10 December 2025

New inquiry to examine if the ACT is fiscally sustainable

| By Claire Fenwicke
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Treasurer Chris Steel

Treasurer Chris Steel is wary a select committee inquiry into the ACT’s fiscal sustainability will be a ‘political exercise’ but he’s happy to be proven wrong. Photo: Ian Bushnell.

A select committee will be set up to examine the ACT’s fiscal sustainability, but any suggestions to improve the bottom line won’t be applied to the upcoming ACT Budget.

Canberra Liberals leader Mark Parton and ACT Greens leader Shane Rattenbury joined forces to have the inquiry established on the last sitting day of the Assembly for 2025 in an attempt to understand how the Territory came to be in its financial situation, and where it could go from here.

The 2025-26 ACT Budget forecast a headline net operating deficit of $424.9 million and a cash operating deficit of $63 million.

Interest expenses were more than $522 million for 2024-25 and predicted to exceed $1 billion in 2028-29.

Mr Parton said fiscal sustainability wasn’t just a matter for accountants, it laid the foundation for “every service Canberrans rely on”.

“This motion aims to shine a bright torchlight into the deepening cavern that is ACT finances,” he said.

“We want to get to the bottom of the things that have led to a strangulation of services and a rising of costs.”

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He pointed to S&P’s further downgrading of the ACT’s credit rating to AA and rising rates and levies as reasons why this needed to be examined now.

“This government doesn’t just spend, it overspends, under delivers, and leaves families to pick up the bill,” Mr Parton said.

The select committee is expected to call on a broad base of internal and external witnesses to evaluate the fiscal position and sustainability of the budget, assess how well the ACT Government is seeking and obtaining Commonwealth funding, assess the effectiveness and fairness of own-source revenue, review the costs associated with managing and delivering government services, analyse the current and proposed capital works pipeline, assess the effectiveness of the ACT’s wellbeing framework, and any other financial management matters that arise.

“If we fail to act now, the debt we ignore today will become the burden our children carry tomorrow,” Mr Parton said.

Mr Rattenbury added that the budget and finances were key issues that were constantly raised and, given the substantive crossbench this term of government, it was “incumbent” on all members to find out what was contributing to the ACT’s bottom line.

“It is the parliament that passes the budget when you have a minority government, and so my view is that we all need to be involved in this conversation,” he said.

“We need to be exploring options about what is the long-term pathway for the ACT’s finances.”

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The motion passed unopposed, but Treasurer Chris Steel flagged that the committee could not rely heavily on treasury staff to assist with the work, as they’ll be busy preparing the 2026-27 ACT Budget, as well as negotiating with the Commonwealth on funding and agreements.

“It is important that the committee does not rely on treasury as the sole source of the information for their review,” he said.

“If matters are raised in March [when the interim report is due], it is too late for the 2026-27 Budget. But, it may be a longer-term consideration.”

He also said, with Assembly funds to be spent on this inquiry, it had to be different to both the annual reports and estimates hearings, and the independent budget review provided each year by Pegasus Economics.

Mr Steel did voice concerns about the motions, stating he felt the terms of reference were “eerily similar” to the Tony Abbott-era Commission on Audit and he was worried this would be an “entirely political exercise”.

He also took a shot at the Opposition and crossbench, and their criticisms of the ACT Government’s attempts to raise money while also asking for more services.

“There is a role for every member of the Assembly in addressing our fiscal challenges,” Mr Steel said.

“The chamber cannot oppose and curtail every revenue measure, call on the government to continue to spend more and more, oppose sensible savings and reprioritisation measures by the executive, and then [expect to be able to] credibly argue that the government is not effectively managing the budget and the Territory’s finances.”

It’s expected the select committee will deliver its full findings by August 2026.

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The bottom line is that the ACT has too small an area and population to sustain it’s own government. Always has always will.

The sensible solution would be to have a local council for the ACT and either have the federal or NSW governments taking care of the government stuff.

Oh wait that’s what we basically had before Labor went directly against our referendum result and foisted self government upon us.

