Michael Ferguson; Medicare Safety Net; Old Growth Logging; Regional Airport Security; Hospitals; Economic Management; Labor’s Tax Hoax;Â School Funding – Interview with Tim Cox, ABC Statewide Mornings (Tasmania)
September 21, 2004Housing market, economic management, Labor’s tax policy costing black hole – Doorstop Interview, Queanbeyan
September 23, 2004TRANSCRIPT
THE HON PETER COSTELLO MP
TREASURER
Debate Simon Crean
National Press Club
Wednesday, 22 September 2004
1.00 pm
MODERATOR:
Please welcome Peter Costello.
TREASURER:
To Ken and to members of the National Press Club thank you for this opportunity
to be here today and to talk about the issues which are important when people
go to cast their ballot on October the 9th in relation to economic
management.
On October the 9th Australians will have a clear choice between
a Government with a proven economic record, a Government with experience,
a Government with a consistent policy which has yielded results over the
last eight and a half years and an Opposition which does not have a clear
policy, which does not have economic experience and which is defending a
record in Government over thirteen years which pales very badly by comparison
with the last eight and a half.
Australians will have a choice between a Government which has made significant
improvements in the economic indicators and in living standards for the
Australian public. If we look at where we were in 1996 and where we are
now, things have improved considerably in the Australian economy. And it
hasn’t been an easy time. It has been a time of drought and SARS and terrorism
and war. And it has been a time of Asian financial collapse and US recession.
And almost alone of the developed economies of the world, Australia has
continued to grow. And our growth has been strong. Our inflation has been
low. Our interest rates have been low.
Under Labor inflation averaged 5.2 per cent, under this Government 2.4
per cent. 1.3 million new jobs have been created in the Australian economy
since 1996. Under Labor, Budget deficits were 1½ per cent of GDP
on average, under the Coalition they were surpluses, on average by ½
per cent.
Now Simon will try and tell you that the reason why the economy has been
strong in the last eight and half years was all the good work that the Keating
Government did before 1983. He leaves out of his story the recession that
we had to have. He leaves out the high interest rates that took us into
that recession. He leaves out the fact that since 1996 Labor has opposed
many of the policies which have got us to where we now are.
When I signed an agreement with the Governor of the Reserve Bank to target
inflation, Labor threatened to sue me, saying it was contrary to statute.
When we determined to balance the Budget Labor opposed the savings measures
which were required to get there. Labor opposed the big tax changes which
took the taxes off our exports and replaced a whole host of indirect taxes.
And promised to roll those tax changes back up until the last election.
Labor did some good things when it was in Government. It reduced tariffs.
I have always given it credit for doing so. But Labor in Opposition has
never supported our program for continuing tariff reductions. And even in
this election the Labor Party says, if it is elected it will slow down the
tariff reductions which this Government has already announced and already
put in place.
In an effort to convince the Australian public during this election that
Labor can be trusted Mr Latham has signed his big interest rate guarantee.
A piece of cardboard which he says guarantees interest rates will be low
under the Labor Party. I wish it were as easy as signing pieces of cardboard.
Economic management takes a bit more than that. It requires leadership,
it requires taking the decisions against political opposition which will
set the country up. It will require in the next term of Government industrial
relations reform. It will require addressing the greatest challenge that
we have, the demographic challenge which we outlined in the Intergenerational
Report and now are putting in place practical steps to deal with. It will
take improving our retirement savings systems. Not robbing in the way that
Labor proposes but improving them with co-contribution schemes which will
give people on middle and low income earnings the opportunity to save for
their retirement. It will require the implementation of the Free Trade Agreement
which this Government negotiated and has no regrets about negotiating. It
will require water reform with a proposal which we have now put in place
for a $2 billion water policy.
These are the challenges of the next term for the next Government. They
are challenges which by reason of our record, our experience and our clear
commitment, the Coalition Government can meet.
Now 15 days ago Labor released its so called Tax and Family Payments Policy.
