Tuesday, November 01, 2022

The extraordinary rise of public service fat cats


The extraordinary rise of public service fat cats

Analysis of public sector annual reports by The AFR shows that at least 24 public servants and executives of government-owned corporations received total remuneration of more than $1 million in 2021-22.

The list is headed by NBN Co CEO Stephen Rue, who was paid $2.93 million, up from $2.64 million in the previous financial year. Meanwhile, Snowy Hydro’s former CEO Paul Broad received more than $2.7 million in pay and bonuses, while Australia Post CEO Paul Graham was paid more than $2.08 million:

Senior public servant salaries

Then there are Australia’s university vice-chancellors, who are dining on average salaries of more than $1 million while their rank-and-file staff struggle on temporary contracts:

Earnings of Australia’s 1 percenters soared from the mid-2000s by around 30% per annum once bonuses are included, while the real incomes of the median Australian worker stagnated:

Wage growth by percentile

Top once percenters make like bandits.

Given senior public servant salaries are more or less benchmarked against those of the private sector, this extreme earnings growth in the private sector gave justification for lifting the salaries of senior bureaucrats and GBE executives to their current absurd levels.

The next time you hear the business lobby claim that an increase in wage growth cannot occur because of [insert bogus claim], think of the above chart and ask why senior executives haven’t shown the same wage restraint.

The whole ‘marketisation’ of government agencies and services has clearly failed, delivering over paid fat cats, endless rorting and poor outcomes for taxpayers.

Over the course of 20 years the ratio of Executive and Senior Executive positions across the whole APS has ballooned from 19% to nearly 30%.  That is from one in every five positions being ‘Executive’ or above, to one in every three.  So for every three people the public bumps into behind the glass at Centrelink or Tax there is someone earning more than $120 per annum, and highly likely to be a beneficiary of a defined benefit superannuation scheme.  There is absolutely no work value driving this expansion of executive level positions, it is a political and executive compliance value.

The below charts clearly show just how the Australian public is being milked.  Those at the very top have been largely political appointments, and they make sure the senior ranks underneath them are ‘on song’ with whatever political narrative is spewed out from the top, regardless of what is in the interests of the people of Australia.

This is how Australia ended up with Robodebt.  This is how Australia ended up with an utterly failed census.  This is how access to medical and personnel records has become such an issue that there is a Royal Commission into Veteran Suicides.  This is why when you call Services Australia, the ATO, Medicare or Centrelink you are almost certain to spend a disgraceful amount of time on the phone, will then be told your call is being recorded for ‘coaching purposes’, and will be able to speak to someone who is only allowed to provide answers from a script, regularly in almost unintelligible English, and will almost certainly try to fob you off and online to sort your issues yourself, and is fundamentally not interested in helping you, or any other member of the Australian public.  It is not the fault of the person on the end of the line, because they are told what to say to you.  It is the fault of the Executives and  Senior Executives who use such people as cannon fodder to prevent the public from getting their concerns addressed.  This is how energy policy means Australians get reamed and governments throw their hands up and say there is nothing they can do.  This is how the Population Ponzi never gets mentioned or looked at.

This is how a series of woeful public decisions are made and implemented.  There is a top heavy structure in place to make sure the public aren’t getting served the way they want, and which is there to make sure that the lower ‘people serving’ levels or the types compiling policy reflective of the Australian community, are watched over by a wonderfully remunerated Commisar class making sure anything distasteful at a political or SES level is weeded out of strategic decisionmaking.  And many of those at these levels have their own variant of the ‘Cult of Personality’ alive and well within their branches and Directorates.  The data averse, narrative resistant, whim based and arbitrary decisionmaking environment this represents is reflected in numerous APS surveys suggesting the lower levels have lost faith in their own chiefs.

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It’s time to drain the swamp and implement uniform salary structures for government departments, government-owned corporations, statutory authorities and universities. Bring them into line with the rest of the public service workforce, and make them accountable.


