More Than Fiscal: The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia
Every five years, the Australian treasurer is required to publish an intergenerational report (IGR), which examines the long-term sustainability of current government policies and seeks to determine how demographic, technological and other structural trends might affect the economy and the budget in...
Gespeichert in:
Beteilige Person: | |
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Format: | Elektronisch E-Book |
Sprache: | Englisch |
Veröffentlicht: |
Canberra
ANU Press
2023
|
Ausgabe: | 1st ed |
Links: | https://ebookcentral.proquest.com/lib/hwr/detail.action?docID=30537255 |
Zusammenfassung: | Every five years, the Australian treasurer is required to publish an intergenerational report (IGR), which examines the long-term sustainability of current government policies and seeks to determine how demographic, technological and other structural trends might affect the economy and the budget in coming decades |
Beschreibung: | Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources |
Umfang: | 1 Online-Ressource (222 Seiten) |
ISBN: | 9781760465780 |
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245 | 1 | 0 | |a More Than Fiscal |b The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia |
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264 | 4 | |c ©2023 | |
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505 | 8 | |a Intro -- List of Illustrations -- Figure 3.1: Underlying cash balance in the 2021 IGR vs 2022-23 budget. -- Figure 3.2: Population projections across IGRs. -- Figure 3.3: Actual vs projected productivity across IGRs. -- Figure 4.1: Population projections across IGRs. -- Figure 4.2: Births and net overseas migration (numbers), 1997-2019, Australia. -- Figure 4.3: Total fertility rate assumptions in successive IGRs. -- Figure 4.4: The TFR, Australia, 1991-92 to 2019-20. -- Figure 4.5: TFRs, English-speaking countries, 2013, 2016 and 2019. -- Figure 4.6: Expectation of life at birth assumptions in successive IGRs, males and females. -- Figure 4.7: Net overseas migration assumptions in successive IGRs ('000s). -- Figure 4.8: Annual net overseas migration (NOM) compared with the annual grants of permanent residence through the Permanent Migration Program, including the humanitarian stream, Australia, 1983-84 to 2016-17. -- Figure 4.9: Sensitivity analysis of the impact of variations in migration and labour force participation on GDP per capita in 2060. -- Figure 6.1: Australia's social-security system is more targeted to the poor than any other OECD country. Ratio of transfers received by poorest 20 per cent to those received by richest 20 per cent of households, 2012. -- Figure 6.2: Projected pension and allowance payments for single adult as percentage of MTAWE, 2021 to 2061. -- Figure 7.1: Real asset values, December 1988 to December 2021. -- Figure 7.2: Share of homeowners who have a mortgage, by age band, 1990-2017, per cent. -- Figure 7.3: Percentage change in the number of homeless persons, by age band and sex, 2006-11 and 2011-16. -- Figure 9.1: Australian government health expenditure as a percentage of GDP: Successive IGR projections | |
505 | 8 | |a Figure 9.2: Australian government health expenditure actuals (2000-01 to 2020-21) and projections (2021-22 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.3: Real pharmaceutical expenditure 2000-01 to 2019-20, 2018-19 prices. -- Figure 9.4: Australian government aged-care expenditure actuals (2000-01 to 2020-21) and IGR 2021 projections (2021-22 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.5: Australian government percentage annual increase in expenditure, historical trends (aged care 2001-02 to 2019-20 -- health 1985-86 to 2018-19) and IGR 2021 projections (2019-20 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.6: Total government NDIS expenditure (Australian government and state/territory contribution) actuals (2013-14 to 2019-20) and IGR 2021 projections (2020-21 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.7: Total government NDIS expenditure (Australian government and state/territory contribution) actuals (2013-14 to 2019-20) and PBO projections (2020-21 to 2031-32). -- Figure 9.8: Growth in average total hospital admitted patient expenditure per person by age and sex, 2004-05 to 2012-13. -- Figure 10.1: The marginal cost of abatement. -- Figure 10.2: Loss in GDP for different temperature scenarios. -- Figure 10.3: Loss in GDP for pathway scenarios. -- Table 4.1: Summary of IGR demographic assumptions. -- Table 5.1: IGR 40-year projections of age and service pension costs. -- Table 6.1: Composition of government spending over time. -- Table 6.2: Composition of payments to individuals, 2018-19 to 2060-61. -- Table 7.1: Home ownership rates, 1982 to 2017, by age band, per cent. -- Table 7.2: Mean loan-to-value ratios and real net housing equity of mortgagors, by age band, 1990 and 2017. -- Table 7.3: Percentage of low-income renter households in rental stress, by location, 2007-08 to 2017-18. -- Table 7.4: Size of public housing stock and waitlist, 2011-20 | |
