Research Paper no. 10 2001-02
The Commonwealth Budget: Process and Presentation
Richard Webb
Economics, Commerce and Industrial Relations Group
19 March 2002
Contents
Glossary Major Issues
Introduction
1. Overview of the Budget Process
1. 1 Forward Estimates Update
1.2 Senior Ministers' Review
1.3 Portfolio Budget Submissions
1.4 Expenditure Review Committee
1.5 Revenue Committee
1.6 Pre-Budget Review of Estimates
1.7 Budget Documents
1.8 Budget Presentation
1.9 Senate Estimates Committees
1.10 Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook
1.11 Final Budget Outcome
2. Accrual Accounting and Accrual Budgeting
2.1 Accrual Accounting and Accrual Budgeting: What are They?
2.2 Issues
3. Outcomes and Outputs
3.1 The Outcomes and Outputs Framework
3.2 Issues
3.3 Costing of Outcomes and Outputs
3.4 Functional Classification of Expenses
4. Appropriations
4.1 Annual Appropriation Bills
4.2 Special (or Standing) Appropriations
4.3 Administered and Departmental Items
4.4 Additional Estimates
4.5 Advance to the Finance Minister
5. Budget Documents
5.1 Budget Speech
5.2 Budget Overview
5.3 Budget Papers
5.4 Ministerial Statements and Media Kits
5.5 Portfolio Budget Statements
5.5.1 Content and Format
5.6 Issues
6. Reporting Standards
6.2 Government Finance Statistics
6.3 Australian Accounting Standard 31
6.4 Accounting Standards Issues
6.5 Treatment of the Goods and Services Tax
7. Agency Financial Statements
7.1 Statement of Financial Performance
7.1.1 Capital Use Charge
7.2 Statement of Financial Position
7.3 Cash Flows Statement
7.4 Capital Budget Statement
8. Other Financial Information
8.1 Charter of Budget Honesty
8.1.1 Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook
8.1.2 Final Budget Outcome
8.1.3 Pre-Election Economic and Fiscal Outlook Report
8.2 Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997
8.2.1 Monthly Reports
8.2.2 Consolidated Financial Statements
8.3 Senate Estimates
8.4 Annual Reports
8.5 Tax Expenditures
8.5.1 Issues
9. Performance Information
9.1 Issues
10. Conclusions
Glossary
The following is adapted from the Glossary
prepared by the Budget Group of the Department of Finance and Administration.
Accrual accounting. The system which brings
to account both monetary (for example, salary payments) and other activities
(for example, depreciation of assets and increases in long service leave
liabilities) in the period when they occur. Differs from cash accounting,
which recognises only monetary transactions and only when such a transaction
takes place. Accrual accounting shows information about revenues, expenses,
assets and liabilities that cannot be obtained by cash accounting.
Accrual Budget. A comprehensive Budget
incorporating assets, liabilities, expenses and revenues, not just monetary
receipts and payments. Accrual Budgeting extends cash Budgeting by incorporating
all resource implications such as depreciation and increases in liabilities.
Additional estimates. Changed circumstances
after the Budget may lead agencies to ask the Government for additional
funds. Approved funding increases are normally incorporated into Appropriation
Bills 3 and 4 and the Appropriation (Parliamentary Departments) Bill (No.
2), and does not become available until after Parliament has passed the
Bills and they have received royal assent.
Administered items. Revenues, expenses,
assets and liabilities that the government controls, but which an agency
manages on the government's behalf. Examples include subsidies, grants
and benefit payments; taxes, fees, fines and excises; and public debt
and related interest.
Advance to the Minister for Finance and Administration.
A provision, authorised by the annual Appropriation Acts and made available
to the Minister as a contingency fund, to provide urgent funding to agencies.
Normally, the advance is made only if the need is urgent and was unforeseen
or arose because of erroneous omission or understatement.
Agency. When used generally, encompasses departments,
agencies, authorities and non-commercial companies. For the purposes of
the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997, agencies
are Departments of State, Departments of Parliament and 'prescribed agencies'.
Portfolios consist of a number of agencies.
Amortisation. The process of writing off, as an
expense, initial expenditure on items such as research and development
costs or lease payments over the over the period of the lease.
Appropriations. An amount of public moneys Parliament
authorises for spending. An appropriation authorises the Commonwealth
to withdraw moneys, but also restricts spending to the particular purpose
specified by the appropriation. Parliament appropriates spending under
annual Appropriation Bills and under Special (or Standing) appropriations.
The annual appropriations Bills are Appropriation Bill (No. 1), Appropriation
Bill (No. 2) and Appropriation (Parliamentary Departments) Bill. The annual
Appropriation Bills account for about 25 per cent of agency expenses and
Special (or Standing) appropriations for about 75 per cent.
Australian Accounting Standards (AAS). Specify
accounting practices including how an entity should present financial
information. AAS 31, Financial Reporting by Governments, is the
main standard for government reporting.
Budget aggregates. Refers to totals of revenue,
expenses and the Budget balance (surplus/deficit).
Budget balance. The term used to refer to a Budget
outcome, whether a surplus or deficit. The 'fiscal balance' in accrual
Budgets is the counterpart of 'underlying cash balance' in cash Budgets.
The Budget Papers contain both the fiscal balance and the underlying cash
balance.
Capital-use charge. A charge levied on agencies
for the cost of capital they use. The charge is usually based on agencies'
net assets at the end of the financial year. Funding for the charge is
included in agencies' departmental appropriations.
Charter of Budget Honesty. The Charter of Budget
Honesty Act 1998 provides a legislative framework for the conduct
and reporting of fiscal policy. The Act's aim is to improve fiscal policy
by requiring fiscal strategy to be based on certain principles of fiscal
management and by facilitating public scrutiny of fiscal policy and performance.
Consolidated Revenue Fund (CRF). Section
81 of the Constitution requires that all revenue raised or money received
by the Executive Government has to form one consolidated revenue fund
to be appropriated for Commonwealth purposes. The CRF is thus the principal
operating fund where the transactions associated with the general activities
of the government are recorded.
Cost. Expenses an agency incurs for the delivery
of outputs.
Departmental items. Resources (assets, liabilities,
revenues and expenses) that agencies control directly and use to produce
outputs on behalf of government. Examples are computers and plant and
equipment used in providing goods and services; accruing liabilities for
employee entitlements; revenues from user charges and profits; and employee
salaries and other administrative expenses incurred in providing goods
and services.
Economic parameters. The values of economic
variables-such as movements in prices, wages, employment, and interest
and exchange rates-on which the Budget and forward years estimates are
based. Parameters are based on the forecasts of the Joint Economic Forecasting
Group.
Effectiveness. The extent to which outputs and/or
administered items make positive contributions to the specified outcome.
Effectiveness indicators are used to assess the degree of success in achieving
outcomes.
Efficiency. The extent to which the use of inputs
is minimised for a given level of outputs, or outputs are maximised for
the given level of inputs.
Estimates. Expected expenses and revenue of the
Commonwealth. Expense estimates are prepared for each item in the Budget
in consultations between the Department of Finance and Administration
and the agency responsible for program delivery. Treasury prepares tax
revenue estimates.
Expenditure Review Committee (ERC).
The sub-committee of Cabinet that meets over a period of months before
the Budget to consider new policy and savings proposals, and which recommends
to Cabinet proposals to be included in the Budget. The ERC usually includes
the Prime Minister, Treasurer and Minister for Finance and Administration
in addition to relevant portfolio Ministers.
Expense. Total value of all of the resources consumed
in producing goods and services. Expenses include cash items such as salary
payments as well as expenses that have been incurred-such as accruing
employee entitlements-which will be paid in the future.
Final Budget outcome. The actual Budget result.
The Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998 requires the Treasurer
to release publicly and table a final Budget outcome report for each financial
year no later than three months after the end of the financial year. The
report contains Budget sector and general government sector fiscal outcomes
including information on actual revenue, expenses, net capital investment,
Federal financial relations and other information for the financial year.
Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997.
The main Act governing the financial activities of agencies including
the collection of public money, the maintenance of accounting records,
control and management of public property, the responsibilities of chief
executives, and the power of the Minister of Finance and Administration
to make regulations and delegate powers.
Fiscal balance. In accrual Budgets, the difference
between government saving and investment. Measures the government's net
call on other sectors of the economy. A surplus, for example, indicates
that the Commonwealth is lending to other sectors. The fiscal balance
is thus an indicator of the financial impact of the Commonwealth's operations
on the rest of the economy.
Fiscal policy. The use of government spending
and taxation to influence the level of economic activity. 'Discretionary'
fiscal policy seeks to counter cycles in the economy.
Fiscal risks. General developments or specific
events that may affect the fiscal outlook. Examples are litigation before
the courts and possible Senate rejection or amendment of Budget measures.
Forward estimates. Estimates of the revenues
and costs of on-going Government policy after allowing for estimated movements
in parameters. The forward estimates show the minimum cost of maintaining
on-going Government policy because they do not include provision for new
programs or expansion of existing programs that the Government has not
agreed to or programs that are not expected to continue. Forward estimates
are a system of rolling three-year financial estimates. After the Budget
is passed, the first year of the forward estimates becomes the base for
next year's Budget bid, and another out-year is added to the forward estimates.
General government sector. Encompasses
agencies that provide public services that are mainly non-market in nature
and are either for the collective consumption of the community or redistribute
income such as social security payments, and are financed mainly through
taxes.
General purpose payments (GPPs).
Commonwealth payments to the States and Territories are divided into GPPs
and specific purpose payments (SPPs). GPPs are distinguished from SPPs
because GPPs are not subject to conditions regarding their use. GPPs comprise
GST revenue, Budget balancing assistance, National Competition Policy
payments and Special Revenue Assistance (paid to the Australian Capital
Territory).
Government Finance Statistics (GFS). The
GFS reporting framework is a specialised statistical system designed to
support economic analysis of the public sector. The GFS used in Australia
accord with the Australian Bureau of Statistics framework, which is consistent
with international statistical standards (the System of National Accounts
1993 and the draft accrual version of the International Monetary Fund's
A Manual on Government Finance Statistics).
Inputs. Resources in the forms of people, materials,
energy, facilities and funds that an agency uses to produce outputs.
Joint Economic Forecasting Group (JEFG). A group
of officials from Treasury, Department of the Prime Minister and Cabinet,
Department of Finance and Administration, Reserve Bank of Australia and
Australian Bureau of Statistics. The group meets three or four times a
year after the quarterly national accounts are released to review official
economic forecasts. JEFG examines economic forecasts in light of the economic
outlook for the remainder of the Budget year and the following year.
Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO).
Essentially an update of the Budget estimates. The MYEFO takes account
of actual spending and revenue in the year to date and decisions since
the Budget. The MYEFO is published around November.
New policy proposals. Ministers' proposals to
Cabinet recommending the adoption of a new initiative or change to existing
programs. Such proposals are normally made in the context of the annual
Budget process.
Outcomes (actual). The results or consequences
of actions by the Commonwealth and other bodies on the community. Because
actual outcomes reflect all influences, it is often difficult to disentangle
those attributable to Commonwealth actions.
Outcomes (planned). The results or consequences
for the community that the Government seeks to achieve.
Outputs. The goods and services that agencies
produce to attain planned outcomes.
Performance. The proficiency of an agency in acquiring
resources economically and using them efficiently and effectively in achieving
planned outcomes.
Performance information. Evidence about performance
that is collected and used systematically. Evidence may relate to appropriateness,
effectiveness and efficiency. It may be about outcomes, factors that affect
outcomes, and what can be done to improve them. Agencies specify in their
Portfolio Budget Statements the performance information that they will
collect, and use this information to report in their annual reports how
well they have met planned outcomes.
Portfolio Budget Statements (PBS). Documents
that portfolio departments develop and publish explaining each agency's
source and use of funds by outcome. The PBS contain information on revenue
authorised by the Appropriation Bills, revenue from other sources, information
on special appropriations, other financial information, and performance
information. The PBS consolidate information on all agencies within the
portfolio.
