Skilled vacancies, construction data, Simon Crean, Labor’s tax policy, retirement savings, Australian dollar, US Free Trade Agreement, interest rates, immigration, Republic – Doorstop Interview, Sydney
August 25, 2004Leadership, economic management, interest rates, children overboard, oil prices, GST – Interview with Neil Mitchell, Radio 3AW
August 30, 2004TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Interview with Chris Smith
2GB
Thursday, 26 August 2004
7.15 am
SUBJECTS: Republic, illegal immigration, employment, water, oil, economic
policy
SMITH:
Well for the moment we have Mr Costello, and the Federal Treasurer has
joined me in the studio, thank you for your time.
TREASURER:
Great to be with you Chris.
SMITH:
Apologies for Alan not being here, he was all fired up for the interview,
but the croaky frog has returned.
TREASURER:
I am sure that he is listening in so we send him our best wishes.
SMITH:
Now, let’s get the predictable questions out of the way first, when
is the election going to be called?
TREASURER:
I don’t know, I don’t think it has been decided yet, the day
John Howard decides to call the election is the day that he will make an
announcement and he hasn’t done that, suffice to say that I think
the three years are up on the 10th of November, so it is a pretty
informed bet that it will be soon. The time between calling an election
and holding an election has to be at least five weeks, so if you were to
call an election sometime in late August-September, it would be in October,
and if you left it later than that, it would be in November.
SMITH:
But you wouldn’t have much on, on the 16th or 23rd
of October would you? You wouldn’t be planning a family picnic or
anything.
TREASURER:
Look, when I sat down a couple of months ago and put the programme together
for the latter part of this year, I made sure I kept most Saturdays free.
SMITH:
What about the leadership, how much does it annoy you to have people asking
you about your ambitions every time you open your mouth?
TREASURER:
Well, I think it has been a bit silly recently, as you said, I gave an
interview on Monday, I think it was, spoke a lot about non-economic issues,
which I like doing, I don’t get asked enough about that, and then
half the journalists went out and said, ‘deep and mysterious, this
means something,’ and the other half said, ‘why is he so silent.’
And as I said yesterday, they have got you coming and they have got you
going, you cannot beat the media. If you talk out, it means something and
if you don’t talk out it means something more.
SMITH:
I don’t know why they say that, but you do have a Prime Ministerial
tie on there and I don’t know why. One quick question in terms of
all of that, you can’t stay Treasurer for the next 30 years, can you?
TREASURER:
No, I don’t think I would stay Treasurer for the next 30 years, I
think that is a safe bet.
SMITH:
What about 25?
TREASURER:
I don’t think it would be 25 either.
SMITH:
20?
TREASURER:
I don’t know where this is going but, I have got no ambitions to
do 20 years in the job of Treasurer, absolutely.
SMITH:
You delivered this so-called, ‘vision speech’ the other day,
one of your subjects was a Republic, you maintained you weren’t saying
anything you haven’t said for the last five years…
TREASURER:
Yes.
SMITH:
…is it really an issue though, aren’t there more important
things on the agenda?
TREASURER:
No, I don’t think it is a big issue in the public’s mind. I
was asked, when did I think people would embrace a Republic, and I said,
well, one day, Australians I think will probably convince themselves, it
might be a long time off, but I don’t feel any great agitation for
it at the moment. We had a referendum, I took part in the referendum, there
was a clear outcome, you accept the verdict. But I was just asked what I
think will happen eventually, I think eventually, the public will come to
the view that this is something that should be dealt with, but there is
no great hurry.
SMITH:
With a better question to deal with hopefully.
TREASURER:
Well I think that is the critical question here, how do you get a good
system of Government out of all of this, and I think that bears a lot of
thinking about, the devil here is going to be in the detail. The thing about
constitutions is they last for hundreds of years, generally.
SMITH:
You have spoken about children in detention, if that is your view, that
they shouldn’t be there, what are you doing to try and bring about
a change to the current Government’s stance on this?
