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Ten
Advantages of a Federal Constitution
By Geoffrey
de Q. Walker
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here for PDF version
The
constitutional debate in Australia tends to concentrate on
and exaggerate the minor inconveniences of federalism, making
no mention of its great advantages.
Worldwide
support for federalism is greater today than ever before.1
The old attitude of benign contempt towards the federal political
structure has been replaced by a growing conviction that it
enables a nation to have the best of both worlds, those of
shared rule and self-rule, coordinated national government
and diversity, creative experimentation and liberty. Within
Australian political-intellectual circles, however, attitudes
to federalism range from viewing it as a necessary evil to,
as one recent work puts it, Ôwaiting for an appropriate time
in which to abolish our spent State legislaturesÕ.2
To some
extent those attitudes are understandable. The pattern of
constitutional interpretation followed by the High Court over
most of this century has consistently tended to favour the
expansion of Commonwealth power at the expense of the states.
This has made it harder for the states to perform their proper
role, so that the advantages of constitutionally decentralised
government are increasingly difficult to identify and evaluate.
These advantages are discussed below.
1.
The right of choice and exit
A federal
system allows citizens to compare political systems and Ôvote
with their feetÕ by moving to a state they find more congenial.
That this right of exit is a political right as important
but much older than the right to vote is obvious from the
events leading up to the fall of the Soviet Union. The communist
governments were the only regimes in history ever to suppress
the right of exit almost completely. The Soviet authorities
well knew that if their subjects should ever seize or be granted
that right, the communist system would instantly collapse.
And that, of course, is what happened.
The citizen
in a liberal unitary state who is dissatisfied with the national
government may move to another country. But it is becoming
harder to obtain a permanent resident visa for the kind of
country to which one might wish to emigrate. Globalisation
notwithstanding, immigration is increasingly unpopular with
voters the world over.
In a federation,
however (including a quasi-federal association such as the
European Union), there is complete freedom to migrate to other
states. This has occurred on a massive scale in Australia,
especially during the 1980s and early 1990s when Australians
moved in huge numbers from the then heavily governed southern
states to the then wide open spaces of Queensland. When centralists
give federalism the disparaging label ÔstatesÕ rightsÕ, they
are therefore obscuring the fact that it is above all the
peopleÕs right to vote with their feet that is protected
by the constitutional division of sovereignty in a federal
system.
2.
The possibility of experiment
Federalism
allows and encourages experimentation in political, social
and economic matters. It is more conducive to rational progress
because it enables the results of different approaches to
be compared easily. The results of experience in oneÕs own
country are also less easily ignored than evidence from foreign
lands. All this is particularly important in times of rapid
social change. As Karl Mannheim pointed out, Ôevery major
phase of social change constitutes a choice between alternativesÕ,3 and there is no
way a legislator can be certain in advance which policy will
work best.
Nonetheless,
hardly a week passes without some activist group lamenting
the ÔinconsistentÕ (the term being misused to mean merely
ÔdifferentÕ) approaches taken by state laws and calling for
uniform ÔnationalÕ legislation to deal with a particular problem.
Behind these calls for uniformity lies a desire to impose
the activistsÕ preferred approach on the whole Commonwealth,
precisely so that evidence about the effectiveness of other
approaches in Australian conditions will not become available.
Centralists
also tend to assume that uniformity and centralisation of
the law bring greater legal and commercial certainty. But
uniformity and certainty are quite unrelated. That is clear
from experience with the federal tax laws and family tax law,
which are uniform but at the same time severly lack certainty
or predictability.
Sometimes
the gains from nationwide uniformity will outweigh the benefits
of independent experimentation. This will usually be the case
in areas where there is long experience to draw on, such as
defence arrangements, the official language, railway gauges,
currency, bills of exchange, weights and measures, and sale
of goods. But experimentation has special advantages in dealing
with the new problems presented in a rapidly changing society,
or in developing new solutions when the old ones are no longer
working.
3.
