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September 6, 2004Scoresby Freeway funding; Labor’s tax policy hoax – Interview with Steve Murphy, Radio 3AW
September 8, 2004TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
TREASURER
Press Conference
Prime Minister’s Office
70 Phillip Street, Sydney
Tuesday, 7 September 2004
4.30 pm
SUBJECTS: Labor’s Tax Policy
TREASURER:
Well, 16 weeks late and 32 days before the election campaign we now know
why Mr Latham has been hiding. He’s cobbled together a policy with the intent
of trying to pull the wool over the eyes of the Australian public. And I
do not think I have seen anything as deceptive as his attempt to put together
weekly tables to show that people will be better off under his policy and
leaving out of those weekly tables benefits which they are entitled to under
this Government.
Mr Latham produces weekly comparisons for families between his policy and
where they stand under this Government and leaves out the $600 per annum
benefit, which all families who receive the Family Tax Benefit (A) are entitled
to – he just leaves it out. He takes it out of his weekly tables.
Not only that but if you read carefully – I’ve only had this for about
an hour and I always go to the footnotes first – the footnotes on
page two of his family tables, he also leaves out of the weekly difference
the value of the low income tax offset which the Labor Party is proposing
to abolish.
Ladies and gentlemen, Mr Latham’s weekly tables are not worth the paper
they are written on. They were designed to hoax you. They are designed to
deceive the Australian public. The one thing you can take out of it is Labor
intends to abolish the $600 per annum payment and they have left it out
of the tables because the moment you put it into the tables, all of these
tables, which are designed to show that 9 out of 10 Australians are better
off, all of those tables have to be redone. Mr Latham has attempted to deceive
you with the statement that 9 out of 10 families are better off. The deception
is built on leaving out the $600 family tax payment and also, in relation
to the tax changes, failing to take into account the value of the low income
tax offset, which is currently available and which he proposes to abolish.
Now, a few other points. A lot of Australians will lose under this package.
And over forthcoming days we will be recasting the tables on an honest basis
but you can see even from these tables themselves that single income families
are attacked by Mr Latham. Even on his figures, single income families –
you go to page 14 of these cameos – single income families with children
are worse off. If you have three children, up to $30,000, up to $35,000,
you’re worse off again, from $80,000 on, Labor has attacked the single income
families. How have they done that? They’ve done that by abolishing Family
Tax Benefit Part B.
I’m just going to ask another rhetorical question here too – it is
very hard to find out, by the way, from these tables, what Labor’s actual
payments are, family payments. They say they are introducing a thing called,
is it the basic family payment, the better family payment…it is very
hard to find out what the levels are, it is very hard to find that out.
I have only had this for an hour but you normally actually name what the
levels are so that you can do these proper comparisons. You may have had
more time, you may be actually able to find out what it is but I think the
reason why they have not nominated the amounts and compared them is, one,
they’re trying to airbrush the $600 payment out of existence, two, they
are trying to cover up the fact that the abolition of the Family Tax Benefit
Part B is an attack on the single income families.
I’m going to make one other point, which I think is absolutely crucial
as this package begins to unravel and it is this. In an ageing society where
Labor says it is in favour of improving savings, Labor is proposing over
three years to rip $3.47 billion out of people’s savings. That is the combination
of the increase in the superannuation surcharge and the abolition of the
co-contribution scheme. Over those three years Labor’s so-called contributions
tax cut will reduce tax by $1.3 billion.
So this is a policy to increase taxes and take away superannuation savings.
There is no doubt about it. When you net it out, this is a policy which
will take away superannuation savings. Now, I thought Mr Latham had been
complaining that he thought savings were not great enough in Australia and
yet he has a policy to rip away people’s savings with the increased superannuation
surcharge and the abolition of the co-contribution scheme for lower income
earners. That is where the money is coming from – bigger imposts on
your superannuation – Mr Latham’s hand reaching out and grabbing people’s
superannuation. Why? He does not care about the future, he does not care
about the future. He is trying to rob from the future for his own naked,
political advantage. One of the most anti-future announcements that could
ever have been made.
This is a deceptive document. This is a document which has started unravelling
already. This is a document which is bad economic policy and I look forward
over the days which lie ahead to outlining to the many, many Australians
who are going to be worse off, the way in which a vote for Mr Latham will
make them worse off and it will make the Australian economy worse off.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, they have railed, both parties have railed long and hard about
the tax, family payment tax debt and they say that this will do away with
that debt. Do you, will this…
TREASURER:
This does nothing about family tax benefit debt. It does absolutely nothing.
What they say – and you have got to read it yourself – what
they say is, we pay it fortnightly and if you tell Centrelink of all your
fortnightly changes, you won’t get a family tax benefit debt. Just as under
the current system, if you were to fortnightly tell Centrelink your payments,
you would not get a family tax benefit debt. There is no change, there is
no change at all. All they say is, if you give accurate information to Centrelink
you won’t get a debt. Just as at the moment, if you give accurate information
to Centrelink you won’t get a debt. It is absolutely true.