TREASURER:
Well, a lot of people don’t know this, but the number of children
in detention, who are children of people who have come in unauthorised to
Australia, is two, is two, in Australia, two.
SMITH:
Some would argue that is two too many.
TREASURER:
OK, but a number of the ones that were in detention are now in what we
call an alternative, which is out in the community, and the bulk of those
that are in detention, are not people who have come into the country unauthorised,
but people who have come into the country authorised with visas and have
overstayed their visas, so it is two in relation to those that have arrived
unauthorised, and I think in relation to those the alternative detention
arrangements, if the families will agree, then you could have a situation
where there were no children of unauthorised arrivals in detention.
SMITH:
Well clearly after the election if you are back in power, you need to round
up Amanda Vanstone and John Howard and say, enough of this, don’t
you?
TREASURER:
Well, the Government as a whole has been putting in place this alternative
arrangement, which I think is better so that the kids can go to school and
be in the community, but I do make this other point, the reason why it is
so low Chris, is that the number of unauthorised arrivals is low. Ever since
the Government put in place the measures which it did, we had thousands
coming in a month, but those measures have been very successful…
SMITH:
You have scared them off.
TREASURER:
…well, the message is this: if you are a genuine refugee and you
want to come to Australia, apply offshore and get a visa. Don’t find
a people smuggler, and pay them $10,000 to get in a leaky boat. Genuine
refugees can come in under Australia’s genuine humanitarian program,
come in with a visa. Don’t waste your money on these crooks and smugglers
in leaky boats and risk your life because that is not the way to do it and
that is the message.
SMITH:
Twenty-two minutes after seven, we are with the Treasurer, Peter Costello,
one last aspect of that speech you gave, you spoke about immigration, particularly
the need for an increase on the skilled front. What about the strain that
additional people, regardless of where they come from, puts on resources,
particularly water considering our predicament at the moment?
TREASURER:
For the overall immigration program?
SMITH:
Yes.
TREASURER:
Yes well I think we have got to deal with water, I think that we waste
a lot of water in this country, we waste it with the uses we put to it,
we waste it in bad infrastructure, we waste it in recycling and I think
we have to deal with that if we are going to have to deal with that if we
are going to support our public. But the point I was making is this, we
actually have skilled tradesmen shortages in Australia at the moment, and
I think this is a wonderful opportunity for young people. I would say to
young people, please consider trade qualifications, whether it be in electrics
or plumbing or any of the trades, there are shortages at the moment, and
the pay is good. And I think a lot of our young people have been told, you
have got to go into University or whatever, tertiary education, well that
is good for some kids, but the trade qualifications will set you up for
life and we have these shortages. And I was saying if we can’t fill
those shortages, we are going to have to bring in skilled tradesmen, so
if there are any kids out there that are listening and they are 14 or 15,
let me remind them that these are great careers and very profitable.
SMITH:
For many of our older listeners, it sounds like a flash-back to the sixties,
populate or perish. But this is where we can use immigration in a better
way. Can I talk about water?
TREASURER:
Sure.
SMITH:
Isn’t it time the Federal Government said, hey listen, the States
can’t get this right. We have got water restrictions that none of
us believe in, we don’t think anything is being done in the long-term
sense to store water, catch water, why can’t we have, and I know this
has been tried with tax, etc, etc, but have some kind of summit, led by
the Federal Government, led by your Budgetary people, sitting down and saying,
hang on, let’s coordinate something here together?
TREASURER:
Well I think we are going to have to do more, I think you are right at
the Federal level, there was a summit called COAG, Council Of Australian
Governments, quite recently. The Prime Minister met with all of the State
Premiers and said, the system of water allocation in rural Australia, particularly
the Murray-Darling Basin which covers Queensland, New South Wales and Victoria,
is no good. And we have come to a new agreement and I think the Commonwealth
is increasingly going to have to take the lead because these rivers cross
state borders and the State Premiers lose interest in a river once it is
outside their state. But that shouldn’t let these State Premiers off
the hook for their responsibility of building dams for metropolitan use.
