Annual Report 2004-05
Annual Report Series
The Annual Report 2004-05 was tabled in Parliament on 31 October 2005. The report forms part of the Commission's annual report series.
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- Full Report (PDF 1.2 MB)
- Individual chapters (ZIP 1.1 MB)
- Theme Chapter: Productive reform in a federal system (PDF 101.5 KB)
- Contents
- Media release
- Preliminaries
Cover, Copyright, Letter, Acknowledgments, Contents, Abbreviations
Theme chapter
1 Productive reform in a federal system (PDF - 102 Kb)What is a federation?
Competitive federalism in action in Australia
Cooperative federalism in action in Australia
Looking to the future- 2 Commission activities and performance
Overview
Year in review
Transparent and consultative processes
Feedback on the Commission’s work
Policy and wider impacts
Associated reporting - APPENDICES
- A Management and accountability
- B Program performance
- C Government commissioned projects
- D Competitive neutrality complaints
- E Supporting research and related activities
- F Publications
- G Financial statements
- Compliance index
- Attachments
A1 Commissioner and staffing statistics
A2 Commonwealth Disability Strategy: outcomes against mandatory performance indicators
A3 Consultancies
A4 Freedom of information statement
A5 Compliance index - References
- Index
Australia’s capacity to build a more productive economy and sustain rising living standards increasingly depends on how well our federal system of government operates, says the Productivity Commission in its annual report for 2004-05, released today.
‘Globalisation, environmental sustainability and an ageing population all pose big challenges for Australia in the years ahead. Lifting the performance of the Australian economy raises policy issues that go beyond the responsibility of any single level of government’, said Gary Banks, Productivity Commission Chairman. ‘This is why the performance of Australia’s federal system has itself come under increased scrutiny in recent years.’
A distinctive feature of Australia’s federation is the high degree of shared government responsibility for vital services such as health, education, transport and housing. Other policy areas involving significant interaction among governments include environmental management, industrial relations, workers’ compensation, and indigenous affairs.
This makes it essential for governments to collaborate and cooperate in a wide range of areas to secure effective policy outcomes. Australia’s federal system also creates opportunities to harness competition between jurisdictions to drive reform. Such competition may take a variety of forms, including direct competition between the Australian Government and the States, as well as beneficial competition among the States based on such ‘economic fundamentals’ as service delivery and regulation.
The involvement of more than one level of government in a policy area is typically portrayed as ‘wasteful’ overlap and duplication. However, the Commission argues that some overlap can be beneficial overall, if it expands choices for citizens and promotes improvements to services over time.
Australia’s federal system will continue to provide competitive incentives for each government to improve its services and regulatory frameworks. But as Australia's experience with national competition policy shows, effective cooperation among jurisdictions is needed to yield further significant dividends in key areas of economic and social infrastructure. Securing these dividends is accordingly a priority for COAG.
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