PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
28/03/2000
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11693
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS TO CANBERRA AND REGION FOCUS ON BUSINESS DINNER, PARLIAMENT HOUSE

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

Well thank you very much to Mrs Kate Carnell, the Chief

Minister of the ACT, to Senator Margaret Reid, the President of the Senate,

Ian Macdonald my Ministerial colleague, Mr Gary Nairn, the Member for

Eden Monaro, Gary Humphries, the Deputy Chief Minister of the ACT, other

Members of Parliament, ladies and gentlemen.

Can I say how tremendously enthused I am both by the

concept of the focus on business exercise and also by the sheer scope

and support that has been demonstrated not only here tonight but also

by what has happened today and what will happen tomorrow.

I am doubly pleased because I believe Canberra and the

surrounding areas that make up Canberra and its regional location has

done the very thing that I believe that many people wanted it to do for

a long time, and that is to recognise that whilst it would always have

a very important place as the national capital and that that would largely

shape its identity so far as the rest of the Australian community was

concerned, its long-term future lay in breaking away from the notion that

it was essentially a public service city. And what has happened over the

last few years I think has vindicated the judgement of many people who

saw that as being necessary in the medium to longer term because what

the ACT, what Canberra and the surrounding regions has been able to do

in recent years is to create the image of itself, in the business community

in particular, as a good place in which to do business, as an area of

Australia having a very well educated, savvy, technologically sophisticated,

certainly in the area of information technology, something that I'll

return to in a moment, and in overall terms an area of Australia that

was increasingly going to be one in which it was attractive to do business.

Now tonight is not really an occasion for a long recitation

of statistics but I think it is important so as to underline what has

been achieved largely, but not entirely, by the many men and women in

this room, to underline the scale of the transformation of your economy

in recent times.

Australia's growth rate over the last few years

has averaged 4% and that itself is quite remarkable, at a national level

we've not had that growth rate since the 1960's. But Canberra's,

the ACT economy grew by 7% in the year to December 1999 and that is the

highest of any Australian state or territory.

No state or territory has a lower level of unemployment,

than does the ACT. At 5.3% your unemployment rate is well below the national

figure and it is also at its lowest level since June of 1990. Over the

last four years unemployment in the ACT has fallen from 8.1% to 5.3%.

And importantly, although the size of the public service has contracted

since 1996, Canberra's private sector workforce has more than grown

to compensate for this.

The private sector's share of total wage and salary

earners has grown from under 47% in 1996 to around 55% last year and that

itself represents a remarkable transformation. It is not only a function

of the undoubted contraction of the public sector in the ACT but it is

also a function of the immensely more attractive business climate which

has been created in the ACT.

Real business investment in the ACT rose by 10.7% in

the December quarter. And another indication of the strength of the ACT

economy is its massive 49% increase in dwelling unit commencements over

the last year. And median house prices in Canberra are now above their

March 1996 level.

Now that, essentially is all I want to say in relation

to state statistics but I believe that the scale of the improvement that's

occurred in the ACT, in Canberra and the surrounding regions, the scale

of that achievement is such that it is important for me in particular

to emphasise those figures because they do represent two things. They

represent, may I say, I hope, not immodestly, a reflection of the success

of the government's overall economic policy.

When you have successful national economic policies they

do have a resonance in every part of the country. And it is true that

unemployment in Australia for example is now sharply lower than what it

was four years ago. And even in those areas of our country that have the

highest level of unemployment, even in those regions such as the Hervey

Bay region of Queensland or parts of northern Tasmania or parts of the

outer suburban areas of Sydney, around Campbelltown, which have very high

levels of unemployment, even their absolute levels are now much lower

that what they were four years ago. And it is important to understand

that the economic reform program that the government has implemented,

at times as the Chief Minister was kind enough to acknowledge, not without

political challenge and political peril, that has given the Australian

economy an underlying strength which has enabled us to grow as fast, if

not faster than any industrialised nation in the world over the last three

or four years.

We do have a budget that is very strongly in balance.

We do have high levels of business investment. We do have lower levels

of unemployment. We have much lower interest rates; we have much lower

inflation. We are seen as a country which is paying off its debt and is

increasingly more competitive.

And we have ahead of us on the 1st of July

the introduction of the biggest change in Australia's taxation system

certainly since WWII and perhaps since Federation. And there is no absence

of those who would seek in the months before the 1st of July

to sow the seeds of unhappiness and discord and confusion about the new

taxation system. None of this surprises me in the least. I knew that we

would fight to achieve community acceptance first of all of the notion

of reform of the taxation system and I knew that the path to the first

of July would be strewn with stories of confusion and of chaos and of

unfairness and of undue penalty on this or that section of the Australian

community.

I see on the news tonight that the latest argument is

about the price of fuel. The price of fuel is a very sensitive issue in

a country as big as Australia. And it may be of interest to those who

are railing against government policy in this area to be reminded of one

or two salient features. The first of those salient features is that the

basic driver of fuel prices in Australia is of course the world price

of crude oil. And that world price has been on the rise over the last

few months. There are some signs of stability returning but we won't

know the outcome of that for a few days or weeks yet. That is something

over which no Australian government, Labor or Liberal, has any direct

control of any kind.

