Interest rates
February 3, 2000Tax Reform and Rural and Regional Australia
February 8, 2000
Transcript No. 2000/09 TRANSCRIPT OF The Hon Peter Costello MP TREASURER
Interview with Jon Faine 3LO 8.30 am Friday, 4 February 2000 SUBJECT: Power crisis, interest rates, Reserve Bank e-mail glitch, Telstra 2
FAINE: Peter Costello is the Federal Treasurer. Good morning to you again. And youre no stranger to industrial disputation. You cut your teeth at the Bar and created your political reputation on these sorts of disputes, with Dollar Sweets and others.
TREASURER: Yes, Ive been involved in numbers of these disputes. Let me take up a few things that were just said. You would have to be suffering from collective amnesia if you thought that when it was Government-owned you didnt have problems down in the Latrobe Valley. In fact, my recollection is that they were just as bad. From the unions point of view, they might like the Government to own the SEC because it would given them another lever on the employer through Government ownership. I dont think thered be any evidence at all to suggest that Government ownership led to better industrial relations, in fact quite the reverse. The second point Id just make in observation is this. The really innocent parties here are the people of Victoria, and South Australia for that matter too. It just seems to be the way, doesnt it, that where you have a critical industry and a concentration of power they always hit the soft spot, and hold the community to ransom. And I would just say that the public interest ought to be the pre-eminent interest here and work ought to resume so that the public can be looked after.
FAINE: And a thinly-veiled threat from the company, it being a British-owned multi national with massive energy investments around the world, that if they cant resolve this dispute soon, they wont invest further in Victoria in renewing the plant which has got another ten or fifteen years of useful life in it.
TREASURER: Well, I dont know that threats ought to be issued either way, but I do think this: that people should return to work. I think that the dispute ought to be ended and I think the really innocent party, which is the public of Victoria, ought to be pre-eminent in the minds of everybody in this dispute.
FAINE: All right. Now were taking peoples calls, all sorts of people ringing in with particular problems caused by the power crisis and the heatwave. Well continue to take notice of the different calls for help that people are giving to us and well be processing those through the morning. [Instruction concerning calls to the station on power] Now, Peter Costello, the interest rates that were put up by the Reserve Bank the other day have been anything but plain sailing for you. Well talk about the GST in a moment, but the interest rate issue first of all. The Democrats have called for a review of the Reserve Bank Act. They describe the Reserve Bank as a secretive organisation. Business groups, including the influential Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry, have said they want to see the minutes of the Reserve Bank meetings released to bolster accountability. Much dissatisfaction in all sectors, many sectors, with the decision for a half a per cent rise in interest rates two days ago.
TREASURER: Sure. Well, let me come to the first point. The Reserve Bank today is probably subject to more scrutiny than its ever been in its history. One of the things that I put in place was the twice-a-year appearance by the Governor of the Reserve Bank before a parliamentary committee, which questions him in front of the press. In addition, they always make a statement for, of their reasons when monetary policy is changed. And youve probably got the most transparent and open arrangements that have ever been in place in Australia, in Australian history. So I think we can put that to one side. The second thing Ive been saying in all of this is, that having stated the reasons why it moved, its instructive to actually look at the reasons why the Bank moved. And I know, I made this prediction that if the Bank tightened interest rates Mr Beazley would say it was GST, and right on cue, he came out and said, oh, it must have been GST. In fact, Im a bit amazed he hasnt yet claimed the power strike is the responsibility of GST, because just about everything else in society is at the moment. But what the Bank said, is that the principal reason is the strengthening world economy. Now, nobody who is a home buyer is going to like their mortgage interest rates going up. Of course if you are a depositor you might, but nobody who is a home buyer is going to like interest rates going up. The good side of this is that the world economy is strengthening, and that means that the Australian economy will be better placed and it means there will be more jobs. There is a flip side to all of this, and the task for monetary policy at the moment is, weve had incredibly good growth, four per cent per annum for four years, the task now is to figure out how we can keep this economy growing. If you were to keep this economy growing at four per cent for another four years you could practically provide work for people who are looking for it. Its a big if, but that is the task of economic policy.
