Working Party to Examine Criminal Sanctions for Cartel Behaviour
October 3, 2003Corporate Law Reform, HIH, Tax, Medicare, Labor Election Advertising, Wentworth – Press Conference, Parliament House
October 8, 2003TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Doorstop Interview
Australian Reinsurance Pool Corporation
London Circuit, Canberra
Tuesday, 7 October 2003
7.00 pm
SUBJECTS: Reinsurance, Iraq, Interest Rates, IBNR Levy
JOURNALIST:
How long is the Commonwealth going to be in the business of reinsurance,
Treasurer?
TREASURER:
The Commonwealth has set up a reinsurance corporation to take risk which
insurers won’t offer for terrorist acts. You can’t get terrorism insurance
for commercial property at any price. Now, we hope, particularly if the
war on terror is successful, that insurers and reinsurers will start
offering terrorism insurance again, and that they will do it at commercial
rates like the normal market. And when it is apparent that that is the
situation then we will be getting out of this business. This is not a
business we intend to stay in long-term.
JOURNALIST:
Are there any other examples where you might see the Government having
to sort of, pull the market (inaudible) of a market failure situation?
TREASURER:
Well, there could be. I hope, the fewer the better. We did it, you will
recall, with our claims fund for HIH, when HIH got into trouble we established
a claims system. We had a system you will recall to pick up minimum employee
entitlements in relation to insolvency, which came out of the Ansett
matter. But, it is only as a last resort, it is only where there is a
real obvious market failure, the Government is not in the business of
running commercial operations, nor is it in the business of propping
up un-commercial operations. But, a you had a situation here with September
the 11th, where it wasn’t predicted, where the payouts were
huge, where insurers just overnight cancelled all terrorism insurance.
And if we hadn’t stepped in, then commercial building would have ended
and the American Government has offered indemnities, its scheme is not
as advanced or sophisticated as ours, we have discussed this at the IMF
and other countries are looking at similar schemes.
JOURNALIST:
On another topic, the Prime Minister has been censured today in the Senate
over his reasons for going to war with Iraq. Do you think he owes the
Australian people an apology?
TREASURER:
I think he has explained his position, which is that he relied on reputable
intelligence, and nothing has been produced to the contrary, but at the
end of the day the world is a better place without Saddam Hussein. And
I don’t think we should spend too much time worrying about Saddam Hussein,
the people of Iraq have been freed from a tyrant, and it is important
that we get on with the reconstruction of Iraq, Australia is making its
contribution. It has made it through aid, we are making it with Treasury
officers, we are working on helping to re-build an economy there. That
is very important.
JOURNALIST:
Do you think that tomorrow we could be seeing our first rate hike?
TREASURER:
I never talk about future movements in interest rates. I haven’t for
the last 7 ½ years, and I am not going to start now.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, we have seen warnings from the Reserve Bank, the IMF, Ken
Henry, and in fact yourself on the housing bubble, but investors are
still taking on more debt and buying apartments and townhouses and what
not, how concerned are you at the moment about this?
TREASURER:
Well, I have said an awful lot about property investment over a long
period of time, and the points I have always made are these. Look, we
have 30 year lows for interest rates. I can remember a time when they
were 17 per cent. Now, that was admittedly under a Labor Government,
but if you were taking out a 30 year mortgage, you know, you could get
a Labor Government back in, and our last experience was interest rates
between 10 and 17 per cent. So, people have got to think in a 30 year
investment the Government can change, policies can change, interest rates
can change, that they have got to allow some room for that. I also say
that people should be careful about their investments, property markets
are not always one-way bets, just like equity markets are not always
one-way bets. But, having said all of that, for most home buyers, the
fact that the value of their home has gone up is a good thing. Believe
me, they’d be a lot less happy if the value of their home had gone down.
JOURNALIST:
What is your stand on the IBNR levy? Helen Coonan is maintaining that
the doctors should be paying it, and Tony Abbott has taken an opposite
direction?
TREASURER:
No, I don’t think that is right. I think that Helen Coonan has done a
great job in relation to the medical indemnity issue, and the tort law
has changed quite considerably. She has managed to get the States quite
considerably to change their tort laws, you know for medical injury and
so on. And bear this in mind, that the taxpayer has picked up. I think
it is $450 million of liability on behalf of that insurance fund. Now,
over a period of time, as doctors pay their premiums, they will also
be paying for that accrued liability, that’s what the IBNR levy is all
about. Tony Abbott announced that there would be a moratorium over $1,000
but he is proceeding with Senator Helen Coonan’s plan.
JOURNALIST:
So, doctors will still be paying the levy?
TREASURER:
Well, they will be paying $1,000, up to $1,000, for the next, there is
a moratorium period which requires they only have to pay $1,000, that
is an 18 month moratorium period, and for most of them, for most GPs,
it wasn’t that much above $1,000 anyway. Then there will be an actuarial
calculation, the rest will be recovered over time. OK, thanks.