15 days ago it could have submitted it for costing to the Departments of
Treasury and Finance. It has refused to do so. The election is in 17 days
time. Labor is holding back submitting that for independent costing because
it knows it doesn’t work.
I want to say to you that the tables that Labor published, allegedly showing
that people were better off on a weekly basis, were rigged. They excluded
significant benefits of $600 payment per annum per child from their calculations.
They did that so they could mail out, as they are now mailing out, a claim
to people that they were better off on a weekly basis. Mr Latham claimed
on television last Sunday that on a weekly basis for 52 weeks you would
be better off under Labor’s policy but worse off at the end of the year.
You would be in front for 52 weeks until the 52nd week clicked
over at which point you would be worse as a whole for the year. Laurie Oakes
said, George Orwell would be gob smacked, would be gob smacked. And I want
to say to you those tables are not only rigged in respect of the $600 payment,
they are also rigged in respect of Labor’s working tax credit replacing
the Low Income Tax Offset. The weekly tables show the benefit of the working
tax credit but they don’t take into account the abolition of the Low Income
Tax Offset. Compare the weekly tables for a single person, no children,
$25,000 with the annual tables. The tax tables are rigged like the family
payments tables.
And today I am releasing a very extensive analysis of Labor’s tax policy
which also shows that Labor has failed to properly cost the low income tax
offset. It has failed to allow in its costings for the fact that it is paid
in arrears. It has failed to allow for the fact that even if you abolish
it from 1 July 2005 it has to be paid in cash terms in arrears in the 2005-06
year and as a consequence a $700 million hole has opened up in relation
to Labor’s tax policy. This was a policy that was cobbled together. Hundreds
of thousands of Australians will be worse off. It does nothing about Effective
Marginal Tax Rates. It is not funded. It involves new taxes which are going
to be increased. And overall they will be a burden on the Australian economy.
In this election there is a clear choice. It is a choice between a proven
record of economic management and a proven policy and an untried record
and an untried policy.
Economic management is important. It is counts and it matters. And in this
election it is the Coalition that has the capacity to deliver. Thank you
very much.
MODERATOR:
Thank you very much Peter Costello. Would you now welcome Simon Crean.
CREAN:
Thanks very much Ken.
Labor is ready to govern, to give our prosperity a purpose. We have a plan
to take the financial pressure off Australian families and we have a plan
to invest in and better secure our future.
All of our policies are fully costed and funded and our Budget pledge ensures
that we will put downward pressure on interest rates.
Nine years ago John Howard promised to govern for all of us. He hasn’t.
And nothing demonstrates this more than the four out of five Australian
taxpayers who missed out on a tax cut in their Budget. Missed out, whilst
the Government has been collecting all time records of tax from the same
hard working Australians.
Now the Howard Government’s record speaks for itself on why families are
hurting. The highest taxing Government in Australia’s history has also cut
services and moved us closer to a user pays society. More tax, more to see
a doctor, more to educate the kids. It is why Australians constantly ask,
if the economy is going so well, why am I missing out?
Now what Australia needs is a Government that will take the pressure off
families today by providing real tax relief and restoring services. But
in a way that also provides benefits into the future. Not just relief, but
reform.
Labor’s approach is built on the bedrock of disciplined budgeting, identifying
savings to fund our investments not spending more but spending more wisely.
And this underpins our Budget pledge which over the next term of Parliament
commits us to Budget surpluses in each year and to reducing debt, to reducing
revenue as a share of economy and to reducing expenditure as a share of
the economy.
Everything we have done to date meets these tests.
But not so our opponents who are spending like drunken sailors. In just
five months, the Budget period and since, the Government has embarked on
a $60 billion pre-election spending spree. All of it unfunded. That’s no
way to run an $800 billion economy.
On our Budget pledge Labor has announced plans on tax, families, health
and education. Labor’s Tax and Family Package gives tax cuts to the four
out of five taxpayers who missed out under Mr Howard. It guarantees the
Budget cuts and it lifts the top threshold from $80,000 to $85,000 from
the 1st of July 2006. It gives substantial benefits to all families.