Extraordinary rise in GST scam: How SA crime groups are making millions

Adelaidenow.com.au | Subscribe to The Advertiser for exclusive stories

Sunday Mail (SA) Online

October 30, 2022 Sunday

By Nigel Hunt, Exclusive

 

Organised criminals in South Australia are stealing millions of dollars by claiming fraudulent GST refunds, a major investigation into the scam has revealed.

The Sunday Mail can reveal an Australian Taxation Office inquiry and several unrelated SA police operations have discovered organised criminal groups are heavily involved in the illegal activity.

The ATO, which has launched an operation dubbed Protego to investigate the scheme, has confirmed it has raided six properties in Adelaide in connection with the scam, which has cost taxpayers up to $1 billion nationally.

It can also be revealed Operation Protego investigators have referred detailed files on 1,500 individuals in SA involved in the scheme to the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission for further investigation.

The ACIC and Operation Protego investigators have "completed an in-depth analysis'' of the individuals and are preparing to take further investigative action.

Sources have told the Sunday Mail they believe many of those involved are using the cash obtained through the scam to directly fund methamphetamine imports into Adelaide themselves, while others are using the cash to fund drug purchases from the other organised crime groups importing the contraband.

Others are simply using the cash - in some instances hundreds of thousands of dollars - to fund their lifestyles and supplement their legitimate business activities.

The fraud involves individuals creating a fake business, applying for an Australian Business Number and then submitting false business activity statements so they can claim GST refunds.

The ATO believes as many as 40,000 individuals Australia-wide have been involved in the illegal activity with up to $1 billion in fraudulent GST refunds made. It has been widely promoted on social media platforms.

Since the ATO launched Operation Protego in April $850 million in fraudulent claims have been stopped.

"This is a clear warning to individuals considering participating - you will not be successful, you are not anonymous, and you will face the consequences of your attempts,'' ATO Deputy Commissioner and Serious Financial Crime Task Force chief Will Day said.

"For those that have already committed this fraud, we know who you are, and you will need to repay the fake refunds you have obtained. You could face severe consequences, including jail if you do not speak to us before we knock on your door. Come forward now or face potentially tougher penalties.

"Most Australians play by the rules and expect the ATO to take action to protect Australia's tax and super systems, and collect the revenue necessary to support the Australian community.''

ATO assistant commissioner Michael Morton last month said the "size, scale and rate of proliferation'' of the scam was unprecedented.

"Some of the participants involved are actually involved in other more serious crimes,'' he said on a CPA Australia podcast.

"You often find that tax evasion is the tip of the iceberg. We've already commenced criminal investigations into many participants and there is a real potential that these people will get some time in jail or face some serious financial penalties.''

In SA, investigators had uncovered multiple individuals within the several organised groups of criminals - who are under active investigation for other serious crimes - who had obtained an ABN, either in their own name or using false identification, and then claimed multiple fictitious GST refunds which were then paid into a bank account and withdrawn.

The individuals have falsely claimed up to $100,000 in GST refunds before closing that ABN and repeating the process after sourcing more identification.

Those involved in the scam were often stealing identification from Australia Post boxes, letterboxes and during break-ins on homes.


French Submarine Gold Trip - Melbourne Cup - Putin and Russia - The Latecomer’s Guide to TikTok

The Melbourne Cup is almost upon us again with a field of 24 local and international horses racing over 3200m for a whopping $8 million in prizemoney.

Here are the key things you need to know ahead of the 162nd running of the great race.

The Race That Stops The Nation - Bet On The Melb Cup 2022


Andrew Wylie, ‘The Jackal’ of books: ‘Amazon is like ISIS; it takes no prisoners’ El Pais 


Don’t shoot the pianists, protect them The Critic


Two Sides of Dignity Commonweal Magazine 


The New York Times – TikTok has become massively influential We’re here to help you understand how it all works. “It has become impossible to ignore TikTok. It’s been a hugely popular short-form video app for hyperkinetic bursts of self-expression for years, now with more than a billion active users worldwide (some even use it as a search engine). TikTok is not just for viral dance videos — it’s also wildly complicated. Its algorithm, which makes it easy to consume videos, has been blamed for amplifying misinformation and other harmful content. 