FAINE: Do you still cling to your zero unemployment in four years prediction?
TREASURER: No, what Ive said is this. If you were to grow the Australian economy at four per cent for four years, then the experience of the last four years showed us that that created 624,000 new jobs. The unemployment rate has fallen from 8.6 per cent to about 7 . . .
FAINE: 7 per cent.
TREASURER: Well, 7, I think its probably a little under that, or it will certainly be under that by mid-year. If you took another 1 points off, well the arithmetic tells you where youd be in four years time.
FAINE: But on your own projections, the GST is going to have a one-off inflationary impact of what, somewhere around 3 to 4 per cent. The post-Olympics slump is factored in as well. In America, they only put interest rates up a quarter of a per cent, we put them up a half a per cent. And people are saying well, hang on, is this the right management tool for the times and for this economy.
TREASURER: Well, you see, thats the other point I made. Mr Beazley said, oh, its all related to the GST, and this was on Wednesday. And I said, well if the US Federal Reserve raises interest rates tonight, as was widely expected, Mr Beazley is going to have a lot of explaining as to why Dr Alan Greenspan moves American interest rates on the back of the Australian GST. Now just to complete the picture, overnight the European Central Bank raised interest rates 25 points, the Danish Central Bank raised rates 30 points, the Swiss raised rates 50 points, the Canadians raised rates 25 points, the Americans, as you said, raised on our time Thursday morning, 25 points, which meant that their total tightening is now a full 100 points over the last six months. So theyve actually tightened policy more than Australia. Now although the US economy is running strongly, people would say its unemployment is lower so you would expect a more significant tightening in the US. Whereas, if you compared Australia to Europe, where unemployment in Australia is much lower than Europe, in France and Germany its about 10 or 11 per cent, theyve had smaller tightenings. But you know, I can tell you this, as somebody who was at the IMF in September and the meeting of the worlds largest 20 economies in Berlin in December, the world economy is strengthening, everybody is tightening rates as a consequence. The bad part is, that that has a cost on mortgages but there is a flip side to this, and that is that the world economy is getting stronger and thats going to help Australia.
FAINE: The Bank of Adelaide put its home loan rates up 0.7 per cent, not 0.5 of a per cent. What are you going to do to them?
TREASURER: Well, I think my advice, and I dont have the figures with me at the moment what their standard variable is, but I assume it was the same as all the other banks right, so theyve come off the same base. Assuming theyve come off the same base and theyve moved up by.7 of a per cent, I would say to anybody in Adelaide who has got a standard variable mortgage with the Bank of Adelaide that has put its price up .7 per cent, I would start talking to another bank frankly.
FAINE: And let the market place sort it out? Not to refer it to the ACCC?
TREASURER: There is no reason, there is no monetary reason why its putting up its interest rates .7 per cent, and I always find that the most direct way of making your displeasure known is to go to another bank, because banks that overcharge in a competitive market place are going to lose customers.
FAINE: How have you made your displeasure known to the Reserve Bank about the stuff-up where 64 financial market dealers got advance notice by six minutes of the half a per cent rate rise, and were able to conduct what otherwise would have been insider trading, but because it was the Reserve Bank that told them, they became, many of them, instant millionaires?
TREASURER: I had a meeting with the Reserve Bank yesterday, a long meeting, and I raised it with them. I asked them whether they were doing an inquiry, they told me that they are doing an inquiry. I asked them whether some disciplinary measures would be taken against those that are responsible, they assured me that they would. And I asked them to put in place arrangements which would ensure that that never happened again, and they told me that they will. I dont even know why 64 people need e-mail notice of this. I think those 64 people could read the Reuters screen
FAINE: Just like everyone else
TREASURER: Or a press release like everybody else. And one of the things I suggested to them was that they actually abolish the list of 64. I also enquired , this is just an interesting titbit for you, as to who was on the list of 64, and its true there are some financial houses, there was also an ABC journalist.
FAINE: Which one? No dont say, dont say.
TREASURER: Why, do you want to go and look at his trading record do you?
