PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
27/05/1998
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
10753
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
27 May 1998 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER: THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP RADIO 6PR WITH HOWARD SATTLER:

E&OE....................................................

SATTLER:

Good morning Prime Minister.

PRIME MINISTER:

Good morning, very nice to talk to you Howard.

SATTLER:

Thanks for joining us.......

PRIME MINISTER:

I'm getting a bit of echo, but maybe the technicians will

remove that as we go along.

SATTLER:

We'll pass the message on.

PRIME MINISTER:

Thank you.

SATTLER:

Little sir echo. That's me.

PRIME MINISTER:

Never say that.

SATTLER:

All right, now come on, tell us, will a goods and services tax

or its equivalent be part of the Government's next election

policy? We want to know.

PRIME MINISTER:

You can't reform the taxation system in a big way without

addressing the need to get rid of the present indirect taxation

system and replace it with a broadly based one. So if you're

really serious about tax reform you've got to look at that,

because the present system does include an enormous range of hidden

taxes. I'll bet most of your listeners don't pay, don't

know that they pay a 32% wholesale sales tax when they buy a television

set. They don't know that they pay a 12% wholesale sales tax

when they buy such things as soap and detergent. They don't

know that they pay a 22% sales tax when they buy a lot of other

household goods. And of course, they probably do know that they

pay a 22% wholesale sales tax if they buy a family car, yet the

one or two people listening to this program who can afford to buy

a lear jet, don't pay any wholesale sales tax on that at all.

Now that is a plainly unfair, increasingly unworkable, old-fashioned,

out-of-date system. And any scheme to fundamentally reform the Australian

taxation system would take an axe to that sort of approach and have

a more broadly based, but obviously, much lower rate of tax.

SATTLER:

All right well you've almost, and why don't you just

declare yourself that you're going to get rid of the wholesale

sales tax which we don't......

PRIME MINISTER:

I'm not, I'm obviously not declaring myself about the

whole package until we're ready to release the whole package.

I mean I've said all along, Howard look, I'm not going

to play those games.

SATTLER:

No, but you've convinced me that the wholesale sales tax system

should go and I guess you want to influence the electors.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well of course I will, and part of the process of reforming the

tax system is to point out the weaknesses of the present system.

I mean apart from anything else, the present wholesale tax system

exempts some things totally (we're still getting the echo)

and, but, has a very very high rate on a whole lot of other items.

And the worst feature economically is that it penalises our exporters.

SATTLER:

How badly?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well very badly. It makes them on average much worse off than their

competitors from other countries, because what we do is we tax the

inputs to those things that we export overseas. I mean the process

of goods being made for export overseas, the people who make them

have to pay tax on the things that go into their manufacture, whereas

under the tax systems against which our exporters compete, from

the exporters, against the exporters from other countries, under

those alternatives tax systems, and the alternatives to ours, there

are no such taxes on inputs. So the worst feature from an overall

economic point of view for Australia is that the present system

is a penalty on exports and that alone is a very powerful argument

for reforming the Australian taxation system.

SATTLER:

And almost everyone of those economies has got a GST.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well they don't call it that, they call it all sorts of different

things.....

SATTLER:

It doesn't matter what you call it.

PRIME MINISTER:

....they have an indirect tax system that doesn't penalise

their exporters. We have one that gives a rabbit killer to our exporters

every time that they manufacture something for export. Now that

is a stupid taxation system and people for years have recognised

this. The Labor Party new this in the mid 1980's. I mean Mr

Beazley and Mr Evans in 1985 were very strong supporters of Paul

Keating's push to have a change to the tax system and to have

a broad based consumption tax. They were very strong supporters.

