Rollback, retail trade figures, Ansett
May 30, 2001Aston Liberal candidate Chris Pearce, bracket creep, capital expenditure and building approval data, One.Tel employee entitlements
June 1, 2001Transcript No. 2001/081
TRANSCRIPT
of
HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
DOORSTOP
Ballarat
Thursday, 31 May 2001
2.45pm
SUBJECTS: Russell Mark, Labor policy on petrol excise indexation, One.Tel
employee entitlements, tax bracket creep
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, Mr Beazley was here in Ballarat yesterday (inaudible) win for the next
election. How do you feel about that?
TREASURER:
Ballarat is going to be a hard seat for the Coalition to win. The Labor Party is
treating it as if it is already their own. But one of the advantages that we have got here
in Ballarat, is, we have got a terrific candidate. He is a Ballarat boy, he is somebody
whos represented his country, he knows what it is to work hard. And I must say, of
all the candidates that Ive ever campaigned with, I think Russell Mark is truly one
of the most outstanding candidates. He aims to win the trust and support of the people of
Ballarat, he has got every chance to do so, and I wish him well in that effort.
JOURNALIST:
How important is this seat to the Liberal Party?
TREASURER:
Very important. Look, the next election is going to be a close election. Most people
reckon that Labor is the favorite, Labor reckons its the favorite. The Labor Party
is already counting itself as getting ready for government
JOURNALIST:
What (inaudible)
TREASURER:
and we have to make sure that we hold seats like Ballarat to continue good
government for the people of Australia. IlI say this, look, the last time the Labor
Party held Ballarat remember this, the home mortgage interest rates were 17 per cent.
Thats what you were paying the last time the Labor Party held Ballarat, today
its 6.8 per cent. It could so easily go back and if you did thered be many
families that couldnt afford a home, families that would be under severe financial
pressure and its important that we keep good economic management going in Australia.
You dont get that from the Labor Party.
JOURNALIST:
What impact do you think the requirements for Michael Ronaldsons (inaudible).
TREASURER:
Michael was undoubtedly a very popular local member. He won Ballarat in 1990, he held
it through four election campaigns, he had a lot of friends and supporters, but Michael is
giving Russell his full support. Michael was very instrumental in talking to Russell and
encouraging him to run, and Russell has got Michaels full support, and (inaudible)
got the good wishes of a number of people here and he is, as I said, one of the
outstanding candidates I think for election in the next Federal election.
JOURNALIST:
Are you actually claiming (inaudible)?
TREASURER:
Weve actually cut the petrol excise and abolished indexation. That means that
under our policy petrol excise wont be going up, but when the Labor Party was asked
yesterday whether it supported our abolition of indexation they wouldnt say they did
and they wouldnt commit to keeping that indexation abolished.
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible)
TREASURER:
So what is obvious is that the Labor Party now has a plan to increase the petrol
excise. We abolished indexation. They wont commit to keeping that abolition in
place. If they are elected, they wouldnt give that commitment, and rural and
regional Victoria ought to know this: Beazley and Crean kept indexation in place during 13
years of Labor government, we abolished it, they have not given a commitment that they
wont bring it back. They wont give that commitment because they fully intend,
if they can get away with it, to bring back petrol indexation which would increase excise
for all rural and regional motorists.
JOURNALIST:
Will you give a commitment that you wont (inaudible) motorists?
TREASURER:
For which motorists?
JOURNALIST:
For those motorists (inaudible)
TREASURER:
Let me say what this Government has done. We give a full rebate on diesel excise for
primary producers. We introduced a new system by which truckies get a rebate, a part
rebate in relation to diesel which didnt exist before. Under our Government, we gave
a rebate to truck drivers. They are paying 27 cents a litre less in tax on diesel than
they would have been under the Labor Party policy. We then abolished indexation on petrol
which had been introduced by the Labor Party in 1983, so we have got the runs on the board
for cutting diesel for farmers and primary producers, for cutting the cost for trucks and
for abolishing indexation and helping motorists. And when the Labor Party was asked
yesterday, do they match us on the abolition of indexation, they refused to say. They want
to re-introduce indexation, I keep on saying it. They introduced it in 1983, they want to
bring it back. Its one of the taxes Mr Beazley is going to put up. He has to put up
taxes. If youre going to roll-back the GST youve got to put up other taxes.
Its obvious now one of the taxes that he intends to put up, is the tax on petrol.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, what do you think of One.Tel going into voluntary receivership?
TREASURER:
Well, like anybody in Australia, I regret the fact that the company has got into
difficulties. I dont think anybody would welcome financial difficulty for One.Tel or
for any other company in Australia. The directors have obviously got an obligation to
comply with the law. It is obviously why they have appointed an administrator. I hope the
administrator can maximise the value of the company and protect the creditors. That is a
matter for the administrators, not a matter for government.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Beazleys response to that is to say that he would introduce legislation to
protect all workers entitlements when a company collapses. What do you think of
that?
TREASURER:
Well, again its just something that he obviously doesnt feel very deeply
about.
JOURNALIST:
Would you be prepared to do the same thing?
TREASURER:
Well, you might ask me why doesnt he feel deeply about it? Because in 13 years of
government he never introduced a guarantee for anybodys entitlements, not one
dollar, not for one employee, not for one company. The only government that ever
introduced a guarantee for entitlements is the Coalition Government. We introduced a
scheme to guarantee entitlements up to a safety net which we fund 50 per cent and the
State governments fund 50 per cent. No Labor State government has yet put a dollar into
it, but the Liberal and National Party Federal Government has paid its 50 per cent
liability. Now, nothing under Labor. We introduced the scheme, we pay our 50 per cent. No
Labor government pays its amount and all of a sudden Mr Beazleys got interested in
the issue. Its just an example of, he says things off the top of his head but
Id say to the public of Australia look at what he does, not what he says. He was in
government for 13 years and he didnt do anything.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, about a half a million people, about a half a million people are going to
be paying the top tax rate (inaudible) 4 years (inaudible) bracket creep?
TREASURER:
What we did about bracket creep is we dramatically reduced income tax rates.
JOURNALIST:
So its going to get worse?
TREASURER:
If we hadnt cut income taxes on 1 July last year, average workers today would be
on the top income tax rate. Theyd be on 43 cents I should say, on 43 cents today,
and it was by cutting income tax rates on 1 July last year that we freed average workers
from that 43 cent rate. Weve got average workers down to a 30 per cent rate. They
would have been on 43 per cent, weve got them down to a 30 per cent rate. And you
dont go above a 30 per cent rate whilst you go through average wages in Australia.
That was what our tax plan did, and were now 11 months into those tax cuts, but this
is an illustration of the advantage of those income tax cuts. We took a person on average
wages, who would have been on a 43 cent marginal tax rate and we cut it to 30 cents. We
cut it from 43 cents to 30 cents, and the Labor Party opposed us every step of the way.
They opposed that plan, and if we hadnt have been able to put that tax plan in today
the marginal rate, the top marginal rate for a person on average earnings would be 43 per
cent, but it is only 30 per cent. That is one of the advantages of income tax cuts that we
put in place on 1 July 2000.
Thanks.