PM Transcripts

Transcripts from the Prime Ministers of Australia

Howard, John

Period of Service: 11/03/1996 - 03/12/2007
Release Date:
01/02/2000
Release Type:
Speech
Transcript ID:
11619
Released by:
  • Howard, John Winston
TRANSCRIPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT THE RICHMOND ELECTORATE DINNER SOUTH TWEED HEADS

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

Thank you very much Larry for that very generous introduction. To your

wife Jenny, to Don Page, to councillor Lyn Beck, Dr Brian Pezutti MLC,

many other distinguished guests, ladies and gentlemen.

As I think you have probably read and heard, I am in the middle of what

is, give or take the odd interruption, such as the flight down to Melbourne

last night to go to a certain dinner which I gather a lot of this audience

watched on television, is a week long visit to different parts of regional

Australia. I have variously called it a visit to regional Australia, to

country Australia, to the regions or to the bush, because as you know

those expressions these days tend to be a little interchangeable. And

it has so far been for me a very fascinating, instructive and in many

ways also quite rewarding experience.

I am doing it because I understand that in different parts of regional

Australia there is legitimate concern that the benefits of the national

economic strength that Australia has at the present moment is not being

as evenly shared as it might have been. And it is very important that

those of us who live in areas which are doing very well economically,

it is very important that we understand that there are some of our fellow

Australians who through no fault of their own, are missing out on the

benefits of generic national economic strengths. It's also been rewarding

for me because, and instructive, because it has reminded me that there

are many parts of regional Australia that are doing very well.

I was in Port Lincoln in South Australia at the weekend and I saw for

the first time in some detail the marvellous tuna industry which is bringing

enormous export income to that part of Australia. But the next day I went

to Quorne in the Flinders Ranges area, a rural community that is almost

a metaphor for the challenges that many parts of the bush face at the

present time. A district heavily dependent on the wool industry, facing

the twin vice, I suppose, of a fairly severe drought in that part of South

Australia as well as low commodity prices. And then I went to Bourke,

a very famous town in Australian history, and Australian folklore, a town

that has been racked by very unhappy relations between aborigines and

other Australians over the years, but I found a community willing to work

together in all its parts to face that problem and also a community that

had the opportunity to embrace a very strong cotton industry over the

last ten or fifteen years which had provided a tremendous economic stimulus.

So, it is a rewarding interesting experience because it drives home to

me the genuine despair of some people and a legitimate and understandable

despair, but it is also a reminder that everything is different according

to where you are. And that of course is something that Larry understands

very well in this electorate. Richmond of course is a very varied electorate,

it is a combination of what you might call some elements of the old rural,

it's got very strong service industries based on tourism, it's got very

significant levels of unemployment, it has people who are broadly described

as in some ways committed to an alternative lifestyle but all part of

the community. So it does have particular challenges. And speaking as

I know I am to a lot of people who share Larry's and my commitment to

the Coalition's success I know that it does contain its measure of political

challenges.

Larry is right, we are living in an environment where it is fair to say

that Australia is a stronger, more confident country than what it was

just on four years ago. We were able to stare down the worst of the Asian

economic downturn with virtually no impact at all. We've seen significant

reductions in unemployment, we have much, much lower interest rates now

than was the case four years ago. We have very low inflation. we have

strong levels of business investment. We've embraced some very fundamental

economic changes and most importantly on that front of all, on the 1st

of July we are going to see the introduction of a new taxation system.

And I don't underestimate for a moment just how major that change is,

but nor do I for a moment, concede to anybody that it is other than a

hugely beneficial change for the entire Australian economy. And it is

very important that all of us see tax reform and the new tax system as

being exactly that. We had a description for it a couple of years ago,

we said not a new tax, a new tax system. And it is very important that

we don't look at it in its segmented areas. It is very easy to run a scare

campaign on the application of the goods and services tax to an individual

item. I can in isolation mount an argument for having no goods and services

tax on any item you name. I can in isolation indeed mount an argument

for having no taxation at all. And sure, hooray somebody says and I understand

that.

