PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
18/08/1998
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
10920
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS TO CARSELDINE RETIREMENT VILLAGE, BRISBANE

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

Well thank you very much Mr McKenzie-Forbes. To my colleague

Teresa Gambaro, who is the Federal Member for Petrie, to John Hodges

over there who use to represent this electorate, and to the other

directors, ladies and gentlemen.

It's an enormous pleasure for me to be here this morning. I'm

often asked by people, as I travel around our wonderful country, what

is the best thing about being Prime Minister of Australia. And the

best thing without doubt about being Prime Minister of Australia is

that you have an opportunity virtually every day, wherever you might

be, of meeting a different group of Australians -in their homes, in

their local community, in their local retirement village, wherever

it may be. And the remarkable thing is that every group is different.

Every group has something new or different to tell you and something,

quite often, a new or different piece of advice to give you and that

is part of the process of the exchange that ought to go on between

a Prime Minister and the people who he or she is elected to serve.

And I do want to take the opportunity this morning of saying a few

things to you about the plan we announced last week.

But before I do that I want to congratulate this retirement village

and indeed I want to congratulate all of those associated with providing

security, comfort, and a congenial living environment for Australia's

senior people and senior citizens. I don't just say it because

I'm addressing this audience but I'm very conscious that

that age cohort of Australians who are represented here today have

contributed so much to our country. The great bulk of you, at various

ages, have lived through a war. Some of you through a depression.

All of you through those years of post war reconstruction in Australia.

And you've all contributed so much and you all held through those

years to some constant enduring Australian values. And you've

created the society that people of my age and younger have the great

privilege of enjoying and I want to place on record my respect and

appreciation for the generation of Australians that you represent

and what you have done for our country.

And it's really doing something for our country which the tax

plan I announced last week is all about. People have talked about

this or that aspect of it but the most important thing about it is

that it is designed to help Australia and to help Australian families.

It is designed to make Australian stronger economically. It's

designed to help Australia export more and if we export more we'll

be more prosperous and we'll create more jobs. It's designed

to give more choice and more help to Australian families, those particularly

with young children. And it's got to be looked at as a whole.

We all like getting benefits but you can't really have benefits

without fundamental reform. The idea that there's a magic pudding

that somebody can come along and carve up and hand out without having

to sort of do anything to build and do anything to put it together

is of course wrong. We build a house and we have the most comfortable

room in it, the one we like to go to most frequently. But, of course,

unless that house is built on sound foundations than it's not

going to last for very long and the transitory comfort of that nice

room is going to disappear.

Now there's been, understandably, a bit of focus on how this

plan affects pensioners and self-funded retirees and I want to come

to that in a moment. But before I do could I just emphasise that the

most valuable thing about this plan is that it will, in a time of

some difficulty around the world, the economies of Asia have turned

down and that hasn't affected Australia too badly because we

are now much stronger than we were. But what we therefore must do

is to make ourselves even stronger. And some people are saying: well

when you've got trouble overseas you shouldn't try and change

anything. I say the reverse. I say because we have challenges overseas

we must change certain things that will make Australia stronger and

make Australia better. And the whole purpose of this plan is to give

us a new and better taxation system to help the entire Australian

nation, particularly our families. And I think everybody understands

that the present system is really on its last legs. But the present

system does need change. But we can't hope to go ahead, the whole

country, unless we have a better and a reformed taxation system. And

that's why we're doing it. We're not doing it for political

advantage. Some people have said to me you shouldn't raise something

like this perhaps a few months out from an election. But we are doing

it because we believe very very genuinely and very sincerely that

it will be good for our country. And I'm very personally committed

to it because I believe in here that this is good for Australia and

good for Australian families.

Now, like any other section of the community, pensioners and self-funded

retirees will say: well if it's good for Australia that's

good. But, not surprising, they say: well how does that affect our

position? And there are ten ways in which...within this plan, there

are ten particular ways in which protection is provided and benefits

are provided for pensioners and self-funded retirees. To start with

there is an up front, from the 1st of July 2000, increase

in the pension and all other like benefits. And that 4% increase takes

effect immediately on the 1st of July when the new plan

comes into operation. And part of the guarantee in relation to that

increase is that the pension will be permanently 1.5% above, 1.5%,

the increase in the pension, 1.5% above any increase that will flow

from price changes as a result of the introduction of a goods and

services tax. And some of you will say the introduction of a goods

and services tax will put everything up by 10%. It won't. And

the reason why it won't put everything up by 10% is that a lot

of things that now carry wholesale sales tax will come down in prices.

