Viewing problems facing State
governments through the same lens used to look at Federal budgets run the very
real risk of erroneous conclusions.
The Australia Institute wrote an opinion
piece titled Tasmania's fear of Government debt is hurting the State published in The Mercury on 22nd March reassuring Tasmanians
that deficit spending was fine because our assets are growing. “That does not sound like a government
about to go broke“, it
was said, ignoring the fact insolvency
isn’t triggered by a lack of assets, rather an inability to service liabilities.
There followed an assertion because our
per capita net debt was lower than other States, despite other financial
liabilities such as the much larger unfunded defined benefit scheme for
government employees, Tasmania was sitting pretty. Our biggest challenge is to unshackle
ourselves from a restrictive self-imposed borrowing constraint.
The pro-forma response to the Tony Abbott-Joe
Hockey debt and deficit doomsday scenario was trotted out. Most economists agree
with this knowing the Australian government is not revenue constrained and more
significantly, controls its own currency, neither of which are true in the case
of state governments.
The weeties choking moment came when
it was stated: “Tasmania currently is able to meet its spending commitment
to pay teachers, nurses and other public sector workers. The
“cash flow” of the government is actually in surplus “.
That statement shows a complete
misunderstanding of Tasmanian government financials. The suggestion that operating
revenue is enough to cover operating spending is simply wrong.
This blog will pinpoint the errors whilst also having a look at the way State governments report their budget outcomes compared to the way the Federal government does.
State governments use their Income Statement.
In the past Tasmanian governments have used the Net Operating Balance from the
Income Statement as a measure of a budget’s outcome. But it was a misleading
measure because it didn’t account for the all-important capex outlays, a
crucial part of State governments’ activities, far more so than is the case
with the Federal government. Finally, after years of using a narrowly defined
figure to hoodwink Tasmanians, readers of financial statements have started to cast
their eyes further down the Income Statement to a measure termed the Fiscal Balance
which is a measure of a budget outcome including operating and capex spending. The
Income Statement is prepared on an accruals basis, what is earned rather than
received and what is incurred rather than paid. The Fiscal Balance is an
accruals measure.
The Federal government’s budget
outcome each year is from the Cash Flow Statement. When the Federal government
talks about a surplus or a deficit it uses a figure called the Underlying Cash Balance
from the Cash Flow Statement. This includes operating and capex spending (labelled
in government accounts as non-financial assets).
There’s a further figure termed the Headline
Cash Balance which includes transfers into government businesses (eg the NBN) and
into other statutory funds which governments increasingly appear to think is
the hallmark of prudent budget management.
Apart from the inevitable timing differences
between accruals and cash measures, as a rule the Fiscal Balance (an accrual
measure) is similar to the Underlying Cash Balance (a cash measure).
To assert “the ‘cash flow’ of the
government is actually in surplus “suggests the Australia Institute is
referring to the government’s Cash Flow Statement. So, let’s look at the latest
from the Revised Estimates Report (RER) for 2023/24 issued in February 2024.
Cast you eye halfway down the Table
and you’ll find a figure representing net cash flows from operating activities.
It is positive in all years which suggests there’s enough revenue to cover
operating spending. But it’s a bogus operating figure for the following
reasons:
1.
Although
described under the label cash received from operating activities, grants
include capital grants. These are listed on page 28 of the RER and vary from $500
million in 23/24 to $391 million in 26/27.
2.
Dividends
tax and rate equivalent payment are the returns from government businesses.
They include the drawdown of a special fund known as the Mersey Hospital money at
the rate of approximately $100 million pa except in 26/27 when the bucket runs
dry. The funds were lodged with the State-owned finance company, Tascorp and are
drawn down and paid as a dividend each year. As a consequence, it gets picked
up as an operating receipt. Structuring drawdowns of special funds as dividends
has been used on other occasions by Tasmanian governments to boost a budget ‘operating’
figure. When TTLine was given a dividend holiday so it could save for two new
ferries, from time to time the government requested a dividend be paid which
was then returned as an equity contribution. The round robin transaction had the
welcome effect of increasing operating cash flows. The return of capital was not
an operating expense and didn’t affect the bottom line when repatriated. It was
an accounting trick to put lipstick on a pig.
3.
Cash
payment for superannuation ($717 million in 23/24) include pension and lump sum
payment for retired members of the government defined benefits (DB) scheme
($352 million in 23/24). Governments for the last 30 years have chosen not to
set aside any amounts for current DB employees not even the mandatory super guarantee
levy (SGL) amounts presently 10.5% of salary. Governments have chosen to spend
the cash rather than borrow and to pay benefits on an emerging cost basis when
they eventually fall due. Hence, for all intents and purposes outlays to meet
DB super commitments are not operating outlays, rather they are debt servicing
costs.
4.