The Biden administration is currently negotiating with ByteDance, TikTok’s Chinese parent company, over concerns about national security and the safety of Americans’ personal data on foreign servers. And there are ongoing concerns about the mental health harms the app may pose to teenagers and young people. But at least for now, TikTok is only growing in influence. If you’ve constantly heard it mentioned by your friends (and children) but have been unsure how it works, this guide is for you. 

No need to be embarrassed. Once you’ve learned the basics, you’ll be better equipped to delve into #BookTok and other trends making news, supervise a child’s new account or just see what all the fuss is about…”



Will Putin Fall Like Khrushchev and Gorbachev?Peggy Noonan. “If we’re facing Armageddon, that should be taking up all the president’s time. JFK wasn’t at fundraisers in October 1962, and when he spoke it was in a studied, careful way, and to the entire nation.” Read all the way to the end; I’m not sure the United States is, to coin a phase, gravitas-capable.


Some People Who Appear to Be in a Coma May Actually Be Conscious Scientific American


Receivers for Elon Musk’s Starlink Internet Are Being Smuggled Into Iran Time


Mossad’s agents used chalet in Malaysia to interrogate abducted Palestinian: Report Straits Times



Pete Recommends – Weekly highlights on cybersecurity issues – October 22, 2022 – Privacy and cybersecurity issues impact every aspect of our lives – home, work, travel, education, health and medical records – to name but a few. On a weekly basis Pete Weiss highlights articles and information that focus on the increasingly complex and wide ranging ways technology is used to compromise and diminish our privacy and online security, often without our situational awareness. 

Four highlights from this week: Weakness in Microsoft Office 365 Message Encryption could expose email contents; How Facebook Became the Internet’s Covid-19 Misinformation Hub; TX AG Ken Paxton Sues Google Over Facial Recognition in Photos; TikTok Parent ByteDance Planned To Use TikTok To Monitor The Physical Location Of Specific American Citizens; and Here’s 5 of the world’s riskiest connected devices.


Wired – “Whether it’s for accessibility or research purposes, you have lots of tools to work with here. “There are plenty of reasons why you might want to pull the text out of an image you find online: instructions on a YouTube still, for example, or items on a printed menu, or inspirational quotes in your Instagram feed. 

Whatever the reason, there are text extraction tools that will do the job of recognizing and copying the words inside those images for you. As image identification techniques improve, these tools are getting better and better at accurately converting text in an image into usable, editable text. In fact, you might already be using one of these tools—there are several to choose from, so whatever your use case is, you should be able to find a service to match…”

How to Extract the Text From Any Image Wired


Amou Haji, Known as ‘World’s Dirtiest Man,’ Dead at 94 ‘Not Long After’ First Bath in 60 Years People


Cats React to ‘Baby Talk’ From Their Owners, but Not Strangers Smithsonian. Cats: “Owners? Owners?!”


Adult Brain Structure Is Not Fixed: Scientists Discover Depression Treatment Increases Brain Connectivity SciTech


Cats are as good as dogs at helping us beat stressSky News


Mike Davis (1946 –2022): Enemy of the StateVerso. Commentary


WSJ – Sentiment has fallen to levels typically associated with worse financial and economic conditions than today’s: “The University of Michigan survey of consumer sentiment measures how U.S. consumers feel about their personal finances, business conditions and buying conditions. Recent surveys have shown that consumers have rarely felt more downbeat about all of these measures. In the past, when consumer sentiment was as depressed as it is today, stocks were in a bear market, unemployment was higher than average or prices were rising faster than usual.