There are a lot of things you buy like detergent and soaps, and other

household items where there's a 22% wholesale sales tax. You

pay 12% wholesale sales tax on some biscuits, on flavoured milk. You

pay 32% when you buy a television or a video. You pay 22% when you

buy a family motor car. Now all of those will disappear and therefore

the price of many goods that you now buy will actually fall. Others

will go up. But it's because some come down and others go up

that it averages out, according to our calculations, at about 2%.

One thing a lot of people forget is that when they go to the supermarket

everything they buy in the supermarket, 20% of the cost of that is

attributable to transport. If fresh food, or canned food or anything

is, it doesn't just materialise on the supermarket shelf, it

has to be carried there. Now one of the big things about this plan

is that transport costs are going to be cut very very significantly

and they're going to be cut because the price of petrol for every

businessman will fall by seven cents a litre, and on top of that we're

going to give a very special big concession for the excise on diesel

which is the fuel used by most large trucks to carry things around.

And this is particularly important for Queenslanders because Queensland

is a very big State and it's a very decentralised State. Queensland

is the only State of Australia where the majority of people live outside

the capital city. So therefore a change which helps to reduce the

cost of carrying things around the State is particularly beneficial

to Queensland because there is more long distance haulage involved

in a decentralised State. That's a digression from the 4% increase

in the pension but I think an important one to explain it. So that's

the first thing.

The second thing is that for a long time now we've had a special

rebate for older people so that no part of the pension will be taxed

and we're going to increase that by $250 for a single person

and $350 for a couple. And thirdly we're going to increase the

pension free area, that's the amount of income you can have without

the pension being affected, by 2.5%. Fourthly, when the pension does

start to be withdrawn we're going to reduce the taper rate from

50% down to 40%. In other words, instead of losing half for every

dollar of private income, that's going to be reduced to 40%.

There will of course, depending on your level of income, be reductions

for all Australians over and above any special provision for older

Australians there will be reductions in personal income tax. The tax

free threshold is going to be lifted to $6000. The bottom rate is

going to be cut from 20 down to 17%. And when you reach $20,000 of

income the rate will be 30% and that will apply right through to $50,000.

There will be no change at all in the tax rate between those two figures.

And that means about 60 to 70% of all wage and salary earners will

be able to, depending on their level of income, they will face a marginal

rate of 30% or less and that is a huge improvement on the present

situation.

The sixth thing that's of particular relevance to pensioners

and self-funded reitirees that for every person 60 and over there

will be savings bonus – a one-off tax fee payment of $1000 in

relation to any investment income that you might have and that investment

income will be very broadly defined to include things like superannuation

and of course returns of dividends and interest savings and so forth

from the bank. And that's available for everybody 60 years of

age and over, pensioners and self-funded retirees. Then additionally

for self-funded retirees who are of pensionable age or above there

will be an additional $2000 one-off tax free bonus. And both of those

payments will be fully available for people whose income is up to

$20,000 and then it will phase out between $20,000 and $30,000.

Now the eighth benefit applies to those of you who may own shares

in companies. You know there's been a system now for some years

called imputation whereby the company is meant to pay the tax and

then it sends the dividend to you on which there's a...sends

you a franked dividend on which the company tax has been paid. Now

there's a lot of retired people, there's a lot of people

generally, where tax is deducted at, by the company at the company

rate of 36%. But because their rate of tax maybe only 20% or some

other figure below 36% at the margin they don't get the full

benefit. Now what we're going to do is to change that and under

the plan we're going to introduce what are called fully refundable

imputation credits on shares. And it means that if the company pays

the 36 and send you the rest and you're on a 17% rate or a 30%

rate you'll get a refund from the tax man, a cheque from the

tax man, that's always good, between the 17 and the 36 or the

30 and the 36. And it will mean that people whose marginal rate of

tax is below the company rate will get the full benefit of the imputation

credit on the share.

