Inquiries
Public inquiries and commissioned studies give the opportunity for all points of view in the community to be heard and considered. All individuals, firms, groups and organisations with an interest in an inquiry can participate in the inquiry.
Fully-matching results
Dr Andrew Gunn (PDF - 49k)
Submission 6 for Identifying Sectors For Reform View full list
I will make two points: the first is general; the second is specific to my work as a GP. 1. Health services cost money. Either patients pay or tax-payers pay. Poor people are the sickest, and sick people are poorest. Making patients pay is therefore
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman (PDF - 2539k)
Submission 39 for Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation View full list
Australian Government. 21 July 2016. Mr Paul Lindwall Commissioner. Australian Small Business and Family Enterprise Ombudsman. Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation Inquiry Productivity Commission GPO Box 1428 CANBERRA CITY ACT 2601. Dear
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
Federation of Ethnic Communities' Councils of Australia (PDF - 146k)
Submission 16 for Data Availability And Use View full list
21 July 2016 Data Availability and Use Productivity Commission GPO Box 1428 Canberra ACT 2601 Submitted online: www.pc.gov.au/inquiries/current/data-access Data Availability and Use The Federation of Ethnic CommunitiesâCouncils of Australia (FECCA)
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
Northern RDA Alliance (PDF - 240k)
Submission 34 for Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation View full list
21 July 2016 Mr Paul Lindwall Commissioner Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation Productivity Commission GPO Box 1428 CANBERRA ACT 2601 Dear Mr Lindwall RE: TELECOMMUNICATIONS UNIVERSAL SERVICE OBLIGATION INQUIRY Thank you for the
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
TPG Telecom Ltd (PDF - 166k)
Submission 38 for Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation View full list
63-65 Waterloo Road Macquarie Park NSW 2113. T: 02 8220 6000 F: 02 9252 7855. www.tpg.com.au ABN: 46 093 058 069 TPG Telecom Limited. SUBMISSION TO PRODUCTIVITY COMMISSION. Universal Service Obligation. July 2016 The TPG Telecom group has always
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
Regional Development Australia - Townsville and North West Qld (PDF - 196k)
Submission 23 for Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation View full list
21 July, 2016 Mr Paul Lindwall Commissioner Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation Productivity Commission GPO Box 1428 CANBERRA ACT 2601 Dear Mr Lindwall RE: TELECOMMUNICATIONS UNIVERSAL SERVICE OBLIGATION INQUIRY Thank you for the
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
Michael Cleary (PDF - 116k)
Submission 17 for Data Availability And Use View full list
Submission to the Productivity Commission. Licensing and Other Restrictions on Government Data. Introduction This submission is offered for consideration in the context of the Productivity Commission's Issues Paper Data Availability and Use, April
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
Royal Australian College of General Practitioners (PDF - 207k)
Submission 8 for Identifying Sectors For Reform View full list
21 July 2016 Human Services Inquiry Productivity Commission Locked Bag 2, Collins Street East Melbourne VIC 8003 Submitted via website: http://www.pc.gov.au/inquiries/current/human-services/make- submission. To whom it may concern The Royal
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
Optometry Australia (PDF - 55k)
Submission 5 for Identifying Sectors For Reform View full list
Professor Stephen King Commissioner Human Services Inquiry Productivity Commission Locked Bag 2, Collins Street East Melbourne Vic 8003. 19 July 2016. Dear Commissioner,. Optometry Australiaâs submission to the Productivity Commissionâs Issues
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
Macquarie Telecom (PDF - 289k)
Submission 27 for Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation View full list
21 July 2016. Telecommunications Universal Service Obligation Productivity Commission GPO Box 1428, Canberra City ACT 2601. BY EMAIL: www.pc.gov.au/inquiries/current/telecommunications. Executive Summary. USO is inefficient, opaque, unclear in who
Date received: 21 Jul 2016
- workforce (1,309)
- regulation (1,285)
- consumers (1,256)
- services (1,241)
- competition (1,035)
- health and medical (945)
- ageing (721)
- overcoming disadvantage (555)
- performance (550)
- policy (521)
- children and youth (517)
- disability (517)
- indigenous government services (409)
- not for profit (409)
- agriculture (392)
- international trade (392)
- manufacturing (392)
- environment (371)
- water (263)
- accreditation (260)
- justice (228)
- economic models (204)
- superannuation (204)
- small business (195)
- climate (132)
- mining (108)
- retail (78)
- science and innovation (65)
- energy (62)
- mental health
- philanthropy
- identifying sectors for reform
- national disability insurance scheme (ndis) costs
- early childhood education and care
- national workers' compensation and occupational health and safety frameworks
- workplace relations framework
- murray-darling basin plan
- data availability and use
- impacts of native vegetation and biodiversity regulations
- productivity inquiry (2023)
- broadcasting
- skills and workforce development agreement
- access to justice arrangements
- intellectual property arrangements
- right to repair
- implementation review 2023
- compensation and rehabilitation for veterans
- education and training workforce
- economic structure and performance of the australian retail industry
- review of mutual recognition (2003)
- natural disaster funding
- indigenous evaluation strategy
- national water reform 2020
- public infrastructure
- housing and homelessness agreement review
- science and innovation
- closing the gap review
- remote area tax concessions and payments
- australia's general tariff arrangements
- national water reform 2024
- superannuation
- assessing efficiency and competitiveness
- cost recovery by commonwealth agencies
- future drought fund
- regulation of agriculture
- reforms to human services
- five-year assessment
- early childhood development
- australia's urban water sector