505 | 8 | |a Table 7.5: Number of homeless persons and homelessness rate per 10,000 of the population, by age band, 2006-16. -- Table 9.1: Decomposition of total real health expenditure growth, 2011-12 to 2018-19, annual average growth rates. -- Table 9.2: What is in the IGR and what could be in the IGR. -- Table 9.3: Sensitivity of total annual health expenditure growth to alternative morbidity scenarios calculated for the 2021 New South Wales IGR. -- Preface -- Contributors -- 1. Making the Intergenerational Report More Relevant and Useful -- 2. Origin and Evolution of Australia's Intergenerational Reports -- 3. The Intergenerational Report Should Be More Frank and Fearless about Fiscal Sustainability -- 4. The Demography of the Five Intergenerational Reports -- 5. Retirement Incomes: Increasing Inequity, Not Costs, across Generations Is the Intergenerational Problem -- 6. The Future of Social Security -- 7. Australia's Housing System and Intergenerational Sustainability -- 8. Situating Social Developments within Intergenerational Reports -- 9. Health and Aged Care in the Intergenerational Report -- 10. The Intergenerational Report and Climate Change -- 11. The Future of the Intergenerational Report | |
520 | |a Every five years, the Australian treasurer is required to publish an intergenerational report (IGR), which examines the long-term sustainability of current government policies and seeks to determine how demographic, technological and other structural trends might affect the economy and the budget in coming decades | ||
700 | 1 | |a Podger, Andrew |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
700 | 1 | |a Woods, Mike |e Sonstige |4 oth | |
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contents | Intro -- List of Illustrations -- Figure 3.1: Underlying cash balance in the 2021 IGR vs 2022-23 budget. -- Figure 3.2: Population projections across IGRs. -- Figure 3.3: Actual vs projected productivity across IGRs. -- Figure 4.1: Population projections across IGRs. -- Figure 4.2: Births and net overseas migration (numbers), 1997-2019, Australia. -- Figure 4.3: Total fertility rate assumptions in successive IGRs. -- Figure 4.4: The TFR, Australia, 1991-92 to 2019-20. -- Figure 4.5: TFRs, English-speaking countries, 2013, 2016 and 2019. -- Figure 4.6: Expectation of life at birth assumptions in successive IGRs, males and females. -- Figure 4.7: Net overseas migration assumptions in successive IGRs ('000s). -- Figure 4.8: Annual net overseas migration (NOM) compared with the annual grants of permanent residence through the Permanent Migration Program, including the humanitarian stream, Australia, 1983-84 to 2016-17. -- Figure 4.9: Sensitivity analysis of the impact of variations in migration and labour force participation on GDP per capita in 2060. -- Figure 6.1: Australia's social-security system is more targeted to the poor than any other OECD country. Ratio of transfers received by poorest 20 per cent to those received by richest 20 per cent of households, 2012. -- Figure 6.2: Projected pension and allowance payments for single adult as percentage of MTAWE, 2021 to 2061. -- Figure 7.1: Real asset values, December 1988 to December 2021. -- Figure 7.2: Share of homeowners who have a mortgage, by age band, 1990-2017, per cent. -- Figure 7.3: Percentage change in the number of homeless persons, by age band and sex, 2006-11 and 2011-16. -- Figure 9.1: Australian government health expenditure as a percentage of GDP: Successive IGR projections Figure 9.2: Australian government health expenditure actuals (2000-01 to 2020-21) and projections (2021-22 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.3: Real pharmaceutical expenditure 2000-01 to 2019-20, 2018-19 prices. -- Figure 9.4: Australian government aged-care expenditure actuals (2000-01 to 2020-21) and IGR 2021 projections (2021-22 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.5: Australian government percentage annual increase in expenditure, historical trends (aged care 2001-02 to 2019-20 -- health 1985-86 to 2018-19) and IGR 2021 projections (2019-20 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.6: Total government NDIS expenditure (Australian government