
Leviathan on the Rampage: Government spending growth a threat to Australia’s economic future | Robert Carling | Research Collection
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About this listen
Australia’s government expenditure has surged to a post-war high (except for the pandemic-era spike) of 38–39% of GDP, up from 34–35% before the 2008 global financial crisis, a new Centre for Independent Studies paper outlines. In Leviathan on the Rampage: Government spending growth a threat to Australia’s economic future, economist Robert Carling warns that federal spending alone has climbed from 24–25% to 27.6% of GDP since 2012–13, fueled by a culture of entitlement and relentless program expansion in social services, defence and debt interest. Key Findings
- Real per capita federal spending has risen 1.8% on average annually since 2012–13, far exceeding Australia’s 0.5% productivity growth and more than double real GDP growth.
- A dozen fast-growing programs — including the NDIS, aged care, defence, schools, Medicare and child care — account for 63% of the increase in federal own-purpose spending in that period and now represent around half of such spending.
- Public debt interest is projected to rise 9.5% a year for the next decade, as higher rates refinance pandemic-era borrowing and ongoing deficits push debt up further.
- Off-budget ‘investments’ — from student loans to energy transition funds — add a further $104 billion in hidden spending over five years.
- Rolling reviews of major programs to cut waste and lift effectiveness.
- Fiscal rules to cap per-capita spending growth below GDP growth.
- Freeze public-service numbers and shift from consultants to permanent staff.
- Shelve new spending ideas — including universal child care and expanded Medicare dental cover.
- Return to structural surplus by 2029–30, echoing successful consolidations of the 1980s and 1990s.
Robert Carling is a Senior Fellow at the Centre for Independent Studies and a former World Bank, IMF and federal and state Treasury economist. #auspol #economics #econ
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