Appointment of Deputy Chairman and a Member of the Australian Securities and Investments Commission
July 9, 2004Economy; Goldstein; Nuclear waste
July 14, 2004TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
Treasurer
Doorstop Interview
Senate Alcove Courtyard
Parliament House, Canberra
Monday, 12 July 2004
4.00 pm
SUBJECTS: Labor Costings; FOI; Superannuation; Kim Beazley; Iraq
TREASURER:
Mr Latham has made $9 billion of unfunded election promises to date and last
week Mr Simon Crean said that his promises would be costed by PricewaterhouseCoopers.
That strategy has unravelled today because PricewaterhouseCoopers has now disclosed
the terms of the engagement that the ALP has given them and Pricewaterhouse
says in its statement today under the limitations of engagement, listen to these
words, “we will express no opinion as to whether the actual costs and
savings of any initiative will be consistent with the ALP’s estimated
costs and savings.” That is the limitation of engagement is that Pricewatershouse
expresses no opinion on the costings. The terms of the engagement to Pricewaterhouse
is to add up the figures and check the mathematical outcome. The assumptions
that are going to be given are the ALP’s assumptions. Pricewaterhouse
is not going to verify the assumptions. Pricewaterhouse is not going to cost
the policy. What Pricewaterhouse is going to do is take the ALP figures, run
them through an adding machine, and tell you what comes out at the end of them.
This is an elaborate sham, so much so that Pricewaterhouse has been forced today
to put out a statement saying precisely what it is going to do and what it is
not going to do and what it is not going to do is cost the policies. ‘We
will express no opinion as to whether the actual costs and savings will be consistent
with the ALP estimated costs and savings.’ So the Pricewaterhouse contract
has been specifically called not to tell you anything but to ensure you don’t
know anything, that you don’t actually know what the policies are going
to cost. Now, Mr Crean and Mr McMullan and I could run these figures through
an adding machine, that doesn’t take very much. The critical question
is what are the assumptions and what are the costs of the policies and that
is precisely the thing that Pricewaterhouse says “we haven’t been
asked to do and we won’t be doing.”
So, Labor’s elaborate sham has fallen apart from the day that it was
announced which was the 5th of July, last week, to the date when Pricewaterhouse
was forced to put out this statement today which I believe is the 12th of July.
It lasted a week.
JOURNALIST:
Treasurer, once upon a time you had a tax policy and these (inaudible) you
had now, and it didn’t add up, and you probably lost the election, the
1987 election as a consequence, wouldn’t it have been advisable to have
something like what Pricewaterhouse has (inaudible) for the Labor Party on that
occasion.
TREASURER:
Well, Labor, if the point of your question is, does Labor deserve to lose
the election…
JOURNALIST:
You had a policy that didn’t add up…
TREASURER:
…hang on…
JOURNALIST:
…why couldn’t they find out whether their (inaudible) certainly…
TREASURER:
…well if Labor has policies that don’t add up and which are elaborately
covered by a charade, they shouldn’t be voted into office, absolutely.
Absolutely. And we now have $9 billion of promises out there. Mr Latham says
he can spend $9 billion more, he can cut tax and he will have more left over
at the end of it. That is what he says. And then he says, but you don’t
have to take my word for it, ask Pricewaterhouse. We find out what Pricewaterhouse
is doing, is it verifying those costings? No. Is it looking at the assumptions?
No. What Pricewaterhouse is being done, is it has been given certain assumptions,
given figures, add them up. This is an elaborate sham, this is a complete sham,
and if the Labor Party wants to go into this election with an ounce of credibility,
they will be renouncing these terms of engagement now.
JOURNALIST:
Did you…
TREASURER:
And they will be saying that Pricewaterhouse either won’t be doing anything
for us, or Pricewaterhouse will be costing our policies, but to try and use
the name of Pricewaterhouse to give you credibility for a task that you haven’t
asked them to do, that is the sham.
JOURNALIST:
…did you or anyone else in the Liberal Party put pressure on PwC to
put out this statement today?
TREASURER:
No, I didn’t. I did not, most definitely. I think Pricewaterhouse probably
was aghast at what was said, because this is what Mr Crean said on the 5th of
July, ‘the proposals from the costings that we have put forward, we have
engaged Pricewaterhouse to do that independent check.’ ‘The proposals
and the costings that we put forward, we have engaged Pricewaterhouse Cooper
to do that check.’ This is what he said on the 5th of July, out comes
this statement, what does it say, ‘we express no opinion as to whether
the costs and savings will be consistent with the ALP’s costs and savings.’
You go right through here, they are not going to look at the assumptions, that
is the whole thing about costings. Now, this is an absolute repudiation of Mr
Crean and what he said on the 5th of July, seven days later and the thing that
concerns me about that is anybody who reads this knows that the Pricewaterhouse
costing is not going to be worth a zack in political terms, that the name is
just going to be flashed out there to try and give some credibility to a whole
lot of policies that don’t add up.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, do you think that PwC has been unwise to enter into this sort
of a deal with the Labor Party?
TREASURER:
Well, I think PwC has been wise to disclose the true nature of the engagement,
let me make that point. It is clear that when the Labor Party talked about what
PwC had been asked to do, they didn’t give the truth and PwC has now been
forced, seven days later, to disclose what they had actually been asked to do.
