PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Keating, Paul

Period of Service: 20/12/1991 - 11/03/1996
Release Date:
16/03/1994
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
9157
Document:
00009157.pdf 5 Page(s)
Released by:
  • Keating, Paul John
PRIME MINISTER WITH DOUG AITON ON RADIO 3LO,

PRIME MINISTER WITH DOUG AITON ON RADIO 3L0, 16/ 3/ 94.
E OE PROOF ONLY
AITON: Prime Minister, Paul Keating, good afternoon.
PM: How are you Doug?
AITON: Very well indeed thank you. You must be very pleased with the results that
came out today on the economy.
PM: I think it vindicates what I said on behalf of the Government in the election
campaign, that we had a growth economy on our hands, that we could re-ignite the
economy back into growth indiiml-yment growth, and today's figures which give us
four percent growth in the economy over the year and two hundred thousand jobs and
low inflation as a kind of trifecta I think Australians should be very pleased with.
AITON: Also the tenth consecutive quarter of growth I think In a row, It Is consecutive?
PM: Yes it is. So it's firm and it's growing, it's on a broad front, it's now got a very high
share of profits in the economy which are still driving it. The tax cuts which the
Government delivered late last year certainly promoted consumer spending and that's
shown up in striong retail sales. So by and large it is, as I said a year ago and most of
the day.
AITON: And what about exports, which is so crucial to us to improve upon. They
came up I think 2.7% inicreas-, was it?
PM: For the year, and they were growing as fast as imports across the year, so
we've made the great jump to exports and a leap into Asia, particularly with
manufactured products. But I think the great thing about it is not just the level of the
growth, which I might say Doug is now stronger than any other western economy, but
with low inflation.
AITON: Yes, can you keep that up? Can we keep that up?
PM: Well I think so. I think so, and the good thing about these accounts is that there's
a number of measures of inflation. The one that we all know is the CPI, the Consumer
Price Index, but that's got a basket of goods in it and even with all the -good'sit Fias
we've got inflation for the year at 1 Well, there's another thing called, wait for it,
it's called the non-farm GDP deflator. Now what it means is, it's an even broader
measure of prices than the CPI and it came out I think one four, so I mean it's very
good confirmation that inflation is low and the trick will be now to keep the productivity
coming through so wage increases which come in the next year or so are protected by
a fair bit of productivity, protecting the inflation rate by productivity.

AITON: The media criticism comes out of course on days like today, and the one that
I've heard most is that business investment is still down or still lagging. Is that true
according to you?
PM: Well it's growing and it's grown moderately well across the year but it's not as
high as we would like it, but again, look at that high profit share recorded today. The
highest level of profits to GDP in the nation's history. As high as the last period of the
late eighties which was higher than any other time since the war. Now that will mean
that business has got the balance sheet into place and it will mean they will be looking
for investment opportunities, and we can see it coming in the expectations data which
we're now recording for private capital investment.
AITON: Well I suppose the question that people will want to know the answer to most
of all is regarding unemployment because I'd know of no family in my immediate social
contact area that has not been afflicted or touched by unemployment. Do you think
these figures actually will give us a direct result there?
PM: Well the link between growth and employment is profound and if you look at any
graphic illustration of it, say from the 1960' s onwards, wherever you see the
employment chart or graph laid over GDP, whenever you get a growth in the economy
you get growth in employment, and we're seeing the same classic illustration of that in
the last year. That is, we've seen the economy pick up, and what have we seen with
it? Two hundred thousand jobs.
AITON: So what are you saying is going to happen?. Can you stick your neck out?
PM: I think we're going to have a fair swag of jobs come out of the rural growth of the
economy and five hundred thousand jobs which I set as an objective at the time of the
last election campaign. One year down a three year path Doug we've got two hundred
thousand in the bag already.
AITON: Yes, true. I did notice, as we all did, in your triumphant election speech of a
year ago, election win speech of a year ago, that you made a point of saying whatever
happens we're going to look after the unemployed. It was a line that affected a lot of
people and it was very well and dramatically put. I wondered at the time, and I still
wonder now even though despite what you've just said, were you foreshadowing that
unemployment is going to become a fact of life in Australia for a long time?
PM: No, because we're hoping that while it will be a fact of life for some time, we're
hoping to deal with the most difficult part of the problem and that is the long-term
unemployed, and the Green Paper which the Government published in November. and
the WhitePaper which vwll be-announcing in late April with the policy changes to deal
with thelong-term unemployed, will be Australia's biggest and most, if -you likevalia-nt
ifi~ tipt todo something interesting, not just in Australian but in world terms, about how
you deal with the problem of three hundred-odd thousand people who have been
unemployed eighteen months or more. So I think that the sense of compassion, the
sense of fair play that resides in the community of this country, will demand that as we
go off now into a long, low inflationary recovery we don't leave an underclass of people
behind forgotten, carrying the burden of the recession, that we actually bring them with
us by making certain that government policy adjusts at getting these people back in the
mainstream of the labour market.

