14 January 2026

The Feds will bail us out of our debt ... or will they?

| By Peter Strong
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Andrew Barr, Chris Steel, Yvette Berry

Consultation has already begun for the 2026-27 ACT Budget, with the mid-year budget review due in the coming weeks. Pictured: Chief Minister Andrew Barr, Treasurer Chris Steel and Deputy Chief Minister Yvette Berry. Photo: Ian Bushnell.

When I ran at the last ACT election, I talked a lot about economic management and I was struck by how many voters didn’t even realise the Territory had debt at all.

When they learned how large it had become, the most common response was a shrug and a reassuring “that’s OK, the Federal Government will bail us out”.

The truth is far less comforting and the Northern Territory’s experience shows exactly why.

The Commonwealth does not bail out states or territories. It never has. Even when the NT hit a genuine fiscal crisis in 2018–19 there was no federal rescue package. What the NT received instead was something far more subtle and far more consequential – fiscal intervention.

The NT kept its parliament and its ministers – they still got paid. But real autonomy evaporated. Budget settings were effectively dictated by the Commonwealth through conditional funding, mandated plans and external oversight.

For businesses and communities, the impact was immediate – uncertainty, delayed projects and a government suddenly unable to make long‑term commitments because they didn’t have control.

The ACT is even more exposed than the NT. We are the national capital and cannot be allowed to drift into a debt spiral or a crisis of confidence.

That means the Commonwealth should act earlier, more quietly and with a firmer hand – not to save the ACT Government, but to protect national credibility. Intervention here would be about reputation management, not generosity.

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The comforting belief that “the Feds will bail us out” is really a belief that someone else will take responsibility for our choices. That the taxpayers of Western Australia, NSW, Queensland and so on will be happy to pay.

But the NT example shows that the Commonwealth does not absorb territory debt. It does not rescue governments from the consequences of long‑term fiscal negligence. It steps in to impose discipline, not to relieve pressure.

As I have previously written, trust is important in a democracy. When people stop trusting that governments are managing money responsibly, they disengage or stop paying tax. When governments stop trusting voters with the truth, they drift into denial. And when both sides assume someone else will fix the problem, the space for good government shrinks.

The ACT still has time to avoid that path, but only if we stop comforting ourselves with the idea of a bailout that will never come.

Fiscal pressure narrows choices, erodes service quality and gradually shifts power away from elected governments toward creditors, credit agencies and then to the Commonwealth.

The real danger is not sudden collapse but the quiet loss of autonomy. Maybe Canberrans prefer that?

When interest costs are higher than those for essential services, governments lose the ability to set their own priorities. Budgets become reactive rather than strategic. Taxes rise just to pay down debt.

Treasuries and credit agencies don’t panic about debt because it is large. They worry when debt dictates decisions.

Two ratios tell the story.

S&P Global Ratings now expects the ACT’s total tax-supported debt to reach around 200 per cent of operating revenue, one of the highest ratios in Australia (after Victoria which is also in deep financial trouble).

At the same time, interest costs are projected to reach 26 per cent of taxation revenue by 2028–29, with interest alone predicted to be 10 per cent of total expenditure.

That is 10 per cent of the tax and charges we Canberrans pay going straight to multinational financial institutions.

History is blunt. Victoria in the early 1990s discovered that once interest dominates the budget, ideology becomes irrelevant. Then much of its public assets were sold to manage debt.

Does the ACT have time to choose a different path? Restoring fiscal sovereignty requires honesty, discipline and action.

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The Libs and Greens have forced a review into the ACTs fiscal sustainability. Good. A clear fiscal risk statement now would set the baseline.

And the establishment of an independent ACT Fiscal Council would also provide credibility and early engagement with the Commonwealth, on the ACT’s terms.

Legislated protections are needed including interest caps and debt growth limits. Pausing non-essential capital spending would stop interest costs from compounding.

Our projected capital expenditure is over $8 billion and much of it can be responsibly delayed until finances improve.

