When taking a step back is the quickest way forward
David Crosbie
Revisiting an existing report that identified the barriers faced by not for profits could hold the solutions the sector needs now, writes David Crosbie.˜
In January 2010, the Productivity Commission released one of the best researched and well-informed reviews of the charities and not-for-profit sector ever published in Australia. The foreword to that report was written by Gary Banks AO, chairman, The Productivity Commission (PC):
"A wide range of regulatory, institutional and funding reforms are needed to enhance (sector) effectiveness and achieve even better outcomes for the community ..... While there have been a number of reviews and inquiries over the years, implementing identified reforms has been slow... ."
The new Assistant Minister for Charities Andrew Leigh has indicated he is committed to implementing the policies outlined in the ALP National Platform. One of the ten key actions set out in these policies relating to the charities and NFP sector is to: "3b.˜ review the Recommendations of the 2010 Productivity Commission Report on the Not for Profit Sector".
More than a decade since this seminal report was published, it is now on the government?s agenda to revisit its findings and recommendations.
I would like to commend some of the key people involved in the 2010 PC report; then commissioner Robert Fitzgerald, associate commissioner Dennis Trewin and a research team that included Professor Myles McGregor-Lowndes and Dr Jenny Gordon.˜ They did good work.
What is remarkable about this report is how current many of the findings and recommendations still are.˜ Here are some examples from the opening summary:
- "The level of understanding among the wider community of the sector?s role and contribution is poor and deserves attention."
- "The current regulatory environment for the sector is complex, lacks coherence, sufficient transparency, and is costly to NFPs."
- "Current information requirements imposed on NFPs for funding and evaluation purposes are poorly designed and unduly burdensome."
- "Harmonisation of fundraising regulation through the adoption of a model act should be an early priority for governments."