SATTLER:

Okay, are you going to set up a system that also allows the States

and yourself to get rid of those little insidious taxes like FID

and BAD, and payroll taxes and that sort of thing?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I said when we started this exercise, Howard, that one of

things we would do is address some of the weaknesses in the Commonwealth

- State financial relationship and the ones that you've mentioned

are part of that are there are some other issues and I believe that

at the end of the process that what we produce will be something

that the States will see as a very significant advance on the present

system. Now I've had some discussion with State Premiers and

I certainly expect to have some more with them before the tax package

is finalised. Because although at the end of the day, we have to

take the decisions, we are keen to have the views of the States.

We're keen their input. We're very keen to discuss various

options with them and that's part and parcel of the process.

But I do want your listeners to understand that the goal of taxation

reform is not some kind of revolution. We're not trying to

turn the system on its head. What we're trying to do is to

reform the tax system as the next thing we have to do to provide

greater safety and security and stability to the Australian economy.

SATTLER:

Okay, you're going to put more money in our pockets?

PRIME MINISTER:

There will be lower personal tax.

SATTLER:

How much lower?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I can't tell you that, and I'm not even going to

speculate. But one thing I want to make crystal clear is that we

will not be introducing a GST, or anything else that parades under

that name, on top of the existing system and we certainly won't

be introducing taxation reform that does not include very significant

reductions in personal income tax.

SATTLER:

Would you raise the threshold because at the moment.....at the

moment you go into paying almost half of your dollars to the Government

when you get to one-and-a-half times the average weekly wage. I

mean, about 20 years ago it was about 10 times...

PRIME MINISTER:

Well that is one of the weaknesses in the present system. What...

SATTLER:

It saps incentive?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well of course it saps incentive. I mean years ago you had to be

earning in today's dollars, the equivalent of about $500,000

- $600,000 a year, and there aren't many people who do that,

before you'd pay the top marginal rate of tax. If we go as

we are under the present system, by the year 2000, you'll be

hitting the top marginal rate of tax if you're earning less

than $1000 a week. And the average wage earners....

SATTLER:

(inaudible) wharfies would be hit by that.

PRIME MINISTER:

Indeed. Indeed they would.

SATTLER:

But you see....

PRIME MINISTER:

I'm still getting the echo.

SATTLER:

Yep, we're trying to work on that. I'm not but someone

else is. But the unions for a start are going to line up with your

opponents. Now, what do you say about that.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well I don't think they're serving the interests of their

members because a lot of trade unionists in Australia resent the

fact that somebody on average weekly earnings is now losing 43 cents

in the dollar on every additional dollar he or she earns. And if

that situation is left unchecked it will be even worse by the year

2000. And I don't think a lot of union members will appreciate

the fact that the unions are going to oppose reforming a system

that allows a lot of people to cheat on it in the black economy.

Now there's a significant amount of revenue lost through the

black economy in Australia and one of the advantages of reforming

the existing taxation system is that you get stuck into the black

economy and it's much harder to evade. And, so I would say

to rank and file trade unionists, if your leaders start attacking

our reforms, look to your own self interests. Ask yourself whether

you are better off with the present system which has all these hidden

wholesale taxes at very high levels like 22% and 32% on household

items, or would you be better of with a reformed system that gave

some relief to the average wage earner at the margin, and also allowed

the collection of tax from people who are now evading their responsibilities

under the existing taxation system. And the other thing I would

say to rank and file trade unionists is that in 1993, the Labor

Party campaigned against John Hewson's Fightback program and

basically said.....

SATTLER:

And won by the way.

PRIME MINISTER:

They won, yeah, but they won by saying this Howard. They won by

saying ‘we will give you income tax cuts without a GST.'.

After they won the election, they did the exact reverse. They didn't

give us the infamous L-A-W Law personal income tax cuts, but to

make matters worse, they introduced their own version of a GST via

huge increases in the wholesale tax system. They were monstrously

regressive increases, hurt the poor and were accompanied by absolutely

no compensation at all for the people who were affected by those

increases. So what they said before 1993 was personal tax cuts without

a GST. What they did after 1993 was the exact opposite. I think

that is a very strong warning to the Australian public as to what

the Labor Party might say before the coming election.

SATTLER:

The Prime Minister's told me he'll take some calls, so

we'll take a break and then we'll be back doing just that.

