elements in Regulation Impact Assessment • Explain objective and why government action is needed • Identify all relevant options (including non-regulatory) • Assess their costs and benefits across the economy/community − and choose the option with greatest net benefit • Consult with stakeholders along the way • Have an effective implementation strategy − and periodically review the outcomes 28 The Australian Government’s regulatory assessment system • All regulatory proposals are screened for impacts on business/competition • OBPR advises on need for Regulation Impact Statement −and monitors compliance • Failure to comply means regulatory proposals cannot proceed −unless the Prime Minister grants an exemption (and then a post-implementation review is required) • All regulations periodically reviewed −sunset clauses in subordinate regulation −5 yearly reviews (and ad hoc ‘stock’ reviews) 29 Some Australian innovations in policy development and review (continued) • Standing review bodies −The Productivity Commission • Regulatory assessment processes −The Office of Best Practice Regulation • Monitoring of public sector performance −Government Services Review −COAG Reform Council 30 How the Review of Government Services is structured Annual reporting on efficiency and effectiveness of government services Steering Committee of senior officials from central agencies – head by Productivity Commission Chairman Secretariat: Productivity Commission Specialist input 12 Working Groups of officials from line agencies 31 Services covered in annual reporting • • • • • • School education VET Police Court administration Prisons Emergency management • Public hospitals • Primary and community health • Aged care • Disability services • Children’s services • Housing 32 Performance indicators for public hospitals Equity Access Equity of access by special needs groups Access Emergency department waiting times Waiting times for elective surgery Appropriateness Objectives Effectiveness Safety Separation rates for selected procedures Unplanned re-admission rates Pre-anaesthetic consultation rates Surgical site infection rates PERFORMANCE Quality Responsiveness Patient satisfaction surveys Capability Accreditation Continuity Continuity of care Sustainability Patient satisfaction Sentinel events Workforce sustainability Recurrent cost per casemix-adjusted separation Key to indicators Efficiency Total cost per casemixadjusted separation Provided on a comparable basis for this Text Report subject to caveats in each chart or table Text Information not complete or not directly comparable Text Yet to be developed or not collected for this Report Outputs Relative stay index Recurrent cost per non-admitted occasion of service Outcomes 33 Some Australian innovations in policy development and review (continued) • Standing review bodies −The Productivity Commission • Regulatory assessment processes −The Office of Best Practice Regulation • Monitoring of public sector performance −Government Services Review −COAG Reform Council 34 COAG Reform Council • A ‘national’ body – appointees from different jurisdictions • Monitors and reports on implementation of agreed national reforms – discipline through transparency • Advises whether state performance meets requirements for Federal funding in specific areas (eg. hospitals, schools...) Structural reform in Australia (and the role of the Productivity Commission) Gary Banks Dean/CEO, The Australia and New Zealand School of Government Former Chairman, Productivity Commission, Australia Athens 18 April 2013