Productivity Commission Report on Airport Price Regulation
May 13, 2002Budget – Address to the National Press Club
May 15, 2002TRANSCRIPT
of
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Interview with Dennis Grant
SBS Television
Tuesday, 14 May 2002
8.45 pm
SUBJECTS: Budget deficit; defence; border protection;
disability pensions
GRANT:
Treasurer, thanks for joining us. It turns out tonight we find out we’re in
deficit. Now the Prime Minister was saying just a month ago that the economy
was going gangbusters. You used to talk about the links between interest rate
rises and deficit budgets. What went wrong? Where did the money go?
TREASURER:
Well during the course of the last year, during a global slowdown when most
of the developed world’s economies went into recession, it was a very difficult
environment. I said that over and over and over again and as a consequence of
September the 11th, and the war against terrorism in Afghanistan,
we decided to make additional expenditure to support to …(inaudible)…build
up security at home. And if a global downturn and a heavy commitment of troops
is required, then the outcome assumed to be is going to take an affect on your
bottom line. But the good news is, Australia defeated the global downturn and
our economy is growing faster than the developed nations of the world and a
long with that we’ll be in a very strong financial position.
GRANT:
Well the tone of this whole budget is very serious, very sobering. Stockpiling
vaccines against possible terrorist stuff within Australia, vast expenditure
on defence. You’re not overstating this?
TREASURER:
Well I hope it’s never needed. As I said in my budget speech, let’s hope we
never need any of these things. But who would have thought the World Trade Centre
would be brought down by terrorism. Countries have got to make their own assessment
in the light of that as to what they should do to protect their public. We’re
protecting airports, aircraft. We’re building up intelligence. We’re increasing
the number of strike teams with the Federal Police. We’ve got …inaudible…in
the Australian Defence Force capacity to lift…inaudible… Hopefully none
of them are never needed, but let’s suppose they are and we didn’t have the
capacity. What would the public think of its Government then?
GRANT:
A lot of worried pensioners I suspect tonight. These changes to the disability
pension. In a nutshell, what’s the point of that? Why are you doing this?
TREASURER:
What we’re saying is, if you can work 15 hours a week, we’d like to encourage
you get back to work. Let’s take somebody who’s got a bad back. They’ve been
in a labouring job. They go on the disability support pension. They can be on
it for 20 or 30 years until they come off it for the aged pension. We’re saying
with medical treatment, with rehabilitation, you can get many of these people
back to work. Not maybe in a full-time 40 hour a week labouring job, but maybe
at a desk job, part-time. We’re providing more services to encourage them to
do that. And we want to try and get them back into the workforce, out of the
disability support pension into the workforce. It’s actually going to cost us
more money in the short term, but we think it will pay off in the long term
as lesser people and I’d like to see the case go on to the disability support
pension.
GRANT:
One quick last one. How may more budgets have you got in you?
TREASURER:
We’ll get through this one before we figure out the next Dennis.
GRANT:
Thank you Treasurer.