and state/territory contribution) actuals (2013-14 to 2019-20) and IGR 2021 projections (2020-21 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.7: Total government NDIS expenditure (Australian government and state/territory contribution) actuals (2013-14 to 2019-20) and PBO projections (2020-21 to 2031-32). -- Figure 9.8: Growth in average total hospital admitted patient expenditure per person by age and sex, 2004-05 to 2012-13. -- Figure 10.1: The marginal cost of abatement. -- Figure 10.2: Loss in GDP for different temperature scenarios. -- Figure 10.3: Loss in GDP for pathway scenarios. -- Table 4.1: Summary of IGR demographic assumptions. -- Table 5.1: IGR 40-year projections of age and service pension costs. -- Table 6.1: Composition of government spending over time. -- Table 6.2: Composition of payments to individuals, 2018-19 to 2060-61. -- Table 7.1: Home ownership rates, 1982 to 2017, by age band, per cent. -- Table 7.2: Mean loan-to-value ratios and real net housing equity of mortgagors, by age band, 1990 and 2017. -- Table 7.3: Percentage of low-income renter households in rental stress, by location, 2007-08 to 2017-18. -- Table 7.4: Size of public housing stock and waitlist, 2011-20 Table 7.5: Number of homeless persons and homelessness rate per 10,000 of the population, by age band, 2006-16. -- Table 9.1: Decomposition of total real health expenditure growth, 2011-12 to 2018-19, annual average growth rates. -- Table 9.2: What is in the IGR and what could be in the IGR. -- Table 9.3: Sensitivity of total annual health expenditure growth to alternative morbidity scenarios calculated for the 2021 New South Wales IGR. -- Preface -- Contributors -- 1. Making the Intergenerational Report More Relevant and Useful -- 2. Origin and Evolution of Australia's Intergenerational Reports -- 3. The Intergenerational Report Should Be More Frank and Fearless about Fiscal Sustainability -- 4. The Demography of the Five Intergenerational Reports -- 5. Retirement Incomes: Increasing Inequity, Not Costs, across Generations Is the Intergenerational Problem -- 6. The Future of Social Security -- 7. Australia's Housing System and Intergenerational Sustainability -- 8. Situating Social Developments within Intergenerational Reports -- 9. Health and Aged Care in the Intergenerational Report -- 10. The Intergenerational Report and Climate Change -- 11. The Future of the Intergenerational Report |
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edition | 1st ed |
format | Electronic eBook |
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spelling | Hall, Jane Verfasser aut More Than Fiscal The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia 1st ed Canberra ANU Press 2023 ©2023 1 Online-Ressource (222 Seiten) txt rdacontent c rdamedia cr rdacarrier Description based on publisher supplied metadata and other sources Intro -- List of Illustrations -- Figure 3.1: Underlying cash balance in the 2021 IGR vs 2022-23 budget. -- Figure 3.2: Population projections across IGRs. -- Figure 3.3: Actual vs projected productivity across IGRs. -- Figure 4.1: Population projections across IGRs. -- Figure 4.2: Births and net overseas migration (numbers), 1997-2019, Australia. -- Figure 4.3: Total fertility rate assumptions in successive IGRs. -- Figure 4.4: The TFR, Australia, 1991-92 to 2019-20. -- Figure 4.5: TFRs, English-speaking countries, 2013, 2016 and 2019. -- Figure 4.6: Expectation of life at birth assumptions in successive IGRs, males and females. -- Figure 4.7: Net overseas migration assumptions in successive IGRs ('000s). -- Figure 4.8: Annual net overseas migration (NOM) compared with the annual grants of permanent residence through the Permanent Migration Program, including the humanitarian stream, Australia, 1983-84 to 2016-17. -- Figure 4.9: Sensitivity analysis of the impact of variations in migration and labour force participation on GDP per capita in 2060. -- Figure 6.1: Australia's social-security system is more targeted to the poor than any other OECD country. Ratio of transfers received by poorest 20 per cent to those received by richest 20 per cent of households, 2012. -- Figure 6.2: Projected pension and allowance payments for single adult as percentage of MTAWE, 2021 to 2061. -- Figure 7.1: Real asset values, December 1988 to December 2021. -- Figure 7.2: Share of homeowners who have a mortgage, by age band, 1990-2017, per cent. -- Figure 7.3: Percentage change in the number of homeless persons, by age band and sex, 2006-11 and 2011-16. -- Figure 9.1: Australian government health expenditure as a percentage of GDP: Successive IGR projections Figure 9.2: Australian government health expenditure