AITON: Do you expect that Australia can return to the 1960' s-type figure of
unemployment which was more or less nil?
PM: No, I don't think so. I don't know what so-called structural unemployment is. You
see, we've got the cycle, that is slower growth which Fai _ ro-cu-ced a pool of
unemployment, and we're now seeing that change with the faster growth. But
underneath that we've got all the changes that come from the redundancies, the
productivity changes, the industrial changes, the tariff changes, the rebuilding, the new
higher-tech industries. That structural change sits under that. If you wash out the
cycle, if you wash the cyclical unemployment out and look at the flux which is always
created by one group leaving one set of industries and another group being trained to
take up another, it's somewhere in that five to six percent area, I think.
AITON: Forever?
PM: Well certainly between now and the sort of intermediate period, certainly between
now and the end of the century.
AITON: If I could move to another matter, l~ m sure you're focussing on the figures
more than anything else today or the economy, but the greatest social problem we
appear to have in the news at the moment is that of Macedonia, and I notice that you
have intervened yourself and attended lunches or-6ea-kfast' -or something with the
Macedonian leaders and what have you. Would you like to state the Government's
point of view on this very troubling matter right now?
PM: Well I said something about it today as a matter of fact but I'm happy to say
something about it to you Doug, on your program, and that is that I think the thing we
pride ourselves on is that down the years this has been a country where old world
hatreds have been mediated and forgotten, and I think this is the way we should
remain. So the principle should be that all those who have made Australia their home
should never forget that their first loyalty is to Australia, and my point is that you can't
be loyal to Australia if you break with the basic traditions of the country, that is, and
these include above all tolerance and non-violence. So old attachments
notwithstanding, acts of violence and engagement in campaigns of hatred I think
constitute an assault on the traditions of Australian democracy and what we as
Australians believe in, and they're not acceptable.
AITON: Alright. Is there going to be further Federal Government intervention on this
matter? PM: Well we've made it clear that what we're looking for is basically, the Government's
made a position of principle, on the basis we've decided to recognise
all other states, a recognition of this state of the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia, and in the argument, if you like, that's bee-n had by groups in this country
wvir~ e saing that Australia's, if you like, unwillingness to accept this state recognising
itself as the republic of Macedonia has in fact, if you like for those associated with the
interests of Greece, brought a recognition, at least temporarily, to this name the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. But now the Australians formerly from this state
objecting to the termSlavMacedonian which was introduced by the Government, not
to cause a sense or to make some ehnic statement but simply to describe a fact, that
these people are people from the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. I mean

