No Objection Raised to Xstrata’s Aquisition of MIM Holdings
May 28, 2003Retail Trade, Interest Rates and Leadership – Doorstop Interview at Royal South Yarra Lawn Tennis Club, South Yarra
May 30, 2003TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Interview with Catherine McGrath
ABC AM
Thursday, 29 May 2003
8.00 am
SUBJECTS: Governor General, Telstra Share Price, ACCC Chairman
McGRATH:
Treasurer, Good morning.
TREASURER:
Good morning Catherine.
McGRATH:
Peter Hollingworth has finished his term now, as the search begins, what sort
of Governor General should we have and what sort of consultation should there
be?
TREASURER:
Well, obviously the most important thing will be somebody who is competent
to discharge their Constitutional duties. Somebody who will have a great deal
of trust in respect of their pre-Vice Regal role, and will bring that to the
Vice Regal role, and somebody who can discharge the other duties of meeting
Australians and going out to all the other areas of Australia and including
people. They will be the kind of qualities that would be looked for, I would
think.
McGRATH:
If there had been checks last time, or if the Prime Minister had looked more
into his past, do you think it would have made a difference?
TREASURER:
I don’t think so, because I remember when Peter Hollingworth was appointed
Governor General, I don’t recall anybody saying at the time that he was unfit
because of abuse allegations in Queensland. Mr Beattie, who has been particularly
loud on this subject, congratulated the appointment, and the Leader of the Opposition,
Mr Beazley, congratulated the appointment. So, I don’t recall anybody saying
at the time, that it was known that Dr Hollingworth had mishandled sex abuse
allegations.
McGRATH:
And what about you, when the Prime Minister asked you, what did you say to
him?
TREASURER:
Well I didn’t know that there were these kind of allegations against Dr Hollingworth
McGRATH:
On broader issues, did you raise any issues with the church and State for example
TREASURER:
Well the Prime Minister told me that he was proposing to appoint Dr Hollingworth.
We discussed pros and cons in relation to that appointment, but I can tell you
this, I certainly didn’t know that there were child abuse allegations against
Dr Hollingworth and I never raised that in that conversation
McGRATH:
No, but pros and cons, what cons did you raise?
TREASURER:
Well I might have raised other things but I
McGRATH:
Well can you share them with us
TREASURER:
No.
McGRATH:
Robert Hill has shared them with the public
TREASURER:
No, I don’t think it’s right
McGRATH:
Mr Downer has
TREASURER:
I don’t think it is right to go into that, because the conversations
that we have on all manners of confidential things, we keep confidential. But
I can tell you this, I was not aware, nor was the Prime Minister, and as far
as I can – and nor was Mr Beattie or Mr Beazley – as far as I can remember,
nobody did, nobody was.
McGRATH:
Well next time, would you expect to be consulted more?
TREASURER:
Well it’s – look, the Prime Minister’s not obliged to consult in relation to
this. The Prime Minister is obliged to make a nomination to the Queen, and the
Queen acts on his advice. That is the Constitutional position, it has been the
Constitutional position for a very long period of time, it has been followed
by Labor Prime Ministers. It has recently been endorsed by Labor Premiers.
McGRATH:
Is it the best way though?
TREASURER:
Well under our Constitution it is the way. That’s the point, and when the public
were asked in a fair referendum, not so long ago, whether they wanted to change
the system, they voted no. So as far as I am concerned, that means this is the
system.
McGRATH:
So you heard Simon Crean’s view there, pushing for a four-year term, what do
you think of that?
TREASURER:
Well, there have been a couple of referendums on that already and they have
been defeated. Personally I have never been enamored with the idea of a fixed
term. I think there is something to be said for four-year terms, yes, yes of
course. More interesting of course, was Mr Crean saying that he thinks the Senate
should lose its powers to break to, to stop Appropriation Bills, perhaps he
can induce his colleagues in the Senate to stop blocking budgets which he has
done in relation to the last two. It’s a bit rich for Mr Crean to go out and
make a speech on reducing the Senate power over money bills when he is in the
process of blocking his second Budget in a row.
McGRATH:
Treasurer, if we can move on to the next issue we mentioned in our introduction,
which was Telstra, the Telstra share price. Now, in Senate estimates last night,
Dr Ian Watt, the Finance Secretary admitted that the price had been inflated,
$5.25 was put in the budget papers instead of the market price of $4.75. How
do you explain that away?
TREASURER:
Well the Government has always said that it wouldn’t sell unless there was
a commercial price. We have made that clear before
McGRATH:
No but this is an issue of Charter of Budget Honesty
TREASURER:
there are two things here. The Government has always said that it wouldn’t
sell at a non-commercial price and it has been pretty clear what price we have
named in the past, and that’s the process we followed in relation to that
McGRATH:
(inaudible) the market price.
TREASURER:
No, I am sorry. In relation to the Budget we have previously put in the commercial
price at which we would sell. That is in relation to the Budget. There is a
second statement called net worth. It’s a statement which I have never referred
to in a Budget. It does not affect the bottom line. None of this affects the
bottom line, $2.2 billion surplus. None of this affects that. The Budget which
is the revenue and the expenses for a year, this does not come into that
McGRATH:
But Labor, which was
TREASURER:
no, no, no, let me explain it to you. Well Labor is not alleging that,
ok?
McGRATH:
Labor is not alleging it
TREASURER:
Well, no I did see
McGRATH:
they are asking about
TREASURER:
no, no, no, Catherine, there is a very important point, because I did
see some people say in the press that this knocks around the Budget. It does
not knock the budget around at all
McGRATH:
Well I can’t assert what other people in the press are saying
TREASURER:
ok, well you and I are in furious agreement on that, so let’s come to
what it is net worth
McGRATH:
can I ask you about the (inaudible) budget
TREASURER:
no, no, I will come to what it is, which is net worth. Now net worth
is an attempt to produce a balance sheet of everything that the Commonwealth
owns. We try and do it in two ways. We do it on the GFS process and we do it
on AAS31. AAS31 is the private company standard, GFS is the IMF standard. In
relation to the valuations, they differ. For example, in relation to the GFS,
what you try and do is you value at market equity, whereas your defence platforms
you put zero value on. The outcome of the net worth in relation to that statement
is minus $46 billion. In relation to AAS31, what you do is you put historic
value, but your value defence platforms in. The outcome of that calculation
is minus $48 billion. They are the sums that we are talking about, and they
are the different valuation issues that are involved
McGRATH:
Treasurer, Graeme Samuel the interim chairman of the ACCC. NSW, South Australia,
Queensland and the ACT are still opposed to that. Are you picking a fight here?
TREASURER:
No, I asked the State governments for nominations for the ACCC Chairman. The
Victorian government supported by, that Tasmanian government, WA and the Northern
Territory supports Graeme Samuel. NSW nominated a man called Tom Parry, who
was supported by one person, Michael Egan. Graeme Samuel was supported by four
governments, and has the support of the Commonwealth. Now, in those circumstances
he is clearly the preferred candidate and we have appointed him. He is also
the best qualified candidate. As recently as yesterday I asked Professor Fels
again, who he recommends as the most qualified person to take over his job,
and it was Mr Graeme Samuel. So we have the most qualified person who has the
most support amongst the states, and a majority support including the Commonwealth
which funds the organisation and is responsible to the Federal Parliament. So
in those circumstances I don’t see how anybody else could possibly have been
appointed to the job.
McGRATH:
Treasurer, thanks for you time.
TREASURER:
Thanks very much.