PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
19/08/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10921
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS TO THE TOWNSVILLE CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY SHERATON HOTEL, TOWNSVILLE

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

Well, thank you very much Mrs Barker. To my parliamentary colleagues

Peter Lindsay, and Ian Macdonald, to the many other distinguished

guests, ladies and gentlemen. Gee this is a terrific venue for a lunchtime

meeting. It is absolutely magnificent and how marvellous it is to

be here in Townsville and how marvellous it is to have an opportunity

of saying a few words about the Government's taxation plan for

the next century. There have been many descriptions given about the

plan and there have been many attempts to put a label on it. Some

talk about a GST, some talk about the tax cuts, some talk about this

or other aspects of the plan that we unveiled last Thursday, but above

and beyond individual sections of the plan, I want, and the Government

wants this to be seen as an integrated attempt to deliver for the

benefit of Australia and for all Australians a taxation plan, a taxation

reform that will sweep away the existing system and replace it with

one that is modern, is contemporary, is relevant and will be in the

long-term economic interests of Australia.

I don't find many people in Australia defending the existing

taxation system. Even those who have criticised the present system,

criticised our plan, will acknowledge, when you talk to them, they

will acknowledge that the present system is out of date. We share

in company with countries such as Botswana and Ghana the maintenance

of a wholesale tax system that was devised in the 1930s when the great

bulk of the Australian economy was based on manufacturing, when the

wholesale sales tax may conceivably have made some sense. Everybody

acknowledges that the present system is flawed, is frail, and is badly

in need of replacement – wholesale replacement.

I've said frequently in the past few days that I was elected

to Parliament in 1974, half-way through the Whitlam experiment. And

within a year of my being in Parliament there was a report tabled

called the Asprey report and it was a report shared by a former judge

of the New South Wales court of appeal into Australia's taxation

system. And you know what the report recommended, and this is in 1975

– 23 years ago – the report recommended that we should introduce

a broad based indirect tax and it should apply to virtually everything

and it should replace the existing tax system and it should be accompanied

by reductions in personal income tax. Now, it recommended a lot of

other things that we haven't picked up but that was the essence

of that recommendation, and now, 23 years later, the need for that

kind of fundamental reform that was identified in the mid-1970s is

more pressing, more urgent and more desirable. Now , I know it is

not easy and I have no shortage of people saying to me over the past

couple of weeks, you shouldn't be attempting a change of that

magnitude - it's too risky. Well, let me say in response to those

people, it is necessary to take risks of a personal political kind

in the long term national interests of Australia and the Australian

people. And that is why we are putting this forward as an integrated

plan. We don't believe the Australian people will respect a proposition

that says oh look you don't need to reform the present system,

but we'll offer you a tax cut. I mean, a lazy tax cut has no

credibility at all, but a personal tax restructure that is part and

parcel of an aggregate reform to the Australian taxation system, I

believe, will win very wide support in the Australian community.

Now, there is no one interest group in Australia that has got everything

it wanted out of this tax plan. We didn't set about to satisfy

every individual interest group. What we set out to do was to design

a structure that would deliver a more productive, more efficient Australia

and would be beneficial to the Australian community. We took account

of the views of interest groups, we didn't seek to produce a

plan that aggregated all of their demands. Now you ask me what is

good for Australia about this plan. The best thing about this plan

for Australia is that it reduces the cost of producing goods and services

within our community. It represents the biggest single proposition

by any Government in Australia since World War II to reduce the cost

of doing business.

The introduction of a goods and services tax, to replace the wholesale

sales tax, the financial institutions duties and bank account debit

taxes where they exist, stamp duty on business conveyancing, stamp

duty on shares, stamp duty on promissory notes, cheques and bills

of exchange, the massive reduction in fuel costs which I'll come

to at the moment which is so important to the bush to regional Australia.

All of those things together mean that when this plan is introduced,

the costs of doing business on an annual basis in Australia will be

reduced by approximately $10,000 million. It represents the most generous

export market development grant that any government has offered to

the exporters of Australia, because it will take $4.5 billion off

the costs of exports. There will be no GST on Australian exports and

all of the taxes paid on exporters inputs will be fully rebatable.

It will mean that exporters from this country will be able to compete

on an equal footing with those from other countries seeking access

to the same markets. I often get requests from people in exports saying

why don't you have a special incentive for exporters.

