PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
27/05/1999
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11393
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
27 May 1999 TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT THE LAUNCH OF THE AUSTRALIAN FOOD AND GROCERY COUNCIL, CANBERRA

Subjects: economy, industrial relation's reforms,

taxation reform, trade liberalisation, Supermarket to Asia

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

Well thank you very much Mr Chairman, ladies and gentlemen. I'm

very happy to be here this morning to talk to you about a number of

things, most particularly of course to congratulate the industry on

the progress made over the last year, to remark upon its enormous

contribution to the Australian economy, and also to thank it very

warmly for the constructive forward looking attitude it's adopted

towards reform causes in this country over the last few years, and

not the least taxation reform, a subject to which I will return in

a few moments.

This gathering takes place at a time when on any measure the Australian

economy is performing exceptionally well. Without, I hope, displaying

any complacency or hubris it is fair to say that right at the moment

we have the best economic conditions for about 30 years. We are seen

as a strong economy in our region. We are seen as an economy that

has developed strong effective and transparent financial institutions

which have stood us in good stead in the wake of the Asian economic

downturn. We have been able to look that downturn in the face and

stare it down. We do have our lowest inflation and interest rate levels

since the late 1960s.

There is a sense in which the Australian economy has got it together

like no other period that I've lived through in the period that

I've been in public life. And that has not been through any accident.

It has been the result of reforms undertaken in earlier years. And

it's a very important message we keep in mind right at the moment.

Today's economic strength is the product of yesterday's

economic reform. Tomorrow's economic strength will be ours if

we undertake reforms today. The idea that you can ever rest on your

oars, the idea that you can ever say well, "she'll be right

mate, it's good enough now, we don't need to do anymore"

- that is a very foolish notion.

And just as three years ago when I became Prime Minister there was

a sense in this community, in Australia, that when you looked at the

Asian-Pacific region it was almost a rich man's club and Australia

was almost knocking on the door seeking admission. I had businessmen

saying to me – you know, you should model the Australian economy

on some of the economies in Asia. You should intervene more the way

they do. I even had some people seriously advocate the Malaysian model

of business intervention as the way to go. And that was quite a strong

mood in sections of the Australian business community a couple of

years ago. I used to get a lot of lectures about it. You don't

do enough. You ought to copy what's happening in the region.

I don't think anybody would give me that advice now. And the

reason why they wouldn't give that advice now is that we were

prepared to undertake some reforms and we got our position very strong.

We got that budget back into balance; we made a lot of other changes;

we updated our financial sector reforms; we made big changes to industrial

relations. In fact the changes made to industrial relations were much

greater than they were ever given credit for by many of our opponents

in the Opposition or in the media. And those changes to industrial

relations have laid the foundation for higher levels of productivity

in Australia at the moment. Australian workers are better off now

than they've been for 20 years. And they're better off for

two reasons. Their interest rates are lower. That means their mortgage

bills are $320 a month less than what they were three years ago. $320

a month on average and that's a huge cut in anybody's housing

mortgage bill. And their real wages have gone up.

That's the basis of the consumer prosperity in this country at

the moment. That is why consumer sales are strong, because Australian

workers have got money in their pockets because of those two developments.

Now that hasn't happened by accident. But it won't continue

forever if we don't make other economic reforms. If we just say

well, we've done enough, it will continue. It won't continue

because Asia will resurge. The competitors will return. They'll

pull themselves up off the mat and they'll start fighting again

and we'll have to be in there bigger and better and more effective

than them in the future.

Economic performance is not a retrospection. Economic performance

is about beating the fellow in the same race as you at any given time.

And that is the lesson that Australia has to always understand. And

that's why we committed ourselves to industrial relations reform,

to economic reform. It is why we've committed ourselves to the

cause of taxation reform. And I was reflecting this morning on the

five principles that the Government set itself back in August of 1997,

almost two years ago, when we began in earnest the journey towards

giving Australia a 21st century taxation system.

We said a number of things. First and foremost we said that there

would be no overall rise in the burden of taxation under our proposal.

And there has not been. The second thing we said was that there should

be major personal income tax cuts, particularly for Australians with

the responsibilities of raising children. And our package delivers

that. A core element of our package was the promise made to middle

Australia, middle Australia bringing up children. The backbone of

our society. The people who are part of the aspirational element of

the Australian community that is so important to our well being. And

these are people earning $30,000, $40,000, $50,000 a year. They're

not wealthy. That's not wealthy. That's just a modest degree

of success with the hope of doing better. And that's very much

part of the Australian psyche. And they deserve recognition and they

deserve reward and that's why one of the key elements of our

package was that you could say that 80% of Australian taxpayers would

be on a top marginal rate of no more than 30 cents in the dollar.

