Ian McAuley lectures in Public Sector Finance at the University of Canberra and is a Centre for Policy Development Fellow. His passion is to ensure social reformers and progressive thinkers are engaged in the nation's economic debates.
In this paper, CPD fellow Ian McAuley explores the intrinsic limitations of Australia's current private health insurance system and explains how a single national health insurer can overcome them. McAuley argues that a single national insurer is more likely to be able to contain moral hazard, deliver public goods, and control price and utilisation to deliver equitable health care at lower costs.
In the second of two articles on consumer policy and competition, CPD fellow Ian McAuley examines the limits of competition in the Australian policy marketplace.
CPD fellow Ian McAuley will talk about financial decision-making at the Australian Bankers' Association summit on Broadening Financial Understanding in Sydney on July 2.
CDP fellow Ian McAuley surveys Australia's economic structure, including an outline of some long-term and medium-term challenges for Australian economic policy in his Australian Economic Fact Sheet for the
In the first of a series of two articles on consumer choice and competition policy, CPD Fellow Ian McAuley examines assumptions about the value of choice in the policy marketplace.
Ian McAuley asks how Kevin Rudd can exercise true leadership and avoid the 'Strong Leader' style which helped bring about the Howard government's demise.
Debate in this election campaign has confused the basic task of balancing the national chequebook with the far more important and complex challenge of sound economic management, argues Ian McAuley.
Borrower blindness and confusion over the difference between real and nominal interest rates have contributed to Australia's heavy debt burden, writes Ian McAuley. But education alone won't be enough to change consumer behaviour - changes on the supply side of the credit market are needed.
Ian McAuley argues that WorkChoices is likely to have a negative impact on productivity: "If labour is cheaper to employ there will be less incentive for firms to ensure workers are employed productively."
Ian McAuley reviews 'Gittinomics' by Ross Gittins, a book that demystifies economic theory and Australian policy, yet still manages to keep its place on the bedside table.
The Coalition can't claim credit for our current economic prosperity, argues Ian McAuley. In fact its unwillingness to deal with long-term structural issues is putting our economy on very shaky ground.
Are taxpayers getting value for money out of Private Health Insurance susbsidies? Ian McAuley looks at the latest OECD data to determine what works in health care financing.
In Ian McAuley'’s address at the launch of 'Reclaiming Universal Health Care' he argued that our current health policies are ‘an extraordinary combination of East German bureaucratic intervention and Chicago-style radical libertarian economics’.
Our debt-shy federal government is keeping the national budget in the black, private utilities in the pink, and the rest of us in the red, writes Ian McAuley
A super policy that encourages people to save now and spend later might seem like a good idea, but IanMcAuley explains that removing the tax on superannuation drawings will increase inequities, weaken the government’s revenue base, distort incentives and increase people’s dependence on the financial sector.
Our Treasurer, writes Ian McAuley, is like Oscar Wilde’s cynic “who knows the price of everything but the value of nothing”. A run of good luck has masked serious weaknesses in the Australian economy. Sound financial management is not enough to compensate for years of underinvestment – we need economic policies to build the infrastructure, skills and resilience we need to ensure our future prosperity
The sale of Medibank Private, writes Ian McAuley, is obscuring the real agenda – the expansion of private health insurance. McAuley argues that any expansion of private insurance would result in waste, inequities and rising costs. If the government wants to invest in disease prevention it could do so far more efficiently and effectively through public health measures or direct subsidies
Ian McAuley explores the complex and inconsistent approaches to paying for different health services in Australia. He explains how some services are provided at no charge, while others incur a full or part user contribution, and that the result is a system in which many people miss out on subsidies to which they are entitled. The solution that he proposes is for the government to undertake a re-design of the entire system, informed by basic policy principles embraced by the community.
Ian McAuley writes, 'Turnbull's case would have been stronger if he had suggested closing off the mechanisms for people with high incomes to avoid tax - such as using trusts and private companies which exist for the sole purpose of tax reduction.'
Ian McAuley writes, 'When politicians in the major parties do attend to the citizens, it is in the way of the marketing executive, determined to sustain or gain market share. The marketing executive offers trinkets such as cash-back vouchers and extended credit terms, supported by glitzy advertising.'
Ian McAuley writes, 'we need to re-frame our public policy attention, away from the simple notion of more or less superannuation, and towards asking what policies may help us in matching income at our life stages with our needs at those stages'
'Labor needs to integrate its policies in a clear vision and set of values - social values - rather than categorising its policies into 'economic', 'social' and 'environmental' headings with their implications of compromise, trade-off, and contradictions', writes Ian McAuley.
Ian McAuley writes, 'This policy forum demands a nation which invests in its physical, human, institutional and social capital so as to reduce the need for welfare dependence.'
Ian McAuley states 'When governments encourage or force the better-off to opt out they talk about choice, but, far from extending our choice, we are denied choice - in this case the choice of using a public school. The same extends to health care and beyond.'
Ian McAuley looks at how a value-based system can resolve public and private divisions in Australia's health system. He describes the confusion and the grab bag of health proposals that we saw at the last election and outlines the importance of consistent principles in deciding how we spend public money in a field where public demands are practically unlimited.