Interest Rates – Interview with Steve Liebmann, Today Show, Channel 9
November 5, 2003Address to 138th Victorian State Council, Shepparton
November 8, 2003TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Interview with Alan Jones
2GB
Thursday, 6 November 2003
7.15 am
SUBJECTS: Interest Rates, Economy, Dollar, Housing
Finance, Banks, NSW Poker Machine Tax Rebate, Marginal Tax Rates
JONES:
Treasurer, good morning.
TREASURER:
Good morning Alan.
JONES:
Interest rates are a surprise to the financial markets, a surprise to Peter
Costello?
TREASURER:
Well look, I follow the debate very closely and I talk to the Bank about
these things so, it’s not really worth going into the way in which…
JONES:
I just asked that because our listeners don’t, just to clarify, you
don’t have any say in any of this?
TREASURER:
Oh sure, let me make this clear, the Reserve Bank is independent and the
Reserve Bank makes these decisions, they’re not Government decisions.
We put it on an independent basis and it makes the decision solely itself
now, as I was saying earlier you follow the debate you get some idea of what
they might be thinking but it is an independent board and it makes the decision
itself.
JONES:
And there is talk that there could be another rise over the next 6 months,
even as early as next month?
TREASURER:
Well look Alan, you will find that people go out and make their predictions
and I have said this before, I have watched some people predict six of the
last one interest rate rise.
JONES:
Yes six of the last one interest rate rise I agree. But however, immediately
this occurred the Australian dollar went to over US71c, what do you think
the farmer is saying today?
TREASURER:
Well, I know what the National Farmers Federation…
JONES:
They are angry
TREASURER:
…said, yes, they were very critical of the decision, they were critical
of the decision because obviously they are being hit by a high currency at
the moment and that’s a point that I understand very very well for the
farmer. The second thing is, although some parts of the drought have broken,
the drought has not broken throughout all of Australia…
JONES:
Sure as hell hasn’t, absolutely, so they have got debt as well to service.
TREASURER:
Yes, well, there is a view in some circles that the drought is completely
over, it is in some areas, but it’s not in other areas and I think if
you happen to be in one of those drought areas, you are still doing it really
hard.
JONES:
It seems extraordinary though doesn’t it, we go through this cycle
over and over again, and acknowledging that we most probably still got the
lowest interest rates in 30 years and great credit to you for your economic
management in that, but none the less you get economic growth to about three
and three quarter per cent, you get excited that means more revenue for the
Government, more income for the wage and salary earner and more jobs for the
people out there and yet you suddenly say hang on hang on we got to put the
breaks on now and put the price of money up.
TREASURER:
Well, you said it, the reason why I think there is a lot of focus on yesterday’s
decision is that interest rates haven’t moved for fourteen months, that
is very very unusual, in fact probably more, I think it was back in June of
last year, very very unusual that you get a period without that movement.
The second point to bear in mind is, you see an interest rate with a six in
front of it, it is historically low and I think there are some people that
think, oh well maybe interest rates have always been at six per cent, well
Alan, even under our Government the average interest rate has been 7.15 per
cent and of course under the previous Government the interest rate averaged
under Labor 12 per cent, so you have to, twelve and three quarter, yeah
that’s right, double, double the current rate.
JONES:
But if the United States, Japan and Europe, which is this case, have interest
rates lower than ours, then our currency could in fact go even higher and
that continues to cause problems for our exports and we come back to the old
farmer.
TREASURER:
Well, as I was saying earlier the mortgage rate is still an historic low
in Australia. Now you come to Japan and the United States, these economies
have been in recession and because they are, both of those economies went
into recession, in Japan’s case a very deep recession, in order to try
and kick start the economy interest rates were put low and they are recessionary
economies. The US is moving out of recession now and so it’s moving
on, Japan maybe, I don’t know, but the thing about currency movements
I do want to say something about that, is that the Australian dollar went
very low, you can recall in 2000 and 2001 and that’s mainly because
America was over valued, a lot of that has come off and the Australian dollar
has gone back up, and I make the point, I always have, that, that makes it
tougher for our exporters and our farmers are exporters and it makes it cheaper
for our importers.