Accommodating regional preferences and diversity
Unity
in diversity. The decentralisation of power under
a federal constitution gives a nation the flexibility to accommodate
economic and cultural differences. These characteristics correlate
signif-icantly with geography, and state laws in a federation
can be adapted to local conditions in a way that is difficult
to achieve through a national government. By these means overall
satisfaction can be maximised4 and the winner-take-all
problem inherent in raw demo-cracy alleviated.
Paradoxically,
perhaps, a structure that provides an outlet for minority
views strengthens overall national unity. Without the guarantee
of regional self-government, for instance, Western Australia
would not have joined the Commonwealth. If that guarantee
were abolished, the West might secede, perhaps taking one
or two other states with it. Federalism thus has an important
role, as Lord Bryce observed, in keeping the peace and preventing
national fragmentation.5
Cultural
differences in Australia. Some commentators see
sociocultural diversity as the only possible explanation and
justification of federalism and argue that Australia is too
homogeneous to be a federation. Yet federalism plainly works
best when sociocultural differences are not too great
or too territorially delineated. Multi-ethnic federations
are among the hardest to sustain. AustraliaÕs relative sociocultural
homogeneity is therefore an argument for, not against, a federal
structure.
Isolating
discord. FederalismÕs tolerance for diversity has
the further advantage of preventing the national government
from being forced to take sides on matters of purely regional
concern. This is consistent with the axiom of modern management
science that problems should so far as possible be dealt with
where they arise. For example, the Northern TerritoryÕs voluntary
euthanasia legislation became a national political issue because,
as a territory enactment, it could be overridden by a Commonwealth
Act. Had the issue arisen in a state, there might still have
been a nationwide debate but the federal government would
not have been directly involved.
4.
Participation in government and the countering of elitism
A federation
is inherently more democratic than a unitary system because
there are more levels of government for public opinion to
affect.6
The
fall and rise of political elitism. This more deeply
democratic aspect of federalism is especially important at
a time when elitist theories of government, albeit clothed
in democratic rhetoric, are once again in vogue. The struggle
between the idea of government by the people and government
by an elite is as old as the Western political tradition itself.
Elitism, however, has been dominant throughout most of history.
Throughout
the 19th century, critics assailed the belief that the common
man could govern as being contrary to experience and an absurdity.
One after another, new theories were advanced to justify rule
by a select few, on technocratic grounds, on the basis of
some romantic ÔsupermanÕ mystique, or by reason of a supposed
historical inevitability. In the 20th century those theories
brought forth the twin poisoned fruit of communism and Hitlerian
national socialism.
The 1960s
saw the sprouting of a new hybrid model of government that
lies somewhere between the traditional poles of democracy
and elitism, a model in which the power of an enlightened
minority would help democracy to survive and progress. Variations
of this model have come to be known as the Ôtheories of democratic
elitismÕ.
The new
wave of elitism has gained momentum from the trend towards
globalisation. The growth of global consciousness is no doubt
a good thing, but the other side of the coin is that it has
opened the way for undemocratic bodies such as the United
Nations and its agencies to implement an elitist agenda under
the pretext of promulgating Ôinternational normsÕ.7
International relations circles have acknowledged this problem
and labelled it Ôdemocratic deficitÕ,8
but no steps other than cosmetic measures have been taken
to overcome it.
Creative
controversy. So long as people are free, they will
disagree. In that sense conflict is an inescapable part of
civilised life. It is only authoritarian governments that
see liberal freedom as encouraging social division and seek
to abolish conflict by creating a false consensus.
The
ÔvoiceÕ factor. Democratic participation in a federation
is also enhanced by what is called the factor of ÔvoiceÕ.
The basic logic of this idea is that the size of the political
unit, as measured by the number of members, is a relevant
variable in upholding the individualÕs political sovereignty,
quite apart from the opportunity for exit.9 If for any reason
people are unwilling or unable to exercise their right of
exit, they may be able to exercise ÔvoiceÕ, defined as activity
that participates in determining political choices. Voice
is more effective in small than in large political unitsÑone
vote is more likely to be decisive in an electorate of 100
than in an electorate of 1000 or 1 million. It is also easier
for one person or small group to organise an influential coalition
in a localised community than in a large and complex polity.10
5.
