Research Note no. 45 2003-04
Road Funding Changes
Richard Webb
Economics, Commerce and Industrial Relations Group
8 March 2004
On 22 January 2004, the Federal Government
announced
proposed changes to road funding.(1) They have
two elements. The first is that the Roads to Recovery program is to
be extended, with modifications, for four more years. The second is
that funds will be redirected from the Fuel Sales Grants Scheme to land
transport infrastructure in regional and outer metropolitan areas. This
Research Note examines some of the likely consequences of these proposals.
Roads to Recovery
The Roads to Recovery
program makes $1.2 billion available for local governments to upgrade
roads through to 30 June 2005. Of this, 70 per cent is being spent
in regional areas. The funds are additional to financial assistance
grants (FAGs) for roads paid under the Local Government (Financial Assistance)
Act 1995. The Commonwealth makes Roads to Recovery payments directly
to local governments. The interstate distribution of grants is based
on historical precedents, length of road and population. The intrastate
distribution accords with the formulae that the state grants commissions
use to distribute FAGs.
The program operates fairly uniformly throughout
Australia. However, in South
Australia, 15 per cent of funds are pooled across several adjoining
local government areas for regional projects, while in Western Australia,
seven per cent of funds are pooled for bridge projects and roads serving
Aboriginal communities.
Roads to Recovery extension
The Government proposes that the Roads to Recovery
program be extended for a further four years until June 2009 at a cost
of $1.2 billion. Two-thirds will be distributed on the same basis as
under the current scheme. The remaining third will be paid directly
to local governments to:
undertake land transport infrastructure projects of
strategic regional importance, particularly those that support emerging
and expanding industries.(2)
An example in the announcement is the upgrading
of roads to service developing industries such as timber plantations.
However, the use of the term land transport infrastructure suggests
that local governments could, for example, contribute towards maintaining
local grain rail lines.
Fuel Sales Grants Scheme
The Fuel
Sales Grants Scheme (FSGS) was introduced to offset the effect of
the GST on petrol prices in regional areas. It provides grants of one
cent per litre in non-metropolitan zones and two cents per litre in
remote zones.(3) The estimated cost of the FSGS between 1 July
2000 and 30 June 2004 is $850 million.(4)
The Government proposes that the FSGS end in
June 2006 and the funds be used to improve land transport infrastructure
in regional and outer metropolitan areas.
Assessment
The consequences of the proposals will be mixed.
The proposal that one-third of Roads to Recovery
funds be used for projects of strategic regional importance seems
to be designed to build on the apparent success of the pooling of funds
in South Australia and Western Australia and so could yield benefits
greater than might be obtained by investment by individual local governments.
But the Government has not said what the basis will be for distributing
these funds.
The question also arises as to whether investment
in projects of strategic regional importance will be priced so that
users pay. If not, the investment will, in effect, be a subsidy to the
industries that use the infrastructure. Based on existing road infrastructure
cost recovery arrangements, it seems likely that this will be the case.
Submissions to the Fuel Taxation
Inquiry(5) questioned the value of the FSGS. The Inquiry
reported that it:
received considerable criticism of the scheme and comparatively
little support of it. It appears that the best that can be said of the
scheme is that it has had little noticeable impact.
it is not clear that any benefits accruing to regional
Australians are proportional to the level of expenditure nor that
this programme is the best use of the funding.(6)
The Inquiry recommended that the FSGS scheme
be terminated.
In light of these criticisms, the termination
of the FSGS would seem to be a positive development. The redirection
of funds from the FSGS will transfer resources from current use to investment
and so increase road investment. But it is unclear whether much of the
spending on regional road infrastructure would satisfy cost-benefit
analysis or similar socio-economic assessments, and it seems that the
Government does not intend to undertake such evaluations.
The Government describes the redirection of
funds from the FSGS to regional and outer metropolitan areas as a downpayment
on the proposed land transport plan, AusLink. But it is not clear from
the Governments statements how this proposal fits into AusLink. Indeed,
it seems to pre-empt AusLink to some extent. In particular, it is not
clear how the downpayment fits in with the undertaking in AusLink that
funds will be earmarked for projects with the highest benefits. Analyses
indicate that investment in local roads has low benefit-cost ratios
especially when compared with urban arterial roads and mainline railway
upgrading works benefiting the freight transport system.(7)
The following table summarises the proposed
changes. Data are in millions of dollars.
| |
200506 |
200607 |
200708 |
200809 |
| Roads to recovery |
300 |
300 |
300 |
300 |
| AusLink |
|
265 |
270 |
275 |
| Total |
300 |
565 |
570 |
575 |
Note: figures based
on current forward estimates
Endnotes
-
Hon. John Anderson,
(Minister for Transport and Regional Services), Major downpayment
on Australias transport future, media release APM4/2004, 22 January
2004.
-
ibid.
-
If fuel has been sold consistently in a remote area
at not less than $1.20 per litre, fuel retailers may, subject to certain
conditions, receive an additional one cent per litre of fuel sold.
-
Treasury portfolio budget statements, various years.
-
The Government commissioned the Inquiry on 8 July
2001.
-
- Bureau of Transport Economics, Facts and Furphies in Benefit-cost
Analysis, report 100, November 1999, p. 116.
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