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February 27, 2001Nomination Of Australian Alternate Director To The Asian Development Bank
March 6, 2001Transcript No. 2001/017
Transcript
of
Hon. Peter Costello MP
Treasurer
ABC AM Interview with Mark Willacy
Melbourne
Friday, 2 March 2001
8.10 a.m
SUBJECTS: Fuel, Budget
WILLACY:
Mr Costello, how can something you decided as bad policy only a month ago suddenly be
good policy?
TREASURER:
Well, as your introduction was designed to make out, the Government and the Prime
Minister has changed its policy and theres no point in saying otherwise. Its a
change of policy the Government has reduced petrol excise by 1.5 cents a litre,
that happened at midnight
WILLACY:
Wasnt this bad policy, though, only a month ago?
TREASURER:
Well, the Government has changed its policy – thats the point I made right up
front – and we reduced petrol excise by 1.5 cents a litre at midnight of last night, but
weve gone further than that, weve also abolished petrol indexation. So that
means that the excise wont follow the Consumer Price Index in the future. Now, we
have to make sure that that decision, which I think Australians will welcome, is
consistent with good economic policy. And what that will mean is that the Budget that
Im now working on will be a very tight Budget, a very tight Budget indeed. And
Ill be looking for the support of all of my colleagues and the Prime Minister to
ensure that we continue to deliver low tax, proper targeted spending and keep the Budget
in the black – the position that we got it into and we want to keep it in.
WILLACY:
Well, if we get to the Budget in a moment, can we ask, does this mean that you
werent listening before? Obviously we had Queensland and WA the Prime
Minister says youve got it plainly wrong, does it mean you werent listening
before?
TREASURER:
Well, the Prime Minister said it was plainly wrong and it was wrong because obviously
the public believed that it was more important to have fuel relief than some of the other
measures that we otherwise would have done. And as a Government, which believes that lower
taxes and lower spending are preferable to higher taxes and higher spending, the
Governments made the decision that it will lower taxes. The corollary of that is
that it will have to be tighter on spending. You cant have both.
WILLACY:
Well, why did it take so long for you to hear that message from the electorate?
TREASURER:
Well, as I said, you cant have both. What well have to do now, is,
were going for a reduction in petrol tax. We will have to be tight on spending so
that we can keep that consistent with a good economic outcome and low interest rates,
which is in everybodys interest. I can promise you that the Government will not be
leaving any stone unturned to continue the good economic management. We worked so hard to
get this Budget back into the black. When I became the Treasurer of Australia what the
Labor Party was doing is, it was spending every dollar of tax revenue, it then used to
sell assets, like the Commonwealth Bank, and completely expend them and it was then ten
thousand million dollars short (inaudible)
WILLACY:
The ANZs Chief Economist, Saul Eslake, says Government spending and that
doesnt include defence and interest rate payments actually has increased by
nearly 12 per cent last year. Thats the biggest rise since the dying days of the
Whitlam Government. Do you like sharing that honour with Whitlam?
TREASURER:
I recall the first Crean budget in the Whitlam Government increased expenditure by 45
per cent. So I think we ought to actually get our facts correct on that one. I also
recall
WILLACY:
Well, according to Saul Eslake youre the next closest.
TREASURER:
Well, Ill have a look at Mr Eslakes figures in due course. But I recall, if
we just get our figures right, it was something like 45 per cent. Some people think it
could have been 50 per cent. Lets go through this Governments record. When I
became the Treasurer, the Labor Party spent every dollar of tax revenue, sold off assets,
treated that as revenue, spent every last dollar and still was coming up ten thousand
million dollars short. In my first Budget we cut eight thousand million from expenditure
and we put the Budget into balance. We have delivered four surplus Budgets, we have repaid
$50 billion of the $80 billion that the Labor Party ratcheted up in those last five years
and we intend to keep the Budget in surplus.
WILLACY:
Well, looking at the current budget well, lets look at the current budget.
This rash of spending on roads, petrol, defence, innovation, the scrapping of the trust
legislation, economists are saying it means a lower surplus, which means a weaker
Australian dollar, which economists say makes it harder for the Reserve Bank to cut
interest rates.
TREASURER:
Well, look, I dont know which economists you refer to there, but as the Treasurer
let me and I think I do know the Commonwealth Budget position as well as any
economist let me actually state what the facts are. Were now coming into a
budget which, after putting the Budget back in the black, weve had four surpluses in
a row. We have now repaid $50 billion worth of the $80 billion that Labor ratcheted up in
those last five years. We continue to keep the Budget in surplus and we continue to repay
down Labors debt. Now, I think thats a pretty good fiscal record. Let me tell
you the greatest threat to Australias fiscal position: Labor. Theres only one
thing that could really give Australia economic trouble in relation to the Budget and
thats the people that created the problem by ratcheting up $80 billion worth of
accumulated deficits in five years. Thats the problem and weve got to make
sure that we continue that economic management.
WILLACY:
Well, Reserve Bank Chief, Ian Macfarlane, seems to think the biggest threat is a
bidding war in the lead-up to a Federal election. It would seem that war was well and
truly under way.
TREASURER:
Well, I know Mr Macfarlane pretty well, I can assure you of that. Now, I dont
think thats what Mr Macfarlane has said. And I think what Mr Macfarlane has his eye
on, as the Government does, in relation to monetary policy, is the agreement which this
Government put in place in 1996. We spelled out how monetary policy is to be conducted in
this country. And monetary policy is to be conducted to produce underlying inflation of 2
per cent to 3 per cent over the cycle, and that inflation rate, the underlying inflation
rate, stripped out of one-off factors, is down at the bottom of that band. Thats
what Mr Macfarlane is targeting, by agreement with the Government and its the
inflation in the Australian economy which will be the principal determinant in relation to
interest rates keep inflation low, youll keep interest rates low. Interest
rates are now 7.5 per cent, an interest rate which we havent really seen since
probably pre-Whitlam days other than under this Government.
WILLACY:
But youre now saying that the belt has to be tightened. The Prime Minister says
this extra spending means the Government wont be able to spend on other things. What
sort of areas will miss out, how do you tighten your belt?
TREASURER:
Well, thats a fair point. You cant do everything. You cant reduce
taxes and increase spending. Yesterday we reduced taxes. What that means is we will have
to keep a tight reign on spending. Thats the corollary of this. But, as I said
earlier, low tax, low spending. To my way of thinking, is a much better way of going than
high tax, high spending. Thats the Labor way. So
WILLACY:
Well, where do you reduce that spending, which areas?
TREASURER:
Yesterday we cut taxes so in the upcoming budget well be very tight on spending.
With the support of the Prime Minister and my colleagues, we are now working on that
budget. I am working on that Budget at the moment. I am sure that we can deliver an
outcome which will be consistent with good economic management.
WILLACY:
Peter Costello, thanks for joining us.
TREASURER:
Thank you.