Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit 
      
  
Inquiry into the effects of the ongoing efficiency dividend on smaller public sector agencies
        
December  2008
Canberra 
© Commonwealth of Australia 2008
ISBN 978-0-642-79134-4  (printed  version)
ISBN 978-0-642-79135-1   (HTML  version)
Contents
   Foreward
    Membership of the Committee
    Members of the Sectional Committee
(42nd Parliament)
      Terms of reference
      List of abbreviations
      List of recommendations
      Executive summary
      Chapter 1 Introduction
      Chapter 2 Non-executive agencies
    Chapter 3 Cultural agencies
    Chapter 4 The courts
    Chapter 5 Scientific agencies
    Chapter 6 Conclusions
    Appendix A – List of submissions 
    Appendix B – List of exhibits
    Appendix C – List of public hearings
    Appendix D – List of agencies
  
  
Foreward
One of the Committee’s roles is to scrutinise the proposed  budget of the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO) each year and make  recommendations on it to both Houses of Parliament. Most years this has been a  straightforward process for the Committee and the Auditor-General. However,  this year the Committee needed to express concern about the ANAO’s resources.  In particular, it had reduced its planned number of performance audits by 10%. 
  
  The Committee’s interest and responsibility in ensuring that  the Auditor-General had sufficient resources to fulfil his mandate led to this  inquiry. This investigation appears to have struck a nerve among agencies and  their stakeholders gauged by the high number of submissions received. The  National Library of Australia, in particular, was well represented in the  submissions.
  
  In meeting these agencies face to face, the Committee noted  that agencies take their financial responsibilities very seriously. However,  the Committee also received a great deal of evidence of agencies scaling back  their activities, maintaining service levels at the expense of sustainability,  and foregoing opportunities and innovation. 
  
  One of the most concerning aspects of this development is  that it has occurred because agency budgets have evolved under the Budget  funding rules. These place a strong emphasis on agency efficiency and it  appears that agency effectiveness has been suffering as a result. Another  problem is that there are no guarantees in the system that ministers will  undertake any strategic stocktake of agencies’ finances and how these relate to  their function, performance and risks.
  
  The Committee’s broad conclusion is that the system favours  larger agencies and agencies with a stronger policy focus over small agencies.  This latter type of agency usually has a technical, precisely defined function  that gives them reduced discretion over how they manage their operations. They  have poorer economies of scale. Further, they have fewer opportunities to top  up their funding through new policy proposals because they are rarely involved  in new policy. 
  
  The various funding rules focus on the major financial and  political issues for the Government. In a sense, this is very reasonable. The  problem is that they do not take into account the particular circumstances of  small agencies.
  
  Although the process for funding new policy appears to be  part of the problem, the Committee has declined to recommend changes to it  because it is inherently political. Rather, the Committee has recommended a  formula for exempting small agencies from the efficiency dividend. The  Committee believes this recommendation is workable and reasonable and commends  it to the Government.
  
  I would like to thank the agencies and organisations that  gave their time and knowledge to the Committee. In particular, the Committee  found the evidence of the Department of Finance and Deregulation, the  Australian Public Service Commission and the Institute of Public    Administration Australia to be very valuable.  Their global perspective greatly assisted the Committee.
 
  
  I would also like to thank my colleagues on the Committee  whose deliberations and views helped shape the report. The Committee was firmly  of the view it should report in December 2008 in time for the 2009 Budget.  I am pleased that through the dedication of  committee staff and the professional commitment of committee members we have  met this deadline.
  
  The Committee appreciates that there are many more demands  on public spending than there are dollars available. Governments need a strong  finance agency to keep control of the Budget. Indeed, the Committee would be  worried if the Department of Finance and Deregulation did not take a robust  approach.
 
