Budget
May 9, 2000Doorstop Interview: Budget, Telstra
May 12, 2000
Transcript No. 2000/52
TRANSCRIPT of Hon. Peter Costello MP
National Press Club Wednesday, 10 May 2000 12.30 pm SUBJECTS: Budget Ladies and Gentlemen welcome to the National Press Club and todays National Press Club Telstra Address. Its the day after Budget day and our guest is obviously the Treasurer. Please welcome Peter Costello.
TREASURER: Thank you so much to the members of the Press Club and the guests that are here today. Its a great pleasure and honour to be here, down here, I believe at my ninth address to the National Press Club. And someone was kind enough to say nine – zip, its starting to sound like your football teams record this year. As we look at this particular Budget, I want to focus on it as part of our medium and long term strategy for Australia. As we faced up to this Budget we had some very important objectives in mind. Firstly, we wanted to secure Australias financial future. And I believe that this Budget will secure that future in a way which we would not have really thought possible 4 or 5 years ago. Secondly, we wanted to show that there could be social benefit from good economic policy. How good economic policy can amount to good social policy. To give the Budget an opportunity to come together and to draw together those things that we believe in deeply, both from an economic and a social perspective. The third thing that we wanted to do of course is we wanted to put together in this Budget, the framework which shows how the largest reform of the Australian taxation system ever, will come about. And the effect that that will have on Australias economy. And I have a feeling that when people write economic history in a decade or two. They will be looking back to this Budget, theyll be looking back to the tax system thats coming into effect on 1 July and they will see it as one of the turning points of Australian economic history. Today when we look at taxation in our country we look back to the Second World War and uniform taxation and we say that was the great structural change when the Commonwealth took over income tax, to finance the Second World War effort. That when people look out in 40 or 50 years theyll look back and theyll say and there it was in July of 2000, when the great reform of Commonwealth State financial relations was accomplished. When the indirect tax base was broadened, when the income tax rates were cut, when capital gains tax was cut, when business taxation was modernised, when family assistance was reformed. They were the great structural changes in relation to the Australian taxation system and they happened in July of 2000. And this was the Budget that drew them together and told the economic story and gave a picture of where we are and where we want to be and brought about some of the great structural changes in Australian economic policy. This is a Budget which could secure our financial future, it could secure social goals, it could secure structural change and will set Australia up as part of that structural change I believe, with opportunities in decades ahead. Firstly, this is the Coalition Governments fourth surplus Budget in a row. Not only are we forecasting surpluses for the future budget year, we will deliver in this financial year a Budget surplus of about $7.8 billion, in fact double what we were forecasting at the Mid-Year-Review. And we will deliver surplus budgets on current growth projections right across the forward estimates. Not only will we be delivering a surplus Budget, but we will be delivering a surplus Budget with substantial income tax relief. You know Ive been out on the radio airwaves today, I think Ive done 10 radio and television interviews already today, and Ive been asked a lot of questions about income tax relief, a lot of curious questions, how will it apply, when will it apply, what will it mean? And I said to one of the interviewers, you know, there is a very large proportion of the Australian public which has no experience of income tax cuts. If youve been in the workforce for 10 years, youve not known what an income tax cut is. Theres a substantial number of people whove never lived through them. And I was thinking back through my own experience of taxation policy, of my own experience and I can vouch for someone who has been in the workforce for about 20 years. Was that whenever we seemed to get to the barrier on income tax cuts, for some reason or another they were never paid. Sometimes they were promises, sometimes they were L-A-W, but very rarely were they P-A-I-D. Yesterday it was 53 days and today its 52 days and on 1 July Australias largest ever income tax cuts are going to take effect. They are a reality. And for many Australians the first experience they will ever have in relation to income tax cuts. I saw one of the commentators remark I thought fairly in the paper today, the usual experience of governments has been to promise income tax cuts and take them away. This is the first Government that promised a tax rise and took it away. And that journalist of course was referring to the East Timor levy. When we announced