And in some kind of utopian concept you might want to argue for that,

but we live in a real world. We live in a society, I think that fundamentally

believes that there is a limited, but none the less important and strategic

role for the government. The faith of the Liberal and National Parties

is built on a belief that people doing their best with as little government

intervention as possible, as lower levels of taxation as possible, that

that is the best kind of society. We believe in people being given the

encouragement to get out and make their own way, to build their own fortunes,

to start with nothing and to build it up through working hard and hopefully

leave it to the next generation.

Now that is the kind of society that we generally believe in. But we

also as a community believe that there have got to be some basic services.

We are not a society that wants to see people starving in the streets.

We are a society that believes that the government has some social responsibilities.

To provide a decent social security safety net. And I have certainly found

since I have moved around the Australian community that the concerns that

people have in the areas that are doing it hard, are concerns about very

basic things. People who live in the outback want the same access to medical

practitioners as you and I have. They want some basic services from the

state governments, as well as from the commonwealth government. They want

to share in the information technology revolution, they don't want an

Australian society where you have haves in the cities and the coastal

areas in information technology and have-nots in the more remote parts

of the country. So we have to achieve a balance.

And one of the reasons we have decided to reform the Australian taxation

system is that it will provide, because the GST revenue is going to the

states, it will provide them with a greater capacity to deal with the

fundamental responsibilities and services which under our federal system

are the responsibilities of state governments. For years and years and

years, people have argued that we needed to reform commonwealth/state

financial relations. For years, people have argued, particularly state

premiers, of all political persuasions, whether it has been Charlie Court

or Joh Bjelke-Petersen or Henry Bolte or Neville Wran, or any of them,

all have said the same thing. We need a reform of commonwealth/state financial

relations. Well the GST will deliver that. It will deliver the single

greatest reform to commonwealth/state relations since World War II.

But most importantly for people in the regions, and most particularly

for those in the regions that live long distances from the major population

centres, taxation reform will mean cheaper fuel and cheaper business operating

costs. The significant reductions in the cost of diesel fuel as a result

of the introduction of the new taxation system will be of enormous benefit

for people who live in rural Australia. So I want all of you ladies and

gentlemen so see the new taxation system for what it is. It is a bold,

fundamental embrace of a new way of structuring taxation in this country.

It will produce cheaper fuel, cheaper exports, lower business costs, a

$12 billion cut in personal income tax with 80% of Australian taxpayers

on a top marginal rate of no more than thirty cents in the dollar. It

will provide compensatory benefits by way of increased pensions and allowances

for retired people and self-funded retirees. The business tax section

will almost halve capital gains tax and it will lower the corporate tax

rate from thirty-six cents in the dollar to thirty cents. Now they are

the positives. And it will also very importantly replace entirely the

existing wholesale sales tax, with in theory seven rates of tax, with

a single rate goods and services tax. And it will also over time as GST

revenues build enable the states in relation to the financial institutions

duty to abolish it almost immediately and subsequently the bank account

debits tax and a variety of state stamp duties.

Now it is a very big reform and there are going to be a lot of scares,

there will be a scare a day, and the tabloid press won't be reluctant

to run some of those scares. They will run the negatives. And we will

need to reply. And we are going to have a very vigorous and active five

or six months. But it is a fight worth having and it is a cause worth

fighting for, because in the end this country is going is going to have

a more competitive taxation system. In the end you will be able to look

back and say we are glad they went the extra miles, we're glad that Howard

and Anthony were prepared to get out there and fight for the cause of

taxation reform.

I have believed in fundamentally reforming Australia's taxation system

now for more than twenty years. And there have been various attempts over

the years to do something about it. I am not doing it because of some

blind ideological commitment. I am not doing it as some kind of easy political

relaxation, because it's not. It certainly isn't, it is anything but comfortable

and relaxing on occasions if I can borrow a phrase that somebody once

used. But what I am doing it for is because I believe deep down that we

need these kind of reforms, and I believe that people are elected to high

office in this country to do something positive and if you're not willing

to do something positive you might as well get out of the way and let

somebody else have a go. And we live in a political environment where

the public expects their governments and their leaders to deliver outcomes

and to deliver results.

