AI Leadership Summit 2025 Highlights
Following his appearance at the 2020 Economic and Political Overview launch event in Sydney, Centre for Policy Development Chair, Terry Moran AC, argues for the importance of community based approaches to providing critical services. He argues that the strength of place-based public policy solutions are a case for greater collaboration between the states and the Commonwealth.
The Centre for Policy Development (CPD) has found that locally connected, place-based approaches to delivering critical services achieve better economic and social outcomes. CPD is not alone in this finding.
Sandra McPhee’s expert advisory panel report on employment services, delivered in 2018, recognised that “the most successful government programs are those that are flexible and adaptable to local conditions, allowing communities to create local solutions to their own needs and maximising employment opportunities”.[1] More recently, David Thodey’s Independent Review of the Australian Public Service said that “a whole-of-government framework for place-based investment that promotes joint decision-making on services will cater for communities’ specific needs and opportunities better”.[2] Peter Shergold found the same in his review of settlement outcomes for humanitarian migrants. In an oration in honour of the late John Cain last year, I said “the best examples of public sector service delivery at the national level are formal joint ventures between the Commonwealth and the States – public hospitals and schools. Each more efficient than their private equivalents.”[3]The housing crisis is a wicked problem, one casting a long shadow over many Australians. The sheer lack of viable and affordable options increases the personal challenges forcing many into homelessness. If we identify those at risk, appropriately fund early interventions and invest in medium- to long-term housing options, we can potentially limit the number of vulnerable falling into homelessness and set them on a path towards self-sustainability, writes Workskil Australia CEO Nicole Dwyer.
Read more Opinion article December 6, 2023There is little doubt that Australia’s disability support system is complex. While the National Disability Insurance Scheme (NDIS) is a major part of the support landscape, it sits alongside myriad other services provided by different levels of government, some targeted at people with disability and others for the whole community. For many users, navigating the system can feel like wandering through a labyrinth in the dark, with a dizzying array of options leading down paths unknown.
Read more Opinion article August 19, 2021Anonymous data from support services platform Ask Izzy shows a massive spike in demand for emergency relief and mental health services during recent lockdowns. Infoxchange CEO David Spriggs says the data makes a case for ongoing funding commitments from all levels of government.