the East Timor levy at the time of the Mid-Year-Review in November of last year, we were anticipating a cost for Australian troops in East Timor of around about $1 billion. It was a cost over and above and unanticipated at that time. And that cost would have driven the Australian budget into deficit. They were our projections in November of last year. We were defending a wafer thin surplus. Wed had the Australian Senate, which had punched a hole through our tax package of $1.8 billion a year. And in November of last year we were defending a wafer thin surplus, which with $1 billion worth of East Timor spending would have driven the budget into deficit. And we said to the Australian people our troops in East Timor are going to lack for nothing. They are going to be given every funding that is required. And didnt they do a valiant and wonderful job. And we said the second thing were going do is we are going to keep the Australian budget in surplus. We cant do both and so for one year only, in this financial year, the 2000-2001 financial year, when the costs of the damage inflicted in the Senate bear most heavily upon us, we will have a 12 month levy to keep the budget in surplus to the tune of $500 million. That was a solemn promise that we made to the Australian people. And as the year went through, growth was stronger than we expected, revenues were stronger than we expected, the budget outcome this year which we thought would be $3.4 billion will in fact be $7.8 billion of surplus. And it became increasingly apparent that we could fund the East Timor levy effort and keep the budget in surplus without introducing that 12 month levy. And we thought it wouldnt be right to go to the Australian people on something as serious as that, to ask them to shoulder a burden for a defence effort and keep the budget in surplus when things had improved and we could keep that budget in surplus without it. A lot of people have said to me today, why didnt you keep the East Timor levy? It wouldnt have been right. It wouldnt have been right to say to the Australian people it was necessary to keep the budget in surplus and once it became clear that that was no longer required to keep that levy, in place it would have broken what we considered a very solemn trust with the Australian people. And I hope that the Australian people will agree with us that was the right thing to do, the necessary thing to do and I hope that it builds trust between Government and people. The kind of trust that were going to need as we accomplish the big economic changes that lie in front of us. A journalist said to me yesterday, why didnt you keep the levy then you could have spent it on something new. We told the Australian people that was for East Timor and it wouldnt have been right to treat it otherwise. So this year, our fourth Budget surplus in a row, we will pay down another $9 billion worth of debt. If I could just leave you with one picture, because I feel so often we use these words billion and people lose sight of the numbers that are behind them. In the last five years of Labor Government after they had raised all of their tax and raised all of their revenues and made all of their expenditures, they had to go out and borrow to fund the difference, to fund the deficit and over five years they borrowed $80,000 million. $80 billion. After five years of Coalition Government, after we raised our revenues, and our non-tax revenues and paid our expenses we werent short for a dollar. We have not borrowed one dollar since our Government was elected. And then we did something else, with our surpluses and our asset sales programs we repaid $50,000 million of that $80 billion borrowing. Five Labor Budgets building up $80 billion in debt, five Coalition Budgets paying off $50 billion. 5/8ths of the way there. And to put that into international terms, a debt to GDP ratio of 7 per cent which would be considered amongst major industrial economies of the world to be one of the strongest Government fiscal positions, Europe 50 per cent, the United States 50 per cent, Japan 50 per cent and rising, Australia 7 per cent. And if the Senate should pass our proposal to allow the Government to sell the remaining equity in Telstra, something that is important for the future of Telstra and worth doing for that reason alone, we would clear all Commonwealth debt. Our debt to GDP ratio would be zero, nothing. I asked the Treasury to find the last Government that did not borrow a net dollar during its term. And they went back through the Keating Governments and the Hawke Governments and the Fraser Governments and the Whitlam Governments and through the Menzies Governments, which even at periods during the Menzies Government there were borrowing particularly in the credit squeeze of 1961, and then they went through the Chifley Governments and the Curtin Governments and back through the Scullin Governments, back pre-World War I. And I heard this criticism this morning from the Labor Party that we should be building bigger surpluses to pay off more of their debt. No doubt, hoping that one day they could fall into Government and spend it again. Ned