Home
»
News Articles
»
Big Issues Survey results 2011
Big Issues Survey results 2011
Posted : Monday, December 05, 2011
The 2011 CEDA/Business Spectator survey has revealed that
productivity and infrastructure are the key topics the business
community want Governments to focus on in 2012.
The survey also found that while the Federal Government was
rated as most effective on fiscal policy, generally policy
decisions in 2011 were considered ineffective by the majority of
respondents.
Other key results were that providing sufficient infrastructure
was the most important area for improving overall productivity and
the most important way to deliver infrastructure was through
improved government planning.
The Big Issues survey aims to highlight issues of national
importance for the business community. The survey was developed
with input from CEDA's Research and Policy Advisory Council with
the intent of revealing the issues of key concern for business
people. The results will help inform CEDA's future research and its
thought leadership forums.
Over 1100 CEDA trustees and Business Spectator readers evaluated
the performance of the Federal Government and assessed major policy
challenges for Australia in the year ahead.
Results from CEDA trustees and Business Spectator
participants
1. How effective have the overall public policy
decisions of the Australian Government been?
The first year of a minority government, confronted with a
sovereign credit crisis and a simultaneous Chinese-fuelled business
investment boom, failed to impress the business community with its
managerial capacity.
An absolute majority of respondents rated the public policy
decisions of the Australian Government as underperforming. Almost
40 per cent of respondents (429) viewed the Government's
decisions as being ineffective and more than 25 per cent (295)
ranked them as very ineffective.
Less than 20 per cent (202) of respondents viewed the policy
decisions of the Federal Government as being adequate, and 13 per
cent (147) of respondents evaluated the performance as
effective.
In contrast, only slightly more than 3.5 per cent of respondents
thought the Australian Government's public policy decisions were
very effective.
2. How effective has the Australian Government dealt
with specific policy issues?
CEDA trustees and Business Spectator participants were asked to
rank how effectively the Federal Government had dealt with a series
of major policy challenges. Respondents ranked the government's
competence with executing public policy in the following order:
fiscal policy, education, health, commonwealth-state relations,
climate change, mining taxation, addressing population changes,
ensuring adequate infrastructure, industrial relations and reducing
the regulatory burden. The average ranking of each policy area is
described in Chart 1.

Overall the difficulties in executing policy in a minority
government contributed to an average rating of approximately 2.3
out of 5 for its effectiveness across all policy areas.
Respondents rated the Government's fiscal policy as being the
most effective policy with an average result of 2.6. While 32.6 per
cent of respondents rated the Government's fiscal policy as being
somewhat effective, significant numbers rated actions in this
category as being average or effective. This gave the policy issue
the greatest level of overall competency.
The area to receive the lowest average ranking was how the
Government's decisions had impacted the regulatory burden on
businesses. Possibly because of policy responses to climate change
and the industrial relations system, respondents gave an average
ranking of 1.8, partway between being considered somewhat effective
to ineffective. Almost half of respondents, 48 per cent, considered
the government to be ineffective on this policy issue.
3. What will be the most important area for reform to
ensure Australia's ongoing economic prosperity?
To inform CEDA's research and thought leadership program, CEDA
trustees and Business Spectator participants were asked to identify
what issues would be most important for ensuring Australia's
ongoing economic prosperity. Respondents ranked the issues in the
following order of importance: ensuring adequate infrastructure,
fiscal policy, education, industrial relations, health, mining
taxation, addressing population changes, reducing the regulatory
burden on business, the national broadband network, climate change,
and finally commonwealth-state relations.
Respondents rated ensuring adequate infrastructure and fiscal
policy as being the most important issues for Australia's ongoing
prosperity. These issues were closely followed by that of education
and industrial relations. However, most of the Government's policy
activity has been focused on the issues at the other end of the
spectrum. In particular, the climate change policies were ranked as
being second least important and the national broadband network was
the third least important issue for Australia's ongoing economic
prosperity.
Q4. What are the most relevant actions that can be
undertaken to create more flexibility in the economy?
Respondents were requested to rank which area of policy reform
would enhance the flexibility of the Australian economy, and hence
its overall productive capacity. Both industrial relations and
reducing the level of government regulation were considered to be
important policy issues where reforms could enhance the flexibility
in the economy. Facilitating interstate labour mobility was
considered the least important issue.
Q5. What are the most relevant actions that can be
undertaken to create more capability in the economy?
Respondents were requested to provide a relative ranking of the
importance of each area of policy reform for enhancing the
capability of the Australian economy, and hence its overall
productivity. The options for consideration, in order of respondent
rankings, were: providing sufficient infrastructure, reforming
vocational education, encouraging higher levels of workforce
participation, reforming higher education, introducing more
flexibility in the migration program, and encouraging more female
participation. The average ranking for each category is described
in Chart 2.

The issue that was perceived to be the most important for
improving the capability of the Australian economy was delivering
adequate levels of infrastructure. Respondents indicated that
extreme infrastructure bottlenecks and population-related pressures
in Australia's capital cities emphasised the need to deliver timely
public infrastructure.
Q6. What are the best ways to meet the future
requirements for infrastructure?
Respondents were requested to provide a relative ranking of the
importance of a series of policy reforms for enhancing the
productivity of the Australian economy. These policy areas were
ranked in the following order: better planning from government on
infrastructure delivery, adequate federal funding for
infrastructure, adequate state funding for infrastructure, clarity
in state-federal roles, greater use of public-private partnerships,
and state governments accepting greater levels of debt to fund
infrastructure provision.

7. What is the most economically efficient method of
achieving the policy objective of a five per cent reduction in
carbon emissions by 2020?
CEDA trustees and Business Spectator readers were asked to
provide a relative ranking of four options to reduce Australia's
carbon emissions by the five per cent target by 2020. The policy
options were ranked: direct action, enhancing the renewable energy
targets, an emissions trading scheme (ETS), or through
international abatement credits. The responses are described in
Chart 4.

The policy option of a program of direct action was considered
to be the most economically efficient method of achieving the
policy goals of carbon abatement whereas an ETS was ranked as the
third most economically efficient method. However, there was a
marked split in respondents' assessments of the ETS with it
receiving almost as many "most efficient" rankings but also
receiving few "moderately efficient" rankings. In contrast, a
program of direct action was ranked last by an almost equivalent
number of respondents to an ETS. The difference in response rates
is described in Chart 5.

8. What are the biggest issues confronting Australia in
the year ahead?
CEDA trustees and Business Spectator provided a relative ranking
of eleven potential challenges for the Australian economy in the
year ahead. The importance of these issues were ranked in the
following order: improving Australia's productivity, managing the
economic growth of the commodities boom, delivering timely
infrastructure, international uncertainty, managing a patchwork
economy, ensuring competitive energy supply, managing an ageing
population, weak growth in OECD countries, managing a growing
population, strong growth in developing countries, and addressing
climate change.

Improving Australia's productivity was considered to be the most
important issue for Australia to address in the year ahead by a
substantial margin, almost an entire rank more than the next most
important issue. Potentially reflecting the nature of the
challenge, addressing the impacts of climate change was rated as
being the least relevant to Australia's economic prosperity next
year.
Click here to
read Productivity and infrastructure the big issues in
2012 by Professor the Hon. Stephen Martin.
Return to the news