The other thing that I would remind those critics of

is that one of the distinguishing features of the tax package is that

it is going to result in sharply lower fuel prices than would otherwise

be the case in rural and regional Australia. The original scope of that

concession has been scaled back because of the attitude of the Australian

Democrats. It is not as generous as we originally wanted because it's

going to be restricted to rural and regional areas in a manner to be announced

very shortly. But it would nonetheless represent, for those areas, a very

significantly lower cost of fuel than would otherwise be the case. In

fact the price of fuel annually is going to fall by about three and a

half to four billion dollars and that will be of enormous benefit to people

doing business in rural and regional Australia.

Because, ladies and gentlemen, taxation reform is not

just about the GST, it's not just about the fact that we are replacing

a rather ramshackle wholesale tax system, that taxes some things not at

all but taxes other things at rates as high as 32 and 45% with a single

rate of tax at 10% potentially across the board barring basic food stuffs

and one or two essential services such as visiting a doctor. It's

not just about that, it's about a fundamental remaking of our taxation

system, it's about 80% of wage and salary earners paying a marginal

tax rate of no more than 30 cents in the dollar. For people in business

it means that we're going to have a corporate tax rate of 30 cents

in the dollar rather than 36 cents.

And can I say very directly to an audience which is probably made up

of proportionately more people in the service sector of the economy than

in the manufacturing sector of the economy than perhaps any other gathering

that I might address anywhere in Australia, that that particular change

is of particular benefit to people in the service sector of the economy.

We will have one of the most competitive corporate tax rates not only

in the world, but certainly in our part of the world.

It is also of course about halving capital gains tax. For self funded

retirees, if there are any here tonight, it's about a number of special

benefits including the abolition of provisional tax and the introduction

of dividend imputation credits which will ensure that people get the full

benefit and the full value of their franked dividends.

I mention these things ladies and gentlemen because you know and I know

that there is a game on at the moment and that game is called scare the

voter. And that game is about planting as much fear and engaging in as

many scare tactics as possible to try and discredit the tax system before

it comes into operation. But can I say to you that I have no intention

as Prime Minister and none of my Ministerial colleagues have any intention

of allowing that campaign to succeed. I mean this is not something we

suddenly dropped on the Australian people out of the clear blue sky, after

the last election. We did have an election, we did tell the Australian

people what we were going to do. We spelt it out in stark detail. We told

people what the rates were going to be. We told people the incidence of

the tax. We disclosed the taxation scale, we went in to more detail on

a major policy than any government since federation has gone in to and

we won that election. And we have charted that reform through the Australian

Parliament and we are now in the process of introducing it. And I pursued

the cause of taxation reform for a long time in my political career and

we are pursuing it now for one reason and one reason alone and that is

we believe it is good for Australia. That it will make the Australian

economy more competitive. It will make the economy of Canberra and the

surrounding regions more competitive.

And another great benefit, let me say of taxation reform is that it is

going to give to the States and Territories of Australia, something that

they have craved for decades and that is access to a growth tax. We have

had this annual circus as it has been called – The Premier's

Conference, where the Premiers come in to Canberra, they shake their fist

at the front door of Parliament House and they say they are going to demand

a better deal for their states from the Commonwealth and then they come

out at the end of the conference and they say that once again the Commonwealth

is being mean and miserly and they are going to have to go back home and

increase taxes because the federal government won't give them enough

money. And that has gone on for years and it hasn't really mattered

who the Prime Minister has been. Whether it has been Malcom Fraser or

Bob Hawke or Paul Keating or John Howard, it hasn't really mattered

and it hasn't really mattered where the Premiers have come from or

what political party they belong to. It's gone on year after year

and Liberal Premiers have been more vigorous, Prime Ministers have been

more vigorously insulted by Liberal Premiers and I can remember some of

the choice things that Wayne Goss used to say about my immediate predecessors

when he came down here. He was no slouch at having a go at a Labor Prime

Minister. It was all part of the I suppose the charade of commonwealth

state financial relations and at the root of all of that was the fact

that the states said it was unfair because the commonwealth government

had access to all of the growth in taxation revenue.

Now we are going to change that on the 1st of July. This is

something I don't think a lot of people understand. I mean the other

day I heard Mr Carl Scully who is the Minister for Transport in NSW, trying

to justify fare increases by reference to the GST and he was saying that

NSW transport users, train riders in NSW – commuters - would understand

that after the 1st of July, that every time they bought a ticket,

the GST component of that rail ticket was going to go straight into John

Howard's pocket. And I say wrong Carl Scully, every last cent of

the GST is going straight into Bob Carr's pocket and that is something

about this tax reform that a lot of people are over looking and that is

that all of the Goods and Services tax is going to the states and the

territories. And it will mean as the years go by and once you get through

the transitional phase and for a state like Queensland, and I think the

ACT does relatively well out of this as well, after a fairly short period

of time, you are going to be in a growth situation. And after a number

of years, all of the states are going to be much better off than they

would otherwise had been if the existing formula had been maintained.

