Outcome of the Review of Aspects of Income Tax Self Assessment
December 16, 2004Mid-Year Economic and Fiscal Outlook, Competition Policy, Tax, China, Oil, Childcare, Telstra, Future Fund, Inflation, Prime Minister, Trades, GST, NSW Vendor Tax, WMC/Xstrata – Press Conference, Parliament House, Canberra
December 21, 2004TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Doorstop Interview
Senate Alcove Courtyard
Parliament House, Canberra
Monday, 20 December 2004
5.00 pm
SUBJECTS: Child care rebate, Prime Minister
TREASURER:
Well today the Government is announcing a new child care rebate which will
lift the cost that parents are incurring by giving them a rebate on their tax
of 30 per cent on any out of pocket child care expenses, and we will be bringing
forward the start date for this measure – which was going to apply from 1 January
next year – so that it applies from 1 July in the current year.
This new increased child care rebate applying for the full amount of out of
pocket expenses in the current financial year will make it a very welcome Christmas
for the mothers of Australia who can be confident that they will get back 30
per cent of their out of pocket expenses either claimed off any tax that they
pay or transferred to the husband against any tax that he pays. This will mean
that for many working women they will get better than tax deductibility. Tax
deductibility would apply if you were on a top marginal tax rate of 30 per cent
but for many women they will not be on that or they would certainly not be on
it for all of their income.
So for all of those women who are tax payers on a top marginal rate of 30 per
cent, this is better than tax deductibility. It means that families will be
covered up to 50 hours a week for 51 weeks of the year with a cap of $4,000
and ensuring nearly every person can maximise the full amount of the rebate.
And I would say to families, the important thing is to keep records, keep records
of all of your child care paid from now on and if you have records of child
care paid from 1 July keep those as well.
Now, there will be some people that haven’t kept the records because
they weren’t expecting this to start from 1 July. So the Government will
be speaking to child care operators and encouraging them to produce an annual
statement at the end of the financial year so that parents who maybe haven’t
kept the records or don’t know the amount they will be eligible for will
be able to get some back records and make their claims.
This is going to be of benefit to all working women in Australia, it will be
of enormous benefit to families, it will start six months earlier than originally
foreshadowed and it will deliver additional benefits to the families of Australia.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer how much will that extension cost the Government?
TREASURER:
It will mean an extra $140 million for six months. We were budgeting for $140
million for six months eligibility from 1 January 2005 to 30 June 2005 and we
estimate that back dating it will deliver an extra $140 million to the families
of Australia.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello just to clarify, will this shift the liability from 05-06 to 06-07?
TREASURER:
What we have done is we have made it clear that you can claim it once you have
got your child care benefit. Now, you won’t get your child care benefit
until after the end of the June 2005 year. So you can’t claim it on that
tax return, you don’t actually get your child care benefit until you have
lodged that tax return. So once that has been lodged, once your child care benefit
has been calculated, then you will be able to calculate your child care rebate
and you will be able to get that on the subsequent tax return.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, would it have been prudent to save as much as you can in the kitty
for any reform, financial reform programmes in May?
TREASURER:
Well this is an extra $140 million for the working mothers of Australia and
it means that the working mothers of Australia, after they have been paid the
child care benefit – I want to make that clear – the amount that they are out
of pocket, the difference between what they have paid and what they have got
in child care benefit can be claimed 30 per cent as a tax rebate. And that is
better than tax deductibility for low income earners, better than tax deductibility
even for people on a marginal tax rate because their average tax rate won’t
be 30 per cent and we figure that it will be enough to cover the expenses of
high income earners using child care for 51 weeks of the year 50 hours a week.
So this is an extraordinarily generous benefit to help working mothers with
the costs of child care.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello why have you back dated it for these six months? Have you got a
huge budget surplus that is burning a hole in your pocket?
TREASURER:
No, we backdated it because we thought it was fairer if it took place from
the start of the financial year. You will only be able to calculate your entitlement
after you have filed this year’s tax return and you will only be able
to get the rebate the year after. So we thought the fair thing to do was to
back date the entitlement so you will get a bigger entitlement even though it
will be on the tax return after this one.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer how do you reconcile this largesse with your post election warnings
of moderating growth and pressure on the Budget?