Now there are two other things that I've left till the last because

I think they are of particular importance and particular benefit to

senior people. And they are the introduction, without an income test,

so therefore it's available to anybody, of a 30% tax deduction

or payment in relation to private health insurance. Now what this

means is that if you've got a private health insurance policy,

from the 1st of January next year, not from the 1st

of July in the year 2000, but from the 1st of January next

year, you'll be able to get 30% of that off either your tax or,

if you want to get it earlier, you pay the premium you can go along

to the Government office and they'll give you a cheque for the

30%. Now if you've got a $2000 policy that will be worth $600.

And the present arrangement, which is a lot more modest, will of course

continue through to the end of this year and the new system will come

into operation on the 1st of January next year. And that

will be universally available. And at the present time the private

health insurance subsidy the maximum if $450 and that's for families.

It's a lower amount for couples and it's a lower amount

still for singles. And this of course won't discriminate at all

between those different people but obviously if you've got full

family cover that's a bit more expensive and the amounts that

you will get back will correspondingly be higher.

And the final thing of course that I wanted to mention is that part

of the plan is to abolish in full provisional tax. And I know from

my experience as a local member, I know from my experience as Treasurer,

I know from my experience as Prime Minister, and I also know from

my experience years ago as a provisional tax payer that provisional

tax is one of those things that did irk a lot of people. And it always

seemed that you were paying it a little bit ahead of time. You didn't

like the tax man suggesting that there was an automatic increase in

the amount of money you were going to earn from year to year and one

of the things that we find we're able to do as a result of the

changes that we've introduced is to abolish provisional tax.

Now I've taken some time ladies and gentlemen to go over some

of the particular features of the plan that relate to pensioners and

self-funded retirees. And I've done that because we spent a lot

of hours and devoted a lot of time in trying to get the balance right

because we are conscious that there is change involved in this and

people are naturally entitled, when change occurs, to be reassured

about the impact of that change on their own circumstances and that

particularly applies to people who are relying on investments and

who are relying on those investments to provide themselves with a

secure environment.

Now one of the things any Government can best do to help provide a

secure financial environement is to see that the level of inflation

is kept as low as possible. I know that lower interest rates are not

as good news for people relying on investments as they are for people

paying off a home. I'm able to say when I go around Australia

and I talk to home buyers, I'm able to say that under the Government's

policies we have reduced interest rates to their lowest level for

home buyers for 30 years. Now that's great if you're paying

off. If you're investing and you're relying on the interest

from that, well it's not so great. I understand that. And that

is why we have gone to some trouble and taken some care to ensure

that the changes that we are making, and I've listed many of

them that have particular relevance to older Australians, those changes

have been incorporated into the plan.

If I could just say one or two other general things and that is that

any government, no matter what stage it may be and no matter what

side of politics it may be, has a responsibility at various times

of its existence to stand up in front of the public and say: we believe

that something ought to be done for the long-term benefit of the country.

When I entered Parliament in 1974, which is just, in May of 1974 when

Mr Whitlam was half way through his term as Prime Minister, and a

few months after a entered Parliament there was a report tabled which

recommended a big change to Australia's taxation system and it

was called the Asprey Report. Some of you may remember that name.

It was chaired by a now deceased Supreme Court Judge of New South

Wales. And you know what it reccommended? It recommended the introduction

of a broad-based indirect tax. It recommended the abolition of the

wholesale tax system. It recommended a whole lot of the changes that

the Government has announced in the last few days. It recommended

reductions in personal income tax, it recommended some other things.

