The
Premier’s Mid Year update revealed an unsustainable budget position. No policy
prescriptions were offered. Likewise Mr Hodgman’s plan, offers no solutions.
The government plans to spend more in 2013/14 as a % of operating revenue than
it did in 2012/13. The forward estimates reveal cash deficits in the future.
The government hasn’t detailed how future deficits will be funded. The
government is unlikely to meet any of its key performance indicators (KPIs)
over the next 4 years. Nor has it announced any policy changes to help satisfy
KPIs in the future. Mr Hodgman’s plan offers no comfort as 97.5% of outlays are
the same as those of the government. He has refused to issue his revised
costings following the Premier’s update. Both parties intend to spend an
unacceptably low amount on infrastructure. Even with the most important election
in a generation the Libs are yet to publicly announce their KPIs, their fiscal
strategies, as required. Electors are being presented with alternative plans,
neither of which will lead the government onto a sustainable pathway.
Wednesday, 19 February 2014
Wednesday, 12 February 2014
The Mid Year Report: What to look for
Premier Giddings releases the
Mid-Year Financial Report later today. The following are five things to look
for:
1. For 2013/14 do government’s cash outlays
still exceed cash inflows? How long will this continue?
2. The government survived 2012/13 by cutting the
capex budget. Does the revised budget for 2013/14 include further downward
revisions of capex amounts (infrastructure, roads etc)? How long can this
continue?
3. As the Auditor General confirmed
yesterday, the government has survived by internally borrowing amounts received
for other purposes, the Royal Hobart Hospital for example. Does the Mid Year
update confirm a rise in the level of internal borrowings?. What is the
expected figure as at 30th June 2014.
4. When will we be able to start repaying
the internal borrowings? In other words when will cash receipts exceed cash
outlays?
5. Have the capex outlays relating to the
Royal Hobart Hospital ($500 million+) been rescheduled? Or is the upgrade still
on track?
Thursday, 6 February 2014
The Hodgman plan: Will it work?
Will Hodgman’s future plans
are at last coming under a little more scrutiny.
The coming election, we are
told, is a once in a generation event, a turning point for Tasmania.
The Liberals have, to their
credit, unveiled a plan in each of the past few years in response to the
government’s budget.
The latest plan titled a Plan
for a Brighter Future issued in May 2013 contained the Libs’ plans for 2013/14
and the next 3 years of the forward estimates.
The plan is based on the
governments’ budgets for those years. In essence the Libs are planning to cut
outlays by about 1% and redirect about 1.5% of wasteful spending to other
initiatives.
That’s all.
It’s sometimes touted the
Libs have identified $500 million worth of savings. But that’s the four year
total. Each year it’s about $125 million.
The government have no plan,
we are told. Only the Libs have, a fully costed plan, a once in a generation
change to fix the Labor Green Budget mess.
Will it work?
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