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Unit 5, 13-15 Stokes St, Lane Cove North NSW 2066 scribepj@bigpond.com 0434 715.861 Discussion Paper Defined Terms and Documents Written Question With Notice Annexure A Annexure B 28 March 2022 Mr. John Alexander Chair of Standing Committee on Infrastructure, Transport and Cities
PO Box 872
Dear Mr. Alexander
A highly skilled Federal Govt Commission has previously offered to appraise the associated Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis for each proposed large transport infrastructure project A Two Step Solution to require State and Territory Governments to provide a Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis (to the Productivity Commission at least six months prior to Financial Close) for each future infrastructure project with projected Capex that exceeds $20,000,000 - Initially restricted to proposed 'rail infrastructure projects', because "one needs to crawl before one can walk!" In 2009 a landmark Productivity Commission paper 6. Evaluating major infrastructure projects: how robust are our processes? - published on the Productivity Commission website - A. identified concerns about Australia's six State Governments' incapacity to undertake robust Cost-Benefit Analysis for prospective transport and communications infrastructure projects; and B. offered for the Productivity Commission "to be a centre of excellence for cost–benefit analysis within the Australian Government" In July 2014 the Productivity Commission published Productivity Commission Inquiry Report into Public Infrastructure with recommendations to bringing down costs of infrastructure projects and minimise delays. The report highlighted that whilst efficient infrastructure provides services which both improve productivity and quality of life; poorly chosen infrastructure can reduce productivity and financially burden the community for decades. A key message of this Productivity Commission report was that there is a need for a complete overhaul of poor processes currently used in the development and assessment of infrastructure investments. Reviewing a wide range of economic public infrastructure projects, the Productivity Commission found many examples of where inadequate processes and project governance have led to costly outcomes to users and taxpayers. Since the above 2009 offer, Annexure A evidences that billions of taxpayer funded dollars have been squandered annually on poorly planned and inadequately appraised State 'rail infrastructure projects' across Australia resulting in cost blowouts, completion delays, usage/patronage paucity and associated Government ministers ducking for cover. * SECT 51(i), SECT 51(xxxiv), SECT 97 Audit and SECT 98 of the Australian Constitution behoove the Commonwealth Govt to enact legislation to 'Centralise' responsibility upon the most skilled Commonwealth Govt department/agency at evaluating 'what is and what is not a cost-effective rail infrastructure project', by legislating that the six States and two Territories must submit (to the Productivity Commission at least six months prior to Financial Close) a Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis for each proposed 'rail infrastructure project' with forecast Capex that exceeds $20,000,000 * For those proposed 'rail infrastructure projects' with over $100,000,000 forecast Capex, the Productivity Commission should, at arm's length, allocate a score out of 100 points based on the Nine Steps of Cost-Benefit Analysis and provide that score, together with the supporting calculations, to the relevant State or Territory Government at least three months prior to the forecast Financial Close Entrusting oversee to the independent/unconflicted Productivity Commission will collectively save the Commonwealth's Public Purse at least $3,000,000,000 in agg. annually in the initial years following enactment until State and Territory - a) public servants become accustomed to completing the Nine Steps of a Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis; and b) ministers acquaint with the complexity of quantified Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis, whereupon the cost saving to the Commonwealth's Public Purse will be even greater, particularly after it is extended to include road and communications infrastructure projects References: 1st Grattan Institute report They keep bringing a bigger barrel - Marion Terrill 21 Mar 2022 2nd Comments attributed to you in SMH Liberal MP: Politicians ‘addicted’ to buying votes, take spending out of their hands - Matthew Knott 27 Mar 2022 This Writer has expended well over 100 hours preparing a Discussion Paper seeking the aforementioned two bullet points be legislated by the Commonwealth Govt pursuant to specific clauses within the Australian Constitution identified with this letter - Annexure B. This Writer's Discussion Paper commences by - a) informing that he worked for CBA for 37 years; the latter half working in infrastructure finance; and b) listing in Annexure A a welter of 'critical reports' and 'fault finding newspaper articles' that chronicle that billions of taxpayer funded dollars have been squandered annually on poorly planned and inadequately appraised 'rail infrastructure projects' resulting in cost blowouts, completion delays and usage/patronage paucity. Annexure B details the following four Sections in the Australian Constitution that support the further below proposed Written Question With Notice to the Federal Treasurer:
Chapter IV. Finance And Trade of the Australian Constitution, in particular SECT 96 'Financial assistance to States', authorises the Commonwealth Parliament to "... grant financial assistance to any state on such terms and conditions as the Parliament thinks fit."
Billions of dollars of cost blow outs of fiscal grants from the Federal Government in recent years (chronicled in Annexure A) were funded under SECT 96 'Financial assistance to States' of the Australian Constitution. SECT 51(i), SECT 51(xxxiv), SECT 97 Audit and SECT 98 behoove the Commonwealth Govt to now enact new laws to 'Centralise' an arm's length responsibility to the most skilled Commonwealth Govt department/agency at evaluating what is and what is not a cost effective infrastructure project, by legislating that the six States and two Territories must submit a Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis (to the Productivity Commission) for each future 'rail infrastructure project' with projected Capex that exceeds $20,000,000 at least six months prior to Financial Close that will - a) save the Commonwealth Govt. Public Purse at least $3,000,000,000 in agg. annually in the initial years following enactment whilst public servants become accustomed to completing Nine Steps of a Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis and ministers acquaint with the complexity of a quantified Cost-Benefit Analysis, and b) materially reduce embarrassment that befalls State Premiers, Deputy Premiers and Transport Ministers when significant cost blowouts and project delays (Annexure A) are exposed in Australia's free press by courageous investigative journalists.
