 |
Research Note no.62 2003–04
Federal government advertising
Dr Richard Grant
Politics and Public Administration Section
21 June 2004
Introduction
Government advertising is a contentious issue in modern democracies. In
Australia, both Commonwealth and State governments are entitled to taxpayer
money to provide the public with information about their programs. This
is allowed for under the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918.
At one level, government advertising has an important democratic function.
The public has a right to be informed about the programs which their taxes
fund. Equally, governments have a right to establish a framework for delivering
this information, subject to parliamentary scrutiny. But the distinction
between government and political advertising is often blurred. This creates
claims of political bias and that the funds would be better spent on the
advertised services themselves.(1) Although governments’ campaign
advertisements generally cease once the Parliament is dissolved for an election,
their style is often similar to parties’ election advertisements.(2)
Not all government advertising is contentious however. A proportion of the
government’s advertising budget is labelled ‘non-campaign’ which includes
job vacancies in Australian government organisations, public notices and
tenders. These are ‘one-off’ advertisements. The system of government
advertising
There are two main bodies responsible for government advertising: the Ministerial
Committee on Government Communications (MCGC) and the Government Communications
Unit (GCU).(3) The Ministerial Committee on Government
Communications
In 1997, Prime Minister John Howard established the MCGC. This committee
makes the key decisions relating to information activities undertaken by
government departments and agencies governed by the Financial Management
and Accountability Act 1997. Under the guidelines, major and/or sensitive
information activities are to be approved:
- first by the responsible minister
- then for discussion with the GCU, and
- then by the MCGC for approval.
The MCGC applies the Guidelines for Australian Government Information
Activities, established in 1995.(4) The principles governing
these guidelines include:
- equality of access to information about government programs, policies
and activities
- an expectation that each government department will have a public
information program ‘particularly where programs concern the individual’s
benefits, rights and obligations’, and
- efficient and effective use of information staff and communication
techniques.
The MCGC is chaired by the Special Minister of State(5) and has
three other permanent members who together provide a whole of government
perspective.(6) The minister responsible for the information
activity, or his or her representative, is a member of the MCGC for consideration
of that activity.(7) Government Communications Unit
The GCU coordinates government communications and advertising. It was renamed
and transferred from the Department of Finance and Administrative Services
to the Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet (PM&C) in 1998.
The PM&C website lists the main activities of the GCU as:
- providing strategic advice on proposed communications issues to the
PM and the MCGC
- maintaining a whole of government overview of current communications
activities
- provide a secretariat to the MCGC, assisting the committee with selecting
consulting and tendering processes, and
- manage the Central Advertising System (see below).
The First Assistant Secretary (FAS) of the People, Resources and Communications
Division is responsible for the GCU. The FAS meets with the chairman of
the MCGC before each meeting of the Committee and is briefed on the meeting’s
outcome.(8) Central Advertising System (CAS)
The Central Advertising System delivers ‘a reliable and cost-effective media
placement service for departments and agencies’.(9) The
Guidelines for Government Information Activities indicate that all
advertising is to be placed through the CAS once approval from the Ministerial
Committee is gained. The selection of advertising consultants is governed
by the Australian Government Procurement Guidelines. These relate to the
principles of value for money, open and effective competition, ethics and
fair dealing and accountability and reporting.(10) How
much have governments spent?
The following table presents aggregate expenditures on government advertising
(1991–2004). The data includes both campaign and non-campaign advertising
registered through the CAS. The third column converts nominal expenditure
to 2003–04 prices. Table 1: Government advertising expenditures
1991–2004
| |
Nominal
$m |
2003–04
prices: $m |
| 1991–92 |
$48 |
$61 |
| 1992–93 |
$70 |
$88 |
| 1993–94 |
$63 |
$79 |
| 1994–95 |
$78 |
$97 |
| 1995–96 |
$85 |
$103 |
| 1996–97 |
$46 |
$55 |
| 1997–98 |
$76 |
$89 |
| 1998–99 |
$79 |
$92 |
| 1999–00 |
$211 |
$240 |
| 2000–01 |
$156 |
$170 |
| 2001–02 |
$114 |
$122 |
| 2002–03 |
$99 |
$103 |
| 2003–04 |
$109 |
$109 |
| TOTAL |
$1234 |
$1408 |
Source: 1991–2 to 1995–6: Department of Administrative Services,
Annual Reports.