Pre-Election Economic and Fiscal Outlook (PEFO). The
Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998 requires the Secretaries of
Treasury and the Department of Finance and Administration to produce a
PEFO report within ten-days after an election is called. The purpose of
the PEFO is to update information on the economic and fiscal outlook.
Price. The departmental price of outputs appropriations
are the purchase price the government pays for agencies' outputs.
Purchaser/provider arrangements. Arrangements
whereby an agency enters into an agreement with another agency to provide
goods or services. For example, in 1999-2000 the Australian Taxation Office
(ATO) entered into purchaser/provider arrangements with the Department
of Family and Community Services and the Department of Health and Aged
Care whereby the ATO undertook to provide services to both to enable them
to achieve their outcomes. Agencies that receive the services pay the
agencies that provide them.
Revenues from other sources. Include revenues
from the sale of goods or provision of services to other entities (user
charges) and profits from the sale of assets.
Savings measures. Measures that reduce the cost
of programs. To satisfy Department of Finance and Administration guidelines,
savings require either a Cabinet decision to alter existing policy or
represent a discretionary reordering of priorities by a Minister, reduce
expenses below what they would otherwise have been, and contribute to
the achievement of the Government's fiscal targets.
Sensitivity analysis. Analysis of the extent to
which expense and revenue estimates are subject to changes in economic
parameters.
Special accounts. A mechanism for recording moneys
set aside (hypothecated) for a particular purpose (for example, a levy
collected from an industry and applied to making grants for the development
of that industry) and for making payments for this purpose.
Special (or Standing) Appropriation. Money appropriated
by a particular Act of Parliament (for example, the Australian Land
Transport Development Act 1988) for a specific purpose, for example,
the payment of grants to the States for roads. Special appropriations
may be for a specific amount of money, level of benefit or period of time.
Special appropriations do not require annual spending authorisation by
Parliament, as they do not lapse at the end of each financial year. Special
appropriations account for about 75 per cent of agency expenses.
Specific Purpose Payments (SPPs). Payments to
the States and Territories for policy purposes that relate to particular
functions, for example, health and education. SPPs are made under section
96 of the Constitution, which states that the Commonwealth Parliament
may grant financial assistance to any State on such terms as it sees fit.
Most SPPs are conditional on policy objectives that the Commonwealth sets
or the achievement of policy objectives agreed between the Commonwealth
and the States.
Tax expenditures. The financial benefits that
individuals and businesses derive from tax concessions in the forms of
exemptions, deductions, rebates or reduced rates. Concessions reduce or
delay the collection of tax revenue. Governments can use concessions to
allocate resources to different activities in much the same way that they
can use direct spending programs.
Underlying (cash) balance. The cash Budget counterpart
of the fiscal balance in accrual Budgets. The underlying cash balance
is a broad indicator of the Commonwealth's cash flow requirements. For
example, an underlying cash surplus reflects the extent to which cash
is available to the Commonwealth either to increase its financial assets
or decrease its liabilities (assuming no revaluations and other changes
occur). The underlying balance differs from the 'headline' balance-the
actual cash outcome-by, for example, excluding proceeds from the privatisation
of investments on the grounds that these are one-off or abnormal items.
Uniform Presentation Framework. An agreement between
the Commonwealth, States and Territories whereby all jurisdictions are
required to publish a common core of Government Finance Statistics and
consistent financial information in their Budget papers.
Major
Issues
The annual Budget, which is brought down in May, is perhaps
the Government's most important political, economic and social document.
The sheer size of the Budget-estimated outlays in the 2001-02 Budget were
$161 billion dollars or the equivalent of 23 per cent of gross domestic
product-attests to its influence over the size of as well as the allocation
of resources within the economy. The Budget contains information on matters
such as its economic consequences and the provision of goods and services.
While the Budget process changes little, major changes have been made
to the Budget's focus, content, format and reporting in recent years.
These changes include:
- the move from cash accounting to accrual accounting and from cash
budgeting to accrual budgeting
- the shift in the focus of agency reporting from program budgeting
to planned outcomes
- the presentation of financial statements in accordance with two main
accounting standards
- the presentation of information to allow assessment of agency performance,
and
- the reporting and other requirements of the Financial Management
and Accountability Act 1997 and the Charter of Budget Honesty
Act 1998.
The move to accrual accounting has positive features.
In particular, non-cash expenses such as accruing long service entitlements
and asset depreciation are now included in expenses along with cash expenses.
Cost accounting methods are used to allocate all expenses to outputs and
outcomes. While problems of cost attribution remain, the cost of providing
goods and services is now measured more fully than under cash accounting.
Under cash budgeting, agencies' annual appropriations
are based on their cash requirements. Under accrual budgeting, agencies'
annual appropriations are based on their accrual expenses (and capital
requirements). Hence agencies are resourced for all expenses as and when
they arise and not just when they have to be paid. For example, agencies
are funded for increasing long service leave liabilities and the depreciation
of assets before the funds have to be spent on paying out the liabilities
or replacing the asset. Agencies have to manage these unspent funds until
they are needed.
Critics argue that appropriations should be cash-based
with a parallel accrual accounting system on the grounds that cash budgeting
and cash accounting are vital to the government's information needs. Another
criticism of accrual budgeting is it does not seem sensible to appropriate
in the current year funds that are not needed in that year but will be
spent in future years.
Despite the move to accrual budgeting, most economic
commentators continue to focus on the underlying cash balance and not
the accrual fiscal balance in discussions of Budget aggregates. One reason
is that cash balances have some advantages for tracking expenditures in
a fiscal year and helping to identify the short-term effects of fiscal
policy on the economy. Further, accrual fiscal balance data are available
only from 1996-97, limiting their use for comparative purposes.
The move from program budgeting to the outcomes and output
framework has been a major shift and, so far, a mixed one. The purpose
of the framework is to encourage agencies to focus on planned outcomes-the
results or consequences for the community that the government wants to
achieve. Under the framework, expenses are allocated to outputs-the goods
and services that agencies produce to attain outcomes-and thence to planned
outcomes. However, the implementation of the framework has been difficult.
Outcomes reflect administrative arrangements but these often do not coincide
with broader community objectives. Some outcomes are so general that,
as the Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee
observed, it is hard to see how accountability is enhanced by reporting
against them. It has been difficult to specify outcomes that do not overlap
among and within agencies' activities.
The trend seems to be for agencies to consolidate outputs
into fewer categories. The desirability of this trend is questionable
on transparency and accountability grounds. The Senate Finance and Public
Administration Legislation Committee's observation on the generality of
outcomes could also be applied to the consolidation of outputs.
It will be some time before a proper assessment can be
made of the framework's success in encouraging agencies to focus on outcomes:
it has been in place for only three Budgets and remains under development.
The recasting of outputs and outcomes will make difficult assessment of
the framework and comparisons of data over time because of the lack of
continuity in data series. However, the problem of comparability has to
be balanced against the provision of better information and the issue
of materiality.
In addition to showing expenses classified by outcomes,
the Budget shows them classified by functions such as health, education,
road transport and defence. While this classification system is not without
problems-such as reclassifications of activities-many readers will find
it more useful than allocations by outcomes.
Contrary to the rhetoric about how accrual budgeting
and the outcomes and outputs framework would increase transparency and
accountability, the availability of information in the Budget Papers and
associated documents that Members of Parliament commonly seek has generally
fallen, although this is truer of some agencies than others. This is particularly
true of the Portfolio Budget Statements, which are the main source of
information about proposed agency activity. The main complaint concerning
these Statements is the high level of aggregation of financial data and
the lack of detail about agency activities. Parliamentarians, through
various committees, have been among the strongest critics of aggregation.
The Department of Finance and Administration, in an appearance
before the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit, has agreed that
the aggregation of data in the Portfolio Budget Statements is an issue.
The Department issues guidelines for the preparation of Portfolio Budget
Statements. However, these are 'minimum' guidelines. Agencies have considerable
discretion as to what they present in their Portfolio Budget Statements
and in what format. Where Parliament identifies gaps in the information
that agencies provide in their Portfolio Budget Statements, it can require
them to provide that information, and agencies have responded to such
requests from various Parliamentary committees. The trend, therefore,
is for agencies to provide more information.
A particular issue is the reporting of special appropriations,
which amount to around three-quarters of total spending. A welcome development
is the reporting by some agencies of estimated expenses from individual
special appropriations. For example, the Department of Family and Community
Services Portfolio Budget Statement shows that in 2001-02, estimated spending
under administered special appropriations is $52 billion. Of this, more
than $40 billion will be under the Social Security (Administration)
Act 1999. The Department even breaks down spending under this Act
by category, for example, age pension, disability support pension, youth
allowance and so on. However, the Portfolio Budget Statement does not
show to which outcome(s) spending under this Act contributes. The Department
administers 26 Acts and has three outcomes. The provision of such information
would link the legislative authority for spending to planned outcomes.
Financial information in the Budget Papers is prepared
in accordance with external reporting standards. The two main standards
are the Government Finance Statistics and Australian Accounting Standard
No. 31, Financial Reporting by Governments (AAS 31). The GFS is
designed to allow economic analysis of the public sector, and major Budget
aggregates are based on the GFS. AAS 31 is adapted from the accounting
standards applying to business. The presentation of data under two standards
is, however, a source of confusion especially since they can yield quite
different results. Some critics argue that having two accounting systems
is a retrograde step and for the use of only the GFS because it is designed
for the public sector.
Agencies are required to prepare statements of financial
performance (profit and loss), financial position (balance sheet), cash
flows, and capital budget for their Portfolio Budget Statements and annual
reports. This requirement has had the positive effect of increasing transparency
and allows assessment of an agency's financial performance and status.
However, the usefulness of the statements is limited because the concepts
on which they are based are more applicable to business than to the public
sector. Critics argue that business accounting systems should not be used
in the public sector without modification to reflect the needs of government.
For example, equity in a business is an indicator of its solvency. But
the concept of equity has limited meaning for an agency whose main functions
are to provide policy advice and administer appropriations. The concept
has even less relevance to the government sector as a whole. Depending
on the accounting standard used, general government net worth at 30 June
2001 was negative to the tune of between $41 billion and $46 billion.
In the private sector, this would result in the business being made bankrupt.
This is not to say that financial statements are valueless. Rather, it
is to urge caution when interpreting them.
The Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998 has increased
transparency of reporting. The Act requires, among other things, that
the Government prepare an economic and fiscal outlook report with each
Budget, a mid-year economic and fiscal outlook report, and a final budget
outcome report. The Act thus imposes an obligation to provide information
that has traditionally been made available. The Act also requires the
public release of a pre-election economic and fiscal outlook (PEFO) report
within 10 days of the issue of the writ for a general election. The publication
of the PEFO has helped reduce dispute over the state of finances that
usually surrounds election campaigns. Similarly, the Financial Management
and Accountability Act 1997 requires the Minister for Finance and
Administration to publish monthly financial statements in a form consistent
with the Budget estimates and annual consolidated financial statements.
Agencies report on how they have performed against planned
outcomes in their annual reports. The usefulness of performance information
is mixed. This is partly because it is often difficult if not impossible
to measure the contribution of agencies to outcomes. For example, the
States are primarily responsible for funding primary and secondary education.
The Commonwealth also provides funds. Since both State and Commonwealth
funds are lumped together to provide education services, it is not possible
to disentangle the consequences of Commonwealth funding. The Auditor-General
has observed that the development of indicators has some way to go.
Much attention is focused on the level of expenditure
and revenue in the Budget. However, a large amount of revenue is foregone
through tax concessions called 'tax expenditures'. The Government can
use taxation concessions to allocate resources to different activities
in much the same way that it can use direct expenditure. But tax expenditures
are not reported like direct expenditure in that tax expenditures are
not added to direct expenditure. This treatment may tempt governments
to 'substitute' tax expenditures for direct expenditure to make public
finances 'look good'. Not adding tax expenditures to direct expenditure
has the effect of 'understating' the size of the government sector. For
example, in 1999-2000, if tax expenditures of around $27 billion were
added to direct expenditure, total expenditure would rise from $153 billion
to $180 billion, an increase of 18 per cent.