I can't think of a more special and better incentive for exporters

than to take $4.5 billion off their export costs by the introduction

of this plan. It will of course, by delivering a more efficient, a

less costly method of production in this country, it will of course

open up the opportunities for greater job generation. I did a local

press conference this morning, and I was asked by a young lady from

the university, what is this plan going to do for the university students

and my answer was that it will increase your chances of getting a

job when you leave university, because it is going to take costs off

the back of business which haven't been proposed before. Now,

it doesn't take all the costs off the back of business that they

would want but it takes more costs off their back than has ever been

offered in the past. And of course the plan does contain some very

particular provisions which are of enormous long term importance to

people who live in the bush, to people who live in regional Australia.

I've been coming to Townsville now for, as a politician, for

almost 25 years, and I can't remember a visit to Townsville that

hasn't involved somebody complaining to me about the relatively

high cost of delivering goods to this part of Australia compared with

some of the major population centres. So what we have done in this

package and we have done spectacularly is to attack the tyranny of

distance which bedevils the costs of operating businesses and keeping

households together in regional areas of Australia. But what we are

doing is to reduce the business, we are reducing by about $3.5 billion,

the cost of fuel in this country. We are doing it in a number of ways.

The first thing we are doing is we are going to reduce from 43 cents

a litre to 18 cents a litre the excise on diesel used by heavy load

vehicles and the same concession will apply to rail, exactly the same

concession.

In addition we are going to extend the, maintain and slightly extend

the existing exemption in relation to the use of diesel for off-road

purposes, and that will continue and slightly expand the concession

that is now available for primary producers. And a like concession

will apply in relation to ferry and tour boat operators using equivalent

fuels so it is not something that is simply limited to one particular

of the community. Now the impact that this will have on reduced transport

costs around Australia is quite enormous. Many people talk to me about

prices in supermarkets under a GST and they say quite wrongly oh everything

is going to go up by 10%. That's wrong. A lot of things won't

go up by 10%, in fact the average increase will be about 1.9% and

the reason that things won't go up by 10% is that a lot of goods

in supermarkets, a lot of things you buy now are subject to wholesale

sales taxes which are much higher than 10%, a whole range of detergents

and soap powders are taxed at rates of in the order of 22%. There's

a 12% tax now on flavoured milk and some kinds of biscuits and on

orange juice concentrate. There's a 22% tax on the family motor

car, and so the list goes on and on and on.

But there's another component to this argument and that is that

for every item that is delivered on to a supermarket shelf about 20%

of the cost of that item is accounted for by transport costs. You've

got to deliver things from markets, you've got to deliver things

from wholesale warehouses, and all of that involves transportation,

and all of that is very expensive, and if you reduce dramatically

the cost of that transportation, particularly when the goods are delivered

to remoter areas of Australia, particularly when the goods are delivered

to North Queensland, you will get an enormous additional benefit and

it has been calculated at about 20% of the total cost of every item

you take or buy off a supermarket shelf is accounted for by the cost

of transport. So this diesel concession is of huge benefit to the

bush, it is of huge benefit to regional Australia and I should remind

you, although it hasn't been my intent to make an excessively

partisan political address, I will nonetheless take the opportunity

of reminding you that the environmental spokesman for the Australian

Labor Party, Mr Duncan Kerr, has attacked the proposals we have in

relation to diesel excise because he thinks they would be bad for

the environment, and he has made it very very clear that the Labor

Party is opposed to those particular concessions. But there's

another little rub, and a very nice little rub in relation to the

cost of fuel and that is that every business operator, quite apart

from whether you are involved in diesel or on-road or off-road, will

now be able to buy their petrol effectively at 7 cents a litre cheaper

because under the new proposal we are going to reduce the petrol excise

by the extent necessary to allow in the 10% GST, and because the GST

will be fully rebatable for business purposes in the way that petrol

excise is not, you will effectively find that your, for business purposes,

and I stress that, you will find that your petrol for every business

purpose is 7 cents a litre cheaper because you will be able to obtain

a full rebate of it.

