PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Keating, Paul

Period of Service: 20/12/1991 - 11/03/1996
Release Date:
04/06/1995
Release Type:
Interview
Transcript ID:
9609
Document:
00009609.pdf 2 Page(s)
Released by:
  • Keating, Paul John
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P J KEATING MP DOORSTOP, MELBOURNE FREIGHT TERMINAL, 4 JUNE 1995

PRIME MINISTER
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER, THE HON P J KEATING MP
DOORSTOP, MELBOURNE FREIGHT TERMINAL, 4 JUNE 1995
E& OE PROOF COPY
PM: I would like to make a statement just about the train behind us. Of
course, this is Dynon in Melbourne which in the One Nation statement
that we decided to make the transport hub of Austfr-alia to bring more
services into Melbourne, because Victoria was, in national terms,
somewhat light on in services, and freight is one of the essential
services of the country. Today, this will be, of course, the first train
that will come on a standard gauge from Brisbane to Perth, via
Melbourne and Adelaide. And it came from the One Nation program,
pulling the country together, and bringing South Australia into the
Eastern States' economy, and giving us a much better transcontinenta
l nk. 79 need I say, I have got my opponent Mr Howard
out around today they had 30 years to do that, the Liberal Party, and
they never did because they have got no ideas, and they rarely if
ever make any initiatives. At any rate, I am pleased to be here, and
you will hear more later, but I am happy to take some questions from
you.
J ( inaudible)...
PM: Well, we have now got the system in place where you know the
Minister for Transport last night talked about a national track, so we
will have a company which runs the rail, and then we-wiF~ e able to
have them competing for users on the system. So, instead of having a
railway company that runs the rail and the locomotives, we will have a
railway company that runs the rail, a track company, and then we will
have... . people will be able to bring locomotives. And, as you know, we
have also announced that we will be making in Australia this huge
refurbishment of the locomotive stock. So, we will see a much more
competitive rail and transport system. And this will take containers off
the roads, it will make our roads safer, it will make the country more
efficient and that's what we need. As we are a trading nation, we

needed efficiency, and we needed this interface between rail, road and
port, like we have here.
J: .( inaudible)...
PM: No. That is already arranged. This is already a national system it's
called national rail it's already in place.
J: What's your reaction to Mr Howard's comments this morning?
PM: Which one?
J: Like extending the term of the Governor-General?
PM: Oh well, it's interesting that Mr Howard thinks that... . he has highlighted
the point that now, the Prime Minister and only the Prime Minister,
speaks to the Queen about the Governor-General. He is apparently
saying, towards the end of this term, that he thinks that we ought to be
doing something else. Well, on Wednesday night I will have some
proposals for him if he thinks that the Prime Minister only shouldn't be
appointing the Governor-General, I'll have some proposals for him,
and we will see how forthcoming he is about those.
J: What's your reaction, Prime Minister, to the fall in interest rates, by
Aussie Home Loans and ( inaudible)
PM: Well, I notice I don't know whether you have seen I have got a copy
of it here the Sun-Herald in Sydney this morning has got " Housing
Rates Tumble", and we are seeing a fall in variable housing rates, and
also we have now got most of the fixed. rates uinder 10%. So, again, I
think this confirms the strength of the Budget, and of course, it gives
the lie to Mr Howard's clairi, about 5 minutes of sunshine. You know,
he was telling everybody [ that] rates were going to go up last week,
we saw the National Accounts out: 3.7% growth for the year, the
broadest measure of inflation at Which means that, as the
Treasury say in the Budget statements, the recovery is entirely
sustainable. And that means, of course, that the notion that it's going
to peter out was, of course, simply an advertising agency's fib, which
the Liberals were happy to put about.
J: So, have the rates peaked in this current cycle?
PM: I'm not here to give you a commentary on the future of interest rates,
but to say to you, that the major determinate of it is inflation. And what
we saw in the National Accounts last week, is that the broadest
measure of inflation the non-farm product deflator was at and
the consumption measure was at 2.2% I think that's the best guide
people can get to interest rates.
ends.

9609