Steel and Barr will appoint some Labor friendly consultant for $100,000 per day to work on an undefined scope of work that will report whatever they want them to say.

Quick pub test would suggest we are broke, our only way out of this is to cut useless work from home ACT public servants, scrap junk projects (almost all projects), stop giving cash away to freeloaders, and increase rates to about $10k per year – and only then we might be able to balance the books before 2050.

Did you actually read the article? Its a Legislative Assembly Committee that has been set up. Hence Barr and Steel can’t just magically appoint a consultant of their choice.

HiddenDragon10:57 pm 10 Dec 25

The best thing that this review could do would be to compare the cost of service delivery in the ACT, across the full range of government functions, with best practice costs nationally.

The net difference – which would likely run to many hundreds of millions per year, if not more – would be the price which Canberra households and businesses pay for the “privilege” of the current model of self government.

A further calculation, which expressed the scope for efficiencies as an average (percentage) saving for households and businesses on current rates and charges, should stimulate some very useful reflection and debate.

Such calculations are already effectively done through the Commonwealth Grants Commission as part of the GST process. There are oodles of published papers as part of that.

Bottom line is: if you want the tram or not, we can’t afford it.

Blame your friends, they voted for this

Deborah Johns5:13 pm 10 Dec 25

Let’s save the money the review will cost. The ACT is broke. The debt is at highest levels ever. The ‘solution’ will be to raise taxes and levies on everything. And add in a few new taxes and levies. Barr will depart and leave those Canberrans who remain to sort out the mess he and his acolytes created. I won’t see it fixed in my lifetime. There it is. Review not needed.

Thanks for your work on this Review Deb. Now we can save the money and provide better health services.

David Watson2:47 pm 10 Dec 25

I suspect Mark Parton had to twist Rattenbury to support this review as I suspect the tram’s future costs are to going to feature at the forefront of expenditure. A Benjamin Franklin listing with party/MP politic projects on one side and essential expenditure on the other would be a nice revelation.

Flogging a dead horse

Common Sense11:31 am 10 Dec 25

Interest expense of $1 billion forecast, and in the same year, they are forecasting total revenue of just over $10 billion. Not sure we need to waste more money on an inquiry….this is unsustainable in anyone’s language, except for ACT Labor and Greens

$100million failed IT project. Although it was a different year, it still equates to 1/4 of our operating deficit. Then there’s cost and lost revenue of failed myway… mr steel must be aware of the hole in our budget that he is responsible for, right? Right?? Yeah, it’s all just politics and nothing to be learned from this. Funny but typical that shane is involved. “Its the government’s fault, governments suck” …but shane YOU were the government for a decade, classic green.

This almost sounds like a Monty Python sketch (just like the Barr Government).
What happens when they find the ACT is not financially viable & probably bankrupt ?

Capital Retro11:19 am 10 Dec 25

If it was in the private sector franky22, the directors would face gaol for running an insolvent company.

The way it is now, Barr will say “it would have been a lot worse if the Liberals were in power” and he will resign gracefully with no personal accountability to become a commissar in the Socialist Republic of Victoria.

The Governor-General has the power to dismiss the Legislative Assembly and appoint a commissioner in their place.

The usual solution will be applied, increase ACT land taxes, property rates again even though they’re already the highest in Australia. There is this view that all Canberrans are wealthy, can and will pay off the ACT government’s bills even when they are the result of waste, incompetence, mismanagement and perhaps some corruption. This is the most expensive city in which to live in Australia. Sydney is way cheaper in terms of rates, taxes, food, clothes, public transport, medical and dental expenses, plus it has doctors including specialists along with shorter wait times for surgery. This ACT government has destroyed Canberra.

We should petition the GG immediately

On the board of the Hawthorn football club.

Hard not to agree. Costs increase when entire families travel interstate for services. Government incompetance means families are slipping in to the poverty trap

Lol go an live in Sydney then psycho. You are in for a rude shock if you think its ‘cheaper’ in any shape or form.

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