JOURNALIST:
But that is not really true, is it Treasurer?
TREASURER:
It is absolutely true.
JOURNALIST:
At the moment, there are one in four families that (inaudible) have a problem
where even though they may notify Centrelink almost straight away of an
income change but still end up with an end of year tax debt.
TREASURER:
No that is not the case. If you keep Centrelink informed of your income
you do not get a debt. It is because people do not keep Centrelink up to
date on a fortnightly basis with their income that they can get an overpayment
or an underpayment which we say, can be made up at the end of the year.
Under the Labor policy, if they do not keep Centrelink informed on a fortnightly
basis, they can get an overpayment or an underpayment. There is no change,
it is just a requirement that it be a fortnightly notification to Centrelink.
If we had people notifying fortnightly and they were doing it accurately,
nobody would ever get the wrong amount. This does nothing….
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer are you saying…
TREASURER:
…about that problem. I have got to say, this is a Wayne Swan Special,
this. This is a man who has been out breathing fire against the Family Tax
Benefit System for so long, that when he gets to announce his policy he
makes no changes.
JOURNALIST:
Are you saying Treasurer that nobody on the under $52,000 income, will
be better off under the scheme?
TREASURER:
No, I did not say nobody would be better off, I said that there will be
many, many Australians who are worse off.
JOURNALIST:
Who exactly? Which, which…
TREASURER:
Centrelink covered families will be worse off
JOURNALIST:
On what types of income?
TREASURER:
Well I have told you, everybody (inaudible) you can see, even on Mr Latham’s,
this is before I do my figures and put the benefits back in. You can see
on page 14 of his cameo: ‘Single income couple, three children, one aged
under five, two aged 5-12 years, worse off on $10,000, worse off on $20,000,
worse off on $25,000, worse off on $30,000, worse off on $35,000, worse
off on $80,000, worse off on $85,000, worse off on $90,000, worse off on
$95,000, worse off on $100,000. Single income couple with two children,
one under five: worse off on $25,000, worse off on $30,000, worse off on
$75,000, worse off on $80,000.’ That is even on his table.
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible) single income people?
TREASURER:
Single income, that is on page 14, I am just reading you his tables. His
tables, the annual tables. Okay, dual income, let’s go to his tables: ‘Dual
income couple with three children with one aged under five, 80/20 income
split, worse off at $25,000, worse off at $30,000, worse off at $35,000.
Dual income couple with two children, one aged under five, worse off at
$30,000.’ I mean, these are his tables. There are thousands of Australians
that are going to be worse off under that, and of course, you see what he
doesn’t put in his tables is, and you will recall, that when we did the
tables of the Budget, not only did we have tax changes, family changes,
but superannuation co-contribution. When you add in another column, for
the abolition of the superannuation co-contribution, some of these tables
are going to go all completely negative. You see he doesn’t, this is how
the Budget was done, tax cut, family assistance, co-contribution. His tables
don’t have that co-contribution. That is what has been abolished for people
earning up to $58,000. Add in the abolition of those benefits.
JOURNALIST:
Why does the super co-contribution on an average (inaudible)?
TREASURER:
It depends, I mean what you want to take as an average case. It is all
here, I mean, dual income couple with two children, one aged under five.
The Government’s superannuation co-contribution $500.
JOURNALIST:
A year?
TREASURER:
Yes.
JOURNALIST:
So you are spending $3.5 billion, who is getting better off? It sounds
like nobody, where has all money gone?
TREASURER:
Well that is, I mean is he spending, who knows what he is spending. I will
tell you something, he doesn’t.
JOURNALIST:
But the bottom line is that…
TREASURER:
We can, I will do my own assessment over the next day or two. I got this
at about 3.15 this afternoon so I had about an hour to read it, but we can
solve all of the questions about what it costs, can’t we? It can be submitted
to Treasury tonight. We can solve all of these arguments. Now, why can’t
he submit it to Treasury tonight? Submit it to Treasury tonight and have
a costing in a day or two and then we will really know. But he has got a
complicated reason, hasn’t he, why it can’t actually be costed by the Treasury
It is a very complicated reason, he can’t actually tell you what that reason
is but it is complicated. Somebody has got to speak to somebody and something
has got to be ironed out. Why can’t it be at Treasury today? Look, this
Charter of Budget Honesty it is no great recent invention, it has been in
place for years, he has known about it whilst he has been in the Parliament,
it has been there for the last 7 ½ years or whatever, he does not
need anything clarified, he can submit it tonight.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, will the Government be offering tax cuts to income earners under
$52,000?