  
  But in this case, it appears that these small agencies, many  of whom define our cultural outlook or protect our rights and freedoms, are  being devalued through a focus on the big financial picture. This report asks  governments to recognise that small agencies are different. With a minor  modification to the Budget rules, they will be much more likely to achieve  their potential.
Sharon Grierson MP
    Committee Chair
Membership of the Committee
  
    |  Chair  | Ms Sharon Grierson MP  (Chair) |  | 
  
    |  Deputy Chair  | Mr Petro Georgiou  MP             (Deputy Chair) |  | 
  
    |  Members  | Hon Bob Baldwin MP (until 25/9/08) | Senator Mark Bishop | 
  
    |    | Hon Arch Bevis MP | Senator Sue Boyce (from 1/7/08) | 
  
    |    | Hon   Bronwyn Bishop MP (from 25/9/08) | Senator David   Bushby (from 1/7/08) | 
  
    |    | Mr   David Bradbury  MP | Senator David   Feeney (from 1/7/08) | 
  
    |    | Mr Jamie Briggs MP  (from  25/9/08) | Senator Grant Chapman (until 30/6/08) | 
  
    |    | Mr Mark Butler MP | Senator John Hogg  (until 26/8/08) | 
  
    |    | Ms Catherine King MP | Senator Kate Lundy | 
  
    |  | Mr Scott Morrison MP (until 25/9/08)) | Senator Andrew Murray (until 30/6/08) | 
  
    |  | Mr Shayne Neumann MP | Senator John Watson (until 30/6/08) | 
  
    |  | Mr Stuart Robert   MP |  | 
Members of the Sectional Committee
(42nd Parliament)
  
    |  Chair  | Ms Sharon Grierson MP  (Chair) |  | 
  
    |  Deputy Chair  | Mr Petro Georgiou MP  (Deputy Chair) |  | 
  
    |  Members  | Hon Bronwyn Bishop MP (from 25/9/08) | Senator David Feeney (from 1/7/08) | 
  
    |    | Mr Scott Morrison MP  (until  25/9/08) | Senator John Hogg (until 27/8/08) | 
  
    |    | Mr Stuart Robert   MP | Senator Kate Lundy | 
    
      Committee Secretariat
  
    |  Secretary  | Mr Russell Chafer
 | 
  
    |  Inquiry Secretary  | Mr   David Monk | 
  
    |  | Dr Kris Veenstra | 
  
    | Research Officer  | Ms Jennifer Eddie | 
Terms of reference
Inquiry into the effects of the ongoing  efficiency dividend on smaller public sector agencies
Since 1987-88 an annual ‘efficiency dividend’ has been  applied to the operational appropriations of Commonwealth public sector  agencies.  The rate of the dividend now  stands at 1.25 per cent, with the Government imposing an additional one-off 2  per cent efficiency dividend for 2008-09 appropriations (with a pro‑rata  reduction in 2007-08 appropriations). 
  
  The Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit will  inquire into and report on the effects of the ongoing efficiency dividend on  smaller public sector agencies, including: 
  - whether the efficiency dividend has a  disproportionate impact on smaller agencies, including whether or not smaller  agencies are disadvantaged by poorer economies of scale or a relative inability  to obtain funding for new policy proposals;
- whether the efficiency dividend is now affecting  the capacity of smaller agencies to perform core functions or to innovate;
- what measures small agencies are taking to  implement the efficiency dividend, and the effect on their  functions, performance and staffing arrangements;
- any impact of the efficiency dividend on the use  by smaller agencies of “section 31” agreements to secure non-appropriation  receipts (eg through user charges and cost recovery) – noting that these  receipts are not subject to the efficiency dividend;
- how application of the efficiency dividend is  affected by factors such as the nature of an agency’s work (for example,  cultural, scrutiny or regulatory functions) or the degree of discretion in the  functions performed by smaller agencies; and
- if appropriate, alternatives to an  across-the-board efficiency dividend to encourage efficiency in the  Commonwealth public sector, including consideration of whether certain agencies  should be exempted from the efficiency dividend, or whether the rate of the  dividend should vary according to agency size or function.
  For the purposes of its inquiry the Committee defines ‘smaller  agencies’ as those with an operational budget (that is to say, departmental as  distinct from administrative appropriations) of $150 million pa or less, and  may particularly focus on a selection of such agencies as case studies. However  submissions relevant to the terms of reference will be accepted from other  agencies.
  
