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Securing the global competitiveness of Australia’s cities

by Staff Writer
February 23, 2018
in News, Planning, Urban Development
Reading Time: 3 mins read
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Infrastructure Australia is calling for the Federal Government to have a greater leadership role in securing the global competitiveness of the country’s largest cities with the release of its new paper Future Cities: Planning for our growing population.

The latest round of research from the nation’s independent infrastructure advisor recommends that the Commonwealth Government establish a framework of incentives to improve the productivity, liveability and affordability of Australia’s largest cities.

“Australia’s cities are the powerhouses of our economy and they need to be a national priority of government,” Infrastructure Australia CEO, Philip Davies, said.

“Asia’s global middle class as well as our own rapidly growing population will unlock new economic frontiers for Australia, but we need to position our cities to take advantage of this historic opportunity.

“Australia needs to start setting national objectives that allow our cities to realise their full potential and remain globally competitive.

“The Australian Government is right to think that investment shouldn’t just come in the form of give and forget grants. We need to introduce more structure and accountability by tying funding for our cities to clear national performance outcomes.”

The paper says that with greater national leadership there is the opportunity to structure infrastructure funding in a way that incentivises the delivery of nation-shaping reforms.

“That is why we are recommending that the Australian Government establish a consistent framework of incentives to drive the delivery of national benefits within our cities at the project, place and reform level,” Mr Davies said.

The new framework would include a hierarchy of three incentive types:

  • National Partnership and Project Agreements which make project funding contingent on meeting specified outcomes across the project lifecycle and demonstrated economic benefit
  • City Deals which apply a series of locally and nationally informed objectives to a city or part of a city, and make infrastructure payments for the area contingent on meeting those objectives
  • Infrastructure Reform Incentives which would provide additional infrastructure funding above existing allocation in return for the delivery of policy and regulatory reform focused on improving the productivity, liveability and affordability of Australian cities

To be successful, the design and implementation of these incentives would need to be informed by a well-evidenced national investment and reform agenda for Australian cities.

The paper, Future Cities: Planning for our growing population, was launched at a breakfast event hosted by the Committee for Melbourne and the Committee for Sydney. It is available for download at infrastructureaustralia.gov.au.

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