Kelly goes to the bank in Jerilderie and robs it and says, why didnt you have more in the vault. Kim Beazley and Simon Crean say why havent you paid off more of our debt? We hope one day to get back into office so we can spend it again. More money in the vault please before the bank robbers make their raid. The Labor Party policy in relation to fiscal management. And I make this point also. When a Budget runs in surplus, that is when you raise more than you spend, you save it. And if youve got no debts you save it by building an asset position. If youve got debts you save it by reducing your debt. You cant do anything else with a surplus. And one of the journalists said to me yesterday, why didnt you keep the East Timor tax that would have given you a bigger surplus and then you could have spent it on something else. If you spend it, it is not a surplus. A surplus is where you save it. You cant do anything else with a surplus except to pay down debt if you have debt, or to build an asset position if you dont have any debt. And if we had built a $1 billion higher surplus, instead of paying of $9 billion this year we would have paid off $10 billion. Instead of at the end of the year having paid of $50 billion of Labors debt, wed have paid of $51 billion of Labors debt. But we have a strong fiscal position and what we decided to do in this Budget as our debt comes down and our interest payments come down, we one redirect some of that expenditure in the areas which are priorities for us. We redirect it out to regional Australia and health services in regional Australia. We redirect it to families. And yes we redirect it to another area which is a priority for us, cutting income taxes. There are a lot of people that are saying, oh well income taxes are there somehow to sugar coat the GST. That is not the point at all. Income tax cuts were deserved in Australia. Our income tax rates are too high. Sure, we are taking the opportunity when we reform the income tax system to reform the indirect tax system as well. And youve heard me on this point before, the Australian taxation system consists of what I call the indirect tax system – the ITS, the personal income tax system – the PITS, the business income tax system the BITS, the ITS the PITS and the BITS. You wouldve had to be reforming the PITS anyway, but we took the opportunity to reform the ITS and the BITS and the family assistance and Commonwealth/State relations. But we would have had to reform income tax rates anyway. We were at the situation in Australia where somebody on average weekly earnings was paying 43 per cent marginal rate on every extra dollar they earned. It was wrong. You cant have average earners paying nearly half of their income in marginal income tax rates. The Australian people had had these tax rates which hadnt been reduced after the L-A-W became the F-R-A-U-D, and they were deserving of income tax relief. It was part of re-energising the Australian taxation system. And so we were reforming the income tax system anyway and we took the opportunity to reform the indirect tax system as well. Middle income Australians need to have incentive. And our personal income tax rates, particularly as they impacted on middle income earners were too high. And so as we built that stronger financial position, as we started paying down the Labor debt, we wanted to reduce the income tax burden on income earners in this country. We took the opportunity to reform the ITS, the indirect taxation system as well. And weve also decided to reprioritise Commonwealth spending. And in this Budget we are delivering real practical help to regional Australia. Now I know that there are some people that have said the test of your policy in regional Australia is not so much the programs but the amounts. And they say look at the amounts, amounts if theyre high mean good policy and if theyre low, not so good policy. Well I dont think like that. I dont think ill-defined expenditures across a wide area are likely to be near so effective as targetted expenditure in a narrow area. Id rather focus and deliver a lot than promise a lot and deliver little. And when we said to regional Australia whats the biggest problem, the message that came back to us was health services. Whats more important to people than their health? The number of doctors – in the metropolitan area, one doctor per thousand, outside the metropolitan area one doctor per 1500. This is a real area of unfairness and disadvantage. You cant describe it any other way. Some people were saying oh, arent you giving more to the bush. Were not giving more to rural and regional Australia. Were just trying to get them up to the standard thats being enjoyed in the metropolitan areas. More doctors, better health services. And so weve said in this area, in this area of policy where there is real disadvantage, lets focus on this area and lets make sure we fix it. And this coordinated range of program measures I believe is the most concrete, practical, workable series of measures that could possibly be put together. Firstly, we say every Australian medical faculty with a clinical school in regional