        
        List of abbreviations  
  
           
             | AAT | Administrative Appeals Tribunal | 
           
             | ABC | Australian Broadcasting    Corporation | 
           
             | ACMA | Australian Communications and    Media Authority | 
           
             | ADB | Australian Dictionary of Biography | 
           
             | AEC | Australian Electoral Commission | 
           
             | AIATSIS | Australian    Institute of Aboriginal and Torres     Strait Islander Studies | 
           
             | AIHW | Australian Institute of Health    and Welfare | 
           
             | AMOS | Australian Meteorological and    Oceanographic Society | 
           
             | ANAO | Australian National Audit Office | 
           
             | ANMM | Australian National Maritime    Museum | 
           
             | ANSTO | Australian Nuclear Science and    Technology Organisation | 
           
             | APSC | Australian Public Service    Commission | 
           
             | ARC | Australian Research Council | 
           
             | ASADA | Australian Sports Anti-Doping    Authority | 
           
             | AWM | Australian War Memorial | 
           
             | CEA | Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 | 
           
             | CPI | Consumer Price Index | 
           
             | CPSU | Community and Public Sector Union | 
           
             | CSIRO | Commonwealth Science and    Industrial Research Organisation | 
           
             | DPS | Department of Parliamentary    Services | 
           
             | EOWA | Equal Opportunity for Women in    the Workplace Agency | 
           
             | ERC | Expenditure Review Committee of    Cabinet | 
           
             | FCWA | Family Court of Western Australia | 
           
             | Finance | Department of Finance and    Deregulation | 
           
             | FSANZ | Food Standards Australia New Zealand | 
           
             | IPAA | Institute of Public    Administration Australia | 
           
             | IT | Information Technology | 
           
             | ITSA | Insolvency and Trustee Service Australia | 
           
             | NAA | National Archives of Australia | 
           
             | NCA | National Capital Authority | 
           
             | NGA | National Gallery of Australia | 
           
             | NLA | National Library of Australia | 
           
             | NMI | National Measurement Institute | 
           
             | NPP | New Policy Proposal | 
           
             | NSLA | National and State Libraries Australia | 
           
             | NTR | National Tally Room | 
           
             | OIGIS | Office of the Inspector-General    of Intelligence and Security | 
           
             | ROMTIC | Return    of Materials to the Indigenous Communities | 
           
             | SBS | Special Broadcasting Service    Corporation | 
           
             | Viclink | Victorian Public Library and Information Network | 
           
             | VTR | Virtual Tally Room | 
           
             | WCI | Wage cost index | 
         
       
         List of recommendations 
         Recommendation 1
           In addition to being adequately funded for other assurance  activities, the Australian National Audit Office be funded to conduct the  number of performance audits that is determined by the Auditor-General and  endorsed by the Joint Committee of Public Accounts and Audit.
           Recommendation 2
         
           The Government establish a parliamentary commission co-chaired  by the Speaker of the House of Representatives and the President of the Senate  and comprising elected representatives to recommend funding levels for the  parliamentary departments in each Budget.
           Recommendation 3
         
           The Department of Finance and Deregulation, the Australian  Public Service Commissioner and each cultural agency jointly develop a new  funding model for cultural agencies.   This model should recognise the importance of funding the mandate for  growth and development of collections and the proportion of their expenses  apportioned to depreciation. The Committee notes that recommendation 8 will  also apply to these agencies.
           Recommendation 4
         
           The Attorney-General establish an independent body to  recommend funding levels for the Commonwealth courts. The courts should be treated  as a separate ‘portfolio’ under the Attorney-General in the Budget process and  in the Budget papers.
           Recommendation 5
         
           The Government investigate whether the courts’ appropriations  should be included in the appropriation bills for the ordinary annual services  of the Government.
           Recommendation 6
         
           Where Finance generates savings through coordinated  procurement, 50% of the savings should be made available to the agencies for  investment in projects designed to lift their efficiency and effectiveness.
           Recommendation 7
         
           The Department of Prime Minister and Cabinet convene a  taskforce with membership from key agencies, including the Australian Public  Service Commission, to conduct and publish further analysis on:
           - the relationship between gender wage disparities and  agency size and function; 
- the relationship between wage disparities generally  and agency size and function; and
- whether staff classifications continue to represent  equivalent levels of skills, responsibility and experience across agencies.
If collecting further data or enhancing databases is required,  the agencies involved should receive supplementary funding.
           Recommendation 8
      
           The Government either:
           - exempt the first $50 million of all agencies’ appropriations  from the efficiency dividend, excluding departments of state (the preferred  option); or
- exempt the first $50 million of the appropriations of  all agencies that have departmental expenses of less than $150 million,  excluding departments of state.
These benchmarks to be indexed over time.
         