FAINE: It wasnt me.
TREASURER: And there were some other people. And it was, I am, they have assured me and I am sure that there was no bad intent, it was just a straight clerical error. Somebody was typing into a machine, to have it ready to punch at 9.30, and they punched it as they were typing it in. Now I think the important thing here is to put in place systems where that cannot happen.
FAINE: All right. On Telstra 2 at the moment we are seeing the shares, or the instalment receipts trading at less than the issue price. Does this dampen your enthusiasm to sell the rest of Telstra?
TREASURER: Not in the slightest, no. The thing about the share market is, its an investment like anything else, its an investment like a house. You buy a house, the value of the house most probably over time will go up. But in between it will go up and come down, and it will go up and come down, but across the graph, if you are looking at a graph, it generally goes up. Thats whats been happening in the share market, it doesnt mean it will go up every single day, there will be days when it will come down. People have got to look at that as an investment.
FAINE: A couple of GST specific questions. Some dispute, retailers saying they want to have the right to display pre-GST and post-GST prices alongside each other. Im sure Ive heard you somewhere along the way say to me, or Ive seen you on the news somewhere else saying you want one price tag, a GST-inclusive price tag, no ifs, no buts, no arguments about it.
TREASURER: I want a situation where, when you walk into a store like now, the price that you see on the shelf is the price you pay at the counter.
FAINE: Yep.
TREASURER: I dont want a situation – I dont know if youve ever been to America where they have a price, like $8 on the shelf, you go to the cash register and they say the price of that is actually $8.60. You know how they do it, they add their services taxes at the counter.
FAINE: And the retailers here are saying we want people to know what component of the price theyre paying is not our fault, but is the GST.
TREASURER: Well, the thing about the price under a GST system is because the GST adds ten per cent tax, one-eleventh of the price is always tax. Thats just the way it works out mathematically. One-eleventh of the tax-inclusive price. Dont ask me to go through the maths, and you know, I dont want to confuse people, but take it from me thats how it works out. So you always know. What you dont know at the moment is what the taxes are, and what Im, which are being taken off, because some are at nought, some are at 12, some are at 22, some are at 32, some are at 47, and what Id be very afraid of with this retailers scheme is whether or not they actually show the taxes that are being taken off. Now I want a situation, where the person in the store knows what they are being asked to pay. And that is the situation at the moment incidentally. If you go into a store at the moment and you buy something thats got a 22 per cent tax, they dont give you a pre and post-tax price. This is the scheme. Well its all inclusive, its already built in. And this is the scheme that weve been operating in Australia since about 1932.
FAINE: All right, the Premier Steve Bracks, available to us in just a moment on the power crisis, one more question for you, Peter Costello. Ray Reagan, from the National Tax Agent and Accountants Association, the other day said that you need to do something about the plight of the people who live in caravan parks as permanent dwellings. The poorest people in our community who cant afford housing of any other kind, and yet although rent in private housing is exempt from the GST, if you are paying rent in a caravan park youll be hit with the GST. And youve got to do something for these people, whats your response?
TREASURER: Well people that are long-term tenants in caravan parks, Im not talking about you or me
FAINE: No, no if we are going on holiday
TREASURER: . . . for a week, but people that are long-term, that is that are living in caravan parks, get the same treatment in relation to caravans as normal rents. That is, that there is no GST on the rent. Its whats called “input taxing” and the owner, the landlord doesnt get credits for the taxes on the inputs, but has no liability for GST on the rents. Theres another alternative system. He can get full input tax credits and charge half GST. But that is the rule to equalise it with people who are in normal residential rents. And dont forget this; that not only are we putting up pensions but we are also putting up rent allowances, so that if there is an increase in rent, rent allowances under the Commonwealth are going up to cope with it.
FAINE: Peter Costello, a very busy morning for you and for us as well. Thank you for sparing some time for our listeners this morning. Well speak again soon Im sure.
TREASURER: A great pleasure to come in, Jon.
FAINE: The Federal Treasurer and Deputy Leader, of course, of the Parliamentary Liberal Party, Peter Costello. |