Australia to be Chairman and Host the Group of Twenty (G-20) in 2006
November 21, 2004OECD Upbeat on Australian Economic Performance
November 30, 2004TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Interview with Steve Price
2UE
Thursday, 25 November 2004
4.20 pm
SUBJECTS: Productivity Commission Report into Ageing, James Hardie,
Michael Long
JOURNALIST:
The Treasurer Peter Costello is just back from a meeting of the G20 economic
ministers in Berlin, he is on the line from, I don’t know where, Canberra
or Melbourne, afternoon Treasurer.
TREASURER:
Sydney actually Steve…
JOURNALIST:
Sydney.
TREASURER:
…it is good to be with you.
JOURNALIST:
It is very nice to have you with us. I am a baby boomer and you are not,
I can’t get used to the fact that you are younger than I am.
TREASURER:
Well, look in the mirror.
JOURNALIST:
Yes exactly, thank you very much. What do you think? Is there going to
be a black hole or is it going to be a golden boom?
TREASURER:
We have got some difficult cost pressures coming up because the number
of people of workforce age up to 65 is going to be more or less constant
and the number of people past workforce age is going to grow. So, you are
going to have more people in retirement compared to the number of people
in the workforce. That is the first point. The second point is that as you
get older you tend to draw down more heavily on healthcare and pharmaceuticals.
Just to give you one of the findings of this report, men over 65 use pharmaceuticals
at 18 times the level of men in their twenties.
JOURNALIST:
Wow.
TREASURER:
So, as our population ages the draw down on healthcare and on pharmaceuticals
is going to increase. Now, we are talking about what is going to happen
in 40 years time so there is a long lead time.
JOURNALIST:
Is it possible to project out that far?
TREASURER:
Yes, we know what the population will be Steve because it is already set
in stone. This is the consequence of changes in birth rates which occurred
in the 1970s and as life expectancy now at 70 or 80 years, it is the changes
that occurred 30 years ago that are going to determine where we are in 40
years’ time.
JOURNALIST:
I guess that is the other imponderable that medical research will continue
apace and we can’t really accurately predict how much longer people
are going to live for. I mean we will all live longer than our fathers lived
before us, who lived longer than their grandfathers fathers before them.
TREASURER:
Absolutely. When the aged pension was introduced back in the 1920s and
you get the aged pension at 65 for men, life expectancy was 67 so the aged
pension was thought to guarantee you an income for two years. Life expectancy
now is about 85 so that is 20 years in retirement. Kids that are being born
today are going to live into their nineties and with the advance in medical
technology, I think in 40 years time you are quite right, life expectancy
could be much longer than we now know. You see…
JOURNALIST:
So do we need a re-think do we on the pension age?
TREASURER:
…well, what I would like to do is get people to work to pension age
which is…
JOURNALIST:
Because is seems a bit silly doesn’t it Treasurer, to have the pension
age of women at 60?
TREASURER:
…well, the thing is that many people don’t even work until
pension age now. You can get your superannuation at 55, people were encouraged
for a while to retire at 55. My message is we should encourage people to
stay in the workforce until 65. That, with medical advances, with people
in much better health and with most people living into their eighties, if
you retire at 55, that is 30 years in retirement.
JOURNALIST:
I have just got a feeling that many, many people were working past that
age and I guess I get that from my own parents experience where my father
is 74 and still working so he has gone way beyond it so…
TREASURER:
Well if he can do that well and good, but a very large proportion of Australians,
particularly men, are retiring at 55. Now, if you are going to keep kids
in school until their late teens, by 55 you have been in the workforce for
35 years, you might live another 30 years and 35 years in the workforce
is not going to be enough to support 30 years of retirement.
JOURNALIST:
If I get to 55 my youngest daughter will be 11. I better not be retiring,
who is going to pay the school fees?
TREASURER:
You got a late start in life Steve, you should have got on with things
at an earlier age.
JOURNALIST:
Thank you. What were they telling you in Berlin about the world economy?
TREASURER:
Well, there are two problems that the world outlook is facing at the moment.
The first as we know is oil prices which are affecting all the economies
through the world and we are feeling it at the bowser. But we have been
protected a little bit more recently by the second problem, our currency
has gone up and that has actually insulated the price of fuel a bit in Australia
but the American dollar is diving, well is falling, I should say, against
other currencies. And this is making adjustment much more difficult so,
these are two very large issues which will affect the global economy. Having
said that, the world economy is growing but if it weren’t for those
two factors it could be growing stronger.
JOURNALIST:
Can I just ask you off the economy, the James Hardie debacle, it seems
to go from bad to worse. We have got Premier Carr here today saying look,
this company does have to fact up to its responsibilities, we have got a
suggestion that this arm that was paying out the compensation may have to
go into the receivership, is it not time for the federal Government to take
carriage of this?
TREASURER:
Well James Hardie has to acknowledge its responsibility and it has to put
aside adequate amounts of money to compensate the victims. There are no
ifs, there are no buts, James Hardie has to accept its responsibility and
I think the directors of the company have got to understand that point and
they have got to set aside the money to do it and that is a message that
I am giving them very, very strongly. Now, in all of that there will be
a lot of legal manoeuvring but frankly I would say to the company forget
the legal issues, forget the restructuring issues, just get on and fix it
and make sure that there is enough money for the victims because otherwise
the company’s position will be very, very much worse.
JOURNALIST:
Canberra is keeping a very close watch on this?
TREASURER:
Absolutely and we have also funded the corporate regulator, ASIC, to investigate
whether or not there have been any breaches of the law and if there has
been anybody associated with the company that has breached the law, then
they can expect proceedings to be taken against them.
JOURNALIST:
One of your favourite Australians, Michael Long, is walking to Canberra
to talk to the Prime Minister. Would you introduce him given how much pleasure
he has given you over the years?
TREASURER:
Yes I would be happy to do that if that, if I were asked to be of assistance…
JOURNALIST:
I should explain Michael Long is an Essendon footballer and the Treasurer
is a very strong Essendon supporter.
TREASURER:
…it might take him a while to get there though he has got blisters,
I think he is near Seamore at the moment, quite a way to go.
JOURNALIST:
He has got a long way to go. It was nice to talk to you.
TREASURER:
Good to be with you Steve, thanks very much.
JOURNALIST:
Thanks for your time.