SATTLER:

And we're talking with the Prime Minister of Australia and

he's offered to speak with you as well. Are you there Prime

Minister?

PRIME MINISTER:

Yeah, I am indeed. And the echo's gone.

SATTLER:

There you go.

PRIME MINISTER:

Howard minus the echo.

SATTLER:

Just before our first caller whose name by the way is Pam, I just

wonder how much of what you go on with at the end of the day is

going to depend on the elector feedback of the Queensland election.

That will be the first opportunity for people to really I guess

have a say about a prospective direct tax like a GST.

PRIME MINISTER:

I'm not too sure about that Howard. I think the Queensland

election will largely be decided by State issues. I don't subscribe

too strongly to the view that State elections are dominated by Federal

issues or vice versa. I wouldn't see the outcome of the Queensland

election as expressing any view on taxation reform. I see it as

very much an expression of the voters views up there about the performance

of the Borbidge Government. I believe the Borbidge Government will

get back, I believe it deserves to get back. And ...

SATTLER:

With the help of One Nation?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I don't know what is going to happen to One Nation preferences

but could I say this that I thought that the Anglican Archbishop

of Brisbane, Archbishop Hollingworth, had something very sensible

to say last night regarding people who might be contemplating voting

for One Nation and he wasn't expressing a view as to whether

they should or they shouldn't, and he said something very similar

to what I've said for a number of months and that is that there

are a lot of people in the Australian community who for one reason

or other have been affected by economic change and they feel perhaps

that they are being unfairly affected by that change and they are

therefore very receptive to simplistic solutions being mouthed by

people who have not had previous experience of political office,

or who pretend that complex issues can be resolved by snap-of-the-finger

simplistic solutions, and there is a simplistic approach in many

of the utterances of the One Nation people and I think what he was

saying to them, and what I'd be saying is that don't imagine

that somebody who comes along with a simple populist solution has

any better capacity to solve the difficult problems of the 1990s

than say the National Party and the Liberal Party in Queensland.

Because Pauline Hanson's group has no magic wand answers, it

has no answers that haven't been looked at before and the idea

that a Party, simply because it is trying to draw on public discontent

against mainstream political parties, the idea that that party has

some easy solution to difficult problems is a myth and people will

find that by supporting it, that they perhaps might get burnt by

the myth and in the process they might be voting for some other

policies that are not in Australia's interests.

SATTLER:

Okay but you are not in Queensland today so...

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, you asked me the question.

SATTLER:

Yes I did. All right here we go. Pam's your first caller.

Hello Pam. You are able to talk with your Prime Minister.

CALLER:

Yes, I'd like to speak to him about the GST, as far as the

pensioners are concerned, and also too I think that is exceptionally

wrong that he can't tell us about about... that he will definitely

take off the taxes that were already on the things....

SATTLER:

It's part of the tactics Pam, don't worry.

PRIME MINISTER:

Look, I'm sorry, I have made it very clear that we are not

going to put a new indirect tax, whatever you might call it, on

top of the existing indirect tax system. That would be crazy, it

would represent an increase in the tax burden and it simply won't

happen. So the answer is, I have told you.

SATTLER:

So the Wholesale Sales Tax would go, Prime Minister?

PRIME MINISTER:

Look, of course if you are going to bring in a new indirect tax

system, you'd replace the existing one. Of course.

SATTLER:

All right Pam, thanks very much for your call. And Joy is next,

Prime Minister. Good morning Joy.

CALLER:

Good morning both of you. What I'm after is to find out why

all this money we are sending to Indonesia when Soeharto's

got $40 billion put away and our people, the pensioners have to

go on a measly $6.50 rise which I'd like to see you people

in power to live off of every week. Especially when you have ....

that you have to buy and get expensive medication and then you've

also got the low wage earners, we have quite a lot of people here

who are down below the poverty line just as well as Indonesia and

I think charity starts at home. I think you should try and live

on what we live on.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I understand the view that charity does begin at home, I

also would ask the listener to understand that in order for this

country to do well and to provide jobs for its citizens and decent

wages for its citizens, it does need to sell goods and services

overseas. We can't live without trading and the reason that

we have helped Indonesia is that it is in our own national interest

to have a stronger Indonesian economy. It is in our national interest

to make certain that the countries of the Asia Pacific region are

strong enough economically so they can continue to buy goods and

services from Australia.