The federal division of powers protects liberty
Barrier
of our liberty. The diffusion of lawmaking power
under federalism is a shield against an arbitrary central
government. By dividing sovereignty, the federal division
of powers reduces both the risk of authoritarianism and the
apprehension of it. The states help to preserve judicial independence
and impartiality as well. The existence of independent state
court structures prevents a national government from filling
all the courts in the land with judges believed to be its
supporters.
That this
aspect of the federal compact has not attracted much attention
or comment in Australia is probably a function of history.
Newcomers from Europe often remark that Australians are too
complacent about their freedom because they have never had
to fight for it. That is not quite true, but the perception
is generally correct regarding internal threats. There was
no turbulent formative period in Australia comparable to the
American revolutionary era, which seems permanently to have
sensitised Americans to infringements of their freedom.
Recent
assaults. A succession of federal government attacks
on civil and political rights over recent decades make such
nonchalance now quite unjustified. Malcolm FraserÕs retrospective
tax legislation, for instance, broke the constitutional convention
against ex post facto lawmaking and led in due course to the
widely criticised practice of Ôlegislation by ministerial
fiatÕ.11
Proliferating quasi-judicial tribunals took politically sensitive
areas of law away from the ordinary courts, thereby depriving
accused persons of due process and subjecting them to rulings
by tribunals whose members may have been appointed precisely
because they were known not to be impartial.12
One of
the most dramatic challenges to liberty was the Australia
Card Bill 1985, which would have required citizens to carry
a government number recorded on an identity card. Among its
many other consequences, this legislation would have reversed
the constitutional presumption that it is for the government
to justify its actions to the people, not the other way around.13
Especially
arresting is the fact that such attacks on liberty have occurred,
not during a war or similar calamity that might have excused
or explained some of them, but in a period of peace and general
prosperity. A country with a recent record like that has no
reason to assume that its freedom and democratic rights are
secure. It has much to fear from any further concentration
of government power.
An
end in itself. In a properly working federation,
a national government seeking to implement a uniform policy
in an area where it has no constitutional power must learn
to proceed by negotiating and seeking consensus, not by diktat,
bribery or menaces. Government by consensus can not only be
more efficient, it can also be an end in itself. The relative
slowness of the process of consensus-seeking, especially in
a federation, is a source of the great stability of federal
systems and of their exceptional political efficiency.
6.
Better supervision of government
Decentralised
governments make better decisions than centralised ones, for
reasons additional to the spur of competition provided by
the citizenÕs right of choice and exit.14
State governments can be more closely supervised because
of lower monitoring costs. There are fewer programmes and
employees, and the amounts of tax revenue involved are smaller.
Citizens can exercise more effective control over government
officials when everything is on a smaller scale.15 Unlike the Commonwealth,
the states cannot create money, and this further limits the
scope for abuse of power.
Large
governments encourage wasteful lobbying by interest groups
engaged in what economists call Ôrent-seekingÕ, the pursuit
of special group benefits or privileges. Rent-seeking is easier
in large than in small governments because it is harder for
ordinary citizens to see who is preying on them.
All but
one of the worldÕs geographically large countries are now
federations (in ChinaÕs case, de facto) for reasons of effective
supervision or sheer governability. The exception is Indonesia,
which is belatedly considering a federal solution.
7.
Stability
Stability
is a cardinal virtue in government. Stable government enables
individuals and groups to plan their activities with some
confidence and so makes innovation and lasting progress possible.
Political stability is much valued by ordinary people because
they are the ones likely to suffer the most from sudden shocks
or changes of direction in the government of the country.
Stability
is obviously a high priority with the Australian people. This
can be seen from their widespread practice of voting for different
parties in each of the two houses of parliament, thereby denying
the government a free hand in passing whatever legislation
it likes. Based on the votersÕ distrust of the career politician,
this practice reduces the destabilising potential of transient
majorities in the lower house.
