This blog takes a closer look at debt servicing costs which increasingly is becoming a crucial matter for service delivering government(s) afraid to raise more revenue lest voters shy away.
One of the government’s key targets of
its Fiscal Strategy is to keep a lid on debt servicing costs including the
costs of its defined benefits (DB) superannuation scheme. The target is 6 per
cent of government revenue. In other words, these costs should be less that 6
per cent of revenue. It’s one measure of budget sustainability that’s about to
be breached.
The following table is from the 2023/24
Revised Estimates Report issued 14th February updating the
government’s 23/24 Budget.
The current year 23/24 will be the
last year when the target will be satisfied. Likely increases of between 0.5%
and 1.0% thereafter will slowly choke the Budget and lessen the amounts
available to fund already stretched services.
The expected growth in DB payments is
best seen from one of the charts from the 2023/24 Budget:
DB costs will keep increasing at the
current rate of $10 million to $15 million pa before peaking in 2035 at around
$500 million pa. Over the ensuing 50 years the annual cost will gradually
decline to zero as baby boomers and their eligible dependents fall off their
perches.
The costs of DB super were always
going to come under the limit of 6 per cent of annual receipts but it is the
new kid on the block, interest on general government debt, which is starting to
cause havoc. As the table shows general borrowing costs will quadruple over the
4 year period to 2026/27. With continuing fiscal balances all but certain, there
will be no respite. What will stop the bleeding? More revenue? Lower interest
rates? A change of government? Praying?
There is still widespread
misunderstanding how the DB scheme works. Employees contribute an agreed amount,
a % of their salary. The government as employer contributes whatever is needed
to pay any defined benefit which may be a lump sum or a lifetime pension.
As a very rough general rule the
government/employer contribution approximates 15 per cent of a DB member’s
salary.
Government DB schemes have always
been permitted to fund payments on an emerging costs basis, that is when the liability
to pay a benefit arises, usually when a member leaves, retires, or dies.
In 1992 the Superannuation Guarantee
Levy (SGL) started requiring employers to pay 3 per cent of employees’ wages
into a superannuation fund. The SGL is now 10.5 per cent. In the case of DB
members the SGL wasn’t an extra impost for employers The SGL became part of the
contributions which DB employers had to pay anyway.
The result has been the State government
hasn’t even been setting aside the SGL contribution component for DB members.
This has given governments of both persuasions a huge cash flow advantage. Taking
advantage of being able to fund employer contributions on an emerging cost
basis and use that money for other purposes instead of borrowing has been the
choice of all governments in the past 30 years.
The Labor government prior to 30th
June 2012 had a policy of appropriating money each year supposedly to set aside
funds to meet future super liabilities. But there was never any surplus cash.
It was an account with no cash backing. Instead, there was an offsetting
liability account termed the ‘Temporary Debt Repayment A/c’ which was needed to
keep the books in balance. It was a classic Clayton’s account.
In 2012 the Labor government
abandoned the attempt to set aside any cash. The Liberals have continued the same
pattern.
In this current year 2023/24 the employer cost for DB members, roughly 25 per cent of the workforce (my estimate) is about $75 million. Were they members of an accumulation fund the government would have to set aside 10.5 per cent of their salaries, or around $60 million. It sets aside nothing.
Had it set aside the employers' current service cost for DB members over the 9 years to 2022/23 the amount would have been $1,221 million as per the following table:
But the chickens come home to roost
at some stage. Which they are now doing in flocks. To pay emerging benefits the
only alternative is for the government to borrow.
It’s always a little galling to hear
the Liberals smugly proclaim how responsible they are, for example this from
the Premier’s 14th Feb election announcement:
Never forget -
under the Labor-Green minority Government………the $1.5 billion superannuation
fund was raided….”
The fund was
never raided. There was never any cash there in the first place. The Labor
government tried for a while to window dress but there was never any available
cash. Just a heap of worthless IOUs which were thrown in the bin in 2012.The
Liberals continue with the same approach as Labor, paying DB benefits on an
emerging cost basis, and not setting aside any amounts or pretending to do so
as Labor did until 2012.
Unfortunately,
that now means borrowing every year to do. This year the extra borrowings needed
are estimated to be $352 million. Borrowing
will peak at $500 million pa in 10 years’ time. Just to pay retiring baby boomers.
But it’s not as if they haven’t had 30 years warning.
Misrepresenting
the true state of our predicament helps build even larger obstacles. If people
don’t understand what’s happened and parties are willing to nurture ignorance
for political purposes, then our hopes of charting a way forward becomes even
harder.
The increasing
share of receipts being devoted to debt servicing is an immense challenge, one which
election candidates are yet to address.
For a long time
the cash flow advantages of not having to even set aside SGL amounts for DB
members has hidden the reality that the emerging cost of DB super would be felt
at some stage. It’s now happened at a time when the fiscal position is under
pressure from all directions.
The next blog
will have a closer look at the revenue side particularly our own source
revenue.
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