Another source of under-reporting of the size of the
Commonwealth government sector is the treatment of the goods and services
tax (GST). The Budget generally treats the GST as if it were not a Commonwealth
tax. The Government argues that the Commonwealth collects the GST as an
agent for the States. But the Australian Bureau of Statistics and the
Auditor-General reject this argument on the grounds that the GST is imposed
and administered under Commonwealth legislation. The consequences of not
recognising the GST as a Commonwealth tax are to understate expenses and
revenue and to overstate net liabilities. In 2000-01, revenues were understated
by $27.5 billion and expenses by $23.8 billion, while net liabilities
were overstated by $3.7 billion. The treatment of the GST inevitably gives
rise to the suspicion that it is intended to reduce the apparent size
of government.
Introduction
The annual May Budget is perhaps the Government's most
important political, economic and social document. The sheer size of the
Budget-estimated outlays in the 2001-02 Budget were $161 billion dollars
or the equivalent of 23 per cent of gross domestic product-attests to
its influence over the size of as well as the allocation of resources
within the economy. The Budget contains information on matters such as
its economic consequences, the provision of goods and services, the Government's
social and political priorities and information on how the Government
intends to attain these priorities.
This paper describes the Budget process beginning with
the first steps in the November before the Budget is brought down through
to the presentation of agency annual reports. The paper also explains
key concepts as well as the major changes to the content and presentation
of the Budget Papers and associated documents that have been made in recent
years. The paper further examines some issues such as the treatment of
the goods and services tax and tax expenditures. This paper is the fourth
in a series and updates a 1993 paper by Mr Denis James(1) to
take account of a number of major changes in recent years. The changes
include:
- the move from cash accounting to accrual accounting and from cash
budgeting to accrual budgeting
- the shift in the focus of agency reporting from program budgeting
to planned outcomes
- the presentation of financial statements in accordance with two main
accounting standards
- the presentation of performance information to allow assessment of
agency performance, and
- the reporting and other requirements of the Financial Management
and Accountability Act 1997 and the Charter of Budget Honesty
Act 1998.
The following discusses these and other aspects of the
Budget starting with an overview of the Budget process.
1.
Overview of the Budget Process
The highlight of the process is Budget night in May.(2)
However, a 'typical' cycle extends over 21 months, beginning about six
months before Budget night and ending three months after the end of the
Budget year on 30 June.
The preparation of a Budget involves a large number of
participants. The Expenditure Review Committee, a Cabinet committee of
senior Ministers chaired by the Prime Minister (see below) is primarily
responsible for developing the Budget. However, a number of agencies-notably
the Department of the Treasury (together with the Australian Taxation
Office), the Department of Finance and Administration, the Department
of the Prime Minister and Cabinet and line agencies-provide advice and
support to the Expenditure Review Committee. Broadly, the Department of
Finance and Administration coordinates the preparation of the Budget and
forward estimates and is responsible for statements on expenses and non-tax
revenue. Treasury is responsible for assessments of the economic and fiscal
outlook and estimates of tax revenues.
The following outlines the key stages of a typical Budget
process. Definitions of the terms used are in the Glossary and are explained
in more detail throughout this Paper and by the use of e-links, which
are underlined.
1. 1 Forward Estimates Update
A typical Budget process begins around November when
the forward estimates are updated. Forward estimates are rolling three-year
estimates of what would be appropriated assuming that government policy
is on-going. The estimates include decisions made since the Budget. An
example is the decision to send troops to East Timor. Forward estimates
exclude new programs, the expansion of existing programs that the Government
has not agreed to, and programs that are expected to end. The forward
estimates are thus the base on which current and future year spending
estimates are built. The estimates are updated so that the Expenditure
Review Committee can consider new policy bids based on the most up-to-date
information.
1.2 Senior Ministers' Review
In November or December, a Senior
Ministers' Review is held. This is a meeting of the Prime Minister,
the Treasurer and the Minister for Finance and Administration, who establish
priorities for the coming Budget, set timetables and deal with other issues.
The review considers Ministers' proposals, new policies and lapsing programs,
and expected major pressures on agency budgets. The Prime Minister advises
agencies of the Government's priorities and targets after the review.
1.3 Portfolio Budget Submissions
To seek additional funding for new policy proposals,
agencies have to prepare portfolio
budget submissions based on the outcome of the Senior Ministers' Review.
The submissions outline all major proposals and potential savings. Agencies
also send a letter to the Minister for Finance and Administration outlining
all minor proposals, and a letter to the Secretary of the Department of
Finance and Administration outlining achievements against previous savings
measures. Agencies cost the submissions and agree the costings with the
Department of Finance and Administration. The submissions are circulated
for coordination comments and lodged with the Cabinet Office, usually
by late February.(3)
1.4 Expenditure Review Committee
As noted, the Expenditure
Review Committee (ERC) is primarily responsible for developing the
Budget against the background of the Government's political, social and
economic priorities. The ERC is a Cabinet committee consisting of senior
Ministers. On 13 December 2001, the Prime Minister announced that the
ERC would include himself (Chair), the Treasurer, and the Ministers for
Trade, Environment and Heritage, Finance and Administration, and Revenue.(4)
The ERC is responsible, among other things, for framing the spending side
of the Budget. The ERC first meets around March and reviews new policy
proposals and on-going spending as well as savings proposals. The ERC
recommends to Cabinet proposals for inclusion in the Budget. When examining
new policy proposals and savings options, the Committee draws on the Portfolio
Budget Submissions and briefs that the Department of Finance and Administration
prepares.
1.5 Revenue Committee
After the Expenditure Review Committee process, the Revenue
Committee-also a Cabinet Committee-meets to decide the revenue components
of the Budget, which are based on proposals and options generally formulated
or reviewed by Treasury.
1.6 Pre-Budget Review of Estimates
Around March and after Cabinet has agreed to new policies,
agencies update their estimates for the preparation of the Budget documents
and Appropriation Bills.
1.7 Budget Documents
Also around March and concurrent with the Expenditure
Review Committee process, agencies begin to prepare Budget documents.
Agencies prepare three components: the Portfolio Budget Statements, the
Statement
of Risks(5) (which was included in Statement 10 of Budget
Paper No. 1 in 2001-02) and the 'measures' descriptions in Budget Paper
No. 2.
1.8 Budget Presentation
The Budget is usually brought down in May. A consequence
is that the outcome of the Budget for the financial year before the Budget
year can only be estimated. The Government introduces Appropriation Bills
1 and 2 and the Appropriation (Parliamentary Departments) Bill when it
brings down the Budget, and presents the Budget Papers and related documents.
1.9 Senate Estimates Committees
After the Budget is tabled, the Senate
Estimates Committees scrutinise the Appropriation Bills and other
Budget documentation. In particular, the Committees scrutinise the Portfolio
Budget Statements, which form the basis for their inquiries. The basic
function of the Committees is to require the presence of, and seek explanations
from Ministers of State who formulate policy and Departmental officers
who implement policy, regarding proposed spending and revenue. Each of
the Estimates Committees takes responsibility for a number of agencies
so that all spending is scrutinised. For example, one such Committee is
the Employment, Workplace Relations, Small Business and Education Legislation
Committee. The Estimates Committee process is generally finished in time
for Parliament to pass the Appropriation Bills before the end of June.
1.10 Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook
The Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998 requires
the Treasurer to release publicly and table a Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal
Outlook (MYEFO) report by the end of January in each year or within six
months after the last Budget, whichever is later. In practice, the MYEFO
has been released in November. The MYEFO updates the economic and fiscal
outlook and the budgetary position. In particular, the MYEFO takes account
of decisions since the Budget was brought down that affect expenses and
revenues, and so updates the Budget spending and revenue aggregates.
1.11 Final Budget Outcome
The final stage in the Budget process is in September
when the Final Budget Outcome for the financial year just ended is tabled.
The Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998 requires the Treasurer to
release publicly and table a Final Budget Outcome report for each financial
year no later than three months after the end of the financial year. The
report must contain Commonwealth budget sector and Commonwealth general
government sector fiscal outcomes for the financial year.
2.
Accrual Accounting and Accrual Budgeting
2.1 Accrual Accounting and Accrual Budgeting: What
are They?
The move from cash accounting and cash budgeting to accrual
accounting and accrual
budgeting in 1999-2000 has been a major change. The rationale for
this move derives from the logic behind accrual accounting as opposed
to cash accounting. Cash accounting recognises only monetary transactions
and only in the period when money changes hands. Accrual accounting, on
the other hand, recognises financial commitments as well as monetary transactions
and records them in the period when they take place. For example, under
cash accounting, a credit sale is brought to account only when the purchaser
pays the debt. Under accrual accounting, the sale and the payment are
treated as two transactions. In the case of Public Service superannuation,
cash accounting recognises only payments to superannuants whereas accrual
accounting also brings to account the increase in liabilities for future
payments.(6) In the case of purchases of assets such as land
and buildings, cash accounting recognises only the purchase. Accrual accounting
recognises the purchase by bringing the asset into the balance sheet and
then depreciates it (as an expense) over its life.
Because cash accounting is a subset of accrual accounting,
it can yield quite different results. This is illustrated by the Mid-Year
Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) for 2001-02. The MYEFO reports the
forecast Budget balance in both cash ('underlying cash balance') and accrual
('fiscal balance') terms. The MYEFO shows the underlying cash balance
to be in surplus but the fiscal balance in deficit.
Under cash budgeting, agencies' annual appropriations
are based on their cash requirements. Under accrual budgeting, agencies'
annual appropriations are based on their accrual expenses (and capital
requirements). Hence agencies are resourced for all expenses as and when
they arise and not just when they have to be paid. For example, agencies
are funded for increasing long service leave liabilities and the depreciation
of assets before the funds have to be spent on reducing the liabilities
or replacing the asset. Agencies have to manage these unspent funds until
they are needed.
The move to accrual accounting means that some data comparisons
may not be possible. In particular, it may not be possible to compare
data up to and including 1998-99 with data for subsequent years. Further,
agencies presented financial statements in their annual reports on an
accrual basis for a number of years in the run up to the introduction
of accrual budgeting.
2.2 Issues
Some argue that instead of being accrual-based, appropriations
should be cash-based with a parallel accrual accounting system. In a submission
to the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit, Emeritus Professor
Alan Barton, formerly Professor of Accounting at the Australian National
University, argued that cash budgeting and cash accounting are vital to
the government's information needs, and that cash budgets can be run in
parallel with accrual accounting reports.
Another strand of argument relates to the fact that agencies
receive, in a given Budget year, funds that they will spend in future
years and have to manage these funds until such time as they are spent.
In a submission to the same Committee, Professor Harris, formerly Auditor-General
in NSW, questioned the wisdom of this system of appropriating funds.(7)
Despite the move to accrual budgeting, most economic
commentators continue to focus on the underlying cash balance and not
the accrual fiscal balance in discussions of Budget aggregates. One reason
commentators focus on cash balances is that they have some advantages
for tracking expenditures in a fiscal year and in helping to identify
the short-term effects of fiscal policy on the economy.(8)
Another reason is that accrual fiscal balance data are available only
from 1996-97, limiting their use for comparative purposes.
3.
Outcomes and Outputs
3.1 The Outcomes and Outputs Framework
Since 1999-2000, budgets have been presented in an outcomes
and outputs framework. The framework was introduced at the same time
as accrual budgeting. However, it should be noted that accrual budgeting
and the framework are independent, that is, it is possible to have accrual
budgeting without the framework and vice versa. The outcomes and outputs
framework forms part of a broader framework of reform of the Public Service
and financial management and reporting. Other reform elements were the
devolution of responsibility to agencies, the repeal of the Audit Act
1901, and the passage of the Financial Management and Accountability
Act 1997. The devolution of responsibility to agencies has, among
other things, given them greater discretion as to how they report their
activities within the outcomes and outputs framework.