Up to $132 a week and on a weekly basis nine out of ten families who receive
assistance are better off. It reforms the current ram shackled family payments
system by fixing the debt trap, restoring incentive, rewarding people who
want to work hard and by introducing two tax free thresholds for all families
eligible for family benefits.
Labor’s Tax and Family Payment delivers relief where it is needed most
– to middle Australia. Take for example Fiona and her family from
Townsville who I met last week. A single income family on $40,000 with two
kids. They are $46 a week better off or nearly $1,200 per year better off.
Another single income example of two kids of $50,000 per year, they are
$85 a week better off or more than $3,000 a year better off. And if we want
to look at the two income family example, a two income family with three
kids, Dad earning $40,000, Mum on $20,000 we all know these examples in
our electorates. They are $132 a week better off or almost $5,000 a year
better off.
But beyond providing the financial relief, the dollars in the pocket if
you like, Labor’s plan is about solving problems. Of fixing the system.
Fixing a system that works against people who do the right thing. Fixing
it to restore incentives so that people are not punished when they work
harder and try and get ahead. What the current system does is to consign
too many people to a life of welfare dependence and entrenched poverty.
By restoring services and getting the incentives right we will help people
escape the poverty trap and realise their potential. There is nothing more
Labor than that.
The respected Melbourne Institute has confirmed with its modelling that
Labor’s plan will encourage more Australians to move off welfare into work,
boosting participation. That is good for the individual, it’s good for the
economy, importantly, it’s good for our society.
We will further ease the pressure on Australian families by investing in
our public hospitals, saving Medicare and restoring bulk billing, thus reducing
the out of pocket expenses of Australian families. We will make the family
Medicare card work, not force families onto their credit card.
And Labor will invest in our schools, our TAFEs and our universities, providing
opportunity based on ability not ability to pay, creating a more innovative
and adaptable workforce. Again financial relief but also reform.
Now our own Treasury Department tells us that boosting workforce participation
is critical. Growth economists tell us that long term productivity and growth
will require investment in education, skills and research. Labor has heeded
that advice.
It is why our Tax and Family policy has been designed to boost participation
in the workforce and it is why our education policy is also an investment
to lift the economy onto a higher growth path.
It recognises early intervention is a good investment for both the individual
and the economy and supports a life long learning approach to education
and skills formation. Labor’s economic framework is built around investing
in the drivers of economic growth – lifting productivity, boosting
participation, encouraging research and innovation, promoting strong competition
and modernising our infrastructure.
It’s what a successful business would do. It’s what our Government must
do. So Labor is offering a vision for the future because while our Government
tells us that families have never had it so good, we believe they’ve been
let down. Our tax and family policy objectives are clear. We need to fix
a complex and an unfair system. A system of disincentives and debt. A system
that is broken and at its core our policy rewards hard work. It supports
families and it strengthens the nation, economically and socially. It’s
more, about more than just the next election because it is a plan for the
future, 10, 20 years hence, but it builds the foundations now. It’s about
providing relief today and reform for the future. It’s a fully costed and
funded plan and Labor’s vision is one that provides opportunity for all
and in doing so restores aspiration to the Australian story. And we have
a leader for the long haul to see it through. Thank you.
MODERATOR:
Thank you very much Simon Crean. We won’t spring up and down to the lectern
from this point on. We do have questions at this point and I have to say
at the beginning that I’m confronted with a list a questions that we will
not get through, even if all the people at the top of the list are very
caring for their colleagues who are at the bottom half and restrict themselves
a little. As you know each person who is asked a question has up to three
minutes. They don’t have to take three minutes to respond. It is directed
to one person, the other has a minute to respond. If it is directed to each
they have the three minute limit. So with that in mind and the number of
questions on demand, let’s start. The first one’s from Ian McPhedran.