       
        
        Executive summary
      
      Introduction
      The efficiency dividend was first introduced in the 1987  Budget. It was part of a package of reforms in the 1980s designed to introduce  managerial flexibility within the public service. The other side to these  reforms was greater focus on agencies’ results and performance.
 
        
        The current rationale for the efficiency dividend is to give  agencies an incentive to find efficiencies; to redirect funds to higher  priority activities and to publicly demonstrate efficiency improvements in the  public service. In 2008-09, the ongoing 1.25% efficiency dividend returned  approximately $250 million to the Budget. At the same time, the Government  imposed an additional one-off 2% efficiency dividend, which returned  approximately $412 million.
        
        The efficiency dividend is just one component of setting  agencies’ budgets and it only applies to some of their funding. Functions  administered on behalf of the Government are largely exempt from the dividend.  It usually only applies to revenues for departmental expenses. Further, some of  these appropriated revenues are exempt from the dividend, in particular  external receipts, special appropriations1 and funds for new policy proposals in their first year. The dividend generally  applies to agencies’ appropriations for the ordinary annual services of the  Government2 (‘eligible appropriations’).
        
        Agencies that are more reliant on receipts and the other  sorts of appropriations tend to be less affected by the dividend. This includes  regulators and commercial research agencies that are funded from industry  levies. The agencies that are more affected by the dividend include the courts,  cultural agencies, oversight agencies and departments of state. For these  agencies, eligible appropriations can comprise almost 100% of their funding.
        
        The Department of Finance and Deregulation (Finance) also  adjusts agencies’ eligible appropriations for inflation. It uses a range of  wage cost indices (WCIs) to do this. Agencies reported that these indices were  often insufficient. Agencies’ costs were generally increasing at 4% per annum,  whereas the WCIs increased at approximately 2%. Adding the efficiency dividend  meant that agencies had to find annual efficiency improvements of at least 3%,  whereas efficiency improvements in the wider economy were approximately 2%.
        
        Previous reviews of the efficiency dividend in the early  1990s did not raise the issue of indexation – it did not appear to be an issue  for agencies. This could imply that the difference between indexation and  actual cost increases was not as large as it is today. The system also appears  to have been more reasonable in other ways: a greater number of agencies  received exemptions from the efficiency dividend, and Finance offered budget  adjustments to compensate for increased workloads.
        
        Agency budgets are also adjusted for new policy proposals  (NPPs). For each Budget, ministers put forward new policy ideas to be  considered by the Expenditure Review Committee of Cabinet (ERC). Small agencies  stated that they had a low success rate with NPPs. They suggested this occurred  because of their clearly defined functions, which are usually laid down in  statute.
        
      The Committee accepted that there was a number of reasons  why small agencies faced greater financial challenges than larger agencies and  departments of state. Firstly, they have poorer economies of scale. Secondly,  they are occasionally requested to absorb NPPs. Due to the agencies’ size, the  dollar amounts are small so a request to absorb does not appear unreasonable.  However, a small dollar amount can be large to a small agency. Finally, smaller  agencies are often established to fulfil a specific function or purpose. This  limits their capacity to reprioritise or trim discretionary activities.
      Non-executive agencies
      This term is used to describe those agencies that are  specifically established to be independent of the executive.
 
        
        Perhaps the most important of these agencies from the  Committee’s perspective is the Australian National Audit Office (ANAO). The  Auditor-General reported that financial statement audits have become more  complex, leading to increased costs. Between 1998-99 and 2007-08, the ANAO’s  spending on financial statement audits increased by 11.5% in real terms.  However, this has resulted in a drop in spending on performance audits of 4.5%.  This translates to five fewer performance audits annually.
        
