PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
14/07/1999
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11324
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP SYDNEY A CENTRE FOR GLOBAL FINANCIAL SERVICES GRAND HYATT HOTEL NEW YORK, USA

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

Thank you very much Richard Holbrooke for those very kind words of

welcome. I feel very honoured that a person who's had such a very

distinguished and effective, as far as achieving outcomes for the

long-term benefit of humanity, contribution and role in the diplomatic

life, not only of the United States but also of the free world, should

be here today and I thank him very warmly for those words of introduction.

Can I, before I say what I wanted to say in relation to the common

purpose we all have in being here, how grateful I am for so many people

in the investment community in Australia and in the United States

who have worked hard to put this gathering together and in particular

to Peter Charlton and Maurice Newman and many others who have worked

with them.

This is a great time to be showcasing the Commonwealth of Australia.

And I am also delighted that the Premier of New South Wales, Bob Carr,

the Labor Premier of New South Wales is with us today. And as the

Liberal Prime Minister of Australia I welcome him in particular to

make the point to our American friends that this is a united bipartisan

Australian effort.

We believe that we have a great story to tell about many things that

have been done to make our nation more competitive and economically

stronger than it has been at any time in the 25 to 30 years that I

have been in public life. You have heard a great deal this morning

particularly from my ministerial colleague, Joe Hockey, who has specific

responsibility in my Government for promoting Australia as a world

financial centre. And also from Ted Evans, the Secretary of our Treasury.

You have heard of the micro-detail of where the Australian economy

sits, of how in getting taxation reform through the national Parliament

we have put in place the fifth pillar of major economic reconstruction

and economic change of the Australian economy over the last 15 to

20 years.

Twenty years ago the Australian economy was far more cloistered, far

more closed, far more insular, far more regulated, far less worldly

than it is as we near the end of this millennium. We hadn't then deregulated

our financial system. We didn't allow in foreign banks, we didn't

have a floating exchange rate, we entertained the absurd delusion

that the central bank could control the level of interest rates. All

of that sounds fanciable, amusing and quaint and old-fashioned now

with the experience of the last 20 years. But I mention it to indicate

the distance that's been traveled and in doing it I have never been

reluctant in a number of areas to acknowledge the contribution of

prime ministers and others from the other side of politics in Australia.

Because without the bipartisan support for financial deregulation

and tariff reform in the 1980s and early 1990s the Australian economy

now would not be as strong as it is.

In recent years two or three other great reforms have been achieved.

One of those, of course, is in the space of two to three years to

turn a very large budget deficit into a very healthy surplus. And

I am particularly proud of the fact that Australia now has the lowest

level of government debt, the GDP ratio, of any OECD country. And

it is one of the great ambitions of our Government and particularly

of my Treasurer, Peter Costello, who has made such a great contribution

to this process for us to begin the early years of the next century

essentially free of net Commonwealth debt. And as a legacy and as

a contribution to future generations I can't think of a more practical

and finer one.

The changes in the Australian labour market in the last few years

have also been quite marked. One of the sometimes negative perceptions

of our country a few years ago was that we didn't have particularly

tranquil industrial relations. I am happy to emphasise the fact that

last year the number of industrial disputes was the lowest in 86 years.

But, of course, of all the reforms that we have undertaken none has

been bigger and one will have greater and more far reaching consequences

than, of course, the reforms to our taxation system that finally passed

into law only a few weeks ago and will come into effect on the 1st

of July next year.

Not only do those reforms sweep away a very old-fashioned and rickety,

indirect tax system and replace it with a simpler more comprehensive

indirect tax system that will be of great benefit to our exporters

and will also provide significant benefits in reduced business costs

to all of our domestic business operations. And it will also provide

very significant reductions in personal income tax for middle income

earners. And will also importantly provide to the States of Australia

which, under our federal system, have the ongoing responsibility for

police services, public hospitals, government schools, roads and all

of those social provisions that are so very important. It will provide

to the States of Australia a guaranteed source of revenue to fund

those obligations and those responsibilities.

But I think one of the more important things about the achievement

of that tax reform is that it has given to the Australian community

and to the political process in our country a belief that if you persevere

long enough you can achieve fundamental reform. There is sometimes

in all of our societies a sense in which the system is so burdened

with complexity and so burdened with checks and balances desirable

as those checks and balances may be. But there is so many of them

and they proliferate so much that you can't really ever achieve fundamental

reform. And I think the faith of the Australian people in the capacity

of our political process to achieve that fundamental reform has been

of enormous value.