JOURNALIST:
Thanks Ken, I’ll be brief. Mr Costello, you worked as a solicitor and barrister
before you entered the Federal Parliament so you didn’t really run anything
either, not even a dodgy city council. Your claim that Mr Latham isn’t qualified
to run the economy suggests that only you and your ilk can learn on the
job. Isn’t that arrogant?
TREASURER:
Well Ian, you’re right, I didn’t run a dodgy municipal council and far
from thinking that’s a disqualification, I think that’s rather a qualification.
The point we make is this. Mark Latham has worked in politics all of his
life. He hasn’t worked in the private sector in a full-time job, so if you
want to look at his record, you’re entitled to look at the last political
office where he was responsible for management and that’s the Liverpool
Council. Just as you’re entitled to look at our record, you are entitled
to look at his record. You see, Ian, anybody can say: we’ll balance the
budget, as Simon says. Anybody can say that we’ll reduce expenditures. Anybody
can go through the formulations, but if these things were so easy to do,
why didn’t Labor do them when they were in Government? Simon says: oh, we’re
fully committed to surplus budgets. The last budget that Labor did in 1995-96
they claimed was a surplus Budget. Whoops! Only missed by $10 billion. You
can say all of these things and everybody will say these things in an effort
to try and convince people that their policy is like our policy, but you’re
entitled to look at the record. You’re entitled to judge people by their
record.
And it’s quite true when I was employed in the private sector I was dealing
with all sorts of matters, wage cases, tax issues, corporate restructuring.
It gave me a wide, commercial experience. And when I came into the Parliament
I think I had a very consistent economic policy. The other point I’d make
about Mr Latham is he’s never had a consistent economic policy. Go back
to the Hansard. He championed the progressive expenditure tax – read his
book – he advocated it as an alternative to GST. Look at his speeches. He
supported regional GST’s where the rate would vary according to the geographical
area in Australia. Now he’s been in every economic fad that’s going. There
hasn’t been a consistent economic policy so you’re entitled to look at his
record and when you do look at his record, I think it’s very instructive.
And we are quite happy to be judged on our record in Government against
the previous Government or if you want to benchmark Australia during the
last eight years against other countries, I think it also stacks up well.
MODERATOR:
Do you have a comment Simon?
CREAN:
Well I just make the point that the Prime Minister has made a virtue of
changing his mind in relation certain issues and I think it rings a bit
hollow to hark back as far as that. But I take the Treasurer on his point.
I mean, judge people by their record. I want the Australian people to judge
this Government by its record. The highest taxing Government in Australia’s
history. And it spends $60 billion from the Budget onwards and it still
can’t give a tax cut to four out of five Australians. And it can’t fix a
ramshackle system that really punishes people that want to get onto work.
That’s the record we’ve got to correct and Labor’s got the plan to correct
it.
MODERATOR:
Okay. The next question is from Andrew Fraser.
JOURNALIST:
Andrew Fraser, The Canberra Times, with a question for both. I put it to
you that if you were truly serious about tax reform, returning surpluses
to the Australian people, that you’d index the income tax thresholds?
MODERATOR:
Who wants to start? The Treasurer.
CREAN:
Two things. First of all we’ve said, and we’ve consistently said, that
bracket creep should be returned to the Australian people. We’ve reserved
the right to determine the best basis for that return, whether it be in
tax cuts or services, and indeed in terms of our commitment over the last
couple of years, our focus to date has been on the services side of it,
Medicare and schools etcetera. I’m not in favour of the straight indexation
approach because that assumes that what you’ve got is a fair tax system
in the first place and I don’t think we have. And I think with all the money
that’s being spent in this tax, in the Government’s tax initiative, it spends
$35 billion between tax and family payments, still can’t fix the family
tax benefit system in terms of the incentive, can only provide tax benefits
for the top 20 per cent and I think we really missed out on a huge opportunity
to reform the system. Now we have to live with what was there. That’s the
truth of it, but we’ve gone further.