And I think that's a pretty good goal to offer to middle Australia.

Not wealthy Australia, middle Australia, which is most of us, which

is the backbone of our community.

We also committed ourselves to fundamental reform of the Commonwealth-State

financial understanding which has been a farce for 50 years. The annual

Premiers' conference in this city is one of the great farces

of Australian politics. Right on message the Premiers arrive, Labor

and Liberal alike. And they say the dirty rotten Federal Government

won't give us enough money. And if they don't get what they

want they go out the door and say we'll have to sack nurses and

teachers and police because the Federal Government won't give

us enough money. Well this Federal Government wants to give them more.

But the people who are supposed to represent them in the Senate at

the moment are sort of, we're not quite sure whether they're

going to let us give the State more. We're working on it, but

we're not quite sure they're going to do that.

But a key of this plan, a key of this plan is to allow a new charter

of Commonwealth–State financial relations. And for the first

time in 50 years we have offered an end to the farce. We have offered

a system that will allow State revenues to grow in a way they can't

grow under the present formula. Because under our plan the States

will get every last dollar of the GST revenue, and that over time

will grow faster than would the funds going to the States under the

current funding arrangement. Now that is an offer that no other group

of States has ever been made. And that is why Labor and Liberal alike,

they queued up, although a couple of them had a couple of them had

a few party political disclaimers like my colleague Bob Carr who said,

you know Prime Minister, I don't believe in any of this but where

do I sign. And he signed up because it's a good deal for his

State. And Peter Beattie signed up, and Jeff Kennett signed up. They

all signed up because it's a very good deal for their State.

One of the things that really perplexes and amazes me about this whole

debate, it has from the very beginning and still does to this day,

is that some of the fiercest critics of our plan are people from the

welfare sector, are people from ACOSS. And what they will stubbornly

refuse to accept and understand is that if you guarantee a rise in

State revenues over time, you guarantee a rise in the money available

to pay for hospitals, and schools, and roads, and community services

at a State level. If this plan falls over the States will have less

money in the future to pay for welfare. Let me say that again, if

this plan falls over in future the States will have less money to

look after the poor.

And yet some of the strongest critics of this plan are people who

hold themselves out as the guardians of the poor. Well, on this issue

they are not serving the poor of Australia well. There's no other

way that we can guarantee a rising revenue base for welfare in this

country without fundamental taxation reform. And if the opportunity

is lost then the poor in the long run will suffer proportionately

more than many others in the community. And I believe that very strongly

and it's one of the reasons why we are so very strongly committed.

And you can't have it any other way. You can't, on the one

hand, say you are interested long-term in the position of the poor

and yet prevent a mechanism that will underwrite rising revenues for

them.

Now, we all believe in a compassionate society. We believe in a society

that offers people incentive through lower taxes if they work harder

and earn more. That's the aspirational side of it. And we all

believe in that. My Party believes in it. It believes in it passionately.

You can't have an Australian society unless you reward the achievers

and you encourage people to lift themselves from an income of $25,000

to $50,000 without going into a higher tax bracket. Imagine the impact

of that on the work aspirations of our young adult children. You say,

well, you can move ahead like that without going into a higher tax

bracket. That's the aspirational side of it. But there's

also a compassionate side of it. And that compassionate of it says

that there are some in the community who need help. And there are

also services in the community that are needed. We all need police

services. We need government schools. We need people to have choice.

If they want to send their kids to government schools which are funded

by the States, those States need revenue. And the problem is that

those revenue sources are shrinking and you've got to find an

alternative and the only alternative is taxation reform and a broad-based,

indirect tax. It's a very stark choice and I just hope that it

is a choice that is fully understood by the entire Australian community.

We also said, when I announced that taxation plan, that we believed

in providing compensation and assistance under the package for those

who needed help and, of course, we have very, very significantly provided

for that. And, of course, the final thing we committed ourselves and

of which I've dwelt for a few moments is that we committed ourselves

to the introduction of a broad-based, indirect tax - a GST, to replace

some or all of the existing indirect taxes. And that, of course, is

precisely what our plan has sought to do.

We fought an election on that plan. We won an election on that plan.