Federations
are exceptionally stable. Of the five countries that survived
the 20th century without a violent change of government, four
are federations: the USA, Canada, Australia and Switzerland.
The unitary United Kingdom (UK), on the other hand, is slowly
disintegrating, with IrelandÕs secession in 1921, 30 years
of Ulster civil war and a Scots separatism only partly satisfied
by the bizarre 1998 devolution scheme. Adopted in time, a
federal structure might have saved the UK.
8.
Fail-safe design
Besides
acting as a brake on extreme or impetuous action by the national
government, federalism cushions the nation as a whole from
the full impact of government blunders by making it harder
for any one group of politicians to ruin the entire economy
at once.
The mixture
of neo-corporatism and public sector expansion on borrowed
money that undid Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia
in the 1980s, for instance, was also the fashionable policy
in Canberra at the time. It might well have been comprehensively
extended to the whole country if the constitutional power
to do so had existed. Had that happened, Australia might not
have weathered the Asian economic storm as well as it did.
For the
same reasons, damage control can bring results more quickly
when the impact of an economic mistake or misfortune can be
localised in this way. The three states that were devastated
in the 1980s have now recovered from their tribulations. In
their reconstruction processes they were able to borrow policies
that had proved successful in other states: fiscal policy
from Queensland, privatisation and reform of government business
enterprises from New South Wales, scaling back the public
sector from Tasmania. Repairing the damage done by a policy
error in an area where the Commonwealth has a monopoly, such
as monetary policy, seems to take longer, however. The unprecedented
inflation ignited by treasurer Frank CreanÕs 1973 and 1974
federal budgets has only recently been brought under control,
almost a generation later.
One should
therefore not assume that a healthy national economy requires
comprehensive macroeconomic and microeconomic control from
the centre. The economic commentator P. P. McGuinness maintains
that there is no good reason for Canberra to deny to states
the possibility of divergent policies with respect to the
overall level of revenue raising and spending. Most of the
powers the Commonwealth exercises in relation to economic
policy are not only unnecessary but positively counterproductive.
ÔIn fact,Õ he writes, Ôthe need for central macroeconomic
policy is largely the product of over-regulation and mistaken
micro-economic policiesÕ.16
9.
Competition and efficiency in government
Government
of the people, for the governors. Inefficiency
in government usually takes either or both of two forms. One
is a tendency to higher tax rates, which is obvious and easy
to detect. The other, less obvious, has been identified and
extensively described by the economists who have developed
the Ôpublic choiceÕ model of government.
This model
proposes that government agents (elected representatives and
public servants) act from the same motives of rational self-interest
as other people. It predicts that government programmes will
be administered so as to minimise the proportion of the programmeÕs
budget that is actually received by the intended beneficiaries,
with the remainderÑthe surplusÑbeing used to further the interests
of the administrators.
A government
that enjoys monopoly power is able to generate such a surplus
for discretionary use by officials and politicians.17 An example is
AustraliaÕs public university system. In the days when they
were administered by the states, the universities were efficient
bodies with the ÔflattenedÕ management profile so admired
today. Commonwealth involvement consisted mainly of funding
Commonwealth scholarships. These were essentially a voucher
system and were awarded to anyone who did better than average
in the final school examinations.
The transformation
began in 1974 when the Commonwealth assumed financial control
over the universities. Access to the proceeds of the CommonwealthÕs
monopoly over income taxation generated a revenue surplus
which, as the public choice model predicts, was increasingly
used to expand the bureaucracy, both in government and in
the universities themselves. Finally, the Dawkins revolution
converted higher education into a total command economy admin-istered
from Canberra. Just when the world was abandoning the many-layered,
command-and-control management model, the Commonwealth forced
the universities to adopt it.