The focus of the framework is planned outcomes. They
are the results or consequences for the community that the Government
seeks to achieve. Ministers approve the outcomes for their portfolios.
An example of a planned outcome is the Department of Immigration and Multicultural
and Indigenous Affairs outcome 1, namely, the 'lawful and orderly entry
and stay of people' in Australia. Outputs are the goods and services that
agencies produce that contribute to the attainment of outcomes. The Department
of Immigration and Multicultural and Indigenous Affairs has four outputs
which contribute to outcome 1, namely, 'non-humanitarian entry and stay',
'refugee and humanitarian entry and stay', 'enforcement of immigration
law', and 'safe haven'. The Department of the Parliamentary Library has
one outcome, namely, 'To contribute to a more informed Parliament and,
through it, to the Australian community'. The two outputs that contribute
to this outcome are 'the provision of commissioned information services
and policy advice and analysis to Senators, Members, Parliamentary committees
and Parliamentary departments' and the 'provision of self-help information
services for Senators, Members, Parliamentary committees and Parliamentary
departments'.
The framework was introduced to encourage agencies to
focus on ends and not means. Program budgeting, which preceded the outcomes
and output framework, grouped outlays into identifiable programs. For
example, the Attorney-General's portfolio had six programs in 1998-99.
One was 'administration of justice' which encompassed the activities of
the courts and tribunals. Another program was 'maintenance of law, order
and safety'. A criticism of program budgeting was that it focused too
much on inputs and outputs and not enough on the reasons for producing
outputs. For example, under program budgeting, there was a tendency to
focus on the cost of information technology rather than on its uses to
which it was put.
3.2 Issues
The outcomes and outputs framework has encountered conceptual
and implementation difficulties. The framework's success depends crucially
on how well outcomes are specified. One issue is the overlapping of outcomes
across agencies and portfolios. Outcomes reflect administrative arrangements.
But these arrangements often do not coincide with broader objectives.
For example, it could be argued that some functions of the Department
of Foreign Affairs and Trade contribute indirectly to Australia's defence
and therefore to the Department of Defence outcome: 'the defence of Australia
and its national interests'. The Department of Transport and Regional
Services has one outcome: 'a better transport system for Australia and
greater recognition and opportunities for local, regional and territory
communities'. But the Department provides only some regional services.
Equitable access to services in regional areas involves agencies funding
health, education and other services. The need for effective coordination
between departments and across all levels of government and the social
support network was a theme of the Reference Group on Welfare Reform.(9)
Another issue is overlapping outcomes within a portfolio
or agency. The framework implicitly assumes that outcomes can be specified
discretely. Professor Harris cites as examples of what he believes to
be overlapping outcomes those of the Commonwealth Department of Health
and Ageing portfolio and the NSW Police Service. He notes that overlapping
outcomes create problems of accountability since agencies have discretion
as to how they classify an activity.(10) This, in turn, raises
issues of agencies' reporting on their contributions to outcomes. Reporting
of performance is discussed in section nine of this paper.
Another issue is the level of specificity of outcomes:
some are highly abstract while others are more specific. An example of
a general outcome is outcome one of the Environment and Heritage portfolio.
This is 'the environment, especially those aspects that are matters of
national environmental significance, is protected and conserved'. The
Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislation Committee, in its
1999 report The
Format of the Portfolio Budget Statements-Second Report, expressed
concern over the widely differing levels of specificity. The Committee
stated that some outcomes are so general that it is hard to see how accountability
can be enhanced in reporting against them.
The Committee also criticised the absorption of agencies
and functions into broader frameworks so that these agencies were no longer
separately identifiable in terms of their funding and performance. For
example, in 1999-2000, the Office of the Status of Women and the Australian
Geological Survey Organisation (AGSO) were absorbed into broader frameworks.
Possibly in response to such criticism, the subsequent trend has been
to show agencies separately. For example, AGSO is now shown separately
in the Portfolio Budget Statements of the Industry, Tourism and Resources
portfolio. The Committee also noted that the amounts allocated to outcomes
ranged from $271 000 to more than $17.5 billion.
A major problem associated with the framework to which
the Committee drew attention is the paucity of information especially
in the Portfolio Budget Statements. Contrary to the rhetoric about how
accrual budgeting and the outcomes and output framework would increase
transparency and accountability, the availability of information in the
Budget Papers and documentation, especially the Portfolio Budget Statements,
has fallen sharply. The main complaint is excessive aggregation of financial
data and the lack of detail about agency activities. The extent of aggregation
can be seen by comparing the 1995-96 Portfolio Budget Statement for the
Department of Employment, Education and Training with that of the Department
of Employment, Workplace Relations and Small Business for 2001-02. This
issue is discussed in section 5.5, which deals with the Portfolio Budget
Statements.
It will be some time before a proper assessment can be
made of whether the benefits of the outcomes and outputs framework justify
its cost. Agencies have, at considerable expense, restructured their accounting
and costing systems to conform to the framework. The framework has been
in place for three Budgets and is still being developed. Some recasting
of outcomes and outputs has already occurred with the trend apparently
towards fewer of both. For example, in 2001-02, the Department
of Environment and Heritage changed its outputs structure substantially.
Further recasting is likely.
The recasting of outcomes and outputs will make assessment
of the success or otherwise of the framework difficult. Recasting will
also make time series comparisons of expenses difficult because of the
lack of continuity in data series. However, the problem of comparability
has to be balanced against the provision of better information and the
issue of materiality.
The trend seems to be for agencies to consolidate outputs
into fewer categories. The desirability of this is questionable on transparency
and accountability grounds. The Senate Finance and Public Administration
Legislation Committee's observation about the generality of some outcomes
and accountability, could also be applied to the consolidation of outputs.
3.3 Costing of Outcomes and Outputs
Outcomes and outputs are costed by attributing all costs
to outputs and thence to outcomes. The objective is to measure as accurately
as possible the cost of producing outputs and outcomes. The trend is for
improved costing of activities.
Still, problems remain. For example, it is difficult
to allocate some costs-for example, 'overheads' such as electricity and
rent-which cannot be attributed directly to a particular output or which
contribute to more than one output. The Auditor-General has noted:
During the 2000-2001 financial statement audit process,
the attribution issue was considered. At this time, not all entities
are able to attribute accurately all costs to relevant outcomes/output
groups ... There is scope for many entities to develop comprehensive
allocation models which are able to attribute more reliably expenses
to outputs.(11)
The Productivity Commission's inquiry into cost recovery
arrangements by Commonwealth regulatory, administrative and information
agencies should result in further improvement in costing of activities.(12)
3.4 Functional Classification of Expenses
Under the outcomes and output framework, it is usually
not possible to determine how much is spent on functions such as health,
education, road transport and defence(13). However, expenses
are classified by function in Statement 6 of Budget Paper No. 1 for 2001-02
and in other documents such as the Final Budget Outcome. The Department
of Finance and Administration notes:
The function classification is a code used to classify
expense transactions by the purpose they serve (e.g. health, education).
It is based upon the Australian Bureau of Statistics GPC (government
purpose classification) which in turn is based upon the United Nation's
Classification of the Functions of Government (COFOG), which
is also applied in the IMF Government Finance Statistics system.
The function allows trends in government expenditure
on particular functions to be analysed over time. This is helpful
in forecasting future expenditures. It can also be used to isolate
government expenditures on functions of interest for specific economic
or social studies. (14)
For example, the 'education' function covers:
- expenses on the provision, management and support of all levels of
educational services at the preschool, school and tertiary level (through
both the higher and technical and further education systems)
- expenses relating to allowances to students at all levels, educational
programs designed specifically for the benefit of special groups, expenses
on non-vocational adult education courses, regulation and some research
activities (with other research funding being classified to General
Research), and general administration relating to education but
- excludes expenses on military colleges classified to Defence. (15)
Note that the classification of activities to functions
can change. The changes are noted at the end of the tables. For example,
expenses for assistance to the aged were reclassified from 'health' to
'social security and welfare' in Table 3 of Statement 6 in Budget Paper
No. 1 for 2001-02.
4.
Appropriations
Section 83 of the Constitution
states:
No money shall be drawn from the Treasury of the
Commonwealth except under appropriation made by law.
There are two broad categories of appropriations:
- annual appropriations and
- special (or standing) appropriations.
4.1 Annual Appropriation Bills
Annual appropriations are contained in the three Appropriation
Bills:
- Appropriation Bill (No. 1)
- Appropriation Bill (No. 2 ), and
- Appropriation (Parliamentary Departments) Bill.
These Bills are contained in Budget Paper No. 4.
The Bills authorise the payment of specified amounts
for particular purposes. Appropriation Bill (No. 1) provides for the appropriation
of money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for the ordinary annual services
of government. Appropriation Bill (No. 2) provides for the appropriation
of money from the Consolidated Revenue Fund for purposes other than the
ordinary services of government. The division of items between the two
Bills accords with the 1965 'compact' between the House of Representatives
and the Senate.(16)
Appropriation Bill (No. 1) sets out agency appropriations
by outcome and distinguishes between administered and departmental expenses.
The data in Appropriation Bill (No. 1) are highly aggregated and additional
information is contained in Portfolio Budget Statements. Items in Appropriation
Bill (No. 2) include:
- expenses in relation to grants to the States under section 96 of the
Constitution (Specific Purpose Payments) and for payments to the Northern
Territory and the Australian Capital Territory
- administered expenses for new agency outcomes, and
- departmental capital-in the forms of equity injections, loans and
carryovers-and administered capital.
The Parliamentary Departments have a separate Appropriation
Bill because Parliament is constitutionally separate and independent of
the Executive and because the Departments are administered under their
own legislation separate from the Public Service Act 1999.
4.2 Special (or Standing) Appropriations
Annual appropriations account for around only 25 per
cent of agency expenses. The remaining 75 per cent are funded under special
(or standing) appropriations-the terms are often used interchangeably-and
receipts from independent sources.(17) Authority for
special appropriations (the term generally used to refer to either special
or standing appropriations) derives from various Acts. For example, the
authority for spending on roads is three Acts: the Australian Land
Transport Development Act 1988, the Roads to Recovery Act 2000,
and the Local Government (Financial Assistance) Act 1995. Standing
appropriations are 'open-ended' in that the amount appropriated for
a particular purpose is determined by the eligibility and other provisions
in the relevant Act. An example is age pensions paid under the Social
Security (Administration) Act 1999. Special appropriations are payments
of a specific amount over a specific period of time.
This highlights a number of differences between the annual
and special appropriations. Whereas the Appropriation Bills are for specific
amounts, the amounts in the Budget for special appropriations are estimated
spending under the various Acts. Further, whereas spending under the Appropriation
Bills is subject to annual review and approval by Parliament, this is
not the case for special appropriations in the sense that Parliament does
not legislate annually for special appropriations. Information on the
estimated payments under special appropriations can be found in Portfolio
Budget Statements.
Revenues from independent sources include proceeds from
the sale of goods and charges for the provision of services, and profits
from the sale of assets. The amount that Parliament appropriates for an
outcome is the difference between the 'price of outputs' (the full cost
of the good or service) and revenue from other sources. For example, in
2001-02, the Department of Finance and Administration outcome 1 (sustainable
government finances) has a price of outputs of $37.628 million, which
will be funded by $36.257 million in Appropriation Bill (No. 1) and $1.371
million in revenue from other sources. To the Department's credit, receipts
from independent sources are listed in some detail in an appendix.
A welcome development is the reporting by some agencies
of estimated expenses from individual special appropriations in their
Portfolio Budget Statements. For example, in 2001-02, the Department of
Family and Community Services and the Department of Finance and Administration
reported such information in an appendix. In the case of the Department
of Family and Community Services, it can be seen that estimated spending
under administered (see section 4.3) special appropriations is $52 billion.
Of this, more than $40 billion will be under the Social Security (Administration)
Act 1999. The Department of Family and Community Services goes even
further and breaks down spending under this Act by category, for example,
age pension, disability support pension, youth allowance and so on.
