Wednesday, 28 January 1998
I want today to mark the beginning of a new year by not only taking
stock of our progress toward the goals we set for ourselves and the
nation when we were elected, but also to outline the government's
main goals for the coming year.
I intend that today's address will be the first in an annual
series in the run up to the Centenary of Federation in 2001 and beyond.
As we approach the Centenary of Federation, it is important to reflect
on our achievements and aspirations as a nation and, in particular,
as a government, on how public policies and programmes can be adjusted
and adapted to ensure that they remain effective and relevant to the
needs of Australia as we enter the new millennium.
The goals we have as a government for the year ahead are very clear.
They are designed to build an Australia which is both strong and fair.
This year the government is intent on accelerating the pace of economic
reform. We must consolidate recent gains in strengthening the economic
fundamentals. This will further cushion the Australian economy against
the fallout from difficulties in our region and sustain economic growth,
the key to further reducing unemployment.
The government will also unveil its proposals to reshape, modernise
and improve the fairness of the Australian taxation system so that
Australians can be guaranteed a world class taxation system as we
enter the 21st century.
We will continue and extend our partnership with the community in
addressing important social issues. Building on that approach, I will
announce in this speech a series of measures to broaden the application
of the principle of mutual obligation. They include further steps
to tackle the problem of youth unemployment.
This year the government will also amplify policies that impact on
rural and regional Australia to ensure that Australians living outside
the large capital cities share equally in our economic and social
progress.
And finally, the issues of native title and whether or not there should
be constitutional change regarding our head of state must be addressed.
Today I will be talking about concrete progress: first, our successes
in managing the economy, not least in the crucial task of fiscal consolidation;
and then some aspects of social policyparticularly those where
our actions most clearly express the stronger underlying themes of
our government. I will also be talking about the necessary connections
between economic and social policy, and putting the economics in their
proper perspective.
It is important that speeches laying out goals and principles address
the real condition of the nation and the citizen.
In that vein, the headland speeches I delivered before the election
of 1996 did not attempt to promise a utopian state of affairs. Instead,
they referred to continual processes which are as valid now as they
will be in twenty or fifty years from now.
The themes of those speeches, as of this one, relate to the ways people
live and work, the way they fit into families and into society, their
ability to pursue happiness.
Now that the Labor Partywith some help from Tony Blairhas
discovered community', I should perhaps add one important
point. Most of the habits and institutions which form and bind our
society are not created by government. They are created when government
allows people the right environment and enough of their own resources
to do it themselves.
The kind of society we want can only be realised through a shared
endeavour between individuals, the community and governments with
each playing their rightful role. Striking the right balance between
these three elements is the constant challenge of modern politics.
Our approachand it has a long history in the Liberal Party
is based on two very important understandings.
Firstthe obvious one, that politics should speak a language
that does relate to the way people live or want to live.
Secondthat our economic institutions depend entirely on the
condition of society. Without the habits of honesty, trust, self-reliance,
co-operation, civility, tolerance, obligation and reason, society
does not workand nor does the free economy. And without prosperity
and economic security, those habits are harder to secure. They always
reinforce each other.
These are intensely real considerations, often overlooked in the day-to-day
business of politics. They underlie the jargon of economic policy,
the jargon of GDP growth and budget balances. Economic policy is central,
but it is not an end in itself, only a means to an end.
There are, of course, those who wilfully choose to misunderstand and
misrepresent this government; those who trot out the overworked language
of economic rationalism' as if it were the highest form
of sophisticated criticism. I think of myself rather as an economic
realist: realistic about economic prudence and necessity, realistic
about economic reform, realistic about the limits of economics, realistic
about the proper ends of economic policy.
These ends are the considerations against which our achievements in
office should be measured. And they are very considerable achievements.
The economic record
In simple economic terms, we must take greatest pride, I think, in
our record of fiscal consolidation.
We inherited an underlying budget deficit of $10.3 billion for 199596;
with no policy change this would have blown out to more than $11 billion
in the following year. In 1998-99, as a result of our policies, we
expect an underlying surplus of about $2.5 billionhandsomely
exceeding our aim of balancing the budget in our first term.
This has not been achieved by raising taxesin fact, tax as a
proportion of GDP will remain essentially constant over the next few
years. It represents real restraint in spending: underlying outlaysstanding
at 27 per cent of GDP when we took officewill decline to around
23 per cent in 200001, the lowest percentage of GDP since 197374.
And in that same period, Commonwealth general government debt will
be nearly halvedto around 10 per cent of GDP.