JONES:
…(inaudible) pushes the debt up.
TREASURER:
When the dollar was low incidentally and there was a lot of criticism in
the press at the time Alan, I can remember the press were fulminating against
that, it was actually a very good thing for our exporters…
JONES:
My word it was.
TREASURER:
…it helped them, it helped them through a time when, when a lot of the
world went into recession.
JONES:
This all seems to though derive, yesterday’s decision, from the Friday
figure of a seven and a half per cent increase in building approvals in September
when the forecast was for one per cent. Now I guess the concern the Reserve
Bank had was that this accelerates the level of debt as more and more people
are seeking to buy and every person who buys a house, normally on their credit
card then buys the washing machine and the kitchen wear and the curtains and
so on. Aren’t there other ways though of slowing that down rather than
increasing the price of money? Do you think for example that people have too
easy an access to credit? I mean on credit cards alone they post them out
to school kids.
TREASURER:
Well I do think that one of things that has led to increased borrowing is
the willingness of the banks to lend money against home equity. There seems
to be quite a new phenomena, you’ve seen them advertised on TV, the
home equity loan the bank writes to you and says oh “look, the value
of your home has gone up, would you like to draw down against it?” In
fact, they send you letters. I know this because they have sent me letters
saying “would I like to borrow against my home” and that is a
new product and banks have been very free with finance particularly in relation
to those new instruments. I do think that finance is very easy and finance
is cheap. As I keep saying by historical standards, interest rates are very,
very low. I just want to make this point because I make it over and over and
over again to people that are thinking about taking out a mortgage. You have
got to remember if your mortgage has six in front of it, it’s a historical
low. There are some young people that think six per cent is a normal interest
rate. Well, I can remember when I bought my first home it was seventeen and
a half per cent.
JONES:
Absolutely, I agree with you.
TREASURER:
Seventeen and half per cent. And so I say to people when you are taking out
a twenty five or thirty year loan just leave some cushion in there because
if you see a mortgage interest rate with a six in front of it, it’s
a historical low and over twenty or thirty years you don’t have thirty
year lows.
JONES:
But the flip side of this of course with the housing as I mentioned to you
is stocking the house up with its furniture and fittings. Average credit card
debt per household has now trebled in 7 years from $1,601 in June 1996 to
nearly $5,000 in July 2003. I mean we’ve got one and a half, one and
three quarter million people here holding credit and charge cards, some hold
many. Do you have a concern about the easy access that people have independently
of their credit worthiness to credit cards.
TREASURER:
Well, I would say to the credit providers and principally this country, their
banks, that the banks should properly assess people. I think it’s a
matter between a customer and their bank and these banks ought to properly
assess people…
JONES:
It doesn’t happen
TREASURER:
…because, well who knows what these bankers think.
JONES:
You must call them from time to time and take the whip out don’t you?
TREASURER:
Well, I make these points that we expect the banks to be responsible and
their lending practices. We had a regulator go through the banks recently
to stress test them. The regulators said that the banks were in fine condition
but I would re-emphasise the point that where a credit provider is allowing
credit to somebody they have an obligation to properly assess their credit
worthiness.
JONES:
Treasurer, the poker machine tax issues in New South Wales. You approved
the GST rebate in July 2000 to ensure that clubs weren’t going to be out of
pocket following the introduction of the GST. Then there was a lot of public
pressure here, as a result of the fact that was going to end next 30th
of June next year and Treasurer Egan made a request to you, did he not, for
the rebate to be continued for clubs with under $1 million in revenue. Now
under the cover of the Melbourne Cup, you actually did say to the New South
Wales Treasurer, well hang on if it is going to go to some it should
go to everybody. What’s the background of that? A press release came
out on Melbourne Cup Day. No one knew anything about it. Is Treasurer Egan
a bit embarrassed about the fact that the poker machine clubs are going to
get the GST rebate?
