Terrorism Insurance
May 21, 2002Telstra, Coalition
May 23, 2002TRANSCRIPT
of
HON. PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Doorstop
Town Green, Port Macquarie
Wednesday, 22 May 2002
9.30am
SUBJECTS: Dairy Regional Assistance Program; Aged Care; Roads to Recovery
Program; University Funding; Unemployment; Prime Minister
TREASURER:
Well today I am announcing funding of $715,000 to Australian Solar Timbers
in Kempsey under the Government’s Dairy Assistance Program. This is a program
which the Government put in place to help with adjustment arising out of dairy
deregulation and it’s going to a very well known company in Kempsey, and it
will help them with new investment, and we figure it will create nearly 40 additional
jobs in the area. It’s great to be here at the invitation of Mark Vaile who
has been the Member for Lyne and of course Australia’s Trade Minister, and he
has had a great deal to do with the structural adjustment package and it’s a
good thing to be able to announce to the people of the region here on the mid-coast.
JOURNALIST:
Is it a fair use under the dairy RAP program though?
TREASURER:
Well, I think so, because this is a structural adjustment. Obviously with the
dairy program you’ll have fewer people on smaller dairy plots and so we have
got to encourage other industries which can take up employment opportunities.
This is a great employment opportunity. It will be a sustainable long term business
and that will give people of the region good job opportunities.
JOURNALIST:
The head of the company at Kempsey though is in fact the Chair of the Lyne
Regional Council. Is this about the Coalition looking after its own?
TREASURER:
No, we have an independent process which evaluates all of these things on their
merits. You don’t get any special favours and by the same token you are not
prejudiced. If you happen to be involved in the local community and you have
got a good project, it goes through an independent assessment and the money
is awarded on its merits.
JOURNALIST:
This is an area with a lot of older people and a lot of pensioners, how do
they fare under your Budget?
TREASURER:
Well, under the Budget we have increased spending on aged care. We have increased
the number of aged carers’ packages, which helps people to stay in their own
homes and gives them assistance with bathing and food and the like. We will
also be increasing spending on radiology services outside capital cities, which
will be good for areas like this. So, I think all in all, the Budget actually
boosts services to the aged. We bring down in this Budget an Intergenerational
Report which talks about some of the cost pressures that are now coming on the
Government in ten, twenty and thirty or forty years and we have put in place
measures which are designed to sustain (inaudible) services for people who are
aged, over the next ten or twenty or thirty years, and I think that’s a very
far ranging, far sighted policy.
JOURNALIST:
David (inaudible) called for the, for the Roads to Recovery to be made recurrent,
he’s probably not alone in that regard. What do you think about that?
TREASURER:
Well, it’s been a five year program I think of $1.2 billion over all which
is a very big investment. I am not surprised that people would call for it to
become a recurrent program, but let’s just get through our five years before
we worry about what’s going to happen after that.
JOURNALIST:
You were asked about the University, Treasurer. How good is that looking for
this area?
TREASURER:
Well, the way in which funding for a university is done is that a global sum
(inaudible) institutions put forward their bids for the taxpayers’ dollar, and
that is assessed by the Education Minister eventually and various advisory bodies
that he has working for him. So if there is a good case and it’s put to the
Education Minister, he will give it due consideration and it’s not something
that I personally decide, it’s Dr Nelson in relation to that.
JOURNALIST:
It’s been suggested that you have only spent something like seven nights in
regional Australia over the last few years. Are we going to see more of you
in regional Australia in the future?
TREASURER:
Well over the last seven years we have spent very considerable periods of time
in regional Australia. That suggestion which was a Labor Party suggestion of
course is false, and what would you expect from the Labor Party? But leaving
them aside, because we don’t want to spoil a good day by thinking about the
Labor Party, I very much enjoy being here. It’s great to be here in Port Macquarie,
for me it’s going back to a place that I spent time as a teenager and if I have
the chance to come back I would love to do so.
JOURNALIST:
The situation with unemployment in regional areas, Treasurer, are you working
on that to bring that sort of situation down? I mean it’s very, very, it’s coming
down But younger people jobs, (inaudible) jobs in this area, I mean (inaudible)
TREASURER:
Well look at this wonderful development here in Port Macquarie, the Four Points
Sheraton which is going to give a lot of young people jobs in a very good industry,
the hospitality industry, where they can have skills which will take them all
over the world eventually, in the hospitality industry. Look, to get unemployment
down we have got to run a growing economy. We need to continue to work with
industrial relations reform and welfare reform and for regional areas it is
important to have adjustment programs and one of the reasons I am here today
is to announce such an adjustment program in relation to (inaudible) which will
give regional areas the opportunity to develop long term jobs in the private
sector. So, yes, the answer to your question is yes. We will continue to work
on that. We have made some progress but there is more progress to be made.
JOURNALIST:
Sorry just one final question if you don’t mind Mr Costello. It has been published
today that 46 per cent of Australians want to see John Howard stay on as the,
(inaudible) as Prime Minister. Can you respond to that?
TREASURER:
Oh well, I can understand that people would take that view, and obviously it
is something that people feel that Australia is being run in good hands at the
moment. I think we are probably the best performing economy in the world. They
certainly don’t want to see any change to the Labor Party so I can understand
that people want to see good strong Government continuing, and I can pledge
to them that they will. This is a Government which is very much dedicated to
the public interest.
Thanks.