Now I mention these things ladies and gentlemen because one of the

aspects of the plan is that there are different parts of it that have

a different impact on different areas of the Australian economy, but

I stress again that the great appeal, the great virtue, the great

strength, is that this is a plan for Australia's future. It is

not a lazy attempt to nibble at the edges. It is not an attempt to

say to the Australian public, you can have the benefit of a personal

tax cut without the necessary reform to strengthen the Australian

economy. We all know that that option is no longer really available.

We had that tried in 1993 when Mr Keating and Mr Beazley said, oh,

you can't have Hewson's GST, we'll give you a tax cut,

we'll make it L-A-W law, what happened after the election was

that the tax cut disappeared and every individual sales tax went up

by 2%, and that was very regressive. And there was no compensation

for the pensioners in 1993, there was no compensation for them, and

there were no special arrangements, and the impact of that increase

in indirect tax was infinitely more regressive than would have been

the case if the Hewson plan had been endorsed by the Australian people.

I notice this morning that the ACOSS, speaking as it claims on behalf

of a number of welfare bodies, has attacked the plan, and I want to

say in reply to ACOSS that we, of course, reject the calculations

that they have made in relation to the price effect of the plan. We

repeat the guarantee that is contained in the announcement last week

that the pension and other benefits enumerated in the document will

increase up-front by 4% on the 1st of July in the year

2000 and thereafter we guarantee that there will be a 1.5% add-on

to any CPI increase that occurs after that date. And the purpose of

that will be to ensure that the pension is always in real terms 1.5%

ahead of increases that occur in the consumer price index. And that

is the essence of the guarantee we give, so if people say: well we

don't think that 1.9 is right, my reply to that is: it is right.

But even if it weren't right and the rise happened to be 3% you'd

have 1.5% on top of that. And that is the nature of the guarantee

that is contained in the Government's proposition because we

have no desire to see the less well off in the Australian community

effected adversely by this plan.

And I took the opportunity yesterday when I visited a retirement village

in Brisbane to enumerate that there were ten individual elements of

the plan that were of direct relevance to pensioners and self-funded

retirees in the Australian community. And they include a special one-off

untaxed payment of $1000 in relation to investment income for all

pensioners and others in the community 60 years and over. Another

$2000 on top of that for self-funded retirees of pensionable age.

The introduction of refundable imputation credits - sounds complicated

but anybody who's got some shares and whose marginal tax rate

is lower than 36% will understand the value of refundable imputation

credits. They are little rippers, that's all I can say in relation

to people who are going to get the benefits of them.

And then going on from that you have the introduction of a 30% tax

rebate for private health insurance. If you've got a $2000 policy,

doesn't matter what your income is, from the 1st of

January next year you'll be able to get that $600 back from the

tax man or if you can't wait for the tax refund you can take

the receipt for the health insurance premium along to the Government

office and they'll write out a cheque for you on the spot for

$600. And that is going to be available from the 1st of

January next year. And that is going to be available without an income

test, there won't be an income text on that.

And I'm particularly proud of the changes that we've made

in relation to personal income tax. I make no apology for the fact,

although it may disappoint some in the community, that we haven't

reduced the top marginal rate. But we have increased the point at

which that applies. We've increased that to $75,000. But what

is very very appealing, most appealing of all about the restructured

income tax scales is that between $20,000 and $50,000 of income there

will be a constant uniform rate at the margin of 30%. In other words

81% of Australian wage and salary earners, 81%, and we should always

keep these figures in our minds so that we have a true perspective

of how these things impact on the great bulk of our fellow Australians.

81% of wage and salary earners in Australia will be on a top marginal

rate of 30% or less.

And those of you who employ people and have had the experience, they

may be earning $30,000 a year and you want them to do some overtime

and they express some doubts and the grumble say: what's the

point? The tax man will take half of it. Now under this plan, if you

are anywhere between that band of $20,000 and $50,000, or indeed if

you are $20,000 a year, you'll be able to earn as much overtime

as you like up to an aggregate of $50,000 without passing into a higher

taxation bracket. And that does represent a very very significant

change to the taxation system, of enormous importance to the great

bulk of the Australian community. And what it effectively does is

to abolish that thing called bracket creep which the economists keep

talking about. That is when you get flung into a higher tax bracket

because your income goes up. It effectively abolishes bracket creep

between $20,000 and $50,000 a year.