4.3 Administered and Departmental Items
Appropriations are classified as either administered
or departmental. The distinction is based on the concept of 'control'
as outlined in Australian Accounting Standard (AAS) 29 'Financial Reporting
by Departments'.
Departmental items are the resources that agencies control
and use to produce outputs. Examples are equipment, liabilities for employee
entitlements, revenues from user charges, and employee and other administrative
expenses. Administered items are revenues, expenses, assets and liabilities
that the government controls and which an agency manages on the government's
behalf. Administered items include expenses such as subsidies, grants
and benefit payments; revenues from taxes, fees, and fines; liabilities
relating to public debt and employee superannuation; and assets relating
to tax amounts receivable, loans to other governments and investments
in controlled entities. An example of an administered expense is the road
grants the Commonwealth makes to the States under the Australian Land
Transport Development Act 1988. Spending by some Departments, for
example, Family and Community Services, is overwhelmingly administered
because most of its spending is authorised by various legislative enactments
such as those pertaining to pensions, family assistance and various allowances.
The distinction between administered and departmental
items is not clear cut. The Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislation
Committee, in its third
report on the format of the PBS observed:
3.22 It became evident, during the 2000-01 budget
estimates hearings, that a number of activities had been reclassified
from 'administered' to 'departmental' and hence their funding could
be varied at agency discretion. For example, a range of programs in
the Department of Environment and Heritage, including grant schemes,
became 'departmental' and were listed as such in the PBS. The distinction,
and its implications, was not the subject of particular questioning
on this occasion.
3.23 The committee could find no examples of reclassifications
in the other direction. The committee concedes that the concept of
'control' is at times a matter of judgement; it also notes that reclassifications
cannot be done unilaterally by agencies but the approval of DOFA must
be sought. Representatives of a number of agencies stressed that funding
flexibility was needed to meet changing priorities and to deal with
the unexpected. While accepting this argument, the committee is nevertheless
concerned that any such reclassifications not be used to thwart accountability.
4.4 Additional Estimates
Funding requirements often change after the Budget is
brought down. Governments make new policy commitments which have to be
funded. Agencies reassess their requirements and, if necessary, submit
requests for additional funding. The Government may agree to additional
funding if the amounts in the Appropriation Acts are inadequate. The process
whereby additional funds are provided is called additional
estimates, and begins around November. The approved additional estimates
are normally incorporated into Appropriation
Bills 3 and 4 and Appropriations (Parliamentary Departments) Bill
No. 2. These Bills are the counterparts of Appropriation Bills No. 1 and
2 and Appropriations (Parliamentary Departments) Bill No. 1 respectively.
Portfolio Additional Estimates Statements are the additional
estimates counterparts of Portfolio Budget Statements and contain explanations
of Appropriation Bills 3 and 4 and Appropriations (Parliamentary Departments)
Bill No 2. The Senate Estimates Committees also scrutinise Appropriation
Bills 3 and 4. Parliament usually passes the additional estimates Bills
around April.
4.5 Advance to the Finance Minister
The Advance
to the Finance Minister (AFM) provides flexibility to the system of
appropriating funds. The AFM is a contingency fund from which the Minister
for Finance and Administration can spend for emergency or unforeseen circumstances.
Authority for payments derives from section 11 of the annual Appropriation
Acts. According to Department of Finance and Administration guidelines,
funding is available only if agencies meet two tests:
- the need for funding must be urgent, and
- the need was unforeseen or arose because of erroneous omission or
understatement.
Section 11 of the Appropriation Acts also requires the
Minister to account to Parliament for spending from the AFM, which the
Minister does by tabling monthly and annual statements. These reports
are, however, not terribly enlightening since they allocate payments by
outcome and do not provide details of what the payments were for.
5.
Budget Documents
As noted, the Government releases the Budget
Papers and Documentation on Budget night. Ministers also issue media
releases and hard copy information kits. The Budget Papers and documents
consist of:
- the Budget Speech
- Budget Overview
- four Budget Papers
- Portfolio Budget Statements, and
- Ministerial Statements.
5.1 Budget Speech
The Budget Speech is the printed version of the speech
that the Treasurer delivers on Budget night. The speech contains Budget
highlights and details of the Government's priorities. As is the case
with the other Budget Papers, the Speech is loaded onto the Parliamentary
computing network on Budget night or very soon thereafter.
5.2 Budget Overview
As its name suggests, the Budget Overview is a document
of about 30 pages that summarises key features of the Budget with an emphasis
on graphical and tabular presentation. In 2001-02, the Overview contained
a Budget overview, a review of the Australian economy, and appendices
containing Budget aggregates, spending initiatives, economic forecasts
and historical data going back to 1974-75.
5.3 Budget Papers
There are four Budget Papers. Each is discussed in turn.
5.3.1 Budget Paper No. 1
Budget Paper No. 1 is the most important explanatory
document. Budget Paper No. 1 for 2001-02 contained eleven Statements dealing,
among other things, with fiscal policy, the outlook for the economy, assumptions
underlying the projections of growth, unemployment, revenue and expenses
and other matters. Budget Paper No. 1 is prepared in accordance with the
Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998, which requires that the government
provide, among other things, a statement of its fiscal strategy and a
report on the economic and fiscal outlook as well as risks to the outlook.
It should be noted that the precise content and statement number can vary
from year to year. The following is based on the 2001-02 Budget.
Statement 1 - Fiscal Strategy and Budget Priorities.
This contains sections dealing with the fiscal and economic outlooks,
fiscal strategy and the Government's priorities in areas such as welfare,
health, education and transport.
Statement 2 - Fiscal Outlook. This statement contains
sections dealing with the fiscal aggregates, variations to expense and
revenue estimates and their consequences for the fiscal balance, the Commonwealth's
net debt and worth positions, and cash flows. An appendix deals with the
sensitivity of fiscal aggregates to economic developments.
Statement 3 - Economic Outlook. This Statement
discusses developments in the domestic and international economies, and
uncertainties in the outlooks for both.
Statement 4 - A More Productive Australia - Policy
and Technology. This Statement is one of a series in recent Budgets,
which discuss various aspects of the economy. In the 2000-01 Budget, the
topic was tax reform.
Statement 5 - Revenue. This contains an overview
and discussion of Budget and forward year revenue estimates. The Appendices
contain useful information including details of revenue measures and revenue
statistics going back to 1990-91.
Statement 6 - Expenses and Net Capital Investment.
This contains information on the spending side of the Budget including
on expenses, which are often the focus of Budget discussions. Expenses
are divided on a functional basis, for example, defence, education, health,
and social security and welfare. Part II deals with general government
net capital investment. The appendices contain useful data including expense
measures by agency, and expenses statistics by function for the Budget
and out years.
Statement 7 - Budget Funding. This contains details
of the Commonwealth's recent and prospective net funding requirements
and borrowing programs.
Statement 8 - Trends in Public Sector Finances.
This contains and discusses data on trends in public sector finances including
fiscal balance and net debt and net worth. The Appendices contain data
on the size of the public sector and other information.
Statement 9 - Government Finance
Statistics Statements. As discussed later, accrual financial
data are presented in two ways. One is known as Government Finance Statistics
(GFS). Statement 9 presents data on a GFS basis for 2001-02 and the three
following ('out') years. The financial statements include the general
government operating statement, balance sheet, cash flow statement, and
statement of taxation revenue by source.
Statement 10 - Australian Accounting Standard
No. 31 Budget Financial Statements. The second way of presenting
financial data is in accordance with Australian Accounting Standard No.
31. The data in Statement 10 accord with this Standard. Statement 10 contains
data on general government sector revenue and expenses, balance sheet,
and cash flows, as well as Notes containing information, for example,
on interest and dividends and income tax.
Statement 11 - Budget Concepts and Historical
Data. This Statement explains and discusses key Budget concepts
such as fiscal balance, the underlying cash balance and the headline cash
balance, and the GFS and Australian Accounting Standard No. 31. Statement
11 also contains a reconciliation of these two standards. Part II of this
Statement is one of the most important-but often overlooked-sources of
historical data. For example, Part II contains data on revenues, outlays,
surplus/deficit, and net debt on a cash basis going back to the early
1970s.
5.3.2 Budget Paper No. 2
Budget Paper No. 2 titled 'Budget Measures' summarises
the various measures the Government is proposing, such as changes to tax
rates and new spending initiatives. Budget Paper No. 2 brings together
in the one document all the intended measures involving individual agencies
and so is a quick way of finding information. It contains details of the
changes to expenses, revenues and capital items by portfolio, and
summarises revenue and expense measures since and up to the Mid-Year Economic
and Fiscal Outlook. Each measure is described briefly.
5.3.3 Budget Paper No. 3
Budget Paper No. 3 deals with Commonwealth payments to
the States and Territories and local government. Budget Paper No. 3 contains
estimates of GST payments and Specific Purpose Payments (SPPs) to the
States and Territories classified by function such as education, health,
and transport and communications. Given that so much of Commonwealth spending
takes the form of SPPs, which are authorised by specific Acts, Budget
Paper No. 3 contains much useful information.
5.3.4 Budget Paper No. 4
As noted, Budget Paper No. 4 contains Appropriation Bills
No. 1 and No. 2 and the Appropriation Bill for the Parliamentary departments.
The introduction to Budget Paper No. 4 contains a useful overview of the
annual appropriations system.
5.4 Ministerial Statements and Media Kits
Some Ministers issue Ministerial Statements (otherwise
known as the 'blue books') on Budget night. For example, when the 2001-02
Budget was brought down, the Minister for Agriculture, Fisheries and Forestry
issued a Statement titled 'Safeguarding Our Rural Resources'. Another
Statement dealt with regional Australia. These Statements often contain
information not readily obtainable elsewhere. Ministers usually release
media kits and press releases. However, it should be remembered that Ministerial
Statements, media kits and press releases are political documents which
sometimes 'stretch' the definition of what their titles suggest they contain.
Media releases are usually available on Ministers' web sites soon after
the Budget is brought down.
5.5 Portfolio Budget Statements
The Portfolio
Budget Statements (PBS) are one of the most important Budget documents.
They are the main source of information on proposed agency activities
and contain information in support of spending proposed by the Appropriation
Bills. Ministers prepare the PBS for the Senate Estimates Committees'
examination of proposed appropriations. The PBS are made available with
the Budget or soon after on-line.
5.5.1 Content and Format
The information in the PBS falls into two broad categories:
agency resourcing and performance assessment. The former contains information
on how agencies will be funded, the use to which the funds will be put
as defined by planned outcomes, and budgeted financial statements. The
PBS also contain details of performance information that agencies will
collect to assess their performance against planned outcomes. The assessments
are presented in their annual reports. Performance information is discussed
in section 9.
The Department of Finance and Administration has guidelines
for the format of the PBS. As a result, the structure of the PBS is broadly
similar across agencies. However, agencies have discretion to present
their PBS in a format that presents information clearly so that the format
differs somewhat across agencies. An example of a structure is the following
taken from the Department of Finance and Administration PBS for 2001-02.
- Part A: User Guide: provides an introduction explaining the purpose
of the PBS as well as information in relation to the styles and conventions
used.
- Part B: Portfolio Overview: provides an overview of the portfolio.
The structure of the portfolio outcomes is depicted in a chart that
outlines the structure of the outcomes to which the portfolio contributes.
- Part C: Agency Budget Statements: for each agency within the portfolio,
statements are presented under the agency's name.
- Section 1: Agency overview, appropriations, and budget measures summary.
This section details the link between the resources appropriated and
their application to the outputs which contribute to the achievement
of outcomes.
- Section 2: Outcomes and outputs information. This section details
planned outcomes and the contributing administered items and agency
outputs.
- Section 3: Budgeted Financial Statements. This section contains the
four budgeted financial statements in accrual format covering the Budget
year, previous year and the three out-years for each agency.
- Section 4: Purchaser/provider arrangements. This section is presented
for those agencies that have entered into purchaser/provider arrangements
with other agencies.
- Styles and conventions used.