Competitive
federalism. By creating a competitive market for public
goods, governments can provide consumer-taxpayers with their
preferred mix of public goods at the lowest tax price.18 Though the composition of the tax/service
bundles may vary, the proportion of revenue that is appropriated
for the purposes of the bureaucracy and politicians is less
because no government is able to exact a surplus from its
citizens.19
Competition coupled with the right of exit also makes
it harder for states systematically to favour particular regions
while imposing the costs on other regions.20
The efficiency
gains from competitive federalism are not significantly reduced
by the smaller size of state governments. There are few economies
of scale in government except in the areas of foreign relations
and defence (and even here the problems of the Collins submarine,
the Steyr rifle and the Enfield artillery piece arouse reservations),
nor are large organisations necessarily any better at dealing
with complex problems than smaller ones.
Competitive
federalism will assume greater importance as the structural
changes wrought by the new technologies continue to work themselves
out. In recent years most of the net addition to employment
has come from self-employment and small businesses, and the
trend is likely to accelerate as the effects of the information
revolution spread through the economy. Small entrepreneurs
need simpler and less intrusive government, union structures
and taxes, and will pressure governments to provide them.
As the New Economy is uniquely mobile, governments that fail
to adapt will lose business.21
The
duplication issue. A common criticism based on
vertical duplication (overlap between federal and state activities)
is that with two sets of politicians, state and Commonwealth,
Australia is over-governed and that it would be more efficient
to dispense with the lower tier.
Australia
has 576 state parliamentarians.22Ê
That is not a huge number when compared with
the 378,700 people employed in government (not counting those
engaged in education, health care or social welfare, or working
for government corporations) or with the nationÕs 878,800
managers and administrators. But it is unrealistic to suppose
that abolishing the states would lead to a net saving of those
576 positions plus their support staffs.
Centralists
always suggest replacing the six states with ÔregionsÕ, between
20 and 37 in number.23
ÊThat structure
would require the appointment of regional governors, prefects,
sub-prefects, together with support staff. FranceÕs regions
are administered by an elite corps prŽfectoral, a highly-paid
class who live like diplomats in their own country, with official
residences, servants and entertainment budgets. Sooner or
later, as in France, our national government would be forced
by public dissatisfaction to create elected regional assemblies,
between 20 and 37 in number. By then any savings would long
since have evaporated.
As matters
stand the 32.7% of GDP that Australia allocates to general
government expenditure is lower than unitary New ZealandÕs
39.6%, the United KingdomÕs 40.1& (before devolution)
or FranceÕs 52.4%.24
AustraliaÕs figure is closer to the United StatesÕ 30.5%.
Six sets of state parliamentarians thus seems quite an efficient
arrangement.
A variant
of the vertical duplication argument is that AustraliaÕs population
is just too small to support six state governments. Some comparisons
may be helpful here. In 1788 the population of the 13 American
states was 3 million, significantly less than AustraliaÕs
population in 1901. By 1832 it had risen to 15 million25 but probably did not match AustraliaÕs current pop-ulation
of 19 million until about 1845. Switzerland, that land of
supreme efficiency, has 5.5 million people for its 26 cantons.
It is a more decentralised federation than Australia, with
even some defence functions being performed by the cantons.
10.
A competitive edge for the nation
Often
overlooked even by advocates of federalism is the value of
competition among the states as a means of enhancing the international
competitiveness of the nation as a whole. In other contexts,
this is quite a familiar principle. It is, for example, the
basis on which international sporting teams are selected.
Out of the deliberately encouraged rivalry between local,
regional and state teams emerges the squad that will represent
Australia in the Olympics or other international events. Competitive
federalism harnesses this principle to the goal of earning
a better standard of living for all.
The
truth about railway gauges. No discussion of governmental
competition and efficiency in the Australian federation can
overlook the old reproach that AustraliaÕs mixture of railway
gauges is a consequence of the federal system. But the rail
networks were established long before federation. Further,
Britain had more gauges than Australia, but all were standardised
by the 1880s. Our federal structure does not explain why,
over a century later, most of AustraliaÕs non-standard track
remains unconverted. The answer, as Gary Sturgess has suggested,
probably lies in the fact that until the reforms of the last
decade AustralianÕs railways were from the outset almost all
government-owned.26
Towards
more effective federalism
At the
dawn of the CommonwealthÕs second century, changes are in
progress that may help revitalise Australian feder-alism.