personally I'd prefer they all call themselves Australians, as I think all people would
prefer to see them called.
AITON: Yes, semantics is always going to get you into trouble though.
PM: The key thing is there are no borders here, there are no borders in this country.
And while it may be an interesting debate for these people to be discussing the
contemporary division of the former ancient state of Macedonia, the whole notion of
pursuing the old hatreds in Australia and the notion that these people have a right to
some sort of violence in our society is, I think, a line we ought to draw without
qualification. AITON: Mr Keating, it's a year now, last weekend, since your unexpected, to most
people, election victory. These figures of course are the sorts of things that you
would've hoped would happen a year after that, the figures today. But is there any
particular matter where you are disappointed that you have not been able to achieve
what you would have liked to in a year?
PM: The mandate I set down was to re-start the economy, get it growing strongly
again, see the recovery bloom, get employment running strongly again, deal with
Mabo, the High Court decision, focus on APEC, that is build structures for Australia in
Asia, and deal with the long-term unemployed. And I think I can give a tick to most of
those things. That is, I can say honestly Doug, to you, the answer to that question, we
have got the economy growing again, we have got two hundred thousand jobs, we
have legislated for Mabo, an historic piece of property in cultural law, we have put
APEC into place and it's growing and changing, and we are now working on the White
Paper and long-term unemployment, and of course we're seeing low inflation right the
way through it. So in terms of the mandate, can I just say our opponents, Dr Hewson
said we'd be in a double-dip recession, they had the ads with the gun sights taking
people out of employment, not putting people back into it. All of that's proven to be
untrue, that Australia wasn't going to go into a double-dip recession, that we weren't
going to see more Australians unemployed but in fact fewer unemployed and more
employed, and a year down the track I think the Government's been true to its mandate
and true to its promises.
AITON: Do you feel embarrassed about the Ros Kelly business?
PM: No, that's part of the sort of sideshows of public life. But you see one of the
things that today's national accounts, there's a growth of consumer sentiment and retail
sales which came from the tax cuts of last year. You never hear about them now
Doug. Eight to ten dollars a week for people, a promise the Government made and
kept, and we had to battle it through the Senate, against the Liberal Party and the
National Party and the Greens and the Democrats and everybody else for the right to
pay people a tax cut which the economy needed to kick itself along.
AITON: I notice that you're coming up further ahead of Dr Hewson as preferred leader
in recent polls. I know you have a certain amount of contempt for polls but
nevertheless we have only them to go by. It seems to me that you might actually like
Dr Hewson to stay there as leader because it makes you feel secure.
PM: Well Doug, when we get that tricky, any of us in public lifethat we're into the
business of choosing our opponents' leadership, that's the time to call it quits I think. I

just think from the point of view of the parliamentary leader of the parliamentary Labor
Party, as we are in office, therefore Prime Minister, I take the view that whoever the
Coalition propose as their leader is the person I have to deal with in policy terms. Now
the Liberals last time in a highly ideological election. they wanted to make a big tax
grab through the GST and essentially funnel the money to the high paid, despite the
fact that the profit share was rising as it has indicated today the highest level ever in our
post-war history, and the public said hang on, this is too greedy, we're not being in this,
we're not going to see you knock Medicare out, we're not going to see you knock the
social wage around and we're not going to let people go onto individual wage contracts,
we don't want a GST, we do want a more inclusive society, we do care about the
unemployed, we do care about our community, we do care about aboriginal Australians
and we want something better. So I mean we were at the time putting what I call the
policies of enlargement out against the sort of straightners and the punishers, that their
view being we can only succeed if we've got our head bowed, our eyes down and
wearing a penalty. This society deserves better and can have better.
AITON: This is a very funny day for you with those figures which are hard for the
Opposition to dispute in any way or to mock. What's been your darkest moment
though over the last twelve months since that triumph of the election.
PM: I must say, I'm happy to say I haven't had many dark moments, and the growth
today came out of the One Nation package of 1992. 1 mean what restarted the
economy? What started those ten consecutive quarters of growth you mentioned
earlier? And the answer was the One Nation spending which Dr Hewson said would
bankrupt the country. So this wasn't put there by accident or good fortune. It was put
there by express government policy and so I haven't had many, can I say, dark days
since. I mean if there was any frustrating, it was the Budget process of last year, that
was frustrating. As you know, I don't believe minor parties should hold the money, the
financial policies of the Government in the House of Representatives to ransom. That
was a trying period but we got through that, we got the tax cuts paid and the
economy's growing as a consequence.
AITON: You told SBS television in an interview recently that when the time comes to
go you won't have to be told, you'll be gone. But where will you go?
PM: Oh where do any of us go? I mean former Prime Ministers are generally a pretty
sad bunch and I suppose I'll end up like the rest of them somewhere along the way but
not quite yet.
AITON: Good to talk to you and thanks for your time today.
PM: Okay Doug, nice to speak to you.
ends.

9157