1996–7 to 97–8: requested from GCU. 1998–9 to 2002–03: Department of Prime
Minister and Cabinet, Annual Reports. Figure for 2003–04 taken from
Senate Estimates, Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet, 25 May 2004.
Expenditures on government advertising placed through the CAS rose fairly
steadily over the years of the Keating Government (1991–96). The exception
was the 1992–93 financial year when there was a sharp increase in outlays.
Government advertising expenditure over the first eight years of the Howard
Government (see Table 1, shaded) is marked by a major increase in 1999–2000.
Expenditures for that year increased by 265 per cent on the previous financial
year. This reflected expenditure on the goods and services tax advertising
campaign. Still, the level of government advertising expenditure in the
past two financial years is similar (in real terms) to outlays in the last
two years of the Keating administration. Which programs have been
funded?
Table 2 presents the highest-spending advertising programs under the Keating
and Howard administrations. Advertising on defence recruitment was by far
the single largest expenditure item by the Keating Government ($54.7 million)
and under the Howard Government is likely to exceed the $119 million spent
on the GST campaign (currently $112.1 million). Table 2: Major
government advertising campaigns (1991–2004)
| Program |
$m |
| Defence
Recruitment
Campaigns (1991–2004) |
$166.8 |
| A
New Tax System (GST)
(1998–2000) |
$118.7 |
| Pharmaceutical
Benefits
Campaign (2003–) |
$26 |
| Republic
referendum
(1998–99) |
$24.7 |
| National
Security Campaign
(as at 30
June 2003) |
$18.5 |
| Strengthening
Medicare
(2004–) |
$15.7 |
| Apprenticeships
(1997–) |
$15.6 |
| Domestic
Violence
Campaign (2002–05) |
$13.7 |
| Lifetime
Health Cover
(1999–2000) |
$12.4 |
| Smart
Traveller (2003–07) |
$9.7 |
| Working
Nation (1994–96) |
$9.4 |
| Superannuation
Guarantee
(1992–93) |
$9.1 |
| Citizenship
(2000–) |
$6.3 |
| Regional
Telecommunications
Campaign (2004–) |
$5.5 |
| Superannuation
Co–
contributions (2004–) |
$4.8 |
| Job
Network Employer
Campaign (2004–) |
$4 |
| Hospital
Entitlements
Campaign (1992–93) |
$3.3 |
| Training
Guarantee
Campaign (1991–94) |
$3.2 |
| Waste
Oil Campaign
(2004–2008) |
$3 |
| Drugs
Campaign (1992–94) |
$2.9 |
Source: 1991–2 to 1995–6: Commonwealth Government Information
and Advertising, Audit Report No. 30, 1994–95.
Defence figures taken from Annual Reports, 1991–2 to 1995–6: ‘Media
Advertising Organisations’.
1996–7 to 2002–03: Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, Annual
Reports.
Figure for PBS Campaign from Finance and Public Administration Senate Estimates
Committee, 5 November 2003. Note: Shaded boxes are continuing
programs—see Senate Estimates Committee, 16 February 2004, pp. 169–176
& 25 May 2004, p. 92 The other big spending advertising campaigns
by both Labor and Liberal administrations were on superannuation and Medicare.
On health issues, the Howard Government has also conducted major advertising
campaigns on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme and on Lifetime Health Cover.
ANAO reports
There have been two major enquiries into the conduct of government advertising
by the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO). In 1995, the ANAO conducted
an efficiency audit of departmental campaign advertising. The purpose of
the report was to ‘make recommendations designed to encourage better practice
in managing difficult and complex campaigns’.(11) The report
‘questioned the extent to which campaigns that only provide facts and are
not designed to influence attitudes or change behaviour actually help achieve
program objectives’.(12) In October 1998, shortly before
the federal election, the Audit Office reported on the GST advertising campaign
at the request of the Leader of the Opposition in the Senate. The report
noted that:
there are no Commonwealth guidelines or protocols on
information and advertising campaigns […] covering matters such as distinguishing
between government and party-political advertisements, the distribution
of unsolicited material and conduct of campaigns in the lead up to an
election […] It is not a matter that officials can duly decide for themselves.