And whilst we have passed, as we said we would, those initiatives of the
Government, we’ve gone further. We’ve found savings to give the tax cuts
for the people who have missed out. We’ve raised the top threshold in a
sense because that would be smart to ensure that people, hard-working people
never got into that top bracket. So our commitment is to restore and return
bracket creep and when we’re in office we returned more than bracket creep,
but I think that what we’ve marked out here as an Opposition is a real commitment
to reform, our family, our tax and family benefits system. It is very difficult
to do it from Opposition, but this is the most comprehensive policy any
opposition has every produced to correct a system that’s been failing us,
and I just want the chance to finish the job in Government.
MODERATOR:
Peter Costello.
TREASURER:
Well a couple of points. The first is, when this Government was elected
the top marginal tax rate cut in at $50,000. That was under Simon’s Government.
From July of 2005, it will cut in at $80,000. Now if all we had done was
index that $50,000 to CPI at 2 per cent per annum, the threshold for the
top marginal tax rate today would be a lot lower than $80,000. That is,
the income tax structure has been changed in a way which is better than
bracket creep. That’s the first point I make.
The second point I make is this. Simon says: oh, well we’ll return bracket
creep in tax cuts or spending. That’s what he just said. Can I say to you,
if you spend the money you’re not returning bracket creep, you’re keeping
the money and spending it. This line that I hear coming out from the Labor
Party, oh, we’ll return bracket creep in spending. I’m sorry that’s keeping
bracket creep and spending it. That is not returning bracket creep. It is
an absolute non secateur, non sequitur. It’s a secateur too because
it ought to be cut and pruned, pulled apart.
The third point I’ll make because I assume I get three minutes to answer.
MODERATOR:
Yes.
TREASURER:
I’ll just make another point. Simon has said on a number of occasions now,
this is the highest taxing Government. That of course is false. Let me tell
you when the highest taxing Government, who it was, it was Paul Keating
in 1986-1987 when tax to GDP was 24.4 per cent. Now the way that Simon tries
to manipulate those figures to get the current figures up to something around
that level, but it’s lower, is he adds in the GST and calls that a Commonwealth
tax.
One problem, what he doesn’t do, is he doesn’t deduct the taxes that the
GST replaced. He doesn’t deduct from his analysis the revenue replacements,
the gambling taxes, the financial institutions, the marketable securities,
the accommodation taxes or the debits tax. So he says: you count as a Commonwealth
tax what replaced State taxes like gambling tax. The effect of that is the
States are shown to have a unilateral reduction of tax to GDP ratio because
he counts the State replacements as Commonwealth but won’t count the State
taxes in the same analysis. And when you reconstitute those figures, even
adding in, the tax to GDP ratio is not the highest in Australia, Mr Keating
takes the record in 1986-1987.
MODERATOR:
The next question is from Gemma Daley.
JOURNALIST:
Same issue, different question. Treasurer, what’s the detail of this plan
to use the surplus to fund the super liability? Where do you see the money
being invested? And to Simon, what is Labor’s plan for the surpluses, to
spend or save the surpluses?
MODERATOR:
Let’s take that as the same question to each of you.
TREASURER:
Well, well the detail was in the policy which I announced the other day,
which is this. When our Government was elected the Commonwealth net debt
was $96 billion. The Commonwealth net debt has now been reduced by $73 billion.
If you continued to run surpluses you could run down that net debt further.
The question is, whether or not you believe it is important to have some
debt out for financial management reasons and if you do, what you are then
going to do with surpluses.
We announced two Budgets ago that if the Commonwealth got to a position
where it believed that there was no reason to reduce net debt further, what
it would try and do, what it would try and do would be to build an asset
position to fund unfunded superannuation liability.
The reason we announced it two Budgets ago, and it was in the Budget Papers
two Budgets ago, is that we did a review of Commonwealth Government securities
which found that there ought to be in gross terms about $50 billion of Treasury
bonds out there for financial management and pricing reasons.