The benefits of all this have been immensegreater, perhaps,
than we would have expected. As Alan Mitchell pointed out in last
week's Financial Review:
The Howard Government's program of fiscal consolidation
has paid dividends in the form of lower interest rates. It has
largely insulated the Australian dollar and interest rates from
the financial market panic that has engulfed most of Asia'
I think this is the simplest and best example of means and ends in
economic policy. The benefits of lower interest ratesincreased
economic activity and employment, housing affordability, consumer
demandare all pretty obvious.
But even these benefits are surpassed now by the absence of crisis
and panic in Australia.
So far we have weathered the Asian storm remarkably well; and, while
the future is never certain, we should continue to do so. There are
already signs, indeed, that Australia will now become even more attractive
as a low-risk destination for investment in the Asian regionand
Australian investors will also be looking to take advantage of new
opportunities to invest in the region.
While we can sometimes take specific measures to help those affectedas
we have done recently to reassure those dependent on Korean marketsthe
best policy available to us is to reinforce the perceptions and the
reality of economic stability and responsibility which have now served
us so well.
I would add that the effects of creating a safe haven are not all
economic: they also provide us with a more secure frame of mind in
which we can pursue both economic and social priorities.
This insulating effect has, of course, been reinforced by our perspective
on foreign affairs. My government has sensibly broadened Australia's
international perspectives.
We have maintained the special focus on Asia, developed over many
years by past governments, but not at the expense of pursuing wider
interests. The emphasis, in a phrase, has been Asia first',
not Asia only'.
Our success in prudent fiscal management has been matched in other
areas.
The decline in interest rates has indeed been significant: official
rates have fallen by 2.5 per cent in the last eighteen months, and
business lending rates have fallen by the same margin. Variable home-loan
rates have fallen by around 3.8 per cent, to their lowest level since
the early 1970s.
Movement in interest rates has gone hand in hand with a welcome fall
in inflation.
For the year to the September quarter 1997, the headline CPI fell
by 0.3 per centthe lowest headline rate in 35 years. Through-the-year
underlying inflation has fallen to only 1.5 per cent, the lowest annual
rate since the series began in 1972. This rate is well below the bottom
end of the Reserve Bank's target range.
The concord between the government and the Reserve Bank in respect
of the Bank's independence, and of inflation targets, has restored
a good deal of credibility to monetary policy, and helped to diminish
inflationary expectations. Underlying inflation, indeed, is expected
to remain below the Reserve Bank's target range for the rest
of this financial year.
The performance, and the expectations, on both interest rates and
inflation are two of the factors which have at last started to unlock
domestic demand and increase domestic economic activity. Real business
investment, for instance, is at a record high level of around 14 per
cent of GDP.
Retail spending has been strong, and economic growth has accelerated.
Employment, always the last economic indicator to turn, is now growing
strongly, with around 140,000 jobs being created in the last four
months of 1997.
So while the Asian troubles will have some dampening effect on national
income, robust domestic demand will cushion the impact on overall
economic growth.
Economic growth is still expected to reach 3 per cent in 199798[still
o.k.?more like 3.5?].
One further factor here is the gains steadily accumulating as the
effects of our industrial relations reforms spread through the economy.
Even though these reforms have been operating less than a year, major
gains are already evident.
The Employment Advocate has already approved 4393 AWAs; and the National
Bank business survey found that one-third of businesses covered expect
to complete agreements during the coming year, with expected productivity
offsets averaging about 2.3 per cent.
In the wider industrial relations sphere, a better ethos seems to
be spreading. The number of industrial disputes in 1996 was the lowest
since 1940; and the number in 1997 is expected to be even lower.
Unfair dismissal claims have also fallen sharply - by around 50 per
cent - in 1997. And the total number of working days lost is expected
to be the lowest since 1959.
I cannot help addingso much for the dire predictions of industrial
chaos promoted by opponents of our legislation.
In two areas, I must add to the record what I think can be called
unalloyed triumphs.
The first is the sale of one-third of the government's holding
of Telstra which resulted in almost 1.9 million Australians becoming
shareholders in this great Australian company.
The second is the successful outcome of the Kyoto conference. Despite
a marked lack of support - despite, indeed, being labelled an international
pariah by some of our domestic critics - we held to the line, and
with persistent reasoned argument achieved an outcome very much in
Australia's best interests.
Sound economic management has so far put us in an enviable position.
But the events in Asia also mean that we have to accelerate the progress
of other economic reform. If the future is uncertain, if there are
further shocks in store that we cannot even guess at, then there is
all the more urgency to continue economic reform.
On the economic front, the government has two major priorities which
are both obvious and compelling. These priorities will carry us through
the remainder of our first term of government and well into our second.