        The ANAO stated that NPPs for extra funding to meet this  complexity have had limited success.
        
        This state of affairs concerns the Committee. The ANAO saves  the Australian taxpayer significant sums of money each year through reduced  opportunity for fraud, better accountability and improved agency performance.  Saving small sums on the ANAO’s budget only costs the Government larger sums  later on. The Committee recommends that the ANAO’s budget be increased so that  the Auditor-General can conduct the number of performance audits he/she deems  appropriate and that is endorsed by this Committee.
        
        Parliamentarians are assisted by three Departments: the  Senate, the House of Representatives and Parliamentary Services (DPS). The  Department of the House of Representatives and DPS advised the Committee that  they will be soon considering service cuts if current circumstances continue.  Since 2000-01, their budgets have decreased in real terms by 11% and 19%  respectively.
        
        The Department of the House of Representatives raised  concerns about the separation of powers. Current arrangements have been  developed by the executive and give little chance for the Parliamentary  departments to negotiate additional funding. The Committee has suggested that  an independent commission be established to recommend funding levels for the  Parliamentary departments. This practice is common in other Westminster countries.
        
        The Committee took evidence from other non-executive  agencies such as the Ombudsman, Insolvency and Trustee Service Australia, the  Inspector-General of Intelligence and Security, and the Australian Human Rights  Commission. These agencies have responded to tight financial circumstances  through a combination of service cuts, disinvestment and foregone opportunities.
        
      The Committee also took evidence from the Australian  Electoral Commission, which argued that the prescriptive nature of the Commonwealth Electoral Act 1918 precluded it from innovating and finding efficiencies. The Committee notes the  Parliament has established the Joint Standing Committee on Electoral Matters (JSCEM)  to specifically examine these issues. Therefore, the JSCEM is the preferred  forum for addressing them.
      Cultural agencies
      Many of Australia’s  flagship cultural institutions are Commonwealth entities. These include the  National Library of Australia, the National Gallery of Australia and  the Australian War Memorial. The Committee received a significant number of  submissions about these agencies, especially about the National Library. In  evidence, the National Library stated that it had started cutting services 10  years ago in order to balance its budget.
        
        These agencies made a strong case that current funding  arrangements are not appropriate for them. First, most of them have a  legislated mandate to grow and develop their collections. This does not sit  well with the efficiency dividend’s goal of harvesting their resources for  government priorities. Second, they have large asset holdings, which means a  lot of their expenses are tied up in depreciation. Since depreciation amounts  are not indexed, these agencies must find additional efficiencies from their  operating expenses to pay for efficiencies they cannot find in their  depreciation.
        
      The Committee has recommended that the Government develop a  new funding model for these agencies to take into account their growth mandate  and their high levels of depreciation.
      The courts
      A special category of the non-executive agencies discussed  in chapter 2 is the courts. The four Commonwealth courts, the Family Court of  Western Australia (funded by the Commonwealth), and the Administrative Appeals  Tribunal made submissions to the inquiry.
        
        All these bodies demonstrated signs of financial stress. Indeed,  they were all running deficits. The exception was the Family Court of  Australia, which has been in deficit and expects to soon return into deficit.  The courts also expressed concern about their IT resources. They tended to fall  into one of two categories. Either they had benchmarked themselves and found  they were well below acceptable levels, or they did not believe they would have  the necessary funds to innovate in future.
        
        Similar to the Parliamentary departments, the High Court  raised the issue of separation of powers. For example, the Budget rules allow  the Attorney-General to switch funds between the bodies in the portfolio to  meet priorities. This could include shifting funds between an executive-style  agency such as the Australian Federal Police and the High Court.
        
      Although there was no evidence that this has occurred, the  Committee accepts that it is a risk. Further, the Court has made significant  cuts to services due to a process that is controlled by the executive. The  Court stated that it started making cuts to services 10 years ago. The  Committee therefore suggests that the Attorney-General should establish an  independent body to recommend funding for the courts. 
      Scientific agencies
      The Committee received the views of a number of scientific  agencies through the Department of Innovation, Industry, Science and Research.  This included the CSIRO, the National Measurement Institute, the Australian  Institute of Marine Science and the Australian Nuclear Science and Technology  Organisation (ANSTO). 
        