[H]istory shows it is not uncommon for Government advertising to increase
in the period immediately preceding an election.(13)
Pre-election spikes
Tables 1 and 2 support this claim of pre-election spikes in expenditure
on government advertising. The 1993, 1996, 1998 and 2001 federal elections
were preceded by sharp increases in government advertising outlays:
- the bulk of the Keating Government’s $3 million advertising campaign
on Medicare Hospital Entitlements was spent the month before the 1993
poll(14)
- the Keating Government spent $9 million in the three months prior
to the 1996 Federal election campaign(15)
- the Howard Government spent $29.5 million in the three months before
the 1998 election campaign.(16) Half this expenditure ($14.9
million) was on the GST campaign. Still, pre-election spending on GST
advertising accounted for only 13 per cent of total expenditure on the
GST campaign, and
- in the four months before the 2001 election, the government spent
roughly $78 million.(17)
This trend of pre-election spikes in government advertising
seems likely to continue. A May 2004 Senate Estimates Committee heard
evidence of various plans for commencing new and continuing existing government
advertising campaigns (see Table 2, shaded).(18)
Information or propaganda?
The 1998 Auditor-General’s report argued that addressing the public perception
of bias is as important as improving the openness and accountability of
the advertising framework itself.(19) The perception that governments’
information campaigns are an extension of political advertising has been
influenced by:
- pre-election spikes in government advertising expenditure
- the status of the federal government (since 2000) as the top spending
advertiser in the country(20)
- the placement of the GCU within PM&C, and
- party-political appointments to the MCGC and MCGIA.
Sally Young, a Melbourne political scientist, has argued
that these arrangements have placed incumbents at a ‘massive advantage’
and challengers at a ‘massive disadvantage’.(21) She argues
that governments have the capacity to run a ‘permanent campaign’ using
the highly effective electoral tool of direct mail-outs. In the absence
of restrictions on the format of these advertisements, Young sees modern
government advertising as blatantly self-promoting.(22)
There are important moderating arguments:
- government advertising is a key mechanism through which governments
can communicate information directly to the public—it bypasses the editorial
commentary of the media
- government information programs only proceed on the basis of a need
to deliver specific facts on issues of broad public concern
- the vast majority of government advertisements do contain information
on new policies and explain how changes to existing policies will impact
on people
- there is a logic to current arrangements whereby those who oversee
election campaign advertising have a responsibility to oversee subsequent
publicity for policy implementation, and(23)
- defence recruitment programs—the single-largest item of government
advertising by both the Keating and Howard Governments—is a long-term
campaign that has strong bi-partisan support.
Put in these terms, government advertising fulfils an important
public service and democratic function. Even those who criticise the timing
and content of government ads concede that ‘you cannot bring in new policies
in a vacuum’.(24)
Addressing bias
The UK, New Zealand and Canada have all introduced reforms
to their systems of government advertising. New Zealand’s reforms date
back to 1989 when the Office of the Auditor-General developed and policed
clear ‘dos’ and ‘don’ts’ for government advertising campaigns. In April
2003, the UK National Audit Office recommended formal checklists which
alert agencies’ staff to propriety issues in campaign planning.(25)
The Canadian Government is currently introducing a series of reforms which
are aimed at intensifying competition for government advertising contracts.(26)
In Australia, there have been recommendations by the Victorian
Auditor-General and the Government Advertising Bill 2000 introduced
by Kim Beazley MP.(27) These can be summarised as follows:
government advertising
- should be directly relevant to government responsibilities with an
identified information need
- should be presented in an objective and fair manner—verifying facts
and clearly delineating between facts and comment
- should be produced and distributed transparently and cost-effectively
- must not be liable to misrepresentation as party-political—avoid
party-political attacks, political slogans, names etc., and
- should consider whether matters such as timing, targeting, and the
overall environment in which it is planned to be communicated, could
suggest a party-political motive.(28)
Although the Bill was not passed, it has focussed attention
on improving the process of government advertising. Bi-partisan representation
on the MCGC will always be contentious and there will always be difficulties
in determining whether the objectives of government advertising campaigns
are legitimate.(29) The recent rejection of a Democrats/Labor
production order to table the cost, authorisation contracts and proposed
conduct of advertising campaigns in Parliament means that accountability
will continue to be exercised by parliamentary and ANAO review.(30)
Endnotes
- See R. Garran, ‘Medicare campaign enrages Hewson’, The Financial
Review, 2 February 1993; F. Brenchley, ‘Ministry of Propaganda’,
The Bulletin, 16 February 1999, pp. 30–32; M. Metherell,
‘Opposition condemns $109 million marketing blitz’, Sydney Morning
Herald, 27 May 2004.