This year, inflation has been near four-decade highs and a main driver of consumer pessimism. The S&P 500 is in a bear market, but up 7% from its 2022 low. Uncharacteristically of periods with low sentiment, unemployment is historically low…A souring mood for consumers is a concerning sign because household spending accounts for about 70% of U.S. economic output…”


Going nuclear and thinking like a KGB official

Going nuclear and thinking like a KGB official


Cyber-attack on Australian defence contractor may have exposed private communications between ADF members Dataset from communications platform ForceNet containing up to 40,000 records may be compromised after breach on external provider


Robodebt: key public officials and debt collectors to appear as royal commission kicks off

How the U.K. Became One of the Poorest Countries in Western Europe Atlantic 


Federal government agencies have allowed migration agents to keep operating despite repeated warnings about their role in rorting the visa system that is misused by organised crime gangs involved in human trafficking and worker exploitation.

‘It’s easy’: Migration agents offering fake visas for $500 a month



Distressed taxpayers owe the government $45b


Satoshi Nakamoto: Will he Pronounce Himself as Bitcoin Moves Away From His Vision?


Credit Suisse is One of 13 Too-Big-to-Fail Banks in Europe, But It Looks Like It Could Be Failing

Following a string of scandals, bad investments and woeful risk management, Switzerland’s second largest bank, Credit Suisse, is close to the edge.


Is Rishi too rich to be PM? Unherd. Deadly subhead: “People won’t accept austerity from a man with a heated pool.”


Former US military pilot arrested over China ties – media RT.

Distressed taxpayers owe the government $45b

Doorstop interview, Parliament House, Canberra Note Joint interview with Chris Jordan AO Commissioner of Taxation


Interview with Tom Connell, Newsday, Sky News



Distressed taxpayers owe the government $45b

Australians owe the Tax Office $45 billion after a nearly 70 per cent blowout in unpaid taxes during the COVID-19 crisis.

Uncollected, undisputed tax debt rose from $26.5 billion in mid-2019 to $44.8 billion on June 30 this year, after widespread economic disruption from the pandemic and leniency for struggling taxpayers from the ATO.

Commissioner of Taxation Chris Jordan and Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones on Monday Alex Ellinghausen

The latest figures come as the ATO and the Albanese government ramp up efforts to catch taxpayers claiming dodgy work-related tax deductions and accountants breaking the rules.

Commissioner of Taxation Chris Jordan met with Assistant Treasurer Stephen Jones on Monday, announcing an estimated $33.4 billion tax gap in 2020. The “gap” is the amount of money owed but not being paid.

About 7 per cent of all revenue which should be collected by the ATO, the tax gap is on par with the $31.3 billion spent on Medicare every year.

The total exceeds federal government spending on aged care ($27.1 billion), support for state government hospitals ($26.6 billion) and the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme ($18.1 billion).

Mr Jordan said small business taxpayers and work-related expenses were the biggest contributors to the gap.

“The biggest effect of COVID-19 is in our collectable debt increasing,” he said.

“Most of that is small business, self-declared debt. It’s not tax on profits... it’s unpaid superannuation guarantee, it’s the GST that’s been collected and never remitted.

“It’s the withholding from wages pay as you go that has never been remitted.”

Last week’s federal budget included plans to raise $5.7 billion from an extension of the ATO’s tax avoidance and black economy taskforces, as well as the personal income tax compliance program.

Accountants and tax agents considered “high risk” due to past dodgy behaviour will also face additional scrutiny as the Tax Practitioners Board is tasked with additional compliance activities. Poor quality or unlawful advice will be targeted.

The ATO’s annual report shows the organisation collected gross tax of $648.5 billion in the 2021-22 financial year, paying refunds of $132.9 billion to taxpayers.

Net tax collections topped $515.6 billion, up by $64.2 billion or 14.2 per cent, from 2020 to 2021.

An additional $15.5 billion was added to the budget bottom line from audits and other compliance measures. About $1.7 billion in suspected fraudulent refunds were stopped as part of Operation Protego, the investigation
into the largest GST fraud ever recorded.

The fraud involved offenders inventing fake businesses and Australian Business Number (ABN) applications, many in their own names, then submitting fictitious Business Activity Statements in an attempt to gain a false GST refund.

An estimated 40,000 individuals were suspected of being involved in the major GST fraud.

Mr Jordan said the building and construction sector was one section of the economy where tax avoidance is present.