One of those priorities is to maintain fiscal consolidation and continuing
micro economic reform including industrial relations.
Micro economic reform involves following through with existing initiatives
in major areas of infrastructure provision such as electricity, gas,
water, rail and telecommunications. It also involves the application
of the new industrial relations framework to improve productivity
and competitiveness in the waterfront and maritime industries, the
coal sector, meat processing, building and construction. These are
all areas which have in the past displayed intractable industrial
relations problems.
The government has already moved, through its shipping reform agenda,
to improve competitive conditions in the maritime sector. Those efforts
will continue in 1998. Internationally competitive maritime and waterfront
industries are essential to boosting Australia's trade performance
in the current economic environment in the Asia Pacific region.
Some further evolutionary changes to our industrial relations legislation
have recently been foreshadowed. AnyThese changes we make will not
only heighten the flexibility and the productivity pay-off flowing
through from our first reforms; more importantly they will help us
in the task of reducing Australia's unemployment levels.
The arguments in favour of freeing up the labour market to help those
excluded from it have been conclusively won. Our task is to achieve
the necessary level of freedom without impairing our distinctively
compassionate Australian approach to helping the unemployed.
The second great priority is the formulation of a fairer and better
taxation system to put to the people of Australia before the next
election.
We do this in the full knowledge that past attemptsnot only
in 1993, but also in 1985have failed to get over the political
hurdles. But the reform of our taxation systemour taxation shamblescan
no longer be put to one side.
The ludicrous anomalies and complexities which pervade the entire
wholesale sales tax structure are now intolerable. The incidence of
our income tax on ordinary wage-earning individuals and families is
equally so.
There is nothing to be said for an indirect tax system under which
caviar is tax-free, but orange juice is taxed at 12 per cent; where
Lear jets are taxed at zero, and the family car at 22 per cent. It
is a system, moreover, which places particular burdens on exporters.
The income tax system has already reached the limit of fairness. In
195455, the top marginal rate of tax cut in at 19 times average
earningsby 19992000, the top rate will cut in at 1.2 times
average earnings. The complexity of the system is such that over 70
per cent of Australian taxpayers now use tax agents.
Our principles in this area have already been made quite clear.
* We will not contemplate reform which increases the overall tax
burden.
* Reform should involve major reductions in personal income taxespecially
for families.
* Consideration should be given to a broad-based indirect tax
to replace some or all of the existing indirect taxes.
* There should be appropriate compensation for those deserving
of special consideration.
* We need to address reform of our Commonwealth-State financial
relations.
Those five principles remain paramount. And it is difficult to see
any alternative: is there anyone here today who believes that tax
is not in need of root-and-branch reform?
Sadly, in fact, the Opposition believes that a few more band-aids
will do the trick. At its conference last week, Labor talked of soaking
the rich a bit more, and perhaps some tax rebates for exporters. Neither
of these is really feasible. There are not quite enough rich people
to make the magic pudding effect work.
For example, a surcharge of 5 per cent on those earning more than
$100,000 a year would raise only $650 million, that is exactly half
of one per cent of current taxation revenue. That is hardly the wherewithal
to fund remediation of the current indirect taxation system or other
fundamental improvements. And only a broad-based indirect tax can
rebate tax paid on exports in an effective and internationally-acceptable
manner.
The record of the social agenda
I am proud of the economic outcomes which I have just outlined. Our
GDP and employment growth in 1998 and 1999 will be higher than in
any of the G7 countries, and better than the OECD average. Most importantly,
the economic growth and stability we have achieved enables us to get
closer to the kind of society we want.
We have acted in many ways to further that aim.
Before the election, we spoke of making Australia a safer community.
Our gun laws legislation was a very significant contribution to that.
But there are other measuresour initiatives on youth suicide,
for instance.
We spoke of creating a more civil society. That is a difficult objective
to achieve, but I think we have helped. The tone of politics is less
vitriolic, less abusive. The democratic right of dissent can be exercised
without instant vilification. There is, I hope, less domination of
debate by narrow interests.
We spoke of a stronger sense of community. And in a number of areas
we have been able to draw on the strengths of private and voluntary
organisations for important policiesthe government-business
alliance in the Partnerships Against Domestic Violence, for instance,
and the important role of non-government bodies in our National Illicit
Drugs Strategy. In March, I will be chairing a major round table of
business and community leaders aimed at developing strategies to promote
partnerships between businesses and community groups and corporate
philanthropy.
We spoke of a more united nation. Our aim of providing the citizens
of rural and regional Australia equitable access to normal services
is an important part of that. Here I should mention, for instance,
the $250 million Regional Telecommunications Infrastructure Fund.