The appropriations and revenue summary distinguishes
between departmental and administered spending, and allocates spending
in these two categories across outcomes. The summary also shows the amounts
appropriated under Appropriation Bills 1 and 2, special appropriations,
and total appropriations.
5.6 Issues
There has been considerable criticism of the format and
content of the Budget Papers and associated documents since the introduction
of accrual accounting and the outcomes and outputs framework. The 1999-2000
Budget marked a low point in that it was one of the least informative
ever.
Subsequent Budgets have progressively provided more information.
But much of the information that Members of Parliament frequently require,
and which was available before 1999-2000, is still not available. The
paucity of information has also meant that it is now necessary to contact
agencies more frequently than before to obtain information. That is certainly
the experience of staff in the Department of the Parliamentary Library,
whom Members of Parliament call upon to find information in Budget documents.
The lack of information has probably increased the importance of the Senate
Estimates Committees process as a means of obtaining information and releasing
it into the public domain.
The PBS have come under particular criticism. A major
complaint is excessive aggregation and the lack of detail about agency
activities. The amount of detail that agencies provide varies considerably.
Some agencies such as the Department of Transport and Regional Services
continue to provide a considerable amount of detailed information.
Aggregation in the PBS has been at two levels. First,
compared with the program budgeting format, the number of items has been
compressed into fewer outputs and even fewer outcomes. The result is a
loss of information about individual programs. Second, agency budgeted
financial statements are also highly aggregated. For example, the Department
of the Environment and Heritage's administered expenses are broken down
into three categories (suppliers, grants, and other). The figure of $333.192
million for grants is not broken down.
The Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislation
Committee in its report titled The
Format of the Portfolio Budget Statements - Second Report, criticised
the aggregation of financial information. The Committee stated:
The committee notes a clear preference on the part
of senators for a more detailed breakdown of financial information.
The committee is mindful of the tight timeframes in which the PBS
are finalised, a fact attested to by the numerous and extensive corrigenda
tabled to the 1999-2000 PBS. It makes the following recommendations
cautiously, and would be prepared to accept the later provision of
the disaggregated information, if agencies required additional time
to provide it accurately. With the above provisos, the committee recommends
(2) the disaggregation of appropriations to output level; it
recommends (3) the itemising of administered items;
and it further recommends (4) the inclusion of forward estimates
for outcomes and outputs. It expects that [the Department of Finance
and Administration] and agencies will monitor the accuracy of the
disaggregated information and if after a reasonable period of time
it becomes apparent that the figures are so imprecise as to be meaningless,
the committee will review its recommendation. (18)
In its response,
the Government agreed to the majority of the Committee's recommendations
but rejected the recommendation that forward estimates for outcomes and
outputs should be itemised on the grounds that Budget Paper No. 1 already
provides adequate information. However, the Committee, in its third
report on the format of the PBS, rejected the Government's response
based partly on the fact that some agencies have done what the Committee
recommended. Concern with aggregation is also a major theme in the hearings
of the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit's Review
of the Accrual Budget Documentation held on 22 June 2001.
Mr Bartos, a senior executive in the Department of Finance
and Administration has acknowledged that the level of aggregation is a
problem.(19) The Department of Finance and Administration issues
Guidelines
for the Preparation of Portfolio Budget Statements. However, these
are 'minimum' guidelines. Agencies have considerable discretion as to
what they present in their PBS and in what format. Where Parliament identifies
gaps in the information the PBS, it can require agencies to provide that
information. Agencies have responded to requests from various Parliamentary
committees by including additional information in PBS. The trend, therefore,
is for agencies to provide more information.
Another criticism of the PBS is that it is not possible
to see how much is to be spent under individual special appropriations.
As noted in section 4.2, a welcome development is the reporting by some
agencies of estimated expenses from individual special appropriations
in their PBS. The example cited is estimated spending by the Department
of Family and Community Services under the Social Security (Administration)
Act 1999. But even in this case, there is no link in the PBS between
spending under special appropriations and outputs and outcomes. The Department
of Family and Community Services administers 26 Acts and has three outcomes
but there is nothing to show to which outcome(s) the Social Security
(Administration) Act 1999 contributes. Given that 75 per cent of expenses
are funded from special appropriations and that authority for special
appropriations is the Acts that Parliament has passed, it seems appropriate
that agencies should show estimated spending under each Act and the outcome(s)
which the Act contributes. The provision of such information would link
the legislative authority for spending to planned outcomes.
6.
Reporting Standards
Information in the Budget papers is prepared in accordance
with a number of requirements. One is the
Uniform Presentation Framework, which is an agreement among the Commonwealth,
States and Territories whereby all jurisdictions must publish common core
aggregate budgetary and fiscal information for external purposes.
The Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998 requires
that the Budget be presented on the basis of external reporting standards.
There are two main standards: the Government Finance Statistics framework
of the Australian Bureau of Statistics, and the public sector accounting
standards developed by the Public Sector Accounting Standards Board (PSASB).
The PSASB standard for government is Australian Accounting Standard No.
31, Financial Reporting by Governments (AAS 31).(20)
6.2 Government Finance Statistics
The Government Finance Statistics (GFS) reporting framework
is a statistical system designed to allow economic analysis of the public
sector, especially of the effects of government spending and revenue on
the economy. Major Budget aggregates (including the fiscal and underlying
cash balances) are based on the GFS framework. The data required under
the Uniform Presentation Framework are also on a GFS basis.
6.3 Australian Accounting Standard 31
AAS 31 is a comprehensive standard that specifies a range
of accounting practices and how agencies should present financial information.
Reporting under AAS 31 is intended to provide an overview of the government's
financial performance and position, including financing and investing
activities. AAS 31 is adapted from the accounting standards developed
for the private sector.
6.4 Accounting Standards Issues
GFS and AAS 31 standards can yield quite different results.
For example, in 2000-01, the general government sector operating surplus
was $4.8 billion on a GFS basis while the operating surplus was $1.53
billion on the AAS 31 basis. At 30 June 2001, general government sector
net worth was minus $41.1 billion on a GFS basis but minus $46.3 billion
on the AAS 31 basis.(21) The differences between the two systems
are described in the Budget Papers.(22) By way of illustration,
AAS 31 includes profits from the sale of assets in the operating statement;
GFS treats such profits as revaluations and excludes them from the operating
statement. Under AAS 31, the Department of Defence brings specialist capital
equipment into the balance sheet and depreciates it. The GFS treat all
defence spending as if it were an expense.
The use of the two standards is a source of confusion.
This raises the issue of what accounting standards should apply to the
Budget documents. In particular, it raises the issue of the usefulness
of accounting standards developed for the private sector in a public sector
context.
The usefulness of AAS 31 in a public sector context is
limited. This is especially true of non-commercial government agencies.
For example, whereas equity in a business is an indicator of its solvency,
creditworthiness, and net worth, these concepts have limited meaning for
an agency whose main functions are to provide policy advice and administer
appropriations.(23) Similarly, an agency statement of financial
performance does not have the same purpose or meaning as that of a company
operating for profit. The purpose of business is to earn profits for its
owners. The function of many government agencies is to provide goods and
services for the non-market sector (public goods) and to redistribute
income through transfer payments such as old age pensions, which do not
entail any reciprocal provision of goods and services. None of this is
to say that financial statements using private sector concepts are valueless
and should not be prepared. Rather, it is to note that caution should
be used when interpreting statements.
One commentator, critical of the decision to use AAS
31 in Budget documents, said:
Merely having two accounting systems is a serious
retrograde step in Australia. Prior to the introduction of accrual
accounting in Australia, there has been huge progress towards the
standardisation of government budget accounting, based upon the cash
accounting version of GFS. Why two systems? AAS 31 is driven by the
idea that government accounting should operate just like private sector
accounting, whereas GFS is tailor-made for public sector policy purposes.
This means that AAS 31 incorporates accounting policies which do not
necessarily make a great deal of sense in a government context.(24)
Professor Barton, in evidence to the Joint Committee
of Public Accounts and Audit, argued that private sector accounting standards
should be modified for public sector purposes:
... I argue strongly that the accrual accounting
system appropriate for the government is not the accrual accounting
system used by business. The accrual accounting systems used by business
are designed to suit the specific market environment of business operations...When
we move to the public sector...the government is concerned with providing
those goods and services which the market cannot conveniently provide...
I believe the accrual accounting systems developed for business are
not readily transportable to the public sector without significant
modifications for some areas of activity. These include the provision
of all these types of public goods, the accounting for the cultural
and heritage assets such as the National Gallery, the National Library
and the Australian War Memorial; all of the land under public roads,
a lot of our infrastructure and so on. The present business accounting
standards do not readily cover these types of situations because they
were never intended for application to them, so we need accrual accounting-but
it has to be modified.(25)
6.5 Treatment of the Goods and Services Tax
The Budget Papers generally treat the goods and services
tax (GST) as if it were not a Commonwealth tax. With one exception (noted
below), the GST is not shown as Commonwealth revenue or spending in Budget
Paper No. 1. The Government's argument for this treatment-the 'agency'
argument-is that the intent of the Intergovernmental Agreement on Commonwealth-State
Financial Arrangement-which governs Commonwealth-State financial relations-is
that the GST is collected by the Commonwealth as an agent for the States
and Territories and appropriated to them.
The alternative 'constitutional' argument is that whatever
the intent of the Intergovernmental Agreement, constitutionally,
the GST is a Commonwealth tax because the GST is imposed and administered
under Commonwealth legislation. The Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS)
has rejected the agency argument and classifies GST revenue as a Commonwealth
tax in the Government Finance Statistics.(26) The Auditor-General
also rejects the agency argument (see discussion under Consolidated Financial
Statements).
The tables in Statement 9 of Budget Paper No. 1 for 2001-02
are consistent with ABS standards on the Uniform Presentation Framework
reporting basis, and show GST as revenue in and expenses out.
A consequence of not recognising the GST as a Commonwealth
tax is to understate expenses and revenue. In 2000-01, revenues were understated
by $27.5 billion and expenses by $23.8 billion. The suspicion inevitably
arises that the 'agency' treatment of the GST is intended to show the
Commonwealth government sector as smaller than it really is.(27)
7.
Agency Financial Statements
The move to accrual accounting
has entailed wide-reaching changes to the presentation of financial information.
The requirement that agencies produce financial statements has had the
positive effect of increasing transparency. For example, under cash accounting,
receipts include diverse items such as taxation revenue and proceeds from
the privatisation of assets while cash outlays include purchases of assets
such as plant and equipment and current expenses such as advertising.
Accrual accounting, on the other hand, brings assets into the balance
sheet and treats advertising as an expense. Accrual accounting thus distinguishes
between the activities that affect operating activities and those that
affect the balance sheet.
Agencies are required to prepare four financial statements
for their Portfolio Budget Statements and annual reports. They are statements
of financial performance, financial position, cash flows, and capital
budget. The statements show departmental and administered items separately.
7.1 Statement of Financial Performance
The statement of financial performance can be thought
of as the counterpart of what used to be called a business profit and
loss statement, albeit with obvious differences in the functions of government
agencies and their sources of revenue compared to businesses. The statement
allows assessment of agencies' financial performance. Typically, the statement
shows revenues from ordinary activities, the total cost (expenses) of
these activities, borrowing cost expense (discussed in section 7.1.1),
and the net surplus or deficit from ordinary activities. Revenues include
revenue from government, sales of goods and services, interest and dividends,
net gains from sales of assets and other revenue. Expenses include payments
to employees, suppliers, grants, write-down of assets, and depreciation
and amortisation.
It is important to understand that items that affect
the statement of financial performance also affect the Budget surplus
or deficit.
7.1.1 Capital Use Charge
A particular item in the statement of financial performance
that requires explanation is the capital use charge (CUC). As its name
suggests, it is a charge that agencies pay for their use of capital. The
argument for the CUC is that capital is not a free resource. Agencies
do not, however, pay explicitly for the capital they use so that the cost
of their activities is understated. Agencies should therefore bear a charge
for the implicit cost of capital used. Funding for the CUC is included
in agencies' departmental appropriations.