And we are urging the Australian Parliament to support that plan because

we believe it is in the long-term interests of the country. And we

believe it is important that the country have the political and institutional

courage to embrace ongoing reform. Because we are where we are now

and we are strong as we are now because we reformed in earlier years.

And a similar gathering in five years time if we haven't embraced

tax reform, we'll look back and say, wasn't that a failure

of nerve and a betrayal of the national interest on our leaders that

they didn't embrace taxation reform when they had the opportunity

to do so. It won't easily come again this opportunity.

We've been at it as a community, debating tax reform, for almost

as long as I've been in Parliament. We've been going on

the current reform for almost two years and it's undergone the

most exhaustive debate, the most exhaustive examination and analysis.

And all the resources of the Federal Treasury have been poured into

it and it's been the subject of a debate from one end of the

country to the other. And sooner or later and I believe inevitably

of course sooner that we have to make a decision. And if the decision

is that we turn our back on reform the nation will be the poorer,

the loser, and that will become apparent fairly rapidly. And many

of those in whose name objections have been raised against this package

will suffer more as a consequence than they are allowed or led to

believe by many of the people who choose to speak on their behalf.

You may gather from those remarks that I'm rather committed to

the cause of taxation reform. I am because I think it is good for

Australia. And that is why the Government, from myself down, remains

very committed to taxation reform. But we are dealing with a system

that doesn't automatically let you through the checkout even

though you've completed the purchase.

But, ladies and gentlemen, can I just say one or two other things

unrelated to the issue of taxation reform. And that really goes very

much to your own industry and the contribution that it makes to the

Australian economy. The very great capacity that it has to grow over

the years ahead. The contribution that it's made to the image,

the clean green image, of this country. The contribution that it's

made to the positive and favourable impressions that people have of

the lifestyle of the Australian community.

I know that trade liberalisation is very important to many sections

of your industry. And one of the very first things that I did as Prime

Minister was establish the Supermarket to Asia Council, which I chair

on a regular basis. And that Supermarket to Asia Council was designed

to promote, in a holistic way, the favourable image of Australia as

a great source of food of all types and of all stages of preparation

to the nations of the Asian Pacific region recognising that despite

the interruption by the downturn in Asia there is an enormous purchasing

capacity in that region. And we're contributing another $14 million

in the 1999 budget which includes a new $9.2 million food and fibre

supply chain to help our food industry respond to new export opportunities.

And we have contributed almost $100 million in additional funding

since coming to government for quarantine to protect our clean green

reputation and to boost our food exports.

But part of the responsibility we have as a government is to continue

to press for trade liberalisation. It still remains monumentally unacceptable

to me as Prime Minister of Australia that agricultural exports remain

punished and discriminated against in major world markets. It is disturbing

in the extreme, for example, that there should be talk by the United

States' administration of imposing some kind of quota on the

import of Australian and New Zealand lamb in the United States. It

is a bit rich to get generic lectures from the American administration

about free trade and the glories thereof. And yet you could have such

a crude, old-fashioned, protective device as an import quota on Australian

and New Zealand lamb. It rivals the crude, protectionist effects of

the American Jones Act under which it's against American

law for ships whose keels have not been made in the United States

to ply the coast of the United States of America. And it's a

reminder that it's still a tough world out there for small countries

like Australia that have got to work together with other like-minded

countries in the Cairns group to expand the opportunities and to expand

the horizons for our exporters. But we continue to do that and Tim

Fischer as the Trade Minister is indefatigable in his efforts to expand

our trade opportunities and our trade horizons.

That's just another reminder that even though we're doing

fairly well at the moment economically you've got to keep fighting,

you've got to keep finding new ways of getting new markets. You

never rest. You never go to sleep on either reform or trying to find

a new market or trying to remove an existing inhibition or an existing

barrier because once you go to sleep on the watch somebody else sneaks

past you. And that has been our experience in the past. You find it

as the experience you have in your own economic and business circumstances.

But, ladies and gentlemen, overall conditions are strong. The general

business outlook in Australia is bright. Consumers are spending. Businessmen

and women are investing. People are taking risks, and that's

necessary. You have a government that is committed to reform. You

have a government that believes in the benefits of reform, not in

reform as an end in itself. You reform in order to deliver a stronger,

better economy and that has always been the goal and the objective

of our reform. But can I thank you for inviting me and can I declare

the meetings of this Council open.

Thank you.

[ends]

11393