PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
02/02/2000
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
11482
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP DOORSTOP INTERVIEW MURWILLUMBAH SUBJECTS: Interest rate rise; GST; services in the bush; Employment National; Cheryl Kernot; Indonesia.

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

JOURNALIST:

Today's interest rate rise, is that the first of a number that will

be generated by the GST [inaudible]...

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, it's really got nothing at all to do with the GST. The average

housing loan will still be $266 a month cheaper than what is was when

we came to office.

JOURNALIST:

Will we see more interest rate rises as the GST kicks in?

PRIME MINISTER:

Interest rates are set by the Reserve Bank and it's quite clear

from the Reserve Bank's statement this morning that this has really

been influenced by international factors. There's no reference at all

to the GST in the Governor's statement. So the line that it's

got something to do with the GST is wrong and the reality is that interest

rates now are miles below what they were when Labor was in power and the

average mortgage is $266 a month lower than in March of 1996.

JOURNALIST:

[Inaudible] expected isn't it?

PRIME MINISTER:

I didn't make any prediction about rates.

JOURNALIST:

You and the Treasurer though had said that you didn't see any signs

that the economy was overheating. Do you think the Reserve Bank has?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, the Reserve Bank says that the economy is not overheating. If you

have a look at the Governor's statement you'll find that he

confirms what I said and what the Treasurer said. He spoke of the international

influences. The reality is that the world economy now is stronger than

what it was a year ago and central banks around the world are marginally

adjusting interest rates in an upward direction. There's wide speculation

that the Federal Reserve in the United States will lift interest rates

by half of one per cent or perhaps a little less in the next 24 hours.

Against that background, the Governor believed that this adjustment was

necessary but it's an adjustment that still leaves the average home

mortgage $266 a month better off than four years ago.

JOURNALIST:

This is going to hit regional areas hard though with average home loans

now going up by $30 a month because of the full half per cent increase.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, the average homebuyer is $266 a month better off than what he or

she was in March of 1996 and that's the bottom line. And the bottom

line is that even after this interest rates in Australia are dramatically

lower – dramatically lower – than what they were when Labor

left office in March of 1996.

JOURNALIST:

So the timing and the rise, is that appropriate in your view?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, the Governor explained the reasons for the Reserve Bank's

decision. As you know we have an arrangement where official interest rates

are set by the Reserve Bank and not by the Government and the Reserve

Bank has explained the reasons for the rise and those reasons do not include

the GST. He does not suggest that the economy is overheating and he talks

very freely about international factors.

JOURNALIST:

Mr MacFarlane has always talked about the need though to be pre-emptive.

Half a per cent is fairly large in pre-emptive terms isn't it?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, he's put it in the context of the international situation

and I think you ought to read his statement. It was a decision taken by

the Reserve Bank under the arrangement whereby it independently sets official

interest rates.

JOURNALIST:

Queensland farmers say this will impact them significantly. What do you

say to them?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, interest rates are dramatically lower now than what they were in

March of 1996, that's the reality.

JOURNALIST:

Prime Minister, you have acknowledged the high unemployment problem in

the Tweed area, have you got any measures that you are looking at to try

and improve things up here at all?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, continuing to run a high growth economy, continuing to ensure that

employment throughout the country grows, that business conditions are

good. If we can get our GST reforms through and implement it which we

are in the process of doing then that will produce cheaper fuel in regional

Australia and will generally make for a better export climate. There are

some characteristics of this region, you know as well as I do, which mean

that the unemployment rate might always be a little above the national

average. It seems to be the kind of area that is appealing to people who

have a particular lifestyle and I think you have to make allowance for

that. It's unreasonable to expect that the unemployment rate here

will be exactly the same as in other parts of Australia. But it has come

down, it's now, what, five per cent lower than what it was a couple

of years ago and that's a very significant improvement.

JOURNALIST:

[Inaudible] to stop regional services leaving the bush has already come

unstuck this morning, it revealed a plan to remove 28...

PRIME MINISTER:

Are you talking about that story in the Sydney Morning Herald?

JOURNALIST:

Yes, I am.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, that story totally distorts what the Government has done. The headline

was wrong. The story inaccurately and dishonestly represented what the

Government has done. The service provided there is the money the Government

provides for the Job Network system. We provide a large amount of money,

we call for tenders and whoever presents the best tender gets the money

and therefore with our money provides the service. Sure, Employment National

offices activities have gone but they have been more than replaced by

the Government funded private providers. Therefore the Commonwealth service

is better now, not worse, better than what it was under the old system.

JOURNALIST:

Mr Howard, aren't there some potential problems however if a further

[inaudible] a national service with linked offices is diminished and replaced

by more discreet terms?

PRIME MINISTER:

The test, Michelle, is whether you help the unemployed and whether you

have got a proper spread. And the new system is helping the unemployed

50 per cent more than under the old system and I think it's splitting

hairs to allege that one provider is less able to provide the service

than another. Employment National didn't provide a competitive tender

and it's quite wrong of anybody to suggest that because Employment

National has missed out that the service has been diminished. The service

has been increased. The private providers are very effective. I have been

told in regional towns around New South Wales that the private providers

are most welcome. The new network is producing 50 per cent better outcomes

than the old Commonwealth Employment Service. And in the end it's

how you help the unemployed that determines the value of the employment

service.

JOURNALIST:

[Inaudible] there's a town in Queensland, Murgon, closed their meatworks...they

want you to visit.

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I can't do that. I mean, you know, I'd like to visit

every town in every part of Australia but I have a Cabinet meeting next

week. I will be going to rural Queensland as part of my continuing pattern

of visiting regional and rural parts of Australia. But this proposition

that every time you embark on a regional tour you are somehow or other

failing if you don't go to every town in every State is a little

bit rich. I notice the acting Premier of Victoria, Mr Brumby, was running

that rather infantile line.

JOURNALIST:

Mr Howard, [inaudible] by the return of Cheryl Kernot and the circumstances

surrounding that?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, I wish her a full recovery in her health. I would wish that of

anybody in Australia. Beyond that I don't have any comment.

JOURNALIST:

[Inaudible] for the Labor Party?

PRIME MINISTER:

I don't have any comment on that. I think the liability for the

Labor Party is its lack of policy. And Mr Beazley has been Labor leader

for almost four years and he has no employment policy, he has no taxation

policy. Labor's liability is its policy vacuum.

JOURNALIST:

Are you concerned that instability may arise from the continuing stand-off

in Indonesia between General Wiranto and the President?

PRIME MINISTER:

Well, Indonesia's going through a very difficult transition phase

and it has our understanding and our sympathy. The new President is strongly

committed to democracy, he's strongly committed to a more open political

system. I welcome the fact that there is a serious investigation being

conducted into what occurred in East Timor and there's a determination

on the part of the authorities to bring people to account. Beyond that

I think any comment is really intruding a little into the internal affairs

of another country. Thank you.

[ends]

11482