SATTLER:

But Prime Minister, do you think the Soeharto family could have

done a lot more for their own country?

PRIME MINISTER:

Obviously the answer to that is yes. Obviously there are practices

in many countries around the world with which I do not agree. I

have certain constraints placed upon me as Prime Minister as to

what I can say in relation to those things. On the other hand, you've

got to think of the aggregate impact on the poorer sections of those

populations and also the aggregate impact on Australia of a ...I

mean, if we allow the nations of Asia-Pacific to be impoverished

by the current economic turmoil, that will damage Australia, it

will reduce living standards in Australia, it will put Australians

out of work and it will reduce our capacity as a Government, for

example, to give the pension increase that the lady referred to,

to provide the Senior's Card which was announced in the Budget,

to a quarter of a million self-funded retirees, and it will reduce

our capacity to deliver the interest rate reductions that the Australian

community has enjoyed over the last couple of years.

SATTLER:

But Prime Minister how do you feel when I tell you, and this is

fact, that a member of Soeharto's family, a very direct member,

was down here gambling at the casino last week. I mean, where would

that money come from?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, ....

SATTLER:

This at a time when his country is in turmoil.

PRIME MINISTER:

Howard, I don't know the particular circumstances of that

and you know that I can't get in...

SATTLER:

I know but it makes people angry.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I understand that and I do understand that anger, but I ask

those people in their anger to think for a moment as to whether

it is in Australia's interests for the nations of the Asia

Pacific region to go down hill economically, because we sell altogether,

we sell 33% of our exports to Japan and Korea alone, and we gave

assistance to help the Korean economy and that will come back to

us in more than the measure of what we gave, through the increased

exports, through the jobs that those export industries... and speaking

to a Western Australian audience which exports an enormous amount

to Japan and Korea, I ask your listeners to understand that if we

allow those countries to go down hill, if we allow them to fail

economically, we are hurting ourselves. Now, that's the reason

why, the major reason why we've given the assistance. I am

very conscious that it was not in the short term a politically popular

thing to do, but in the long term interests of our country we have

to sell abroad. I mean we can't survive on our own and therefore,

you need economies abroad that are able to buy our goods and services

and it is in our interests to help those countries just as it was

in the interests of nations like the United States after WWII to

have a Marshall plan that resurrected Europe and meant that Europe

in time was able to buy goods and services from the United States.

If they had refused to engage in that Marshall plan immediately

after the war the American economy would not have boomed in the

way that it did through the 1960s and the 1970s.

SATTLER:

Okay, I want to squeeze a couple of more calls in because you've

got to go in a minute. Good morning to you Mark.

CALLER:

This is a question to the Prime Minister regarding a GST rate.

Is it going to be fixed at 10% or is it just going to keep increasing

like it has done in England. You know, GST started in England in

single digit figures.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I haven't talked about any particular rate but you can

rest assured...

CALLER:

Well, we heard it's 10%.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, you hear a lot of things, I wouldn't believe anything

you....

CALLER:

But whatever rate it is going to be....

PRIME MINISTER:

Look, whatever we, if we introduce a new broad based indirect tax,

you can rest assured whatever it is introduced at it will stay at.

SATTLER:

All right thanks for that, and Ian good morning.

SATTLER:

Ian we are going to have to put you on hold because we won't

get him. But Tony we can get you. Hello Tony.

CALLER:

G'day Mr Prime Minister.

PRIME MINISTER:

How are you Tony?

CALLER:

I heard you talking about One Nation and I want to let you know

that I am not

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