But can the government resist pressure from the CFMEU and their construction companies to do that? I think not.

Will our federal elected representatives demand action? It’s Labor Governments at either end of this and a local Labor Senator is the finance minister. So maybe they will just write a cheque for $18 billion for their mates in the ACT?

That’d be a vote winner in the rest of Australia … not.

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Bill Gemmell7:29 am 15 Jan 26

I am more than a bit alarmed that the author has not mentioned the biggest financial risk the Territory is facing in a discussion about financial management.

Of course, I refer to climate change adaptation. No point in calling it mitigation anymore because latest data suggests we have already got past the point of no return.

Ah yes, that famous point of no return …. have you got an estimated end of civilisation date Bill ?

I’m most curious because if it’s soon I better pop out to Coles and stock up on all the essentials, especially sun cream, icy poles and chocolate.

G’day Bill,
I like a lot of Australians have some concern about climate, however, that risk will not be lessened one iota, by the ACT Government spending like drunks on a bender.

Evan Williams7:14 am 15 Jan 26

More Liberal complaining with no forward thinking answers, policies or a perception of cohesion as a potential alternative. So anti everything, progress, womens rights and freedom from religious interference in government. Until they can look and act like a coordinated moderate, innovative and forward thinking party we a are doomed to a tired but reliable labour government.

HiddenDragon11:48 pm 14 Jan 26

“We are the national capital and cannot be allowed to drift into a debt spiral or a crisis of confidence.”

The problem with that assumption is that the ACT is by no means the only sub-national jurisdiction which could conceivably fall into a “debt spiral or crisis of confidence” and there are far fewer votes (and no swinging electorates) here to focus the hearts and minds of our federal FIFO political class.

More to the point, perhaps, the Commonwealth’s own fiscal problems are now such that all we seem to get are constant efforts at cost-shifting and breathtakingly hypocritical one-off interventions such as Albanese’s recent exhortation about the more efficient running of State and Territory public hospitals.

A Commonwealth government with this outlook will not be losing sleep over the thought of Canberrans paying more and more for less and less as debts and interest payments mount – we’re on our own, and the dimwits and denialists who think there’ll be a bailout or some other form of helpful intervention are in for a particularly rude shock.

Another article giving vent to those usual suspects linked to the Canberra Liberals with their customary angst directed towards the government. I am desperately waiting to see what the Canberra Liberals, under this new leadership team and the most conservative in the party’s history, has to offer voters. Not good judging by a simple visit to their Facebook pages!

Mark Parton, this TikTok and media tart is desperately trying to shore up angst against the government for the light rail extension and the recent public transport changes in Belconnen, but again, he doesn’t quite know where to stand with his weathervane antics, asking readers to provide him with feedback on what they think!

Boorish as usual with his stomach turning culinary endeavours he has recently announced his latest stunt, a ‘pub crawl’ throughout Canberra to introduce himself to Canberrans with his deputy also promoting his efforts on her FB site! Like honestly, there is nothing I can think of that has destroyed more families than addiction and alcohol abuse and Mark Parton, Liberal party leader is now trying to benefit from its misery by announcing he is going on a pub crawl! Mr Parton is the same person who in an assembly debate a few years back received much media attention with his desperate efforts to undermine the government’s endeavours in tackling gambling harm, with him claiming that gaming was nothing more than being addicted to chocolate!

I can only imagine how social media would light up with those haters out there, prevalent on this site in their constant moaning against the Labor government would think if Andrew Barr or Katy Gallagher announced that they were embarking on a ‘pub crawl’!

Gregg Heldon10:10 am 15 Jan 26

A simple yes or no question Jack. Do you consume alcohol? Yes or no. No waffle. No deflecting. Yes or no?

Deborah Johns4:12 pm 14 Jan 26

Fiscal intervention is just what is needed. Bring it on!

What gets me down is that all the money and effort that ACT Labor spends on spin (rather than competently and economically implementing things of substance) seems to be working for them.