- This is known as the ‘caretaker convention’. Government advertisements
may continue through the election campaign if ‘they are required to
inform the community of entitlements or obligations’. See ‘Taxation
Reform: Community Education and Information Programme’, Auditor-General,
Audit Report No. 12, 1998, p. 23.
- The MCGC replaced the Labor Government's Ministerial Committee on
Government Information and Advertising (MCGIA). The GCU replaced the
Office of Government Information and Advertising.
- Guidelines for Australian Government Information Activities,
February 1995, http://www.gcu.gov.au/code/pdf/Government_Information_Activities.pdf
- This position is currently held by Senator the Hon. Eric Abetz.
- The Committee’s current members are Mr Petro Georgiou MP (Federal
Member for Kooyong), Mr Tony Smith MP (Federal Member for Casey) and
Mr Tony Nutt (the Prime Minister’s principal private secretary). The
Labor Government’s MCGIA also had a party political membership.
- GCU website, ‘The MCGC and its processes’,
http://www.gcu.gov.au/code/about/pg2.html
- This position is currently held by Mr Greg Williams.
- Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet, Annual Report,
2003–04, p. 77.
- GCU website, ‘The MCGC and its processes’, op. cit.
- G. Hogan et. al., ‘Efficiency Audit, Commonwealth Government Information
and Advertising’, Australian National Audit Office, Report No. 30,
1994–95, p. xi.
- ibid., p. xvi.
- Audit Report No. 12, op. cit., pp. 12–13.
- Appendix 6, Audit Report No. 30, op. cit., p. 48.
- F. Brenchley, op. cit., p. 32.
- ibid.
- J. Koutsoukis, ‘Now for the really hard sell’, The Age, 29
May 2004, Insight, p. 3.
- Senate, Finance and Public Administration Committee.
- Audit Report No. 12, op. cit., p. 12.
- S. Brook, ‘Fed’s $150m the big spend’, The Australian,
27 February 2002.
- S. Young, ‘Killing competition: Restricting access to political
communication channels in Australia’, Australian Quarterly, May–June
2003, p. 15.
- S. Young in J. Koutsoukis, op. cit.
- F. Brenchley, op. cit., p. 32.
- Senator J. Faulkner in V. Burgess, ‘Ad campaign ignored auditor’s
advice’, The Canberra Times, 5 July 2000.
- Government Advertising: A Review by the National Audit Office,
April 2003.
http://www.nao.org.uk/publications/gov_advertising.pdf
- ‘Canadian Government Cleans Up Ad Rules’,
http://canadaonline.about.com/cs/govpurchasing/a/fedadrules.htm
- The Victorian Auditor-General, ‘Framework for Government Advertising
and Marketing’, Report on Government Agencies, June 2002.
http://www.audit.vic.gov.au/reports_better_practice/agbp01.html
- See also
http://www.anao.gov.au/WebSite.nsf/Publications/
4A256AE90015F69B4A256904000476AC
- Provisions of the Government Advertising Bill 2000, Finance and
Public Administration Committee, August 2002, p. 9.
- Senator Robert Hill, ‘Government Advertising: Return to Order’, Senate,
Debates, 12 February 2004, p. 20,168.
For copyright reasons some linked items are only available to
Members of Parliament.

|
 |