The federal government has rightly identified that improving productivity, building economic resilience, and strengthening budget sustainability will be critical to Australia’s long-term prosperity.

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Productivity growth is the key to raising our living standards in the long term. While the federal government doesn’t hold all the levers, it can strengthen the foundations: a competitive economy, a well-functioning labour market, the conditions for people to flourish (housing, health, education, and social cohesion), and the right infrastructure, tax, and regulatory settings.

This submission aims to focus attention on three major economic reform opportunities where the 2025 Economic Reform Roundtable could make substantive progress:

1. Tax reform to improve the efficiency of Australia’s tax system and strengthen budget sustainability.

2. Reducing barriers to work to ease workforce pressures and maximise our talent pool.

3. Better infrastructure, including more housing, to meet our urgent housing needs, support the economic transformation to net-zero, and better target public spending.

Grattan Institute’s Orange Book 2025 identifies a wide range of policy reforms to boost economic growth, tackle the structural budget problem, improve health and education, make housing more affordable, reduce emissions, more sustainably meet the needs of an ageing population, and strengthen our political institutions.

Aruna Sathanapally

CEO and Economic Prosperity and Democracy Program Director
Dr Aruna Sathanapally joined the Grattan Institute as CEO in February 2024. She heads a team of leading policy thinkers, researching and advocating policy to improve the lives of Australians. A former NSW barrister and senior public servant, Aruna has worked on the design of public institutions, economic policy, and evidence-based public policy and regulation for close to twenty years.

Kate Griffiths

Chief of Staff and Democracy Deputy Program Director
Kate Griffiths is Grattan Institute’s Chief of Staff and Deputy Program Director of the Democracy program. Kate completed her Masters in Science at the University of Oxford as a John Monash Scholar and holds an Honours degree in Science from the Australian National University.