The strongest message, of course, that comes out of Australia over

the last 12 months is the fact that we were able to stare down the

Asian economic collapse. And if I can encapsulate what I want to say

to you today, if I want to convey to you a metaphor for what Australia

has been able to achieve and what Australia represents at the moment

it is the fact that we were able to do that. And I don't mind saying

to you that it surprised just about everybody, myself included. A

couple of years ago if you'd have said to me: will we be able to survive

the Asian downturn? I'd have said regretfully I think it will adversely

affect us at some time before the end of 1998. Now, of course, it

didn't and there are a number of reasons for it. A lot of the reasons

are to be found in the reforms that I have mentioned because today's

strength is always the product of yesterday's reforms. As tomorrow's

strengths will be the product of today's reforms.

A lot of the credit for the successful management of our economy over

the last year ought to be given to the very skillful management of

our exchange rate policy by the Reserve Bank of Australia which I

think has done an outstanding job and we have seen during this period

of time the authorities in Australia working together in a very efficient

and a very effective way. And it bodes well in my mind for the future

conduct of public policy in so many of these areas.

But in public life and in policy making you never really get to the

top of the hill. You scale a hill and then there's another one on

the horizon and there are other challenges to be undertaken. And the

purpose of this conference, and certainly the purpose of my remarks,

is not to in any sense dwell upon or luxuriate in what may have been

achieved over the last few years but rather to tell all of you that

our process of reform has by no means been finished. And having completed

the, what I might call, the retail side of our taxation reform process,

of having got our goods and services tax established, the next big

thing, and this is of very particular relevance to the central goal

of this conference, is to complete the process of business taxation

reform.

Now, there are many reasons that make Australia particularly but not

only Sydney, of course, an attractive location as a world financial

centre. Undoubtedly our economic strength is one of those. Undoubtedly

our marvelous way of life, the congeniality of Australia as a place

in which to live and to raise children. The great social and political

stability, the fact that we speak the English language, the fact that

we have a culturally diverse and linguistically skilled population

who have deep and enduring family and people-to-people links with

the nations of South East Asia. There are some 300,000 - 400,000 people

living in Sydney, for example, who are ethnically Chinese from various

parts of South East Asia as well as from mainland China to give you

an example of the diversity of the Australian community, particularly

of the Sydney community.

We, of course, have a very clear set of rules relating to corporate

governance. We have a very well regulated and prudentially supervised

banking system. We have also, as Australians, had one characteristic

and Richard talked earlier about the affinity that exists between

the peoples of the United States and the people of Australia. And

one of the things that we have in common with our American friends

is that we have a fascination for new technology. And all of my life

I have been conscious of the fact that if something new comes on the

market, some new product, Australians literally devour it. And that

is why we have a mobile phone and internet take-up which is second

only to that of the United States and in some aspects of communications

reform in advance of that of the United States. And this is tremendously

important to the sort of exercise that we are engaged in today, it

is tremendously important to the capacity of our country to provide

the people, to provide the infrastructure and the wherewithal to be

an effective world financial centre.

Now, all of those things are very attractive, they are very nice and

they'll get a tick but, of course, they are only part of the story.

And I recognise that in the end the competitiveness of our business

taxation system will count for a great deal more than some of those

other things attractive though they are. And if you can get all of

them together and if you can tick every single one of the boxes then

you really do have a very compelling case. And that is why I want

to tell you today in very unambiguous terms that I know that what

we do in relation to the business tax reform process will be the ultimate

determinant of how successful we are in the years immediately ahead

of us in achieving the goal that so many of us have in common.

Now, a number of the changes we have already put through the national

Parliament including the abolition of stamp duty on share transactions

and the removal of the Financial Institutions Duty make a contribution

towards removing some of the impediments. But the recommendations

to come out of the Ralph review which we will have in our hands by

the end of this month and how the Government reacts to those recommendations

will be of crucial significance and importance in determining whether

or not we realise those goals.

I know that in a globalised world you really have to have a tax system

that, as far as possible, makes the choice between an investment in

the United States and an investment in Australia neutral. And while

that choice is not neutral and whilst it is tilted in favour of the

United States whether by operation of our capital gains tax or by

operation of our tax laws to deny to those funds and those other accumulations

of capital in this country that have a tax free status a similar treatment

in Australia then that is going to act as a disincentive. And that

is why I recognise as Prime Minister that how we react to the recommendations

in respect of capital gains tax in particular will determine how much

more attractive we can make investment in Australia.

There is little doubt in my mind that our present capital gains tax

does act as a disincentive in a number of areas and if we are really

serious about the exercise on which we are all collectively embarked

today then some fundamental changes will need to be made in that area.

And they will bulk very large in the considerations that we have.

I am particularly conscious of the many representations that have

been made to me over the years about the absence of a more realistic

capital gains tax approach to script exchanges. I am aware of the

break that is seen in the existing capital gains tax regime on the

accumulation of venture capital. And I am conscious of a number of

the other disincentives that that tax represents in relation to decisions

that are being made as to whether an investment should occur in Australia

or an investment should be retained in the United States or an investment

that is made elsewhere.