So if you were going to keep a gross position out there and you were still
running surpluses, you could either invest the money in the bank, where
a lot of it is currently held or you could run an asset position. We’ve
announced that we’ll run an asset position to fund superannuation liabilities.
We’ve announced that the private sector will be given the opportunity to
manage that. We believe that it’s sensible management because you should
be able to get a better return of than the long-term bond rate. And the
Commonwealth has something like about $80 billion of superannuation liabilities
out there which it would be sensible to build an asset position against.
We announced that in the policy which I released the other day. I think
it will be a sensible way of engaging in financial management and it will
be locking away a provision against liabilities which the taxpayer has incurred
and will continue to incur under superannuation schemes.
I just want to make one point. We have also announced that we will be closing
the PSS scheme. Labor opposes that, so that Labor will continue to run up
unfunded liabilities under its policy and it did that because it wanted
to use the money as one of the offsets against its tax policy.
MODERATOR:
Simon Crean.
CREAN:
Well, Ken you might recall that when I responded to the Treasurer’s Budget
back in May, one of the points I made there was that Governments should
make provision to, for a fund to invest in the future. I said it was like
superannuation for the nation. I said that there were a number of models
that one could look at but suggested we needed to develop further the concept
of the intergenerational fund. I didn’t, I went straight back to Parliament
that day and not only was Peter Costello ridiculing it, so was the Prime
Minister. Ridiculing it, said it couldn’t be done, the money wasn’t there,
dismissed it out of hand. So I am delighted that the Treasurer has come
on board. Delighted that he has acknowledged the importance of this very
important commitment to our future. Where I differ from the Treasurer, of
course, is that from what I understand him to be saying he says that the
purpose of the fund should be just for financial investments. I believe
we should consider it beyond the financial investments, economic investments.
Investments that benefit this nation, that stack up on a cost-benefit analysis
and the governance of which is independently verified so that you take it
away from this notion of the pork barrelling that has been so evident by
this Government in this election with its $60 billion spending spree. Now
I have a pretty simple sort of approach and that is to say that we have
to develop a savings investment culture. We don’t only have to do it in
the context of the Budget, which is the reason that everything we’ve spent
we’ve paid for, but we have to do it for our future. And what sense is it
to simply use the money and put it in the bank and get a lesser return than
if you invested it in something that is going to make a bigger return for
the economy. But that is the test that has to be made. Does the economic
benefit stack up and is that economic benefit verified by independent sources?
So I am delighted that they’ve accepted the concept, the notion. What I
want them to do is to pick up and work with us to take it further. But I
tell you this, if you really want to see this issue addressed for the future
you must elect a Labor Government because this was our idea, we are the
only ones who believe in it and we are the only ones committed to doing
something for the future of this nation through it.
MODERATOR:
Next question is from Lincoln Wright.
JOURNALIST:
Lincoln Wright, Sunday Herald Sun. Treasurer you regard yourself as an
economic reformer of some credentials, why is it then that you criticise
Labor’s tax package for providing incentives for people to join the workforce
and secondly, Simon, why is it that Labor has risked alienating people it
needs to vote for them to win this election by providing negative incentives
to low income families and sole parents?
TREASURER:
Well Lincoln can I make the first point that Labor has done nothing about
Effective Marginal Tax Rates except make them worse. Now the thing about
Labor is that they have introduced some new tapers, they have introduced
a taper in relation to their so called tax guarantee and they have introduced
a taper in response to their so called per family component. The consequences
of that are that although Labor has actually moved around where these EMTRs
apply they have actually worsened them.
For example a worker on $52,000 with two children and a wife in part-time
work will have an Effective Marginal Tax Rate under Labor’s policy of 61.5
percent. 31.5 per cent tax, 10 per cent working tax bonus taper, 20 per
cent family payment taper. And further up the income scale Labor’s Effective
Marginal Tax Rates will go higher.