Australia. So every medical student trains in regional Australia, and while theyre training deliver services in regional Australia. Secondly, we say 100 new medical places for people wholl enter a bond to practise in regional areas once theyre qualified, and in return a $20,000 a year scholarship. Money for specialists to pay them their travel and incentive to go out into the rural and regional areas. New health services which bring together medical services which may not be offerable on stand alone basis, but when you put them together can give a regional health service. More undergraduate medical scholarships. And incentives for allied health professionals, psychologists, and podiatrists to go out into those regional areas and deliver services. This is practical, real, tangible, focussed, difference making initiative. And I think the people of regional Australia who have heard lots of promises and sometimes wonder what they amounted to will say this is a government thats been honest and real about focussing and targetting changes. Now of course the Australian Labor Party, whilst it says it really believes in higher surpluses, I often wonder how Kim Beazley says that word without stuttering, has said not only are they in favour of higher surpluses, but theyve criticised the Budget on this basis. Little or no new investment in education, science, infrastructure, regional development, jobs and industry, no extra money for public hospitals. So presumably what they want is more money on science, infrastructure, regional development, jobs, industry, public hospitals, education and a higher surplus. Now when Kim Beazley on Thursday night gives his Budget Reply and announces his rollback of the GST, which I presume hes going to announce on Thursday night, hes got to say how much it costs, and how hes going to pay for it. On Thursday night when he announces his rollback of the GST, that is how he is going to reduce the revenue base, hes got to put his costings, how much of this supposedly iniquitous tax that hes going to rollback and how much that hes going to save, and then hes got to say, how much more money hes going to put on education, science, infrastructure, regional development, jobs, industry and public hospitals. And then hes got to announce his tax rates to pay for it. Because if he stands up there on Thursday night and says, heres where my rollback is, and Id like more money and Id like an increase surplus and by the way, Im going to guarantee all of the revenue to the States, it will be a prolix speech but it wont have content. Thats the challenge for him on Thursday night with his rollback. And Ill be very interested to see how far that rollback goes because a rollback is one of those things that seems to be shrinking by the day. You know the policy that dare not speak its name. The Party that has for two years fought GST and now lo and behold, if they ever get elected have decided they want to keep it. This tax, this GST, which the Labor Party said could never be made fair, theyre going to keep and roll it back. And Im looking forward to his speech on Thursday night. One other thing that Id say to the Labor Party and that is this that if they are genuinely interested in the fiscal position, I assume they will be passing all budget measures in the Senate. No point running around saying that theyre interested in the budget bottom line and trying to vote down measures in the Senate which will worsen it. Again these are budget measures. And once upon a time budget measures used to be enacted through the Senate, but then again once upon a time if you put a policy to the electorate and won a mandate, you got your measures through the Senate as well. I well remember standing up here in May of last year, let me take you back, and the criticism of the Budget then was Treasurer, this Budget, its all premised on something thats not going to happen, isnt it? Its all premised on revenues from GST which havent been enacted by the Senate and wont be enacted by the Senate. And I remember at the end of the week, I flew up to the APEC Finance Ministers meeting and I got off the plane in Singapore and Senator Harradine had made his speech, and everyone said, well that was the end of that Budget, premised on GST revenues which werent enacted and wouldnt be enacted. But they were, not as well as we would liked, but they were. And we put our measures into the Senate and we fight for them because we have a mandate for them and we have a vision. We have a vision for a better tax system. We have a vision for Australia which has a secure financial future. We have a vision for Australia where our economic goals and our social goals come together. We have a vision of spending on priorities like regional Australia. We have a vision of spending on families. We have a vision of creating a strong economy and this Budget, our fifth Budget, continues that policy and builds for the future, a future for Australia which will, in my view, give better opportunities to our people because we cared enough to make the big and the tough decisions, we cared enough to try and build for the future. Thank you very much.