So putting all of that together, ladies and gentlemen, I know that

if we are to realise the goal that we want and it's not an end that

we pursue as an end in itself, there is no particular virtue in its

own right of being able to say that Sydney has become a world financial

centre or Australia has become a world financial centre. But if you

have responsibility for governing a nation which has achieved a great

deal and has demonstrated its economic strength and its economic capacity

but is nonetheless a nation which needs to build on successful industries

in areas such as mining and manufacturing and primary production.

By adding value to those industries, particularly in the service sector,

where you believe we have a capacity to perform effectively in one

of the areas where you most naturally turn your attention is the area

of financial services.

And if we can add to the undoubted generic strengths that I described

earlier in my speech a modernisation of the Australian taxation system

that removes some of the inhibitions that now exist, that recognises

that in a global economy with seamless transfers of capital matched

increasingly by seamless transfers of jobs that unless you are able

to have a taxation regime that removes the impediments between this

or that location you have no capacity at all to build upon the undoubted

generic strengths that I and other speakers have been canvassing.

So the central message I wanted to convey to you at this luncheon,

ladies and gentlemen, is that, yes, over the last few years Australia

has been a country of growing economic strengths and self-confidence.

A country, I believe, which has received an enormous national psychological

boost out of the fact that we were able to do something most of us

thought we couldn't do and that is avoid significant impact from the

Asian economic downturn. And nations, in many respects, are like individuals

and like communities. We are governed on some occasions by reason,

we are governed on some occasions by predictability, we are governed

on some occasions by instinct and we also enjoy tremendous fillips

and tremendous boosts from a psychological point of view.

And I can't overestimate to you today the boost that being able to

beat that Asian downturn has represented in the Australian psyche.

And wherever you go in our country you find that sense of excited

achievement that we have been able to do something that we really

deep down didn't think we were going to be able to do. We are not

totally sure that we have every explanation as to why we have done

it. I mean, confident government ministers, of course, list instinctively

and proudly the immediate contributions that their portfolios have

made to that magnificent achievement and they are encouraged by their

Prime Minister to do so.

But there are a lot of things to do with our national make-up that

have produced it but it has meant that we have a sense of ourselves

and a sense of what we have been able to achieve that I haven't found

in our country for a very long period of time. And for that reason,

as well as many others, now is a time for us to not, out of any sense

of complacency or any sense of smugness to say, well gee, isn't that

terrific let's enjoy ourselves for the next few years. There is no

sense of that in Australia. There is a sense that we have become a

'can do' country. There is a sense that we have challenges that we

tackle in a practical way.

We have a great base for being a world financial centre and I have

described that several times but we also, I think, now maturely recognise

that if we are to go further we have to make some very specific changes

to provide some very specific incentives particularly in a number

of taxation areas. And this conference is about communicating Australia's

strengths. It's about absorbing the concerns that potential investors

may have, it is about, of course, demonstrating a common commitment

we all have to a free enterprise system and it is about, of course,

demonstrating just how much we all live in a global financial environment.

Can I conclude my remarks by returning to a theme that Richard Holbrooke

touched upon in his very gracious introduction and that is the affinity

which exists between our two societies. In any close relationship

we will have our differences and there has been some well publicised

differences in recent days regarding one of our fine export products.

And it, of course, is a source of some irritation to our country that

that should have occurred and we don't in any way resile from or apologise

from the fierce criticism that we have tended to the American administration

regarding that.

But Richard spoke very warmly and very appropriately of the values

and attitudes that bind us together and those values, of course, are

infinitely more enduring than those things that tend on occasions

to cause disputation and to push us apart. And I am immensely proud

as the Prime Minister of Australia to be able to speak at this luncheon

today to talk a little of what my country has achieved and to be able

very genuinely to say that I speak for both sides of Australian politics

in saying that we share the sense of that national achievement. That

we are working together overseas to achieve something more for Australia.

I think by dint of what it has particularly achieved in the Australian

economic firmament there is an emphasis quite properly on the city

of Sydney but it is very much as a representative of the entire Australian

nation.

And on that note can I conclude by saying to all of you that Richard's

reference to the Olympic Games was very apposite. Can I say that the

preparations for the Olympic Games are in great shape and full credit

to SOCOG. I think Sydney will do those games on its ear. I think they

will be one of the most remembered Olympic Games of the modern era.

I think Sydney is superbly suited and superbly prepared. The facilities

are very well advanced.

I invite all of our American friends to visit our country for the

Games and it will be for a sports loving and sports crazy nation an

absolute gourmet delight of sporting celebration and a great way for

a proud and committed nation to welcome the world and to showcase

its remarkable way of life and its remarkable sense of national purpose.

Thank you.

[ends]

11324