TREASURER:
Yes, well he seems to be very backward about this particular issue for reasons
which I can’t understand. You have properly recited what happened. When
the GST came in, because GST was going on gambling, we said to the State Governments
you have got to reduce your gambling margins. And in New South Wales that
involved giving the clubs an actual rebate, because they weren’t applying
tax at low levels of turnover. And the New South Wales Government said, yes,
we will give them a rebate for four years and the Commonwealth said fine,
here’s the reimbursement for that. But when the four years were up,
the New South Wales Government first, apparently didn’t want to keep
the rebate at all, and then said, oh well, we will allow the rebate for the
smaller clubs but not the larger ones. I pointed out to the New South Wales
Government that we would not reimburse them if they didn’t pay it to
the clubs. But if they decided to pay it to the clubs they would be reimbursed
by the Commonwealth. I made that very clear to them. I wrote to Treasurer
Egan on Friday of last week and I said, all right, you have now agreed to
pay it to the smaller clubs you will be reimbursed, if you agree to pay it
to the larger clubs as well, you will also be reimbursed. By the way…
JONES:
And he, and he didn’t want to pay it to the larger clubs?
TREASURER:
Well, as far as I know, he has not yet agreed to pay it to the larger clubs.
The moment he agrees to pay it to the larger clubs, that is, the New South
Wales Government agrees to pay it, they will be reimbursed. But if the New
South Wales Government does not agree to pay it, there is nothing to reimburse
them.
JONES:
But am I right in saying that, Treasurer Egan, with all the problems that
clubs are facing, he did not even make you a request?
TREASURER:
No, he did not make a request in the first analysis for any clubs and he
has still not made a request for those clubs above one million. He has still
not made it.
JONES:
Even when the Commonwealth Government is quite prepared to give, to continue
the GST rebate after June 30, 2004?
TREASURER:
Even though I wrote to him last Friday and said, you have still not made
a request. You will not be paid if you are not going to return it to the clubs.
But if you decide to return it to the clubs and request reimbursement you
will get it. I am still waiting for that request.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer can I shift the focus a bit, that is extraordinary. Tax, just back
to this tax thing, our highest tax bracket, what are you going to do about
these poor coots out here on sixty something thousand and suddenly find themselves
on the highest tax, $62,000, highest tax bracket in the country. I mean you
can’t save in that environment can you?
TREASURER:
Well, I have said before, and I will say it again, that I think the top rate
cuts in at too low a threshold. The threshold at the moment is $62,500 and
when we came to office it was cut in at $50,000 and when we were introducing
the New Tax System, I wanted to lift that to $75,000 and Labor opposed it.
And as a consequence of that we were only able to lift it from $50,000 to
$60,000. We have since increased it a little bit to $62,500 but my original
plan was to take it out to $75,000 and if we had been able to take it out
to $75,000 it would have been higher than that today. But I don’t think
$62,500 is the right level, back in 2000, I thought $75,000 was the right
level…
JONES:
Right.
TREASURER:
…so it should be higher than that today. But see you have got to remember
this Alan, people ask me about this, they say why don’t you do this
or why don’t you do that with the tax system…
JONES:
(inaudible)
TREASURER:
…let me make this point, the tax system is contained in legislation.
It cannot be altered except by an Act of Parliament – a lot of people don’t
know this – and to get an Act of Parliament through, you have got to not only
pass it through the House of Representatives which has a Liberal/National
majority but you have got to pass it through the Senate, which has a Labor/Democrat…
JONES:
I understand that. Listen we have got to go to the news. You are talking
to a very sophisticated electorate here, they do understand that. But thank
you for your time, we need to talk again.
TREASURER:
Thanks very much Alan.