The goods and services tax in practice provides the secure
revenue basis the states have long needed and is a step towards
more balanced federal-state fiscal relations. The lack of
a formal national bill of rights denies the federal judiciary
the de facto veto power over state legislation that they enjoy
in the United States and Canada.
Despite
this, many of the worldÕs other federations tap the benefits
of federalism better than Australia does. There are, however,
a number of simple and inexpensive steps that would improve
AustraliaÕs performance. They include reviving the SenateÕs
role as the statesÕ house by establishing a standing committee
on federal-state relations, formalising present inter-governmental
bodies by requiring regular meetings and public hearings,
and by recognising that the usual drive towards national conformism
should be balanced by an appreciation of the benefits of diversity.
The High
Court should be invited to emulate the United States Supreme
Court and revisit some of the centralist decisions that have
undermined the Constitution. Some purely symbolic measures,
such as the award ofÊ honours at the state level, would also help
re-awaken the spirit of independence, self-reliance and community
solidarity.
Conclusion
An awareness
of the positive benefits of federalism will make the constitutional
debate a more equal and fruitful one. This will mean recognising
that in a properly working federation government is more adaptable
to the preferences of the people, more open to experiment
and its rational evaluation, more resistant to shock and misadventure,
more politically efficient and more stable. Its decentralised,
participatory structure is a buttress of liberty, a counterweight
to elitism, and a seedbed of Ôsocial capitalÕ. It fosters
the traditionally Australian, but currently atrophying, qualities
of responsibility and self-reliance. Through greater ease
of monitoring and the action of competition, it makes government
less of a burden on the people. It is desirable in a small
country and indispensable in a large one.
Endnotes
1ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ S.
Calabresi, ÒÔA Government of Limited and EnumeratedÊ PowersÕ: In Defense of United States v LopezÓ, 94 Michigan
Law Review (1995), 752, 756; R. Watts, ÔContemporary Views
on FederalismÕ in Evaluating Federal Systems, B. de
Villiers (ed), (Nijjoff: Dordrecht, 1994), 1, 5. See generally
D. Shapiro, Federalism: A Dialogue (Evanston, Ill.:
Northwestern UP, 1995).
2ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ G.
Maddox and T. Moore, ÔIn Defence of Parliamentary SovereigntyÕ,
in Power, Parliament and the People, M. Coper
and G. Williams (eds), (Annandale, NSW: Federation Press,
1997), 67, 82. On this issue see Parliament of Victoria, Federal-State
Relations Committee, Australian Federalism: The Role of
the States, 2nd Report, (Parliament of Victoria: Melbourne,
1998), 9-12.
3ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ K.
Mannheim, Essays on Sociology of Culture (London: Routledge
& Keegan Paul, 1956), 169.
4ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Calabresi,
ÔLimited and Enumerated PowersÕ, 775.
5ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ J.
Bryce, The American Commonwealth, vol. 1, (Indianapolis:
Liberty Press, 1995), 315; Calabresi, ÔLimited and Enumerated
PowersÕ, 770
6ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ J.
Bell, Populism and Elitism: Politics in the Age of Equality
(Washington: Regnery, 1992), 78; see generally Hon. John Wheeldon,
ÔFederalism: One of DemocracyÕs Best FriendsÕ, in Upholding
the Australian Constitution, vol. 8, (East Melbourne:
Samuel Griffith Society, 1997), 189.
7ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ See
B. Robertson, Economic, Social and Cultural Rights: Time
for a Reappraisal (Wellington: NZ Business Roundtable,
1997), 51, 60-61; R. Kemp, ÔInternational Tribunals and the
Attack on Australian DemocracyÕ, in Upholding the Australian
Constitution, vol. 4, (East Melbourne: Samuel Griffith
Society, 1994), 119; Senate Legal and Constitutional References
Committee, Trick or Treaty? Commonwealth Power to Make
and Implement Treaties (Canberra: Australian Government
Printing Service, 1995).