CHAIR: Thank you Treasurer. Our question period today begins with Belinda Goldsmith.
JOURNALIST: Yes Treasurer I wanted to ask you what implications this Budget has for the operations of the Australian Office of Financial Management. You forecast further reductions in debt, can you give some details of what kind of assets you might buy to offset this given your commitment to retain a liquid bond market?
TREASURER: Sure. Theres been a bit of concern I notice in the financial markets that our debt reduction program means that there wont be enough Commonwealth Securities on offer and as a consequence that will lead to an illiquid bond market. For the Australian journalists that are here just let me tell you the first question I am always asked when I go internationally is why arent you borrowing more money. Because amongst the finance houses they want to issue Australian bonds and in fact if the Telstra sale were to go through we wouldnt be borrowing at all. But it is important we believe to keep some bonds and some securities out there so that you can get the yield curve and you can keep the market liquid. So we would still do gross issuings to keep a liquid market and we would offset it with assets if we got to an asset position. That would be the responsibility of the Australian Office of Financial Management to manage the bond issue, to keep the market liquid and marry it up with an asset position. We would be one of the few countries in the world which would be managing a net asset position. There are some others. I think Singapore is one, but we would put that in the hands of the independent Australian Office of Financial Management and charge them with managing the net asset position in the most profitable way and frankly its a problem Id like to have. I would like to have the problem of deciding where to invest the net asset position of the Commonwealth because I dont think anyone has had that problem at least since before the first World War and maybe even before that.
JOURNALIST: Treasurer, there is in fact some recent analysis that shows foreign investors have reduced their holdings of Australian bonds. And given the steady fall in the value of the Australian dollar since the start of the year, what can you say to reassure foreign investors about their investments in Australia.
TREASURER: Well in relation to investment in Australia I think the most important thing we can do is we can run a strong economy. A strong economy with low inflation, with a good fiscal position, with a low tax position and certainly in the case of foreign investors I point to at least two things which have changed recently in Australia. One is we have cut capital gains tax. Do you know theres a lot of people that dont really know weve cut capital gains tax. Capital gains tax was cut on 21 September last year and for foreign investors particularly pension funds which are not subject to taxation in their home jurisdiction, they can come in and they can make investments in Australia now capital gains tax free where they are engaged in the venture market and the like. Weve also reduced company tax starting on 1 July and we will have one of the lowest company tax rates in Asia. It will be lower than anything in America or Europe and one of the lowest in Asia. In relation to the exchange rate, the exchange rate moves for a whole variety of factors and some of it is because our exchange rate is moving and a lot of it is because the exchange rate that we measure ourselves against is moving. And I ask you to bear that in mind when you assess exchange rates. You could look at the exchange rate for example on the Euro and the US dollar. Youve got to always bear in mind that where there are two variables the movement in any one can create the difference. But its important to make sure that we run a strong economy and thats what we intend to do.
JOURNALIST: Treasurer, you talked about the social benefits of economic reforms that you have already undertaken like tax reform. What further reforms do you plan and, or are you just going to sit on your laurels?
TREASURER: I dont know Louise. How big are those laurels? I suspect you think theyre too small to sit on and I agree with you. And theyd be rather prickly too. I was going to answer that question. Lets get our way through tax reform which is going to take place in 1 July. Lets get our way through our privatisation programme which is hopefully going to continue and I have indicated that I think that there are some other areas, financial areas that need a little bit of simplification and if we were to get through these great challenges perhaps we could turn to simplifying some other areas which are very complicated at the moment. It starts with S.
JOURNALIST: I wanted to know firstly, how your health was and whether John Fahey had been breathing too heavily on you in the preparation of budget given that hes taken a few days off to be treated for Legionella and the second thing is the budget forecasts that the September quarter inflation rate will jump to four and a half which means that in the year to September inflation could be reaching towards six or seven per cent. Given that how can you continue to urge workers that they should not chase wage rises because of that and if they did would that have an impact on interest rates?