actuals (2000-01 to 2020-21) and projections (2021-22 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.3: Real pharmaceutical expenditure 2000-01 to 2019-20, 2018-19 prices. -- Figure 9.4: Australian government aged-care expenditure actuals (2000-01 to 2020-21) and IGR 2021 projections (2021-22 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.5: Australian government percentage annual increase in expenditure, historical trends (aged care 2001-02 to 2019-20 -- health 1985-86 to 2018-19) and IGR 2021 projections (2019-20 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.6: Total government NDIS expenditure (Australian government and state/territory contribution) actuals (2013-14 to 2019-20) and IGR 2021 projections (2020-21 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.7: Total government NDIS expenditure (Australian government and state/territory contribution) actuals (2013-14 to 2019-20) and PBO projections (2020-21 to 2031-32). -- Figure 9.8: Growth in average total hospital admitted patient expenditure per person by age and sex, 2004-05 to 2012-13. -- Figure 10.1: The marginal cost of abatement. -- Figure 10.2: Loss in GDP for different temperature scenarios. -- Figure 10.3: Loss in GDP for pathway scenarios. -- Table 4.1: Summary of IGR demographic assumptions. -- Table 5.1: IGR 40-year projections of age and service pension costs. -- Table 6.1: Composition of government spending over time. -- Table 6.2: Composition of payments to individuals, 2018-19 to 2060-61. -- Table 7.1: Home ownership rates, 1982 to 2017, by age band, per cent. -- Table 7.2: Mean loan-to-value ratios and real net housing equity of mortgagors, by age band, 1990 and 2017. -- Table 7.3: Percentage of low-income renter households in rental stress, by location, 2007-08 to 2017-18. -- Table 7.4: Size of public housing stock and waitlist, 2011-20 Table 7.5: Number of homeless persons and homelessness rate per 10,000 of the population, by age band, 2006-16. -- Table 9.1: Decomposition of total real health expenditure growth, 2011-12 to 2018-19, annual average growth rates. -- Table 9.2: What is in the IGR and what could be in the IGR. -- Table 9.3: Sensitivity of total annual health expenditure growth to alternative morbidity scenarios calculated for the 2021 New South Wales IGR. -- Preface -- Contributors -- 1. Making the Intergenerational Report More Relevant and Useful -- 2. Origin and Evolution of Australia's Intergenerational Reports -- 3. The Intergenerational Report Should Be More Frank and Fearless about Fiscal Sustainability -- 4. The Demography of the Five Intergenerational Reports -- 5. Retirement Incomes: Increasing Inequity, Not Costs, across Generations Is the Intergenerational Problem -- 6. The Future of Social Security -- 7. Australia's Housing System and Intergenerational Sustainability -- 8. Situating Social Developments within Intergenerational Reports -- 9. Health and Aged Care in the Intergenerational Report -- 10. The Intergenerational Report and Climate Change -- 11. The Future of the Intergenerational Report Every five years, the Australian treasurer is required to publish an intergenerational report (IGR), which examines the long-term sustainability of current government policies and seeks to determine how demographic, technological and other structural trends might affect the economy and the budget in coming decades Podger, Andrew Sonstige oth Woods, Mike Sonstige oth Erscheint auch als Druck-Ausgabe Hall, Jane More Than Fiscal Canberra : ANU Press,c2023 9781760465773 |
spellingShingle | Hall, Jane More Than Fiscal The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia Intro -- List of Illustrations -- Figure 3.1: Underlying cash balance in the 2021 IGR vs 2022-23 budget. -- Figure 3.2: Population projections across IGRs. -- Figure 3.3: Actual vs projected productivity across IGRs. -- Figure 4.1: Population projections across IGRs. -- Figure 4.2: Births and net overseas migration (numbers), 1997-2019, Australia. -- Figure 4.3: Total fertility rate assumptions in successive IGRs. -- Figure 4.4: The TFR, Australia, 1991-92 to 2019-20. -- Figure 4.5: TFRs, English-speaking countries, 2013, 2016 and 2019. -- Figure 4.6: Expectation of life at birth assumptions in successive IGRs, males and females. -- Figure 4.7: Net overseas migration assumptions in successive IGRs ('000s). -- Figure 4.8: Annual net overseas migration (NOM) compared with the annual grants of permanent residence through the Permanent Migration Program, including the humanitarian stream, Australia, 1983-84 to 2016-17. -- Figure 4.9: Sensitivity analysis of the impact of variations in migration and labour force