8
ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Sir
Ninian Stephen, former Governer-General and High Court Justice,
discerns a parallel Ôdemocratic deficitÕ as regards treaty-making
in all Western systems, and particularly in Australia in view
of the effect on the constitutional alteration mechanism:
Parliament of Victoria, Federal-State Relations Committee,
International Treaty-Making and the Role of the States
(Melbourne, 1997), 13.
9ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ J. Buchanan, ÔFederalism and Individual SovereigntyÕ,
Cato Journal 15: 2-3 (1996), 25, 263.
10ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ As above, 261-62.
11ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ G.
Walker, ÔThe Law that WasnÕt There: Retrospectivity Becomes
RoutineÕ, Australia and World Affairs 5 (Winter 1990),
47.
12ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ G.
Walker, ÔThe Tribunal TrapÕ, Australia and World Affairs
8, (Autumn 1991), 53. The High Court restored some legal rigour
to this area in Brandy v Human Rights and Equal Opportunity
Commission (1995) 183 CLR245, 69ALJR 191.
13ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ G.
Walker, ÔInformation as Power: Constitutional Implications
of the Identity Numbering and Identity Card ProposalÕ, Queensland
Law Society Journal 16 (1986), 153.
14ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Calabresi,
ÔLimited and Enumerated PowersÕ,Ê
777.
15ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Calabresi,
ÔLimited and Enumerated PowersÕ, 777-778.
16ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ P.P. McGuinness, ÔFederalismÕs HypocritesÕ,
The Australian (31 October 1990).
17ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ P.
Grossman, Fiscal Federalism: Constraining Governments
with Competition (Perth: AIPP, 1989), vi, 31.
18ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Calabresi,
ÔLimited and Enumerated PowersÕ, 775; Grossman, Fiscal
Federalism, chs. 3-6.
19ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Vertical
competition in federations can also improve governmental efficiency.
See A. Breton, ÔTowards a Theory of Competitive FederalismÕ,
European Journal of Political Economy 1, 2 (1987),
263-329.
20ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Calabresi,Ê ÔLimited and Enumerated PowersÕ, 779.
21ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ H.
McRrae, ÔGiving the little guy a handÕ, Forbes (24
January 2000), 32; W. Kasper, Building Prosperity: AustraliaÕs
Future as a Global Player (St Leonards, NSW: The Centre
for Independent Studies, 2000), ch. 4.
22ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Yearbook
Australia 1997, (Canberra: Australian Government Printing
Service, 1997), 34.
23ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ ÔCould
this be AustraliaÕs new Constitution?Õ ABM (November
1992), describes Mr Ken ThomasÕs plan for 37 regions, each
one under the direction of a kind of management committee.
See also Parliament of Victoria, Federal-State Relations Committee,
10; Parliament of Victoria, Scrutiny of Acts and Regulations
Committee, Report of Australian Federalism Conference,Ê (Melbourne, 14-15 July 1995), 5
24ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ OECD
Economic Outlook 66 (December 1999), Table 28,Ê 220; K. Coghill MLA, ÔBenefits may be illusoryÕ, The Australian
(26 May 1993), 10.
25ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ Bryce,
The American Commonwealth, 3.
26ÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊÊ G.
Sturgess, ÔTaking Social Capital SeriouslyÕ, in Social
Capital: The Individual, Civil Society and the State,
A. Norton, M. Latham, G. Sturgess and M. Stewart-Weeks (St
Leonards, NSW: The Centre for Independent Studies, 1997),
49, 62.
Geoffrey
de Q. Walker is
Emeritus Professor of Law, Central Queesland University. This
is an extract from his forthcoming policy monograph, Ten Advantages
of a Federal Constitution: And How to Make the Most of Them,
available from The Centre for Independent Studies.
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