We're no longer as tribal about our politics. There are more and

more people who float around in the middle. There are more and more people

who are easily attracted by peripheral people who offer magic solutions

only to be revealed as having feet of clay in a fairly short period of

time. What people want are governments that are prepared to embrace problems

and to adopt policies that are going to bring about fundamental change.

And I know as somebody who, in different ways, has had something to do

over the last 20 odd years with the intense debate about economic policy

in this country. I've known for a long time that we needed to do

basically about four or five things to make our economy more internationally

competitive. We needed to open up our exchange rate, we needed to have

a deregulated financial system. We needed to get our budget in order to

get it back into surplus and out of deficit. We needed to do something

about our arthritic industrial relations system. We needed, in my view,

to get the government out of running businesses that it's no good

at running and I'll come to Telstra in a moment as I'm sure

you'd be disappointed if I didn't mention it.

And we also and very importantly needed to do something about our taxation

system. Now in different ways in various stages all of those things have

been tackled and one of the reasons Australia was able to lick the Asian

economic downturn, in fact the overwhelming reason was that our economic

position was strong. If we'd still been in deficit, if we hadn't

shown the rest of the world that we were prepared to embrace economic

reform that global economy in which we now live would have punished us

very severely and I wouldn't have believed that 18 months ago that

we could have done as well in the face of that Asian downturn. And I'm

so pleased that we took the decisions we did in 1996 to get the budget

into shape. Some of those decisions made us unpopular. Some of them made

us unpopular in areas of regional Australia. I know that but in the long

run we delivered a much greater benefit and that was that we were able

to essentially protect and waterproof this country against that very severe

economic downturn.

But you can never stop this process. We have to keep going and if we

are to protect ourselves against the next adverse international circumstance

when it comes along, and it will come along at some stage, we need to

have completed the next round of reform and that means making this country

more effective as far as its taxation system is concerned.

So I believe in taxation reform because it will make Australia stronger

and better economically. I believe it will improve our international competitiveness.

I believe it's a fairer system. I believe once it's been introduced

and fully understood, people will find it a less complicated system than

the existing arrangement and that is why I ask all of you to go with us.

We'll go through some difficult times politically over the next few

months on this issue. There'll be plenty of scares but keep our eye

firmly fixed on the long term aim and that is to give this country a comprehensively

better and comprehensively new taxation system.

One of the things that I mentioned, talking about the sort of things

that were needed to make this country more competitive, was to get the

Government out of running those things that private enterprise is better

at running. And I mentioned Telstra. I know not everybody in the community

including a number of people who support the Coalition are totally convinced

about the desirability of the full privatisation of Telstra. Let me tell

you why it's government policy. Let me remind you that that policy

says that we won't proceed to the full privatisation of Telstra unless

we're satisfied that the community service obligations of Telstra

are being fully met. It's a condition of moving to the sale of the

rest of Telstra that there be a satisfactory inquiry carried out into

those community service obligations. But I believe and I hope that the

Australian community will agree with me that as time goes by it will be

increasingly absurd and inappropriate for this country to invest tens

of billions of dollars in a telecommunications company when that money

could be alternatively invested in other forms of public expenditure or

public investment because the ownership of Telstra represents a public

sector investment by the Australian tax payer.

It's a question of making a choice. Do we think it's better

to have tens of billions of dollars tied up in a telecommunications company

or would we rather see those tens of billions of dollars used to pay off

part of our national debt. We've paid off a lot of it but if we were

able to sell the rest of Telstra we could make the Commonwealth free of

net debt by about the year 2003 and that's only three years away

from now. And we'd have something left over as well, quite a large

amount left over. And wouldn't it be better to see what was left

over, invested for example in accelerated commitment to infrastructure.

Wouldn't it be better to see that money invested in another way.

