Budget; higher education; CSIRO; economy; Governor-General
May 12, 2003Budget – Address to the National Press Club
May 14, 2003TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Doorstop Interview
Ministerial entrance
Parliament House, Canberra
Tuesday, 13 May 2003
8.40 am
SUBJECTS: Budget; higher education; Senate
TREASURER:
Tonight’s Budget is going to be a statement by the Government of how we can
keep Australia strong through a difficult international, economic environment.
And as other countries, like the United States, and Europe and Japan, move into
deep deficit, it is our priority to keep the Budget in surplus. We will also
be laying down tonight, a very bold statement reforming Australia’s higher education
system and international education, improving the way in which universities
can deliver education to students, giving students more choice in relation to
courses. So, tonight will be a combination of structural reform, strong economic
management and making sure that we keep Australia strong and secure in a very
difficult world environment.
JOURNALIST:
Is your eighth Budget as exciting as your first?
TREASURER:
Well they all take a lot of work, I can tell you, I can tell you that. But
they represent the culmination of months of work and months of effort by all
of the Ministers, to whom I pay tribute. Bringing documents together like this
is very, very time consumming and detailed, as you can imagine, and the eighth
has taken as much work as the first.
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible)…Will this Budget make it more difficult for children from average
working families to attend univeristy?
TREASURER:
No, I think it will make, it will give better opportunities…
JOURNALIST:
How will it do that?
TREASURER:
…it will give better opportunities to, for students to get financial assistance
in relation to higher education, but more than that it will give more money
to the universities to provide better courses and it will also allow universities
more flexibility to go into those courses where there is demand and to get out
of those courses where there is no demand.
JOURNALIST:
But won’t there only be more financial assistance because universities will
be allowed to charge more for courses?
TREASURER:
No, there is more financial assistance for universities and there is more
assistance for students, but the…
JOURNALIST:
And more upfront fees?
TREASURER:
…the big, the big leg of all of this is reform of the universities. Universities
as institutions need to become flexible and they need to become responsive to
student demands, just as is happening in the rest of the public sector and indeed
in the private sector.
JOURNALIST:
Do you concede that a large part of your Budget won’t get through the Senate?
TREASURER:
I don’t concede anything to the Senate until such time as the Senate has voted.
The only point I would make is this: the reason we elect governments in Australia
is to, is to get on with the programme and do things. Now, if Mr Crean thinks
that he has the right to disrupt the Government and its programme, he ought
to think very carefully about the outcome of the last election. At the last
election the people voted this Government in, to do a job. They did not vote
Mr Crean into office to disrupt the budgets.
JOURNALIST:
Will we see economic growth slowing for fiscal 2004 from the 4 per cent you
forecast in November?
TREASURER:
Well you might, but you had better look at the Budget documents.
Thanks.