And there will be a significant regional component in the infrastructure
projects coming out of the $1 billion Federation Fund.
We spoke of a caring societyand, despite considerable fiscal
restraint, we have adhered faithfully to our promise to maintain the
welfare safety net, in all its essentials. The community would want
no less than that.
But that is not always enough.
There are problems which need more than the safety net.
Youth unemployment
Youth unemployment is still too high, and we maintain our commitment
to tackling it as seriously as it warrants.
I believe that we have the full support of the Australian people in
this. Australians feel a strong sense of obligation toward their young
people, an obligation not just to help, but to try to make sure that
those young people have the best possible future.
This sense of obligation is one of the habits which bind our community
together. But those who feel it know that obligation is a mutual affaira
two-way street. Every obligation has a corresponding responsibility,
and this mutual obligation has to be recognised as a basic principle.
Just as the community expects that every effort will be made to help
the young, and to provide them with opportunities, so it also expects
the young to use those opportunities. We have a right to expect that
they will make the best of the help offered and, as far as they can,
to give something back to the community.
Education and Training
We owe it to the young to get the fundamentals right. In particular,
the economic and educational settings need to be appropriate so that
there are, first, the jobs in place, and, second, the right skills
for those jobs.
While the Commonwealth's direct responsibility in schooling is
limited, we have nevertheless taken strong action to focus on the
educational fundamentals.
We have committed $669 million over four years to raise the standards
of literacy and numeracy in schools; and the Commonwealth and
the States have agreed to a National Literacy and Numeracy Plan, which
includes testing of all Year 3 and Year 5 students against national
benchmarks.
We have also committed $187 million over four years to implement school-to-work
programmes, including school-based apprenticeships.
The new Youth Allowance, to be introduced in July, will dramatically
simplify the income support system for the youngcutting out
the 13 different rates of pay and 5 different payments we inherited.
Most importantly, it will remove the skewed incentives whereby unemployment
could be preferable to further education.
We will simply give more assistance to those who are prepared to studywhether
at school, TAFE or university.
The transition from education to employment is one area where the
Commonwealth can act, and we have done so, decisively.
The introduction of the New Apprenticeships will deliver flexible,
responsive and accessible training arrangements for business, and
will open up opportunities for many young Australians, over a wide
range of industrial activities.
We have committed $560 million in incentives to employers, apprentices
and trainees, to support up to 220,000 places over the 199798
and 199899 financial years.
The new employment services market will start operating in
May this year, and will bring a much-needed focus on getting unemployed
people real jobsnot just churning them through endless training
programmes.
The creation of the new Centrelink agency has brought together
the social security network, parts of the CES network and student
assistance and childcare services, bringing simplicity and effectiveness
to a previously complex and time-consuming system.
Mutual Obligation, Work for the Dole
Perhaps most importantly, the principle of mutual obligation, of reciprocal
duties, is now established in our Work for the Dole scheme.
The scheme is already demonstrating the strong obligation felt by
the community to the young unemployed, and the value that the unemployed
feel in being able to give something back.
Well in excess of our expectations, more than 630 enterprising submissions
for Work for the Dole schemes were received from community and welfare
groups, and from local councils. Due to this enormous demand, we expanded
the original aim of 70 pilot projects to 179involving groups
such as Mission Australia, the ACT Cancer Society, Council on the
Ageing, Open Family Australia, the RSPCA, Centacare Catholic Family
Services and Anglicare Tasmania.
So far, around 1400 participants have started work, on 62 projects
around the country. They are involved in environmental improvement,
in preserving our heritage, or in providing direct help and support
to those who need it within the community.
We knew from the start that the participants would be a mix of voluntary
and compulsory. In fact, about 60 per cent of those participating
so far are volunteers.
And it is already clear that many of the rest have become positive
and willing participants in their scheme once they actually started
work.
For all of them, the scheme has one considerable additional benefit.
They will now be able to go to employers and demonstrate that they
have acquired some work habits. And the habits of workof regular
routines, of working with others, of performing as expectedare
in some ways even more important than technical or vocational skills.
As more young people begin to see these benefits, we expect to see
the number of volunteers increasing.
New initiatives
The government has decided on three new policy initiatives in this
area.
Firstly, we have decided not only to expand the Work for the
Dole scheme, but also to extend the mutual obligation principle so
that all young unemployed people aged 18 to 24 who have been on unemployment
benefits for six months or more will be required to participate in
an activity in addition to job search.
Secondly, and as part of the extended mutual obligation principle,
we are introducing a major new literacy and numeracy programme specifically
designed to assist those young people who have been unemployed for
six months or more and whose