participation on GDP per capita in 2060. -- Figure 6.1: Australia's social-security system is more targeted to the poor than any other OECD country. Ratio of transfers received by poorest 20 per cent to those received by richest 20 per cent of households, 2012. -- Figure 6.2: Projected pension and allowance payments for single adult as percentage of MTAWE, 2021 to 2061. -- Figure 7.1: Real asset values, December 1988 to December 2021. -- Figure 7.2: Share of homeowners who have a mortgage, by age band, 1990-2017, per cent. -- Figure 7.3: Percentage change in the number of homeless persons, by age band and sex, 2006-11 and 2011-16. -- Figure 9.1: Australian government health expenditure as a percentage of GDP: Successive IGR projections Figure 9.2: Australian government health expenditure actuals (2000-01 to 2020-21) and projections (2021-22 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.3: Real pharmaceutical expenditure 2000-01 to 2019-20, 2018-19 prices. -- Figure 9.4: Australian government aged-care expenditure actuals (2000-01 to 2020-21) and IGR 2021 projections (2021-22 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.5: Australian government percentage annual increase in expenditure, historical trends (aged care 2001-02 to 2019-20 -- health 1985-86 to 2018-19) and IGR 2021 projections (2019-20 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.6: Total government NDIS expenditure (Australian government and state/territory contribution) actuals (2013-14 to 2019-20) and IGR 2021 projections (2020-21 to 2060-61). -- Figure 9.7: Total government NDIS expenditure (Australian government and state/territory contribution) actuals (2013-14 to 2019-20) and PBO projections (2020-21 to 2031-32). -- Figure 9.8: Growth in average total hospital admitted patient expenditure per person by age and sex, 2004-05 to 2012-13. -- Figure 10.1: The marginal cost of abatement. -- Figure 10.2: Loss in GDP for different temperature scenarios. -- Figure 10.3: Loss in GDP for pathway scenarios. -- Table 4.1: Summary of IGR demographic assumptions. -- Table 5.1: IGR 40-year projections of age and service pension costs. -- Table 6.1: Composition of government spending over time. -- Table 6.2: Composition of payments to individuals, 2018-19 to 2060-61. -- Table 7.1: Home ownership rates, 1982 to 2017, by age band, per cent. -- Table 7.2: Mean loan-to-value ratios and real net housing equity of mortgagors, by age band, 1990 and 2017. -- Table 7.3: Percentage of low-income renter households in rental stress, by location, 2007-08 to 2017-18. -- Table 7.4: Size of public housing stock and waitlist, 2011-20 Table 7.5: Number of homeless persons and homelessness rate per 10,000 of the population, by age band, 2006-16. -- Table 9.1: Decomposition of total real health expenditure growth, 2011-12 to 2018-19, annual average growth rates. -- Table 9.2: What is in the IGR and what could be in the IGR. -- Table 9.3: Sensitivity of total annual health expenditure growth to alternative morbidity scenarios calculated for the 2021 New South Wales IGR. -- Preface -- Contributors -- 1. Making the Intergenerational Report More Relevant and Useful -- 2. Origin and Evolution of Australia's Intergenerational Reports -- 3. The Intergenerational Report Should Be More Frank and Fearless about Fiscal Sustainability -- 4. The Demography of the Five Intergenerational Reports -- 5. Retirement Incomes: Increasing Inequity, Not Costs, across Generations Is the Intergenerational Problem -- 6. The Future of Social Security -- 7. Australia's Housing System and Intergenerational Sustainability -- 8. Situating Social Developments within Intergenerational Reports -- 9. Health and Aged Care in the Intergenerational Report -- 10. The Intergenerational Report and Climate Change -- 11. The Future of the Intergenerational Report |
title | More Than Fiscal The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia |
title_auth | More Than Fiscal The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia |
title_exact_search | More Than Fiscal The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia |
title_full | More Than Fiscal The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia |
title_fullStr | More Than Fiscal The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia |
title_full_unstemmed | More Than Fiscal The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia |
title_short | More Than Fiscal |
title_sort | more than fiscal the intergenerational report sustainability and public policy in australia |
title_sub | The Intergenerational Report, Sustainability and Public Policy in Australia |
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