Not everything in the Asprey Report has been picked up by us but it's

very interesting that 23 years ago this expert report that had been

commissioned by the late Sir Billy Snedden who was Treasurer in the

Liberal Government, had been delivered to Mr Whitlam as Labor Prime

Minister and it recommended these things. And since then various people

have tried to change the system. And the reason they've tried

to change it is not because people enjoy changing things. I mean from

a point of view of ease and comfort the simple thing to do is to not

sort of change anything and just let things bubble along. The problem

is that that's not always the best thing for the country. And

the reason people have tried at various time to change it, I tried

on a couple of occasions when I was Treasurer in Mr Fraser's

Government. Mr Keating tried it when he was Treasurer in Mr Hawke's

Government. Dr Hewson, as Leader of the Opposition, tried before the

1993 election and we've come back and we're putting in forward,

in a better form if I may say so, I hope with no immodesty, in a better

form than any of those that who've gone before me. But the reason

we've all tried is that deep down everybody knows that the present

system has to be changed, on both sides of politics. And at various

stages I can trawl through the records and I can find remarks made

by Mr Beazley and Mr Evans and Mr Keating and Mr Hawke as well as

myself and Dr Hewson and Mr Costello all saying that change is needed,

reform is needed. And it's very tempting when you're a politician

to say: we'll offer you the nice things without the reform. And

I think you all know from your life's experience that it's

never quite as simple as that.

So what we've tried to do on this occasion is put together a

total plan that will, above everything else, be good for our country

and good for Australian families. That's the most important thing

about it. And if I wanted people to think one thing of it, I would

want them to think that it was good for Australia and good for Australian

families because that at the end of the day is the thing that unites

all of us whether we vote Labor or Liberal or whatever our age is

or whether we were born in this country or whether we adopted this

as our country, and whatever our background may be, in the end we

are bound together by a common love of our country and a common concern

for our country's future. And that is the most important thing

about this and that is the reason why I am personally so very committed,

and we are putting it out for people to have a look at. We think it

will provide plenty of protection and plenty of reassurance for retired

people, for those on the pension. We believe it will be good for the

economy, it will make our exports cheaper, it will make production

costs for Australian businesses lower, it will therefore mean that

more jobs can be generated, and it has had a very strong response

from the business community, not because there are such enormous tax

cuts for the business community, and in fact there are none. What

there are for the business community are reductions in their costs,

because now when business operates things, when you run a business

you've got to pay taxes on many of your business inputs, simple

things like computers, you've got to pay tax on them. Under this

system you'd be able to get the tax, which will be at a lower

rate back, because that's how a goods and services tax operates.

There are a number items which are GST free. Doctors' bills,

dentists' bills, prescription drugs – they are GST free.

Childcare expenses, education expenses are GST free. And that means

that you don't pay anything on them and the people who produce

them can get a full refund of their input credits. And we calculate

that the cost of, operating costs of doctors and childcare centres

will in fact fall. Nursing home fees are GST and so are hostel charges,

GST free. SO we have taken care to exclude from the GST those things.

We have included food and clothing for the simple reason that if you

leave out very big items like that, then other people will say why

don't you leave something else out and you'll end up back

with the present system which has become so unworkable. And providing

you get the compensation right and providing you build in these other

protections and benefits then all of that I think will work out for

the benefit of the country.

Ladies and gentlemen, I have appreciated this opportunity and I thank

you very very warmly for your patience and willingness to listen.

It is my responsibility as Prime Minister to explain to you and to

explain to millions of Australians why I think this is good for our

country and for our country's families, and to direct my comments

to areas that they particularly effect, because that is accountability

in politics is all about. Now, I think this is a good plan for our

country's future. I'm putting it out before the election

so people so will know about it when they vote, whenever that may

be. I don't want to be in a position of saying nothing about

it before the election and then bringing it in afterwards, because

that would be quite dishonest. And I want people to know exactly what

I am going to do before the election so that they can make their judgment

and I think if they consider the long term future of Australia and

if they look at the way in which it effects them, then I believe,

and I certainly hope that they will come to a very positive conclusion.

But whatever conclusion you come to, that is your perogative as an

Australian and I will accept the judgment of the Australian people

with the very best of grace and good will because I have an enormous

regard for their common sense. So thank you very much, Sir, for inviting

me along, and thank you very very much for listening and I look forward,

over a cup of tea perhaps, of wandering around and chatting to you

and answering any questions you have to put to me. But thank you,

and good luck to all of you and it has been a very great privilege

for me to have an opportunity of talking to you this morning.

Thank you.

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