The Writer's Discussion Paper - A) informs that Australian Government financial payments effectively support about 46 per cent of Australia's six states' annual fiscal revenue expenditure. "In aggregate, the States were estimated to receive Australian Government payments of $127.4 billion in 2019–20"; B) contends that, pursuant to SECT 51(i), SECT 51(xxxiv), SECT 97 Audit and SECT 98 of the Australian Constitution, the Commonwealth Govt is obligated to enact legislation to 'Centralise' responsibility upon the most skilled Commonwealth Govt department/agency at evaluating/quantifying 'what is and what is not cost-effective rail infrastructure projects', by legislating that the six States and two Territories must submit (to the Productivity Commission at least six months prior to Financial Close) a Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis for all proposed rail infrastructure projects with forecast Capex that exceeds $20,000,000; and C) seeks the Productivity Commission to inter alia 'score/rank' out of 100 points all Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis for all proposed 'rail infrastructure projects' with forecast Capex that exceeds $100,000,000, relying upon SECT 97 Audit of the Australian Constitution. D) finishes by asking the below two questions:
Annexure A evidence that the below forecasts that Henry Ergas and Alex Robson made over 12 years ago in the Commonwealth Productivity Commission paper "6. Evaluating major infrastructure projects: how robust are our processes? at 6.4 Conclusions have eventuated, seemingly even beyond the expectations of Messrs Ergas and Robson:
ii) The distortions arising from this undesirable narrowing of the range of options considered are then compounded by evaluations that are too vulnerable to ‘fudge factors’. In a Gresham’s law of evaluation, bad evaluations (often by consultants) can drive out good, given that they trade at equal values. In our view, these outcomes are driven by governments that see little real value in major project evaluation. They may see merit in evaluation of essentially routine decisions (such as the decision to place a new roundabout or improve a road surface) or in cost-effectiveness analysis of the options available for meeting predetermined goals (such as improving bus transit in a congested area), but not in the full analysis of objectives and options (including the option of not spending taxpayers’ money). This, we argue, reflects the impact of a perception (initially due to strong economic growth, and then to a belief that the global financial crisis justifies greatly increased outlays) that public funds have a negligible opportunity cost. This perception has been accentuated by the growing blurring of accountability in the Australian federation, which reduces the budget disciplines on the States, and the blurring also of responsibility for financing infrastructure as between the public and private sectors (which, whatever its other merits, increases the return to rent-seeking deals between governments and private infrastructure developers). Together, these trends risk making cost–benefit analysis merely a box to be ticked, rather than an exercise that has real value, not least to government itself." Conclusion The Australian Constitution, specifically SECT 97 Audit and SECT 98, obligates the Commonwealth Govt to enshrine into legislation B) and C) above. Critical reports and fault-finding newspaper articles (Annexure A), in particular The Social Losses from Inefficient Infrastructure Projects: Recent Australian Experience - 17 Aug 2009, chronicle that Australia's States no longer possess the specialist skills or objectivity to appraise Cost-Benefit Analysis which includes a robust Base Case Financial Model that forecasts future costs/revenues to calc inter alia the Net Present Value and an Internal Rate of Return. It is substantially cheaper to assign significant research to observe the Four Disciplines of Project Planning (1. Project Proposal. 2. Options Analysis. 3. Business Case. 4. Project Plan) and prepare a comprehensive Information Memorandum, than to learn from exceedingly costly construction mistakes. Much better to identify those mistakes on A4 paper or a computer monitor than after many kilometres of tram tracks or toll roads have been laid and utilities (electricity, water, gas and sewerage) re-routed. In 2009 the Productivity Commission offered to be "a centre of excellence for cost–benefit analysis within the Australian Government". Request To avoid $3 billion circa of the Commonwealth's Public Purse being further wasted annually collectively by Australia's States and Territories, the Writer welcomes your thoughts on his afore-mentioned proposal for the Commonwealth Govt to legislate, pursuant to SECT 97 Audit and SECT 98 and SECT 96 Financial assistance to States "...on such terms and conditions as the Parliament thinks fit....", that - I.) each Australian State and Territory Government must submit a Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis for each proposed future 'rail infrastructure project' with forecast Capex beyond $20,000,000 to an independent Gatekeeper, namely the Commonwealth Productivity Commission, at least six months prior to forecast Financial Close; and II.) the Productivity Commission would provide (to the pertinent State or Territory) a detailed analysis, including allocating a score out of 100 points, for all proposed 'rail infrastructure projects' with forecast Capex beyond $100,000,000 at least three months prior to forecast Financial Close. iii.) requires the pertinent State or Territory Government to publish (within two weeks' of receipt of) the Productivity Commission's analysis of its Conforming Cost-Benefit Analysis on its State or Territory 'Transport' website to inter alia facilitate Community Consultation.
Reference 2 (further above) evidences that the retiring Member for Bennelong is fervent about infrastructure expenditure being reliant upon robust Cost-Benefit Analysis. Seemingly pursuant to Infosheet 1 and Question Time - Chapter 15, the retiring Member for Bennelong could place in the House Despatch Box a 'Written Question With Notice' directed to the Federal Treasurer. It would likely be in A4 hardcopy, and also on CDs and USB Sticks to facilitate navigation to information and legislation relied upon, in particular my Discussion Paper. This should have the support of former top NSW rail executive Dick Day, and Greens MP, Mehreen Faruqi, who has a doctorate in engineering who first alerted to the prospect for costs claims by Acciona and also former director of Professionals Australia, Paul Davies, Ron Christie, former Co-ordinator-General of NSW Rail as well as Crikey and the Grattan Institute.
Yours sincerely
Philip James Johnston
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