Meeting of The Ministerial Council for Commonwealth-State Financial Relations and The Australian Loan Council
March 23, 2005GST, State Windfall, Petrol, Budget – Interview with Leon Byner, Radio 5AA, Adelaide
March 31, 2005Press Conference
Treasury Place, Melbourne
Thursday, 24 March 2005
12.00 noon
SUBJECTS: Superannuation, GST
TREASURER:
Starting on Easter Monday the Australian Government will be unveiling a national
advertising campaign to promote co-contribution to superannuation.
In the past if you were an eligible person and you made a contribution into
superannuation the Government would match it dollar for dollar. In last year’s
Budget we announced that the Government will now match for each dollar for eligible
people with a $1.50 contribution into their superannuation.
The original measure, last year, gave more than half a million Australians
an additional payment into superannuation. We want to increase that number and
we want to make the contribution more generous. For people earning $28,000 a
year, they can get a co-contribution from the Government of up to $1,500. The
co-contribution amount phases down and is still available up until an income
of $58,000. So for people earning between $28,000 and $58,000 they are eligible
to receive $1.50 contribution from the Government for a dollar they put into
their superannuation. And it is weighted so that people at the lower end of
the income scale are eligible to put more in and to receive more benefits.
This is an exciting programme which is designed to build savings for people
who are worried about their retirement income. The profile that we have is that
the people who have taken this up in the past, in the most numbers, tend to
be women and women who are approaching retirement, and women who are approaching
retirement on lower incomes who haven’t put money aside throughout their
working career but want that opportunity before they retire to increase their
savings income.
You will have seen advertisements of the original scheme which was dollar for
dollar. That scheme has been improved. It is now $1.50 for a dollar. These advertisements
will be going to air over the Easter period.
Ad runs
The Australian Government Super Co-contribution is now even bigger and better.
It’s increased so now Australians who earn under $58,000 could be eligible
and the Government contribution is even greater. For every dollar you contribute
the Government contributes as much as $1.50 – up to $1,500 a year. Now more
working Australians can give their super an extra helping hand. For improved
super co-contribution details call 13 10 20 or visit our website. Authorised
by the Australian Government Canberra.
And to mark this new scheme for a dollar contribution the Australian Government
now makes $1.50 in a matching contribution. Any questions – on superannuation
first?
JOURNALIST:
Do companies have to provide any (inaudible)?
TREASURER:
No. It is a scheme by which if you are an eligible person between that income
range of $28,000, well sorry, under $58,000 – you don’t have to
be at $28,000 – if you are in that income range up to $58,000 then if
you make a dollar contribution to your superannuation the Government will match
it with $1.50. So you put in a dollar but $2.50 is credited to your superannuation.
You are eligible to put $1,000 in which will credit $2,500 to your superannuation
up to $28,000 and then it phases down. And the scheme ends for people over $58,000.
JOURNALIST:
Any estimate on how much it will cost over coming years?
TREASURER:
Oh yes, we announced in the Budget that this will be a very, very significant
cost – depending of course on the number of people that take it up –
and of course the more people that take it up the more it will cost but the
more there will be in savings.
JOURNALIST:
So it could be a million dollars it could be a billion dollars you really don’t
have a…?
TREASURER:
Oh no we put our estimates out in the Budget but I am doing whatever I can
to attract as many people into this scheme.
JOURNALIST:
Do you think that land tax should be abolished all together?
TREASURER:
Well, in Victoria, I would observe that land tax has increased exponentially
over recent years. The reason for that of course is that land values have gone
up. The Government hasn’t cut the rates, so I would say that you can tell
in Victoria that business are bleeding over land tax and I believe that the
Victorian Government should very carefully consider those land taxes.
JOURNALIST:
Mr Costello on the, at the moment we have got rising inflation concerns in
the United States that impact on commodity prices and the Australian dollar.
Do you see any impact or threat to the Australian economy from things internationally
at the moment?
TREASURER:
Well the rising oil price will be a difficulty for Australia and you are seeing
at the petrol bowser people have to pay exorbitant prices. Prices which I don’t
like and I am sure motorists don’t like. But if we are able to prevent
the spread of those price rises into the general economy we will be able to
make sure that there isn’t a general inflationary response. There will
be an inflationary response for petrol prices but it is making sure that that
doesn’t move its way into the general economy through businesses. And
if we are able to do that then our economy would be stronger.
JOURNALIST:
On the States and GST agreement – the States yesterday were warning that if
the Federal Government walks away from the Agreement that they will blame the
Federal Government for cuts to services. Are you ready for that?
TREASURER:
The Federal Government won’t walk away from the Agreement. The Federal
Government wants that Agreement to be honoured. Let me make this clear –
the Federal Government will not walk away from the Agreement. The Agreement
says that the States will eliminate nine taxes. We want that Agreement to be
observed. And if the States eliminate those taxes the Agreement will be observed.
Now the critical question here is are the States going to walk out of the Agreement?
A refusal to eliminate the taxes which have been slated for elimination in response
to the GST, if that were done by the States, would amount to the States walking
out of the Agreement. Let me be very clear about this point.
JOURNALIST:
But they say the Agreement says review not eliminate.
TREASURER:
Everybody in Australia knows when the GST was introduced it was introduced
to eliminate other taxes. Everybody in Australia knows that. We campaigned on
it all around Australia and now the time has come for the elimination of those
other taxes. The States say we will keep the GST and the other taxes, that isn’t
the system. The GST replaces the other taxes. They know it, we know it, the
people of Australia know it. Nobody said to the people of Australia when the
GST is introduced we will be keeping those other taxes as well. Not Mr Brumby,
not Mr Bracks, nobody. What the people of Australia were told was when the GST
comes in those other taxes would be eliminated. And to the States I say, keep
the Agreement.
JOURNALIST:
If the Agreement were to come to an end for whatever reason wouldn’t
that you know give the Commonwealth a unilateral power to put up the rate of
the GST as well as cut grants to the States?
TREASURER:
I am not looking for a moment at the possibility of this Agreement coming to
an end. Because if the agreement came to an end that would mean that those other
taxes weren’t abolished. We want those other taxes abolished. We want
the agreement to stand. This Agreement has to be honoured. It was negotiated
in 1999. This shouldn’t come as any surprise to anybody. This was negotiated
six years ago. It has been on the record all the way through. The States have
known since 1999 that this was coming in 2005. It is no surprise to anybody.
JOURNALIST:
Is there any flexibility on what taxes are abolished? Are they ones that you
have specified or will the States come back with alternatives?
TREASURER:
No they’re the ones that we agreed – the nine that we agreed –
the nine that were part of the policy. The only argument is timing and sequencing.
There is no argument that they have to be eliminated. That is the whole essence
of the agreement. Okay.
JOURNALIST:
If the States hold their ground and you withhold GST that situation can’t
continue so obviously something has to give…?
TREASURER:
Well I have laid down the timetable for the elimination of these taxes. The
States said that they would like time to think about it. And so we have given
them time to think about it. But there is no argument about the elimination
of these taxes. The question is the timing and the sequencing. Thank you all.
JOURNALIST:
On another matter – has the Government been in communication with the
Indonesian Government about the Victorian prisoner being taken over to…?
TREASURER:
You would have to ask the Attorney-General in relation to that. Thank you very
much.