Agencies pay the CUC on their estimated departmental
equity (assets less liabilities) at the end of the financial year; in
some cases, funding is based on opening equity. The CUC does not apply
to administered equity. The CUC rate is set annually. In 2000-01, the
rate was 12 per cent.
The CUC is shown in the statement of financial performance.
The CUC appears 'below the line', that is, after net operating profit
(revenues less expenses) along with abnormal and extraordinary items.
How the CUC operates is illustrated in the Department of Defence Portfolio
Budget Statement for 2001-02. This shows that the Department is projected
to run a net operating surplus of more than $5 billion in 2001-02. The
CUC is projected to offset the surplus exactly.
7.2 Statement of Financial Position
The statement of financial position sets out the agency's
assets, liabilities and equity (assets less liabilities) at a point in
time (stock). The statement is the counterpart of a business balance sheet
and allows assessment of an agency's financial position over time. Assets
are divided between financial assets such as cash, receivables and investments,
and non-financial assets such as plant and equipment and inventories.
Liabilities are divided between debt such as loans and leases, and provisions
and payables such as amounts owed to employees and suppliers. Equity is
divided among capital contributions, reserves and accumulated surpluses
or deficits.
Items that affect the statement of financial position
only do not affect the budget surplus or deficit. For example,
asset sales such as the sale of the Commonwealth's equity in Telstra are
generally reflected only in the statement of financial position. In this
case, the sale is a change in the type of asset (from financial investment
to cash) with no change in the Commonwealth's net equity position. Similarly,
using the proceeds of asset sales to reduce debt does not change the Commonwealth's
net equity position since the reduction in debt is matched by an equal
reduction in cash.
Such a transaction will, however, also usually also affect
the statement of financial performance-through changes to dividends and
public debt interest-and hence the Budget surplus or deficit.
Under Australian Accounting Standard 31, any profit or
loss on the sale of an asset has to be brought into the operating statement
and hence would affect the Budget deficit or surplus. However, in practice,
it seems that some assets are revalued (reflected in an increase in equity)
to the sale price so that no profit is recognised in the statement of
financial performance.
7.3 Cash Flows Statement
The cash flows statement shows the sources and
uses of cash (flows) including the cash balance at the end of the year
(stock). The statement distinguishes among cash received and used in operating,
investing and financing activities. Operating activities include, for
example, cash received from appropriations and payments to employees.
Investing activities include proceeds from sales of property and repayments
of loans, and cash used to make loans and buy property. Financing activities
include equity contributions and proceeds from loans and cash used to
repay debt.
7.4 Capital Budget Statement
The capital budget statement shows how agencies fund
capital activities and how they use those funds. Agencies fund capital
activities from their own resources and from additional capital that the
government provides in the forms of loans and equity injections. The capital
statement also shows how the capital is used, that is, to buy new assets
or reduce liabilities.
8. Other Financial Information
In addition to the documents presented on Budget night,
there are other documents containing Budget-related financial information.
In particular, the Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998 and the Financial
Management and Accountability Act 1997 require the preparation of
a number of reports.
8.1 Charter of Budget Honesty
The Charter
of Budget Honesty Act 1998 is a framework for the conduct and
reporting of fiscal policy. The Act has two broad purposes: to improve
fiscal policy by requiring policy to be based on principles of sound fiscal
management, and to require the government to explain and account for its
actions. The Act obliges the government to present three reports annually.
They are:
- a Budget Economic and Fiscal Outlook Report (sections 10 to 13 inclusive)
- a Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook report (sections 14 to 17 inclusive),
and
- a Final Budget Outcome report (sections 18 and 19).
The Budget report is contained in Budget Paper No. 1.
8.1.1 Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook
Section 14 of the Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998
requires the Treasurer is to release publicly and table a Mid-Year
Economic and Fiscal Outlook (MYEFO) report by the end of January in
each year, or within six months after the last Budget, whichever is later.
In practice, the MYEFO has been brought down in October or November in
recent years.The required contents of the MYEFO are set out in section
16. The main requirement is an update (the 'budget report') of the economic
and fiscal outlook.
The MYEFO updates the economic and fiscal outlooks and
the budgetary position. In particular, the MYEFO takes account of all
decisions affecting expenses and revenues and so revises Budget aggregates.
8.1.2 Final Budget Outcome
Section 18 of the Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998
requires the Treasurer to release publicly and table a Final
Budget Outcome (FBO) report for each financial year no later than
three months after the end of the financial year. Section 19 deals with
the contents of the FBO and states:
A final budget outcome report is to contain Commonwealth
budget sector and Commonwealth general government sector fiscal outcomes
for the financial year.
Much of the data in the FBO are aggregated and so are
of limited use. However, the FBO contains a comprehensive section dealing
with payments to the States and Territories.
As noted, one problem associated with the presentation
of Budgets in May is that financial outcomes for the year preceding the
Budget year can only be estimated. However, information on actual outcomes
for the financial year just ended can sometimes be found in the Portfolio
Additional Estimates Statements.
8.1.3 Pre-Election Economic and Fiscal Outlook
Report
Part 7 (sections 22 to 28) of the Charter of Budget
Honesty Act 1998 deals with the preparation of the Pre-Election Economic
and Fiscal Outlook Report (PEFO).(28) The purpose of the PEFO
is to update information on the economic and fiscal outlook before an
election. Section 22 requires that the PEFO be released publicly within
10 days of the issue of the writ for a general election. The PEFO must
contain spending and revenue estimates for the current and following three
financial years, the assumptions underlying the estimates, the sensitivity
of the estimates to changes in the assumptions, and risks that might change
the fiscal outlook materially. Only two PEFOs have been prepared: one
before the 1998 election and the other before the 2001 election. In 2001,
the Government published the MYEFO and the PEFO within a day of each other
and the two documents were virtually identical.
The financial position that an incoming government is
likely to face is usually an election issue. The requirement that a PEFO
be prepared is a positive step towards transparency in that it shows the
likely state of finances. The fact that the Secretaries of the Treasury
and the Department of Finance and Administration are responsible for preparing
the PEFO-albeit on the basis of information that Ministers provide-adds
to its credibility. The PEFO has therefore taken some of the heat out
of election campaigns, which were often typified by claims and counter-claims
about the true state of finances.
8.2 Financial Management and Accountability Act
1997
8.2.1 Monthly Reports
The Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997
requires the Minister for Finance and Administration to publish monthly
financial statements in a form consistent with the Budget estimates, as
soon as practicable after the end of each month. Monthly
financial statements can be found on the Department's web site. These
show, among other things, monthly and cumulative data including the fiscal
balance, the underlying cash balance and the net operating result for
the Commonwealth general government sector.
8.2.2 Consolidated Financial Statements
Section 55 of the Financial Management and Accountability
Act 1997 requires the Minister for Finance and Administration to prepare
annually consolidated
financial statements (CFS) for the Commonwealth. The statements contain
consolidated results for all Commonwealth-controlled entities, and disaggregated
information on all three Commonwealth sectors: general government, public
non-financial corporations and public financial corporations. It is not
possible to compare the CFS directly with the Final Budget Outcome because
the the CFS are prepared on the basis of Australian Accounting Standards
including AAS31 whereas data in the Final Budget Outcome are on a GFS
basis.
8.2.2.1 Issues
The Auditor-General has qualified the CFS in respect
of their treatment of taxation revenue and the GST. The CFS treat the
GST as a tax that the Commonwealth collects in an agency capacity on behalf
of the States. For the year ended 30 June 2001, in respect of the treatment
of the GST, the Auditor-General found:
This accounting policy does not accord with Australian
Accounting Standard AAS 31 Financial Reporting by Governments which
requires that all of the Government's assets, liabilities, revenues
and expenses be recognised in its financial statements.
The policy also differs from the policies adopted
by the Australian Taxation Office and the Department of the Treasury
in their financial statements for the year ended 30 June 2001 whereby,
respectively, the GST is recognised as a Commonwealth revenue when
the tax is imposed, and the associated amounts payable to the States
and Territories are recognised as grant expenses for the period.
The financial effects of not recognising the GST
as a Commonwealth tax are to understate the result for the period
and to overstate net liabilities as at period end. These effects,
calculated by reference to the amounts that would have been recognised
had all other tax revenue been recognised on an accrual basis (refer
to first mentioned qualification paragraph), are:
an understatement of revenues by $27.5 billion,
expenses by $23.8 billion and hence the overall result by $3.7 billion;
an understatement of accrued revenues by $3.8 billion
and liabilities by $0.1 billion, and hence an overstatement of net
liabilities by $3.7 billion; and
total operating cash inflows and outflows are each
understated by $19.2 billion (a difference which takes account of
GST-related cash flows within the Commonwealth Government).(29)
8.3 Senate Estimates
As discussed, the eight Senate
Estimates Committees such as the Rural and Regional Affairs and Transport
Legislation Committee and the Employment, Workplace Relations, Small Business
and Education Legislation Committee, examine agency estimates after the
Budget is presented. The Committees also examine additional estimates.
The Committees require the presence of Ministers (although not always
the portfolio Minister) and agency officers, and provide Senators with
the opportunity to question them about programs and policy implementation.
Although there is a delay in their release, the Committee reports contain
valuable information not available elsewhere. Hansards
of Estimates proceedings are available on the Senate website and Parlinfo.
8.4 Annual Reports
Most agencies table their annual reports by the end of
October in the year after the Budget is introduced, that is, 18 months
after the Budget to which they relate is introduced. Agencies provide
a wide range of non-financial and financial information in their annual
reports.
A feature of the changes that were introduced in the
1999-2000 Budget is greater consistency between Portfolio Budget Statements
and annual reports. Annual reports contain information on how agencies
performed against planned outcomes using the performance information measures
set out in the Portfolio Budget Statements. The presentation of financial
statements in annual reports is on the same basis as the budgeted financial
statements in the Portfolio Budget Statements, allowing comparisons of
budgeted and actual financial outcomes. Unfortunately, like the Portfolio
Budget Statements, annual reports have also dispensed with some of the
financial data they used to contain.
8.5 Tax Expenditures
Much attention is focused on the level of spending and
revenue shown in the Budget. But a large amount of revenue is foregone
through tax concessions. 'Tax expenditures' are estimates of the financial
benefits derived by the recipients of these concessions. Concessions take
the forms of tax exemptions, deductions and rebates, and reduced tax rates.
Concessions lower the tax burden on the beneficiary by either reducing
the amount of, or delaying the collection of, taxation revenue. The concessions
raise the burden of taxation on non-beneficiaries who have to pay more
to raise the amount of taxation revenue the government wants.
Appendix D of Statement 5 in Budget Paper No. 1 in the
2001-02 Budget contains a statement of tax expenditures. Treasury publishes
a more comprehensive 'Tax Expenditures Statement'. The statement issued
in December 2001 shows that the single largest tax expenditure is related
to the concessional treatment of superannuation contributions, fund income
and benefits paid. The total benefit of this concession is estimated at
$9.5 billion in 1999-2000. The aggregate cost of tax expenditures for
which estimates were prepared is around $27.3 billion in 1999-2000. This
compares with taxation revenue (on a Government Finance Statistics basis)
of $152.6 billion.(30)
8.5.1 Issues
Tax expenditures are not reported like direct expenditure
in that tax expenditures are not added to direct expenditure. This treatment
may tempt governments to 'substitute' tax expenditures for direct expenditure
to make public finances 'look good'. Not adding tax expenditures to direct
expenditure has the effect of 'understating' the size of the government
sector. For example, in 1999-2000, if tax expenditures of around $27 billion
were added to direct expenditure, total expenditure would rise from $153
billion to $180 billion, an increase of 18 per cent.
9.
Performance Information
In their Portfolio Budget Statements, agencies set out
the performance indicators they will use to assess their performance in
terms of efficiency and effectiveness against planned outcomes. Using
the information collected under the indicators, agencies report on how
well they actually performed against the planned outcomes in their annual
reports. Agencies report against indicators such as quantity, quality
and timeliness. The purpose in requiring performance assessments is to
increase agency accountability.