And I think that is where a lot of these State Governments have fallen behind
recently, they have not been making the investments in the right place.
SMITH:
But you need to get them back into Canberra, don’t you, and head
a meeting, similar to the one you had over the Murray-Darling Basin, and
say, hang on, this is what we need to do, this is how much I am prepared
to throw into it.
TREASURER:
Well we need to crash their heads on water issues that cross state boundaries.
SMITH:
When will you do this? Because I tell you…
TREASURER:
Well, there are always…
SMITH:
…I asked this question because when Alan brings up this…
TREASURER:
..we are crashing their heads all of the time, but the only point I am
making is, we can’t take responsibility for something that is within
a State and controlled by a State. Mr Carr will say, well I am the Premier
of New South Wales, that is my responsibility, to which we say, good, do
something.
SMITH:
But he not going to refuse to front up to a meeting chaired by you or the
Prime Minister.
TREASURER:
But we have a very big role in relation to water and agricultural areas
across state borders, better use and better recycling and we are working
on those issues as we speak.
SMITH:
OK, twenty-six minutes after seven, I wanted to talk about another dwindling
resource, oil, we have seen world prices at record levels, although some
dipping of that in the last couple of days, will any of this has an impact
on our overall economy, in particular interest rates, do you foresee?
TREASURER:
Well if the world oil price stays up at around $40 or $50 a barrel US,
or higher, ultimately it will affect the world economy, the world economy
will grow slower, and if the world economy grows slower that will affect
back into Australia. A high oil price is not good for a growing economy,
and I think the Americans are starting to get quite worried about that,
they are the heaviest user of oil. So, if it were this high or higher for
a long and sustained period, it will have an effect on world growth, yes.
SMITH:
Including interest rates?
TREASURER:
Well, it think it is a mistake to draw a direct connection between oil
prices and interest rates, but you can draw a connection between oil prices
and economic growth, and economic growth is one of the factors you take
into account in interest rates.
SMITH:
Have you got pancreatitis?
TREASURER:
Not so far.
SMITH:
How is he going? How is he going to shape up to a tough election do you
think, Mark Latham?
TREASURER:
He has got to have a policy, you know, this is the great joke. You put
yourself forward to be Prime Minister but you don’t have a policy.
He promised he was going to have a tax policy in the week of the Budget,
middle of May. We go all through May, all through June, all through July,
all through August – no tax policy. And Crean comes out yesterday
and make the extraordinary statement that it is costed and it is funded,
but nobody is allowed to look at it. I mean this is the great secret of
Australian politics, and if Mr Latham wants to be taken seriously he has
got to get a policy and it has got to be a serious policy because he is
running for a serious job. No more stunts, you are running for a serious
job, you want to get into the big league, this is not the Liverpool Council
anymore, you are not going for Mayor of the Liverpool Council, you are now
running for Prime Minister of Australia and you ought to have the decency
to show the public some policy and until such time as he shows some policy,
the public can’t seriously assess him.
SMITH:
With the Prime Minister replying to this document or dossier of lies, is
there a feeling here that the Party is now looking over its shoulder and
not concentrating on what it should have in front of itself rather than
looking too much on what Mark Latham is doing?
TREASURER:
Look I think it would be a mistake if we fall for the distractions of Latham.
Latham wants to run these things as distractions to keep the election off
policy, and I think it is very important that we stay on policy because
it is very important that the public demand policy from Latham. He is untried,
he is untested, he has got no experience in the big business of politics
and he hasn’t got a policy, so how are you going to assess a guy like
that. And he promised the Australian people in May of this year that he
would have a tax policy, well where is it, bring it out, let’s have
a discussion.
SMITH:
Thank you for coming in this morning, we will get Jonesy back next time
you come in.
TREASURER:
Well it is very searching coming up with you Chris, he is probably shaking
in his bed, hoping he gets better soon.
SMITH:
Thank you, Treasurer, Peter Costello.