        A common theme in their submissions was that there is a  combination of increasing demand for their products (for example, relating to climate  change) and increasing complexity in their work. These factors have led to budget  pressures resulting in a number of opportunities foregone. For example, the  National Measurement Institute advised that its progress in biological  measurement was limited compared with other developed countries. ANSTO stated  that it has scaled back research into atmospheric modelling (understanding past  climate change) and radiopharmaceuticals.
        
        Generally, the scientific agencies estimated that financial  pressures had led them to start cutting services 10 years ago.
        
        Although the Committee did not believe that the scientific  agencies warranted recommendations in addition to those in chapter 6, it did  note the special case of the CSIRO. Previously, 70% of its appropriation was  exempt because this proportion of its funding was for research and considered  to be similar in nature to a grants program. However, the efficiency dividend  was applied to all of its funding in 2008-09.
 
        
      This represented a significant additional burden on the  organisation, one that resulted in the  closure of regional facilities. The Committee would hope that such seemingly arbitrary and unfair  decisions will not be imposed in the future. Furthermore, should any further ‘one-off’ efficiency dividend or an  increase to the existing 1.25% efficiency dividend be imposed in the next  financial year, the Committee believes that the CSIRO warrants special  consideration.
      Conclusions
      The Committee agrees with Finance that some sort of  efficiency incentive for agencies is warranted. Technologies and people’s  preferences change as time progresses, meaning that there will always be new  and more efficient ways of doing things. The Committee notes that, with current  indexing arrangements, abolishing the efficiency dividend for all agencies  would still leave the great majority of them with an efficiency incentive. This  is because the WCIs are lagging behind increases in the costs of agencies’  inputs at a rate similar to productivity increases in the wider economy.
        
        During evidence, Finance argued that many agencies have not  explored options for finding efficiencies through joint procurement. The  Committee believes that Finance is much better placed to manage joint  procurement through its position as a central agency. Currently, Finance appears  to be harvesting all the efficiencies when it manages joint procurement,  leaving nothing for agencies.
 
        
        The Committee would like to see Finance implement something  similar to that recommended by Sir   Peter Gershon  in his review of IT procurement. This review suggested that 50% of the savings  generated by central procurement be retained in a central fund to be reinvested  in agencies’ efficiency and effectiveness. The Committee has made a similar  recommendation for when Finance coordinates procurement more generally.
        
        The Committee noted that Finance has set an aggressive efficiency  incentive for agencies (more than 1% higher than the private sector achieves).  This is an effective way of managing the risk that excess resources might build  up in an agency. The other risk is that agencies might be under resourced from  the cumulative effects of the dividend. Finance’s preferred method of managing  this is for agencies to ask their Minister to approach his or her Cabinet colleagues  to make the case for extra funds.
        
        One difficulty the Committee has with this approach is that  it does not manage the risk of disinvestment. This is a real risk because  agencies are reluctant to report financial difficulties. They are concerned it  would appear that poor management was to blame when the problem may really be  insufficient funding.
        
        Current arrangements place the highest premium on ensuring  that agencies do not build up fat and other risks are secondary. This raises  the question of whether Finance is placing a higher priority on agencies’  efficiency at the expense of their effectiveness. What the Committee would  prefer to see is a greater balance between efficiency and effectiveness in the  Budget process. Both are required for agencies to be performing at a high  standard.
        
        There is a number of unintended consequences from the  efficiency dividend and the associated Budget rules:
        - some agencies tend to view reducing their  regional presence as a source of convenient efficiencies;
- disparities have developed in pay rates between  agencies, which may reflect nothing more than an ability to pay;
- some agencies have become very reliant on  external receipts when this may not have been the intention when they were  established;
- cultural agencies’ funding does not support  their legislated mandate to grow and develop their collections;
- agencies’ capacity to innovate has diminished  over time; and
- agencies have implemented false economies to  meet their financial targets, including service cuts and cost shifting.
        One of the reasons these unintended consequences have arisen  is that governments budget at the margin. Each year, agencies have their budget  from the previous year adjusted for inflation and the efficiency dividend. They  then apply for NPPs. From an annual perspective this may be an efficient  process. However, it means that Cabinet is unlikely to conduct a strategic  stocktake of an agency’s financial position. 
      