TREASURER: What weve said is that there will be a spike in the Consumer Price Index for the September quarter because on 1 July wholesale sales tax is abolished and goods and services tax is imposed. If a product has a direct wholesale sales tax that comes off the product, goods and services tax goes on it. And that more or less happens immediately. But then over the course of the next months or quarters embedded wholesale sales taxes come out of prices. Embedded wholesale sales taxes are the wholesale sales taxes which are built in to the production process. The distribution process. The transport process. And those embedded costs unwind over a period of time so you get a spike and then as your embedded wholesale sales taxes come out you come off the spike and actually at one point you go negative with ongoing inflation assumed to be constant. And I think there is a graph of that in the glossy budget papers. And over the course of the year, as you look at the overall effect in the year the average effect of the one-off price change is two and three quarter per cent. Now with wage earners it is important that rather than looking at the spike and assuming its spiked up and its going to continue, it is important that they understand theres the spike and then the embedded costs come out so that the spike comes off again. And that the overall effect is two and three quarter per cent on an average over the year. It is also important that they remember that income taxes means that on the same wage theyre now taking home more money. Income tax cuts mean that on the same wage theyre now taking home more money. And family assistance improvement means that if they are a family they have increased family assistance for the care and the nurture of their children. It is important that they remember that its their after tax position, its their disposable income which counts in dealing with price changes. Some prices will go up, some will stay the same, some will come down. But the average over the year will be two and three quarter per cent, and a lot of work has been done on this now. A lot of work has been done on this now and I think it has been generally agreed that with the effect of those income tax cuts and family assistance changes, even after price rises they are all better off. Those wage and salary earners and there are no grounds for seeking wage increases. And if the wage increases were sought, worse if they were granted and they flowed into a second round, then you would get a second round effect. Its the Government policy to have a first round effect. To make it clear that that shouldnt flow into wages it is recognised by the Reserve Bank that we ignore the one off effect and we look through to ongoing inflation, we keep the ongoing inflation in the band, then thats the figure that well be focusing on during the course of 2000-2001. Well hows my health, good I hope. Very busy time for Treasurers. I think this morning I had done ten radio and television interviews and a Press Club and a Question Time and a function tonight, so its a heavy programme. My colleague John Fahey has been toiling with me in budget preparation. It is an incredible strain and he perservered through that with Legionella in the last week or two. I pay tribute to the work he has done. Hes gone home to rest. He told me that all the medical advice is that if he rests that he will be right after the period of rest is ended and we wish him all the best. You asked me whether he had be breathing on me? And by that I meant breathing on my kneck rather than breathing to my face. I asked him that, strange as it may seem, and apparently it is not communicable except through airconditioning. Not suggesting there would have been a problem if it was communicable.
JOURNALIST: The Treasury seems very bullish about the prospects for low unemployment. Do you believe that a five per cent unemployment rate is within Australias grasp and, if so, when do you think this might happen?
TREASURER: The experience of the last four years that the Coalition Government has been this, that if the economy grows at around four per cent and employment grows at around two per cent. You take about a half a per cent off the unemployment rate. So after four years we have taken about two per cent off the unemployment rate. The unemployment rate which when the Coalition was elected was about 8.6, 8.7 is now 6.7, 6.8. The point then is if you did it for another four years, if you did it and that is a huge if. If you were to grow at four per cent for another four years and employment growth therefore grew at two per cent and you took off half a percentage point, you would see where the unemployment rate would be, but thats the huge if. Now weve come off a pretty good growth spurt and nobody predicted that it would be as good as it was in the past. Is anybody going to say you could do it for another 3 or 4 years. What I do know is this, that by reforming our economy we increase our chances. Thats what I know. I know that by reforming our economy whatever it would have been it will be better. And if it would have been a 2 per cent growth it may be that well get 2 . If it wouldve been 3 maybe well get 3 . As we reform the Australian economy, we lift the speed limits at which we can grow. And Ive said this before, the great task of the Australian economy at the moment is how do we prolong the cycle. Coming off 11 quarters now where growth has been at 4 per cent. Were coming off a positive run of growth which is even longer than that and the task now is how do you prolong the growth because every year you prolong it is more people that are going to get jobs. And we have to think in our minds how do we keep this economy growing. That is the great task of economic policy.