I would say to PwC, that they ought to look very closely at their client because
a client that was prepared to misrepresent the task in the way that the ALP
did seven days ago is the kind of plight that might get you into a lot of trouble.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, the Department of Treasury is down at the Administrative Appeals
Tribunal today with a team of lawyers and a QC funded by the taxpayer trying
to ensure that documents aren’t released under FOI laws that you suppressed
using rarely used powers, what is the big secret and why can’t those documents
be released in the public interest?
TREASURER:
Well, you will recall that the Labor Party, you will recall that the Labor
Party asked me a question about this after News Limited said that these were
rarely used powers and you will recall that the powers were used by, just from
memory, Ralph Willis, Paul Keating, George Gear, Bryan Howe. Every Treasurer
bar one, since the laws were introduced, that is how rarely they have been used…
JOURNALIST:
Why…
TREASURER:
…by every Treasurer except one…
JOURNALIST:
…why are you using them?
TREASURER:
…no, hang on, hang on, and I think this is very important for The Australian
to put in its story, every Treasurer bar one, since the laws were introduced,
that is how unusual…
JOURNALIST:
And why are you using them?
TREASURER:
…no, and what the Freedom of Information laws say is that in order to
preserve advice from public service to Ministers, where it is necessary for
the purposes of confidentiality to do so, the Minister can give a certificate,
which I have done. Now the AAT looks into that and it determines whether or
not for the purposes of confidentiality, that is required. But I can tell you
this, and again, I think this is worth reporting, that the documents that are
being sought include the Question Time Briefs. Now, if Ministers have to disclose
to newspapers their Question Time Briefs, we might as well give them to the
Opposition too…
JOURNALIST:
Some of the…
TREASURER:
…Question Time Briefs with all due respect, are matters that are given
for the purpose of high confidentiality in the Party.
JOURNALIST:
…some of the documents relate to the, Mr Costello…
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible)?
TREASURER:
On fees?
JOURNALIST:
On fees.
TREASURER:
I think there should be the ability to move your superannuation savings with
the minimal cost and complexity available. Now, the whole reason why we want
freedom of choice is so that people who are getting a bad return can move their
superannuation to a fund which will give them a better return and if there are
large exit fees, that ease of entry and ease of exit, that competitive market
will be frustrated. So, I would thoroughly recommend to the superannuation funds
themselves that as a measure of competitive discipline, that those fees be made
as low as possible and I will be seeking to have some discussions with the funds
in relation to that.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello, will the return of Bomber Beazley help Labor…
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible)?
TREASURER:
They do. The ALP can give its policies to the Treasury and have it costed,
(inaudible). I want to make that entirely clear.
JOURNALIST:
But that (inaudible).
TREASURER:
They can do it today. They can do it today. The ALP can provide their policies
to the Treasury and Finance and they can be costed…
JOURNALIST:
Can they lose their confidentiality?
TREASURER:
…and they can do so under the Charter of Budget Honesty. And I make
it, I make this point, that the offer has been open to them in previous elections,
they have refused to take it up and there is a reason why they refuse to take
it up, they don’t want them to be costed. If you had $9 billion of unfunded
promises you wouldn’t want them to be costed, so you know, if the ALP
wants to give its promises for costing then it is open for it to do so.
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible)?
TREASURER:
Well, my view is that the return of Mr Beazley is Mark Latham’s attempt
to try and patch up Australia’s alliance with the United States. But you
have got to bear this in mind that it was Mark Latham who caused the problem
in the alliance relationship and I don’t think until Mark Latham changes
his position you can solve those problems. Mr Beazley would be better than Mark
Latham, that is for sure, but at the end of the day, it is Mark Latham that
is still the Leader and it is Mark Latham that is still committed Labor to the
policies that have given problem on the alliance…
JOURNALIST:
The Government has been very complimentary of Mr Beazley’s abilities
in recent weeks…
TREASURER:
…yes, well that is what I said. I said, Mr Beazley is much better than
Mr Latham, I said that. He would be much better at managing Labor’s relationship
with the United States than Mr Latham, but Mr Latham is still the Leader and
the problems that are on the relationship are problems that have been given
by Mr Latham, not by Mr Beazley, poor old Mr Beazley, he has got to be brought
in to try and clean up the mess, he didn’t create the mess, and if a Leader
creates a mess, then the Leader has by and large got to clean it up.
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible) that Labor is warming up to roll back their policy on (inaudible)?
TREASURER:
Well, I would expect that their reappointment will mark an opportunity for
Labor to try and review and change its policy, I can’t imagine any other
reason why it has been done, but as I say, if the problems have been created
by Mr Latham, it is very hard for Mr Beazley to clean them up.
JOURNALIST:
(inaudible) The US Senate report on the…
TREASURER:
Last question.
JOURNALIST:
…used in the Iraq war is relevant to Australia? Do you think we should
be…
TREASURER:
No, I don’t think so, I think we had our own inquiry, it was done by
a Parliamentary Joint Committee, the Parliamentary Joint Committee made its
own findings, as a consequence of that the Government has now, has Phillip Flood
doing a further inquiry, but I think this is a question of each country looking
at its own intelligence agencies, that is the US Senate looking at the US intelligence
agency, we have had the Australian Parliament, the Joint Committee, of both
Senate and House of Representatives looking at ours. Thanks very much.