BDO tax partner Mark Molesworth said the substantial increase in collectable debt would influence the ATO’s behaviour.

“We expect to see further collection action from the ATO, including by direct action taken against non-paying taxpayers, and use of their director penalty notice powers where the debts are owed by a company and relate to GST, pay as you go withholding or superannuation guarantee.

“Early indications are that the ATO is having some success with its ramped up collection activities, so we expect this will continue.

“Any taxpayer with a tax debt should be considering how to pay it, including by negotiating a payment plan with the ATO. It is better to talk to the ATO, before they start to talk to you.”

Mr Molesworth said large corporate groups had the lowest tax gap assessment at 4.2 per cent.

“While making ‘large companies and multinationals’ pay their ‘fair share’ makes for a good headline, by comparison to other taxpayer groups, they already are,” he said.

GST scam: How SA crime groups are making millions

Adelaidenow.com.au | Subscribe to The Advertiser for exclusive stories

Sunday Mail (SA) Online

October 30, 2022 Sunday

By Nigel Hunt, Exclusive

 

Organised criminals in South Australia are stealing millions of dollars by claiming fraudulent GST refunds, a major investigation into the scam has revealed.

The Sunday Mail can reveal an Australian Taxation Office inquiry and several unrelated SA police operations have discovered organised criminal groups are heavily involved in the illegal activity.

The ATO, which has launched an operation dubbed Protego to investigate the scheme, has confirmed it has raided six properties in Adelaide in connection with the scam, which has cost taxpayers up to $1 billion nationally.

It can also be revealed Operation Protego investigators have referred detailed files on 1,500 individuals in SA involved in the scheme to the Australian Criminal Intelligence Commission for further investigation.

The ACIC and Operation Protego investigators have "completed an in-depth analysis'' of the individuals and are preparing to take further investigative action.

Sources have told the Sunday Mail they believe many of those involved are using the cash obtained through the scam to directly fund methamphetamine imports into Adelaide themselves, while others are using the cash to fund drug purchases from the other organised crime groups importing the contraband.

Others are simply using the cash - in some instances hundreds of thousands of dollars - to fund their lifestyles and supplement their legitimate business activities.

The fraud involves individuals creating a fake business, applying for an Australian Business Number and then submitting false business activity statements so they can claim GST refunds.

The ATO believes as many as 40,000 individuals Australia-wide have been involved in the illegal activity with up to $1 billion in fraudulent GST refunds made. It has been widely promoted on social media platforms.

Since the ATO launched Operation Protego in April $850 million in fraudulent claims have been stopped.

"This is a clear warning to individuals considering participating - you will not be successful, you are not anonymous, and you will face the consequences of your attempts,'' ATO Deputy Commissioner and Serious Financial Crime Task Force chief Will Day said.

"For those that have already committed this fraud, we know who you are, and you will need to repay the fake refunds you have obtained. You could face severe consequences, including jail if you do not speak to us before we knock on your door. Come forward now or face potentially tougher penalties.

"Most Australians play by the rules and expect the ATO to take action to protect Australia's tax and super systems, and collect the revenue necessary to support the Australian community.''

ATO assistant commissioner Michael Morton last month said the "size, scale and rate of proliferation'' of the scam was unprecedented.

"Some of the participants involved are actually involved in other more serious crimes,'' he said on a CPA Australia podcast.

"You often find that tax evasion is the tip of the iceberg. We've already commenced criminal investigations into many participants and there is a real potential that these people will get some time in jail or face some serious financial penalties.''

In SA, investigators had uncovered multiple individuals within the several organised groups of criminals - who are under active investigation for other serious crimes - who had obtained an ABN, either in their own name or using false identification, and then claimed multiple fictitious GST refunds which were then paid into a bank account and withdrawn.

The individuals have falsely claimed up to $100,000 in GST refunds before closing that ABN and repeating the process after sourcing more identification.

Those involved in the scam were often stealing identification from Australia Post boxes, letterboxes and during break-ins on homes.