JOURNALIST: Malcolm Farr from Treas from the Telegraph Treasurer.
TREASURER: Dont let on youve been our plant all these years Malcolm.
JOURNALIST: We did pretty well on the front pages this year didnt we.
TREASURER: How did you get that story on beer so wrong?
JOURNALIST: Well talk later. Treasurer, two things if I may. When the, the first week of the GST the Prime Minister is going to be celebrating the Federation of Australia over in London, what sort of message do you think that sends, sends to the public, and secondly what elements of the Australian superannuation system do you think could be improved or replaced?
TREASURER: I dont want to go on to the next thing before we have finished the current thing. But if youd reform the taxation system and your privatisation program is on track and your debt reduction program was on track, and your Budgets were in surplus and your structural reform to your labour markets was continuing and you ask me what are other things in Australia that need improving, I think the complexity in superannuation needs improving. And I think superannuation is now so complex, that it should be simplified. Now all Im saying is thats something thats down the track and it may even be another Treasurer after me and Im not going to start on that until weve finished what weve done here. But I think I was asked what are the other great challenges of economic policy and I think thats something that one day will have to be done in this country. In relation to the Federation, the hundred year celebration of Federation, look I think itll be a great occasion actually. A hundred years as a nation. To celebrate it and for the Prime Minister to lead those celebrations is entirely correct and proper and I make this point. I think Im right in making this point. Hes going to be accompanied by all the State Premiers, including the Labor State Premiers. As far as I know the Labor State Premiers are going to be there in London, in July, and I know that Federal Labor likes to criticise the Prime Minister over this but theyre not joined in that criticism by the State Labor Leaders who consider it absolutely appropriate to be there and I think itll be a wonderful time. I think its appropriate that we mark these occasions, a hundred years of Federation. Its a good story in Australia. Look I know that there are areas where we havent done as well as we would have liked. But a hundred years, no wars, no civil disturbances. Weve provided a home for people all over the world. We are still considered an opportunity society and I think thats worth remembering and celebrating.
JOURNALIST: Youve told us in the past about how your Budget, Budgets fire-proofed us against the Asian meltdown. The first international reaction to this Budget was negative bouncing back to I guess neutral. Can you guarantee that this Budget, in fact fire-proofs us against whatever the world might be throwing at us, and in that respect is it especially fire-proof us against what Dr Greenspan might throw at us?
TREASURER: Look for 2 years during the Asian financial crisis the task was how do we cope with a regional recession. I think what your adverting to, whats on everybodys mind at the moment, is how do you cope with an American boom? Id rather have a strong world economy than a weak one, frankly. Id rather have a stable one. And I think thats whats on the minds of the American policymakers, how do they get stable growth in the United States. But the fact that world growth has picked up is a good thing. I keep making this point. World growth is a good thing for Australia because its going to give us export opportunities that we havent had. Weve come through a period of recession. The world is picking up. That is going to be a good thing for Australia. Were going to switch our growth into exports and that will have an effect on commodity prices and that will be a good thing for Australia. One indicator in this Budget of that, is we expect our current account deficit to decline from 5 to 4 – per cent. Its going to be good for Australia, that is part of the export story and from my point of view, whilst I would like strong consistent stable growth I would always rather have a world economy growing than a world economy or regional economy which is in recession. And I say to the Press Club, thank you for coming today. Its been a great opportunity for me to talk to you and to enjoy the company of my friends in the press and I hope that you all have a very happy after-budget day. Thank you very much. |