Voters are ignorant of the massive debt because Barr and Steel instead describe it as “investment” and temporary, forecasting imminent budget surpluses that they know will never occur.

Barr’s media team then spend all their time on Our CBR and social posts (even paying influencers for positive content) to spruik how glorious everything is in the People’s Republic of Canberra. They also seem to enter (pay to enter) every private global-ranking survey going, so they can win a prize – oh, this week Canberra was voted the best city in the world for raising cavoodles!

Finally, when doubts arise about whether ACT Labor could do better, the Liberal boogeyman is dragged out – whoooo, scary scary, vote for the Liberals and they’ll slash jobs and eat your first-born child as they are all Murdoch-loving religious whackjobs. Yes, there are the Greens, which you can vote for if you have to, as they mostly won’t get over the line and will preference us. Even if they do win, they are easy to hoodwink to give us the numbers. Don’t vote for any independents, though. People like Thomas Emerson and David Pocock are really just Liberal-party stooges. You can’t trust them. And besides, imagine the Senate without Katy or an inner-north coffee shop without Andy – it’s unCanberran! Just do the right thing, and vote like you always do. As we say here in ACT Labor, “vote lazy, not crazy.”

Well, the ACT Labor spin has been pretty much foolproof for decades now, despite the place visibly falling into wrack and ruin and the cost of living skyrocketing. Many Canberrans clearly choose to create their own reality rather than confront the uncomfortable truth.

Capital Retro2:42 pm 14 Jan 26

All services like Education, Health, Policing Correctional Services, Road and Rail etc. can be run by NSW in the future. It will eliminate an enormous level of bureaucracy which now duplicates what it should be.

The Arboretum needs to be sold off for housing and further vanity developments there need to be forgotten about. The proceeds would go a long way to reducing our debt.

The CBR brand slush fund needs to be deeply audited to see where the money is spent.

The ACT Legislative Assembly is not needed. We don’t even need a council. The existing members can be offered seats in the NSW electoral system.

The tram should be abandoned. I don’t think the NSW government want’s its problems with the Parramatta tram extension duplicated.

NSW Government should take over the unfunded public service pension scheme which the ACT has been struggling with since the inception of self-government.

I could go on.

It’s amazing how Steel can stuff up so many projects with massive cost blow outs yet still get promoted to Treasurer. What he knows about management and finance you could write on the head of a pin

Capital Retro9:57 pm 14 Jan 26

Steel’s nickname should be Errol.

Fellow boomers will know what I am referring to.

Debt can be OK when it is for infrastructure that has a benefit cost ratio of greater than around 1.2. The problem here is that the ACT is borrowing to meet running costs and interest payments. This is not sustainble.

PaperTigerGovt11:03 am 14 Jan 26

Katy Gallagher owes the ACT $1bn. She saddled us with this huge debt when she refused to make the Federal Govt responsible for the Mr Fluffy debacle, even though it happened long before self government, and was therefore the responsibility of the Feds.

What the feds need to do, rather than a bail-out, is fix the GST so the revenue generated from it grows with the population.

There is a real disconnect between spending to ensure political survival and the realisation that the money belongs to us and comes out of our pockets through the many charges, taxes and levies (some of which are just basic loot and pillage from taxpayers). The photo looks like they are conspiring to see what they can stuff up next.

The loss of autonomy isn’t the real risk here Peter. What matters most is how local Labor spends OUR money—recklessly, on popular projects rather than essential needs.

The bigger concern is who ends up paying the price for this careless spending – it is us the ratepayers or those who are then on-charged via their increased rents that include rates.

With Andrew Barr set to hit the eject button and retire to Newcastle at the ripe old age of 52, the responsibility will then fall to junior, Chris Steel, to keep the music playing here on the financial Titanic.

Meanwhile, the ACT continues to shoulder one of the country’s largest bureaucracies in what is little more than a glorified local council, home to the most expensive bus services with many empty buses that never go where needed, and the highest water prices in Australia —all while hospital wait times remain among the second worst in the nation.

100% Peter!

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