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Regional and Local Tensions:
The Role of Shared Services
Michael Kortt
†
Southern Cross University
Brian Dollery
‡
University of New England
Bligh Grant
§
University of New England
Regional development and local government often exist in a state of tension, especially
where efforts to foster regional development are channelled through proposals
to consolidate existing local councils into larger ‘regional councils’, and where this
follows from the view that larger government authorities are more efficient than smaller
ones. With respect to amalgamation, critics point to the controversy generated by
local government consolidation, the absence of authoritative empirical evidence of
scale economies, the equivocal outcomes reported in case studies, and the reduction
of local democracy. Moreover, structural change through consolidation is often met
with an auxiliary argument for the implementation of shared services arrangements
between local government entities. Proponents of shared services commonly argue
that since only some local government services exhibit economies of scale, structural
change should focus on the joint provision of these services. Thus, shared services
arrangements can play an important role in easing the tension between regional
development and local development by fostering and supporting collaboration in an
effort to improve local government service delivery, while at the same time maintaining
‘local voice’ and ‘local choice’. Given the potential policy interest in shared services
arrangements, this paper (i) reviews the current body of empirical evidence on the
economic outcomes of shared services arrangements and (ii) considers the associated
policy implications. We conclude that cooperation between councils in the form of
shared services arrangements should be pursued because it may not only result in
cost-savings but could also lead to ‘bottom-up’ revival of regional development. In
our view, this collaborative approach is a far better policy option than the ‘top-down’
policy approach that has been historically imposed on local communities in the form
of forced council consolidation.
PUBLIC POLICY VOLUME 7 NUMBER 1 2012 47 – 62
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†
Michael Kortt is Senior Lecturer in Economics at Southern Cross University and a Member of the UNE Centre for
Local Government. Address for correspondence: michael.kortt@scu.edu.au
‡
Brian Dollery is Professor of Economics and Director of the UNE Centre for Local Government.
§
Bigh Grant is Research Lecturer in Local Government Studies and Deputy Director of the UNE Centre for
Local Government.
© 2012 Curtin University ISSN 1833-2110