As
per 3 above superannuation payments do not include the SGL portion for current
DB employees. In 23/24 this is estimated to be $60 million. Hence the operating
cash figure needs to be taken with a grain of salt if used as a measure of budget
wellness.
Let’s now proceed to
·
adjust
operating revenue by reallocating capital grants so they net off against capex
spending.
·
Remove
the draw down of the Mersey money as it overstates operating cash revenues (NB
it exhausts in 3 years’ time.)
·
Rearrange
interest/borrowing costs and DB super outlays as debt servicing costs to emphasise
the current precarious budgetary position.
Presenting the cash flow statement in
a similar format to the Federal budget with an underlying cash position and a headline
cash position might help readers understand Tasmania’s predicament.
[NB Some of the capital grants may become
equity contributions into government businesses, Tas Irrigation for example,
before being spent for their intended purpose. To that extent the underlying cash
balance may be overstated. The headline cash balance remains unaffected.]
CASH FLOW STATEMENT $ million |
||||
2023/24 |
2024/25 |
2025/26 |
2026/27 |
|
Operating
receipts |
8,190.1 |
8,306.6 |
8,470.9 |
8,725.7 |
Operating
payments excl debt servicing |
-8,251.0
|
-8,173.2
|
-7,968.7
|
-8,097.5
|
Cash
operating balance before debt servicing |
-60.9
|
133.4 |
502.2 |
628.2 |
Less debt
servicing |
||||
DB super payments |
-352.0
|
-371.1
|
-380.4
|
-393.0
|
Interest |
-127.9
|
-204.2
|
-259.6
|
-302.5
|
Total
debt servicing |
-479.9
|
-575.3
|
-640.0
|
-695.5
|
Operating
cash after debt servicing |
-540.8
|
-441.9
|
-137.8
|
-67.3
|
Less
purchases non-financial assets (net) |
-590.6
|
-623.5
|
-738.3
|
-596.5
|
Underlying
cash balance |
-1,131.4
|
-1,065.4
|
-876.1
|
-663.8
|
Less net
cash outflows financial assets(policy) |
-317.3
|
-227.4
|
-116.0
|
-62.2
|
Headline
cash balance |
-1,448.7
|
-1,292.8
|
-992.1
|
-726.0
|
By way of comparison estimated Federal government receipts
for 23/24 total $685 billion. The underlying cash deficit is only $1.1 billion.
In the above Table Tasmania’s underlying cash deficit for 23/24 is $1.1
billion on receipts of $8.2 billion.
Just to service Tasmania’s debt
requires borrowings. Paying for capex (non-financial assets) not covered by
capex grants requires more borrowings. Equity contributions into government
businesses (financial assets for policy purposes) requires even more borrowing.
Government businesses are borrowing at the same rate as the government to service
aging assets in companies that have been used as ATMs by governments, thereby
constraining those companies from continuing with existing high levels of
returns to government as their debt will have to repaid. There’s no plan to raise
extra revenue. Real operating outlays are falling whilst demand is increasing. There
are no feasible future scenarios where extra borrowings won’t be needed. If in
doubt read Treasury’s Fiscal Sustainability Reports. Growing assets is the easy
bit. Servicing the liabilities used to acquire the assets is the challenge. We
haven’t even started looking for the $300 million of budget savings already embedded
in the budget, or how to fund the $1.7 billion of election promises by the
Liberals assuming they form a government, or the programs not included in
forward estimates because deals with grant recipients weren’t finalised, not to
mention the stadium deal or UTAS which is looking increasingly likely to
require a bail out.
To suggest Tasmanians stop worrying
is the dumbest thing I’ve ever read from the Australia Institute with whom I usually
find myself in agreement.
It’s going to be a long hard road forward
when there’s such widespread misunderstanding of the fiscal position of states
like Tasmania.
This is truly scary reading John! Tasmania the basket case is about to lose its basket!! Generations of lying, deceipt and mismanagement by our politicians has left Tasmania with no future.
ReplyDeleteThe highest priority of the new State government must be to have a comprehensive parliamentary review of State finances, and a truth-telling with the Tasmanian community.
To continue this charade is just completely unacceptable.
Thanks
Gordon.
It's basically a fraud on Tasmanians. And if it continues most of the reckless politicians will walk leaving a gigantic black hole for us. Great work Sir.
ReplyDeleteI cling to a faint hope that the independent members of the Parliament may be able to "encourage" our hapless goverment to start charging appropriate market based license fees and taxes on big industries. Like, for example, Big Salmon, forestry etc. It won't be enough to solve Tasmania's financial crisis but it might start us moving in the right direction.
ReplyDeleteIf Parliament doesn't address the emerging financial crisis, Tasmania could slip back into another lost decade where economic activity founders, homes cannot be sold, jobs disappear etc. God help us all if that happens.