Australia to Fund New Aceh Reconstruction Work
September 6, 200512th APEC Finance Ministers Meeting
September 9, 2005Interview with Jim Middleton
ABC AM
Tuesday, 6 September 2005
(pre-record)
7.00 pm (Indonesia time)
Jakarta, Indonesia
SUBJECTS: Banda Aceh, Telstra
MIDDLETON:
Treasurer, you seem to have been inspired by what you saw in Aceh. What lessons
did you learn there?
TREASURER:
Well, the devastation is just beyond anything we’ve probably seen in
our lifetimes and the rebuilding is going to take a very long period of time.
We’re going to rebuild schools and hospitals and eventually homes, and
it can’t all be done immediately. We’ve got to be there for the
long haul. And to go to a school today, as we did, where over 400 school students
were killed from the one school, and to see the devastation, but to know that
with Australian aid and the partnership between Australia and Indonesia we can
rebuild that school and give the survivors a chance, shows you the importance
of the relationship, I think, between Australia and Indonesia, and the need
that they have for us to remain committed.
MIDDLETON:
Now you were there to see how Australia’s $1 billion aid programme is
being administered, how it’s working on the ground. Are there things that
you saw there today that make you think there need to be adjustments in the
way in which we’ve managed that programme into the future?
TREASURER:
I think the projects we’re doing are good projects – building the
schools, building the port, building the hospital. We’re also lucky that
there are good non-government organisations that are there. And I think the
important thing is going to be to direct our aid, to get good projects, lasting
projects, to make sure that the money gets to those that really need it, and
not to be pressured into making bad allocations. And although it’s frustrating
that it’s taking time, I think what I saw today indicated we’re
making progress.
MIDDLETON:
It’s obviously been one of the more uplifting experiences of your time
as Treasurer. If you could look at the highlights of your time as Treasurer,
what would you see them as having been?
TREASURER:
Well, here is a highlight, isn’t it? That Australia, because it has a
strong economy, is able to reach out and help people in need. When the tsunami
hit, why was Australia able to help? Because we have a strong economy. We have
the resources, we have the people, we have the skills and the expertise and
the money. And here is an example of where economic strength in Australia is
now becoming a capacity to lend to other countries.
MIDDLETON:
Now, you said some time ago that you had a couple more budgets in you, and
your supporters keep telling reporters like me, including me, that March-April
next year is the outer limit of a period for a smooth transition from the Prime
Minister to his successor. Does that mean that you won’t be presenting
the next budget?
TREASURER:
Jim, it’s not my purpose to speculate on any of these things and I’m
not going to add a fraction of speculation.
MIDDLETON:
Are you prepared to go to the backbench if necessary if there isn’t a
smooth transition in good time before the next election?
TREASURER:
Jim, you know, you are entitled to ask these questions, and you do. But I’m
not here to talk or speculate about any of those things, and I’m not going
to. Not for a moment.
MIDDLETON:
Now if I could turn to the Government’s relationship with Telstra, which
is obviously quite difficult at the moment. We’ve seen the Prime Minister
describing the management of Telstra as a disgrace, and we’ve seen ASIC
now undertaking an investigation into its performance. How much longer does
Sol Trujillo, and also the chairman of Telstra, Don McGauchie, have in these
circumstances? It can’t go on forever?
TREASURER:
Well, the situation is this: That the shareholders appoint the directors; the
directors appoint the executives. So, the executives are appointed by the board
of Telstra. The board is responsible for the overall management, and the board
is responsible for disclosure under the law and under StockExchange requirements.
If there’s a suggestion that hasn’t been done, the proper thing
is for an investigation to be conducted. That’s what’s going on,
and I wouldn’t speculate on what the outcome of that is going to be. The
only point I’d make is this: That the directors are there to actually
enhance the value for the shareholders. This is their responsibility. And the
shareholders want to see the value of their investment preserved and increased.
Whether you’re a private shareholder or whether you’re the Government,
which is also a shareholder, you have a common outlook. And we would expect
the Corporation to be run well and in the interests of shareholders.
MIDDLETON:
But it would be the argument, I think, of Mr Trujillo that it’s the actions
of the major shareholder and the intentions of the major shareholder, the Government,
that are actually inhibiting it from performing as well as it can for all shareholders.
TREASURER:
You see, as it turns out, the Government is not only a shareholder. It writes
the regulation rules. And a government, when it writes regulation rules, is
there for the community as a whole. I’ve always said this gives the Government
a big conflict of interest. It’s the reason why you ought to resolve the
shareholding. But the Government has to ensure when it’s writing regulatory
rules that they’re competitive, that they’re fair to all competitors,
and that they give good cost value to consumers. We have to do that. At the
other end of the spectrum, the Government is also a shareholder and wants to
see its shareholding value preserved. But we can’t overlook the public
interest that we have as a government.
MIDDLETON:
Now, Mr Trujillo is appointed by the board but the board, including Mr McGauchie,
is appointed by the Government. So doesn’t the Government bear some responsibility
for the parlous situation we now see Telstra in?
TREASURER:
Well, the Government is …Yes, the Government is responsible for appointing
directors, along with other shareholders.
MIDDLETON:
Do you think it’s conceivable that there will come a time when the Government
will have to ask, as the major shareholder, to ask the board to rethink its
strategy and, if not, for some of those members of the board to reconsider their
future?
TREASURER:
No, I don’t think we’re at that stage. What we’re at, I believe
…
MIDDLETON:
So you retain confidence in the board of Telstra?
TREASURER:
Well, I don’t … Look, I’m not for a moment casting any aspersions
on the board. Not for a moment. But the only point I would make is: You want
well qualified directors that appoint well qualified executives that enhance
value. That’s the only point I’ll make in all of this.
MIDDLETON:
So what should Telstra be doing now? Pulling its head in and getting on with
business the way you want it?
TREASURER:
No, let’s just hope that Telstra provides good services at low costs
and enhances shareholder value.
MIDDLETON:
But for the moment it’s not, and this must be a disappointment to a government
which is wanting to end that conflict of which you talked about before and get
it off the Government’s books?
TREASURER:
Well, the only point I’d make is, and I’ve made this publicly:
The Government’s not a distressed seller and the Government will want
to maximise value on behalf of all shareholders, and it’ll choose its
timing accordingly.
MIDDLETON:
Treasurer, thanks very much.
TREASURER:
Thanks very much, Jim.