TREASURER:
Let’s not worry about the Government, we have just seen the most blatant
attempt to hoodwink the Press Gallery that we have seen in a very long period
in Australia. The production of weekly tables which oh, just happen to leave
out the $600 increase which was handed down in the Budget. Oh, just happened
to leave out the net difference on the low income tax offset which he is
taking away. And then, just happen to leave out the superannuation co-contribution
and then said, have a look at those weekly tables, nine out of ten are better
off…
JOURNALIST:
What about the $8 tax cut?
TREASURER:
…this is, well…
JOURNALIST:
It is better than zip.
TREASURER:
Well does everybody, let me ask you this question, let me ask Mr Latham
this question. Does everybody up to his limit get an $8 tax cut? Did he
tell you they did? I think he might have. But that is not true either. Because
that credit has to be netted off the low income tax offset, this is what
I keep telling you about. There is a low income tax offset which the Government
currently pays $235 between the incomes of $21,600 and $27,475. By my calculations,
hard to find in his table, he is introducing 416 as his offset, he does
not actually tell you the amount. The difference is 181, it’s only 181 on
an annual basis if you were previously entitled to the low income tax offset.
You only get near your $8 if you are somebody who was previously entitled
to none of the low income tax offset and are fully entitled to his 416.
Now, does he know it? I don’t know if he knows it, but he sure tried to
misrepresent it.
JOURNALIST:
What will your Government be offering people who earn less than $53,000
(inaudible) tax cuts?
TREASURER:
Well let me tell you, and I think this is very important, there’s a big
difference, there is a huge difference at this election between what our
Government is offering people below $52,000 and what Mr Latham is. We are
offering them $1.50 for every dollar they put into their superannuation
under our co-contributions scheme. He is saying if you put a dollar into
your superannuation, zip, nothing, zero. This is…
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible) Labor….
TREASURER:
This was the most generous superannuation initiative that we’ve ever seen
in Australia. It wasn’t a tax cut, it was a 150 per cent payment to you
for each dollar your made your contribution. Today Mr Latham just said it
is getting abolished. So those people, just think about those poor people
who have the opportunity to have $1.50 for each dollar they contributed
to set up their savings for their retirement. That disappeared today.
JOURNALIST:
With respect Treasurer that does not account for the question of whether
you would offer people earning less than $52,000 a tax cut of your own.
TREASURER:
I’ve answered it by saying I am offering them a superannuation co-contribution
scheme which is better than any tax cut. Can I tell you this? A tax cut
can never actually give you money, it only reduces the amount the Government
takes away. Where you actually have a co-contribution you actually give
them and in this case it is 150 per cent for each dollar of contribution.
JOURNALIST:
But Treasurer surely families that are struggling to meet basic weekly
payments, a few dollars in their pockets now instead of $1.50 from 30, 40,
50 years in future?
TREASURER:
Well if that were your view you would abolish the Superannuation Guarantee
wouldn’t you?
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer (inaudible)
TREASURER:
I mean that is the argument against the Super Guarantee, give them the
nine per cent now in their wages rather than put it into superannuation.
You see, people deserve good wages and they deserve strong savings for their
retirement. But to net take away from them on their superannuation savings,
in an ageing population. We have produced this Intergenerational Report,
on the back of the Intergenerational Report we showed that our population
was ageing, we had to start saving for the future. We introduced a co-contributions
scheme and Mr Latham walks into an election campaign, 16 weeks late, 32
days before, and says he’s going to abolish it. Just extraordinary.
JOURNALIST:
… cost the Government at the moment?
TREASURER:
The co-contribution? Well it’s all in Labor’s costings.
JOURNALIST:
Why doesn’t the (inaudible).
TREASURER:
Well I’m quite happy to accept his figure on it because I assume he’s taken
it off my Budget papers, I don’t have my Budget papers. But here it is,
I’ll show it to you. It’s on page four of Labor’s savings measures. He says
abolishing this co-contributions scheme will save $632 million in 05/06,
$1 billion in 06/07, $1.045 billion in 07/08. His increase superannuation
surcharge will cost
$69 million in 05/06, $340 million in 06/07, $385 million in 07/08. And
in return, jeez he is generous this bloke isn’t he, he cuts the superannuation
contributions tax, after taking all that, by $199, $423 and $676.
JOURNALIST:
… because a single means tested family payments (inaudible) in the
Government’s (inaudible).
TREASURER:
No. Because it takes away a benefit which is currently available for single
income families. He is abolishing a benefit for single income families.
JOURNALIST:
… means tested and…
TREASURER:
Part B, he is abolishing it.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, is the Government committed to the $600 in the next term?
TREASURER:
Absolutely.
JOURNALIST:
That’s an iron clad guarantee?
TREASURER:
Absolutely. We introduced the $600 increase in the Family Tax Benefit.
We introduced it, we paid it before 30 June. Families are now getting their
second annual payment commencing from September, if we are re-elected they
will get it next year and the year after and if Mark Latham is elected it
will be abolished.
Thank you very much.