        Another concern for the Committee is that ministers and the  Parliament effectively delegate some decisions to officials that should be made  at higher policy levels.
        
        Small agencies argued during the inquiry that they received  less funding on a pro-rata basis from NPPs than other agencies. NPPs are  important to agencies because it offers them a way of growing. Increased size  gives them better economies of scale. Although agencies that receive NPPs are  meant to implement new policy, the Committee accepts that they can use the new  funds to cross-subsidise old activities.
        
        Small agencies argued that, because they often had a precise  technical function instead of a policy role, they tended to get less NPPs. The  Committee compared how different agencies fared in receiving NPPs in the 2007  and 2008 Budgets. departments of state, which have the strongest policy role,  were the clear winners. They received 6% and 5% of their budgets in NPPs for  the respective years. Of the other agencies, those with budgets over $150  million received 3% and 1% respectively. Small agencies received 2% and 0%.
        
        Although small agencies are disadvantaged by the NPP  process, the Committee decided against recommending changes to it. Budgets are  largely political processes and are intimately tied to Government policy.
        
        The Committee concluded that the various Budget processes  and rules work reasonably well for large agencies and departments of state.  While they are subject to tight efficiency requirements through the dividend  and the indexation rules, these are offset by a steady supply of NPPs.
        
        Given that billions of dollars are involved in these NPPs,  designing the budget rules for larger, more policy-oriented agencies is  appropriate. This is the area of greatest financial risk. Finance has developed  a set of administrative rules that continually extracts a small proportion of  these policy funds and redirects them to the highest priority use. In other  words, for these agencies the Budget rules are a way by which policy funds are  kept up to date. Administrative rules are supporting policy.
        
        It would be more practical to adjust the efficiency  dividend. The Committee has recommended that the first $50 million of agencies’  eligible appropriations (excluding departments of state) should be exempt from  the dividend. The 1.25% dividend would then apply to all of an agency’s  appropriations above this amount. The practical effect of this is an agency  with eligible appropriations of less than $50 million would have a zero  efficiency dividend. The old system should continue to apply to departments of  state due to their success with NPPs.
        
        Agencies with eligible appropriations over $50 million start  to pay the efficiency dividend, but this is graduated over the size of the  appropriation. For example, an agency with an eligible appropriation of  $100 million would pay nil dividend on the first $50 million and 1.25% on  the second $50 million. This means that the practical efficiency dividend for  this agency would be 0.625%.
        
        Although this system would return some money to large  agencies, its advantage is its simplicity. By avoiding a ‘carve-out’, the  Committee has reduced the chance of managers facing perverse incentives to stay  within thresholds. The estimated cost of this proposal is $35.3 million,  or 17% of the amount that the dividend returns to the Government. The  Committee’s less preferred option would be to only allow this exemption to  agencies with budgets under $150 million. This would cost $24.6 million,  or 11.9% of the dividend amount. The Committee believes that this improved  workability and simplicity is worth $10 million.
        
        Finally, there will still be a need for some agencies to  apply for baseline reviews. The Committee believes that these reviews can be  improved in a number of ways, to the benefit of both Finance and the agencies.  In particular, the following should be recognised:
        - requesting such a review is appropriate when  supported by good quality performance data and evidence of systematic  expenditure review within the agency;
- systematic expenditure review can include staff  involvement;
- the efficiency dividend, without top-ups from  new policy proposals, can erode an agency’s funding base; and
- downgrading regional services and regional  presence needs to be subject to cost-benefit analysis, rather than regarded as  a source of convenient efficiencies.
      Footnotes
      
        
          | 1 | These are funds appropriated when certain  factual circumstances laid out in legislation apply. Special appropriations are  made through Acts other than the general Appropriation Acts. Back | 
        
          | 2 | This is the wording used in section 54 of  the Constitution. Back | 
      
      
      
 
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