TREASURER:
Well when you say it is largesse it is an extra $140 million to the mothers
of Australia. And I think it is thoroughly deserved and I think it is affordable
and what is more, by encouraging mothers who are utilising child care to take
advantage of this, you may actually get more mothers who are able to re-join
the workforce and I think it will be a good economic investment for the country.
Let me make this clear, what you are getting is you are getting a 30 per cent
return on your taxes. So, if this encourages more mothers to return to the workforce,
the taxpayer is still going to be in front.
JOURNALIST:
Will this reduce the size of the surplus or have you got additional revenue
that is going to cover this?
TREASURER:
Of course it will reduce the size of the Budget. This is another $140…
JOURNALIST:
The size of the surplus?
TREASURER:
…well, I am not saying what the situation of the Budget is, but this
is $140 million straight off the bottom line back into the hip pockets and the
wallets of the mothers of Australia.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello when this was first announced during the election it was uncapped,
how did you decide on a $4,000 cap?
TREASURER:
Because it will hardly affect anybody. But there is another more important
reason. We don’t want child care operators to put fees up. This is a very
important point. We are introducing a 30 per cent rebate for out of pockets.
If the child care providers put fees up, they might try and capture the benefit.
So we don’t want the child care providers to say, ‘well now you
are paying 30 per cent less for your child care, we will put the fees up 30
per cent,’ because if the child care providers did that the women of Australia
would not be better off. And so this is a warning to the child care providers
that you are not going to be able to go for unlimited fee increases.
JOURNALIST:
Does this mean that the value of this will diminish over time?
TREASURER:
No.
JOURNALIST:
Will this measure take strain off the 05-06 Budget?
TREASURER:
No, sorry to disappoint you but this is actually an additional $140 million
to the mothers of Australia. Now I know you like to be cynical about things
but I think it is a great thing for the mothers of Australia. They were going
to get six months of their out of pocket child care expenses rebated at 30 per
cent, now they will get 12 months. My only concern is this and the reason I
am making the announcement now is I want them to keep their receipts. Because
if they haven’t got their receipts they are going to find it hard to calculate
what their out of pockets are. Now, I know there will be some mothers that may
have already destroyed their receipts for the first six months of the financial
year, that is from 1 July until now, so I am going to speak to the child care
providers and I am going to ask the child care providers to actually supply
a statement to them. Some of the child care providers will find that a bit of
a burden if they are not computerised or automated, we will talk to them and
try and help them but my message to the mothers of Australia is this is a great
announcement, this will help families, it will encourage mothers that are struggling
with child care expenses but please do keep your receipts because you will need
them.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello what is your message to Mr Howard who celebrates a milestone as
second longest serving Prime Minister tomorrow?
TREASURER:
Well it is a wonderful achievement to be the second longest serving Prime Minister,
second only to Sir Robert Menzies, Australia’s greatest Prime Minister.
It makes you Australia’s second greatest Prime Minister and I just want
to say to him that this is a wonderful milestone, thoroughly deserved after
four election victories and I hope he celebrates it very happily with his family
as I believe he is going to tomorrow night.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello do you have any ambitions to be the longest serving Treasurer?
TREASURER:
Well look, I have ambitions to run the best economy that we possibly can and
to get more people in work than we have ever had. And at the moment we do have
more people in work than we have ever had in Australian history before and it
is my ambition to keep it that way.
JOURNALIST:
In hindsight did John Howard make the right decision to stay on?
TREASURER:
I congratulate him on an absolutely stellar performance, he is Australia’s
second greatest Prime Minister to Sir Robert Menzies, Australia’s greatest
Prime Minister. To have won four election victories is something that will give
him a place of history which very few people will ever be able to take away
from him. He deserves every credit for a wonderful and a magnificent electoral
performance and I just hope that he can enjoy himself with his family. Thank
you very much.