There is a very important point to bear in mind, Labor has not reduced
Effective Marginal Tax Rate, just moved where they apply and increased them
in respect of its working tax bonus.
Second point, Labor claims under the modelling of the Melbourne Institute
that there will be this participation dividend, that around 75,000 people
who are not currently working will go out and work. The largest single group
that will go out and work it says is the stay-at-home, Mother or the sole
parent.
Why does Labor say that they will increase their participation? Because
Labor’s policy make the stay at home mother worse off and the sole parent
worse off. You see Labor wants to claim they’re not worse off on one hand
but their modeller participation, why, because you are stripping them of
benefits, you are stripping them of the Family Tax Benefit so Labor’s very
policy and participation dividend is premised on forcing people into a worse
off situation who are currently out of the labour market in order to get
them to participate. Now look that is one way of forcing people to participate
but it’s another way of saying we are making families worse off, particularly
the single income family and the single income family is going to suffer.
MODERATOR:
(inaudible) respond to that before your question?
JOURNALIST:
Well I think I was asked the question too, so it gives me three minutes
rather than one.
MODERATOR:
Well you were after, well ok let’s treat it that way.
CREAN:
Well I think it was a specific question to me at the end. What we have
done to address the disincentives that are in the system now. The debt trap
that families find themselves in, the cripplingly high Effective Marginal
Tax Rates and we have set about correcting that. We have put incentive into
the system by first of all giving a tax cut to all of those people who missed
out. That is a positive incentive. That’s acknowledged by the Melbourne
Institute just as much as it acknowledged the dynamic effect of their tax
cuts. So there is a positive effect in the first place. But the second positive
effect is what we have done in consolidating this ramshackle Family Tax
Benefit system into the one payment. What that has done is give significant
benefits to middle Australia and I have gone through some of those examples.
But you see what the Government wants to do is to just concentrate on sole
parents and low income. When have you ever heard them do anything or express
some concern about them in the past. The simple fact of the matter is, even
on their best analysis and we don’t accept it, on their best analysis, on
their best analysis, three out of 10 families, only, are better off under
John Howard which proves our point. People are much better off under us.
But what we have said is, take it on a weekly basis. Why do we say take
it on a weekly basis? It’s because when families have to make the ends meet.
It’s when they have to find the money for the bills. They don’t just sit
there and accumulate at the end of the year. People have to find this pressure,
this financial pressure week in, week out and I might say in terms of our
package we presented both. We presented the weekly payments and we presented
the annual payments, the same as Centrelink presents them now. Centrelink,
when it talks about the weekly payments under their system, does not include
the $600 lump sum so we’ve presented in the exactly the same way as Centrelink
already projects their stuff.
My point is when you take it on a weekly basis when it’s money in the pockets
because people can’t wait for the end of the year when they need the financial
relief, we said let’s take it away from an annual payment. Let’s put it
into a weekly payment when people need it and on that basis nine out of
10 families on a weekly basis, nine out of 10 families in receipt the Family
Benefits on a weekly basis are better off under us and the families that
are worse off, that do suffer, are those in the very higher income levels
over $100,000 per year.
MODERATOR:
Fleur Anderson.
JOURNALIST:
Fleur Anderson from News Limited. This question is to Mr Crean. What is
your response to this $700 million black hole that Mr Costello says he’s
found?
CREAN:
Well I am delighted that he has waited till today to give us this knock
out blow that he has always told us. I mean I can remember the reports Peter
Costello’s just waiting to get his hands on Labor’s package and rip it apart.
Well we are still waiting and I think Treasurer when I see this document
that you put out today you will be sadly disappointed because I think from
what I understood you to be saying and the assumptions you’ve made, you’re
wrong. But let’s wait and see the analysis. I am quite happy to wait and
see that. I just love the circumstances in which he swaggers into the Parliament
or swaggers out there to another Press Conference day in and day out and
says I am going to knock the big hole. You know it’s sort of like re-living
the Paul Keating history. The Box Hill knock out.