9.1 Issues
The usefulness of performance information has been criticised
as limited. This is partly because it is often difficult if not impossible
to measure the contribution of agencies to outcomes. Actual outcomes are
the consequences of Commonwealth government actions and those of other
agents in the community. As a result, the consequences of Commonwealth
actions cannot be disentangled, qualitatively or quantitatively, from
other influences. For example, the States are primarily responsible for
funding primary and secondary education. The Commonwealth also provides
funds but this is at the margin. Since both State and Commonwealth funds
are lumped together to provide education services, it is not possible
to disentangle the consequences of Commonwealth funding.
The Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislation
Committee, in its third
report on the format of the PBS concluded:
Reporting on progress towards outcomes is at present
a weakness of the new system. Few of the narrative 'effectiveness
indicators' proffered to date are particularly robust and many agencies
have indicated that they have work to do in this area. Given that
funding is now directed to outcomes, the importance of assessing progress
towards outcomes is of paramount importance. When and if this is done
well, senators may indeed begin to scrutinise outcomes.(31)
Such criticism suggests that scope exists for Parliament
to give agencies feedback and require them to provide more useful information.
The Senate Finance and Public Administration References Committee, in
its Second
Report on the Format of the Portfolio Budget Statements, was mildly
critical of Senate Standing Committees in this regard:
Performance reporting per se is not new, but its
presence in annual reports has not attracted a great deal of systematic
scrutiny from senators. As the committee has noted in its previous
reports on the PBS and their predecessors, to make sense of specific
performance information, an adequate knowledge base is required and
the vagaries of political life frequently work against the acquisition
of such knowledge. While individual senators may develop expertise
in a given subject area, it is a random process.(32)
The Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) has undertaken
a performance audit of how well agencies are reporting performance information.
The ANAO concluded that :
... overall, performance information in the PBS should
be improved to enable agencies to establish and demonstrate the links
between outcomes, outputs and performance indicators. Agencies had
placed considerable emphasis on developing useful performance information.
The latter remains a priority given the importance of using performance
information for target setting, performance measurement and for accountability
purposes.
A common limitation in the performance information
in all 10 audited agencies' PBS and annual reports related to effectiveness
indicators which did not actually measure outcome performance. In
particular, outcome effectiveness indicators were often influenced
by factors beyond the agencies' control to a degree that may mask
any direct effect that agency performance had on actual achievements.
In this context it is important to track overall outcomes achieved
across the layers of government and through various partnerships with
other agencies, including non-government bodies, as well as the particular
contribution made by the specific Commonwealth agency to the outcome
to the most practicable extent possible.
The ANAO also concluded that it would be difficult
for Parliament and other stakeholders to assess agency performance
with reasonable assurance. This was because the PBS performance information
did not always include targets, or the targets that were provided
were often vague and/or ambiguous.
As well as these general themes, the ANAO identified
and informed agencies of agency-specific issues early in the audit.
The latter were dealt with by the relevant agencies during the audit
fieldwork. For example, this included Department of Transport and
Regional Services making extensive revisions to its outcome and outputs
and performance information for the 2001-02 PBS. As well, Defence
was advancing the development of new agency-wide performance information
arrangements for the 2002-03 Defence PBS.
All 10 agencies audited complied with PM&C requirements
for annual reports in that the performance information identified
in their PBS was reported in their annual report. However, problems
with the performance information in the 1999-2000 PBS, identified
by this audit, made it difficult for agencies to reach an informed
judgement in relation to their performance in the related annual report.
Agencies generally had adequate organisational arrangements
to support the PBS performance information and reporting. Quality
assurance for PBS data (for example, relating to data validity, reliability
and accuracy) relied on operational areas that, typically, had embedded
procedural arrangements such as range and consistency checks. However,
in many cases, the current performance information arrangements were
developed for internal operational purposes without consideration
of the higher accountability PBS requirements. Therefore, minimum
PBS data quality standards should be established and monitored to
ensure the data supplied to Parliament are valid, reliable and accurate.(33)
As noted, agencies table their annual reports 18 months
after the Budget to which they relate. The Senate Finance and Public Administration
Legislation Committee noted that a major defect of this arrangement is
the 18-month time lapse between the setting of the indicators and reporting
against them. The Committee suggested that agencies provide in their PBS
part-year performance information for quantifiable indicators or which
information is readily available. Performance information would also benefit
from disaggregation of indicators. This point is related to the trend
for agencies to consolidate the number of outputs.
10.
Conclusions
The Budget is the foremost statement of the Government's
priorities, which are reflected in the resources allocated to particular
activities. With outlays equivalent to almost a quarter of gross domestic
product, the Budget is also a major influence over the economy generally
and particular activities.
Given this, it is desirable that the Government should
be accountable to voters through their representatives in the Parliament,
not least because voters' taxes fund spending. Recent changes to the format
and content of the Budget Papers and related document are aimed at enhancing
accountability. These changes include the move from cash to accrual accounting;
from cash budgeting to accrual budgeting; agency reporting in terms of
planned outcomes; the presentation of financial statements in accordance
with two main accounting standards; the presentation of information to
allow assessment of agency performance; and the reporting and other requirements
of the Financial Management and Accountability Act 1997 and the
Charter of Budget Honesty Act 1998.
The move from cash to accrual accounting has improved
accountability because all costs are now taken into account and allocated
to outcomes. However, caution should be used when interpreting accrual
financial statements because their usefulness in a public sector context
is limited. For example, general government net worth is negative to the
tune of more than $40 billion. A business valued at this amount would
immediately be made bankrupt. The desirability of the move from cash to
accrual budgeting is subject to debate, with some arguing that it would
be preferable to retain cash budgeting along with accrual accounting.
Most economic commentators continue to focus on cash rather than accrual
outcomes.
It is difficult to assess the success or otherwise of
the outcomes and outputs framework in encouraging agencies to focus on
ends and not means. Implementing the framework has encountered conceptual
and practical difficulties. Moreover, the associated sharp decline in
information in Portfolio Budget Statements has been a source of frustration
to users including Members of Parliament. In response to criticism, more
information is now being provided in the Budget Papers and Portfolio Budget
Statements but room for improvement remains. The lack of information in
the Portfolio Budget Statements has probably increased the importance
of Senate Estimates Committees in ferreting out information.
The use of two accounting standards to present financial
data is a source of confusion to non-specialist readers. While the Budget
Papers explain the differences between the two main standards, critics
have argued that it would be sensible to use the Government Finance Statistics
system that is designed specifically for the public sector. However, a
case can also be made for aspects of Australian Accounting Standard 31.
The Budget generally treats the GST as if it were not
a Commonwealth tax. This has the effect of understating expenses and revenues.
The rationale for this treatment is questionable and both the Australian
Bureau of Statistics and the Auditor-General have rejected it. The treatment
of the GST inevitably gives rise to the suspicion that it is intended
to show the Commonwealth government sector as smaller than it really is.
Similarly, the treatment of 'tax expenditures' which are not added to
direct Budget expenditure also has the effect of 'understating' the size
of government.
Endnotes
- Denis James, 'An Overview of the Commonwealth Budgetary Process (Third
Edition)', Department of the Parliamentary Library, Background Paper
No. 30, 18 November 1993.
- Budget night typically occurs around mid-May and on the first night
of the Budget sittings of Parliament. This sitting normally runs until
late June when Parliament adjourns.
- For a description of Cabinet processes, see Department of the Prime
Minister and Cabinet, 'Cabinet Handbook' at http://www.dpmc.gov.au/docs/cabinet_index.cfm#pubs
- Hon. John Howard, MP, 'Cabinet Committees', Media Release,
13 December 2001, at http://www.pm.gov.au/news/media_releases/2001/media_release1462.htm
- The statement of risks discusses matters such as changes to economic
parameters and contingent liabilities that can affect the forward estimates
of expenses and revenues.
- Payments are recognised as an expense (debit in accounting terms)
and in the balance sheet as a reduction in money balances (credit).
The increase in the liability is recognised as an expense (debit) and
in the balance sheet as an increase in liabilities (credit).
- Official Committee Hansard, Joint Committee of Public Accounts and
Audit, 'Review of the accrual budget documentation', 22 June 2001, pp.
14-15 at http://www.aph.gov.au/hansard/joint/commttee/j4854.pdf
- Budget Paper No. 1, 1999-2000, p. 1-5.
- For background to the report and the Government's response, see http://www.facs.gov.au/internet/facsinternet.nsf/whatsnew/welfare_reform_background.htm.
- Official Committee Hansard, op. cit., pp. 15 and 16.
- Australian National Audit Office, 'Audits of the Financial Statements
of Commonwealth Entities for the Period Ended 30 June 2001', Audit
Report No. 29, 2001-02, 21 December 2001, p. 16.
- See draft report at http://www.pc.gov.au/inquiry/costrecovery/index.html
- National security considerations limit scrutiny of the defence budget
including in Budget Cabinet.
- Department of Finance and Administration website at http://www.finance.gov.au/budgetgroup/other%5Fguidance%5Fnotes/functions.html
- Department of Finance and Administration website at http://www.finance.gov.au/budgetgroup/other%5Fguidance%5Fnotes/functions.html
- See Chapter 13 of Senate Practice, which deals with financial
legislation, at http://search.aph.gov.au/search/ParlInfo.ASP?action=view&item=18&resultsID=1rLMQg
- In practice, either term is used to refer to appropriations not made
under the annual Appropriation Bills. To confuse matters further, the
terms are used interchangeably. This paper uses special appropriations
to mean either special or standing appropriations.
- Official Committee Hansard, Joint Committee of Public Accounts and
Audit, 22 June 2001, pp. 14 and 15
- ibid., p. 9.
- AAS 31 is a general framework for accrual budgeting and financial
reporting for governments. However, compliance with all other applicable
accounting standards is required. Exceptions to this rule are explicitly
stated in AAS 31.
- Final Budget Outcome 2000-01, pp. 16-17 and 32-33.
- A summary of selected differences and a reconciliation of GFS and
AAS 31 data can be found in Final Budget Outcome 2000-01, pp.72-6.
- Marc Robinson, 'Public Sector Net Worth: Is It Worth Measuring?',
Research Paper No. 26, 1995-96, Department of the Parliamentary
Library.
- Marc Robinson, 'Accrual Accounting and the Public Sector', Economic
Papers, volume 20 No. 2, June 2001, pp. 57-66.
- Official Committee Hansard, Joint Committee of Public Accounts and
Audit, 'Review of the accrual budget documentation', 22 June 2001, pp.
13-14.
- Australian Bureau of Statistics, Accruals-based Government Finance
Statistics, Information Paper 5517.0, 13 March 2000.
- It is interesting to note that when the States handed their income
tax powers to the Commonwealth, the Commonwealth treated the revenue
as if it were its own revenue even though, in a sense, the Commonwealth
was acting as an agent for the States. For a time, the Commonwealth
used to describe money it gave to the States as 'tax reimbursements
to the States'.
- For a fuller description of the provisions relating to the PEFO, see
'Charter of Budget Honesty: Pre-election Provisions', Research Note
10, Department of the Parliamentary Library, 28 September 2001 at http://www.aph.gov.au/library/pubs/rn/2001-02/02RN10.htm
- Australian National Audit Office, 'Audits of the Financial Statements
of Commonwealth Entities for the Period Ended 30 June 2001', Audit
Report No. 29, 2001-02, 21 December 2001, pp. 27-8.
- Final Budget Outcome 1999-2000, p. 34.
- Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislative Committee, 'The
Format of the Portfolio Budget Statements: Third Report', November 2000,
p. 41.
- Senate Finance and Public Administration Legislative Committee, 'The
Format of the Portfolio Budget Statements: Second Report', October 1999,
chapter 5.
- Australian National Audit Office, 'Performance Information in Portfolio
Budget Statements', Audit Report No. 18, 2001-02, 1 November
2001, pp. 14-15.


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