And I'm also very proud of the changes we have made to family

tax arrangements. There's been the odd journalist who's

been running around the country saying that Howard wants women to

do this or that, he wants them all to stay home. Nothing of the kind.

What I want is to give Australian parents a choice about how they

organise their lives when they've got young children. What we

have done is to give a greater recognition to the right of Australian

parents, particularly in the middle-income area, to exercise a choice

when their children are very young about the participation of either

or both of them in the work force on either a full-time or a part-time

basis. It's not my job or my desire to impose some kind of stereotype

on Australian families. It's my desire to give the maximum amount

of choice to Australian families within and through this taxation

system.

Could I just say one other thing that was raised by ACOSS in its response

this morning which I think we should all bear in mind. And that is

that ACOSS is arguing that we should exclude food from the operation

of the goods and service tax. Now the problem with doing that of course

is that once you decide to exclude fresh food you then come under

enormous pressure to exclude things that are closely aligned to fresh

food. In Canada I think it is, they have an argument because the GST

applies to a heated pie bought in a take-away shop but it doesn't

apply to a frozen pie bought in a supermarket. One is regarded as

not quite food in the sense of the GST definition and the latter one

is regarded as in that definition. Now what would happen in this country

is that if you left out fresh food, you'd then have people saying:

well hang on, if you're going to leave fresh food out, you've

got to leave out Hungry Jacks, you've got to leave out Pizzas,

you've got to leave out McDonald's. And if you leave them

out you'd have to leave out every restaurant in the country as

otherwise you would be setting up absolutely unreasonably barriers

and artificial distinctions. And once you start doing that you are

back with the same problem that we have with the present system. And

I can't think of anything that would be more, in relative equity

terms, I can't think of anything that would be more beneficial

for the rich in Australia than to take a decision in the name of helping

the poor that ended up leaving restaurant meals completely out of

the operation of a GST yet you're imposing it on other sections

of the Australian community.

Now ladies and gentleman, as I said at the beginning of my speech,

not everything in this tax plan is acceptable to everybody in Australia.

We didn't set out to try and satisfy everybody on everything

they want. That is absolutely impossible and governments that set

out to try and do that are doomed to failure and doomed to disappointment.

But what we did set out to do as we come towards the 21st

century, as we come towards the third millennium, is to say to the

Australian people something that they all deep down know, and that

is that the present tax system is unsustainable. The present tax system

is increasingly unfair. The present tax system is increasingly in

disrepute. The present tax system holds back the productive sector

of the Australian economy. And we haven't sought to insult the

Australian people with just the offer of a lazy tax cut and say: oh

we'll try and bribe your support by offering you a tax cut out

of the surplus. We haven't done that. What we have tried to do

is to say to the Australian people, before the election and not after

it, before the election, we believe that in the interest of the country

and in the interest of Australian families we need taxation reform.

Part of tax reform is lower personal income tax, but that's only

part of it. A part of tax reform, and it's essential, is the

introduction of a goods and services tax and the replacement of all

those existing indirect taxes. Part of tax reform is to reduce fuel

costs because this is a very big country. Part of tax reform is to

end the annual unseemly wrangle between the Federal Government and

the State Governments over the division of the total amount of revenue

collected in Australia and we've done that. Part of tax reform

is to get rid of the poverty traps in the existing income tax system

and give poorer families a greater incentive to work and to get off

welfare. Part of tax reform is to give people a greater incentive

to take out private health insurance. Part of taxation reform is to

have a more uniform treatment of the taxation of different business

entities whether they be trusts or companies or other business entities.

In other words, we have tried to take an aggregate approach for the

aggregate interests of the Australian people. We haven't set

out to add up all the complaints and all the logs of claims of individual

interest groups, rather we have asked ourselves: what is the sort

of tax system that the Australian community wants as it goes into

the 21st Century? And that is what we have sought to deliver.

I don't under estimate the fight ahead but I'm greatly enthused

about it because I believe it is good, I believe it is right, I believe

it is in the interests of all of the Australian people and that if

we can get this plan accepted by the Australian people it will be

of enormous long-term benefit to the economy of this country. And

I ask the Australian people to judge it in the national interest rather

than in the sectional interest. I ask the Australian people to see

it for what it is. It is a bold courageous visionary plan to give

this country a tax system fit for the 21st Century.

Thank you.

[Ends]

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