And that means that all of them will be able to pour more money into basic

services, public hospitals, government schools, police, transport and

road. All of the things that governments both state and territorial do

in this country which are quite properly regard as local services.

Now my friends I perhaps digress a little in talking to you about taxation

reform, just a little. And you will understand why because I think it's

very important. I mean this is a gathering of men and women who are interested

in the economic future of Canberra and its regions. It's a gathering

of men and women who know that you can't have a good economy unless

you have a government that is willing to undertake fundamental reforms.

You have been willing to take risks. As I looked at the acceptance list

tonight, I see a vast array of large Australian companies that are displaying

a great deal of interest in this city and in the region of which it is

heart. And that reason, that interest is a direct consequence of the leadership

that I believe Kate Carnell's government here in the ACT has shown.

I think she has led a government that has been realistic. I know that

some of the decisions the federal government took after May, in the May

budget in 1996 were unpopular in the ACT, I know that and I was told that

frequently and that is fair enough because politics is about plain speaking.

And we took those decisions because we believed that in the longer term

if we got our budget back in to balance, every body would be better off

and if you look around you, you start to see the benefit of that commitment.

But it would not have been possible for Canberra to have absorbed those

changes unless there had been a willingness by the local business community

to get off its tail to use the vernacular and to attract new business

and to recognise that you have got some natural advantages such as for

example as your region is seen as probably the most attractive region

or one of the most attractive regions in Australia for developing e-commerce

because of your very sophisticated highly educated work force. The way

in which this city and this region has taken to the advantages of outsourcing.

The way in which I think you have built upon the natural advantages that

Canberra and the surrounding area has. The way in which you no longer

see this region as just being the Australian Capital Territory but its

got a broader reach than that and that is why I am delighted to see representatives

of Councils and areas in NSW surrounding the Australian Capital Territory

gathered here this evening.

And I have come along tonight for a couple of reasons. First and foremost

to make it very plain that the federal government totally supports the

goals and the aspirations of your conference. It totally supports the

goals and the aspirations of the government of the ACT in developing the

economic strengths of the area and tomorrow morning at breakfast, many

of you will have the opportunity of talking to four or five of the most

senior Ministers in the Federal Government to convey your thoughts and

to gain their insights.

The future I believe of the ACT is one of great economic strength and

great economic prosperity. Canberra, which is a beautiful city by any

measure will always occupy a very special place in the national life of

our country. There will always within the Australian community be something

of an ambivalence towards Canberra because it is the National Capital.

There is no federation in the world where from time to time for convenience

sake, people who don't live in the National Capital, choose in some

way to make unkind remarks about the National Capital. But equally the

National Capital, increasingly is seen with great pride by the people

of Australia. And I am reminded of some remarks that were made by Sir

Robert Menzies when he was Prime Minister and he spoke of a different

Canberra and he spoke of a Canberra that was viewed perhaps differently

not only by some of its residents but by the rest of the country. And

he said as the new capital would inevitably have small beginnings, it

will be looked down upon by its elder state brethren and later as it grows

as the centre of power, it will be looked at sometimes with envy but ultimately

with pride.

I remarked today when I spoke at the National War Memorial at the reopening

ceremony by the Queen. I spoke of the magnet that that memorial represented

to hundreds of thousands of Australians and that is but one example of

the attraction of this part of the world and of this city in particular

to people from other parts of Australia. And what I think is really valuable

about what is occurred here over the last few years and what your conference,

your focus on business conference represents. I think it is the coming

together of those three things which will really make Canberra and its

regions a very dynamic area of the Australian economy. And they are the

undoubted role of Canberra as the National Capital. Secondly, what flows

from that is that there will always be a very large public service component

of the life and the culture of this city. And thirdly and particularly

as represented here tonight is the commitment of so many men and women

in the business community to build upon the natural advantages of this

city and its regions.

And what is encouraging about what I see here tonight and what I know

to be the case in discussion with Mrs Carnell and with so many of my own

Ministers is the realisation that there is no longer any conflict between

the public service side and the business side. Those days are fast slipping

behind us. That each is seen as complementary to the other and if you

work together then you are going to get some very good results. So I am

delighted to be with you tonight. I want to say again that I respect very

much the leadership that Kate Carnell's government has shown. It's

not easy governing anything these days. Government is challenging. We

live in a less tribal political environment and the ebb and flow of public

opinion is freer and fuller than used to by the case. But that is part

and parcel of what public life is all about. It is very much about as

we have done with things like tax reform, committing yourself to an objective,

accepting that there is political risk, but maintaining a sense of commitment

and purpose because you know it is in the national interest and I believe

you have seen that here in the ACT and I congratulate Kate and her colleagues

for that. I thank all of you for the support that you are showing for

Canberra, for our National Capital and for the cause and I wish this conference

every success.

Thank you.

[ends]

11693