Isn't there a better way of investing billions of dollars of public

money than tying it up in a telecommunications company and in the process

raising all sorts of difficult issues when for example you have a telecommunications

company now which is owned just over 50% by the Government and it might

want to invest in say a media asset and that raises questions as to whether

it's appropriate for the Government to have an investment in another

media asset.

As time goes by, I believe it will be increasingly inappropriate for

the Government to own just over 50% and it will be increasingly desirable

and in the national interest that we should invest that additional money

in other forms of public investment including public investment in infrastructure

in regional Australia. That is not to say that we won't continue

to commit significant resources to infrastructure in the regions but it

means that if we were able to sell Telstra, we would be able to accelerate

and increase the level of commitment to infrastructure in different parts

of the country.

Well ladies and gentleman, can I just finish by saying this. The Government

is about more of course than economics. It is also about the kind of country

we have. It's about the kind of society we seek to build. Larry mentioned

East Timor, he mentioned the way in which I think we were able to demonstrate

the historic commitment of Australia for standing up for what was right,

not only in our own region but also around the world.

One of the things of which I am very proud that the Government has been

able to do and I pay tribute in particular to the work that Alexander

Downer has done as Foreign Minister has been the way in which we have

been able to rebalance our foreign relations. When I came to the Office

of Prime Minister, I felt as though I had inherited a situation where

my predecessor in the Government of this country saw our relations as

being exclusively and totally involved in the Asia Pacific Region. The

Asian Pacific Region is the most important region to us, is now and will

always be but there's more to our relations than our own region.

We are in every way as a country a citizen of the world and we have important

relations in Europe. We have important relations with the United States

and I think we've been able to rebalance those relations. We've

been able to play a very strong role in our own region and we've

been able to do that because we've been economically strong and because

we've been able to argue very very strongly for the right things

to be done in our region.

But it is important to see the Government in dimensions beyond what it's

achieved on the economic front and Larry was kind enough to mention many

of those things. I think also our health reforms and I am delighted to

know incidentally that as a result of the introduction of the tax rebate

and the lifetime health cover proposals which you are seeing advertised

on television at the present time with the use of those umbrellas. I've

very happy to report that some of the major health funds in Australia

this year have announced that they are not going to increase their insurance

premiums. Some of the major funds to date, at least 30% or more of Australians

who have private health insurance will not only have the benefit of the

tax refund but largely as a result of that they won't see any increase

in their private health insurance premiums over the next 12 months and

that is a direct result of the determination of this Government to preserve

the private component of the health insurance in this country. We're

not a government that believes that health should be totally a public

monopoly but we are a government that believes that the supplementation

of the public sector by the private is very important.

Ladies and gentleman I am delighted to be in Larry's electorate.

He's frank enough to know and I'm realistic enough to agree

with him, this is a tough seat. It has been made a bit more marginal by

the redistribution. He's been a terrific Member. He's an extremely

able and respected Minister. He's taken to his responsibilities as

Minister over the last 12 months in a very effective and energetic fashion

and I really do admire him greatly for that. I admire the work he did

first as a Parliamentary Secretary and more recently since the changes

following Tim Fischer's retirement as Minister for Community Services.

Can I say because this is a Coalition dinner and I have been all of my

political life a strong believer in the Coalition how much I enjoy working

in harmony with John Anderson who took over as Deputy Prime Minister from

Tim. Tim did a tremendous job, he lead the National Party through some

difficult times, he kept the faith he supported loyally the decisions

that we took as a government and John has done exactly the same thing.

He's a man I admire and respect and trust totally. He brings great

integrity, great intelligence and great decency to his responsibilities.

The National Party is well served in the Federal Parliament with its

younger Deputy Prime Minister and its younger Ministers like Larry Anthony.

It's a strong Coalition. And all of us know from past experience

that the great years of the Liberal Party and the National Party have

been when they've worked together. The Menzies / Fadden, the Menzies

/ McKewen, the Fraser / Anthony and now the Howard / Fischer, the Howard

/ Anderson years. They're the great years of the Coalition. Division

is death, unity builds success, encourages and inspires loyalty and gathers

support.

I don't take the next election for granted. Every election is hard

going in this country. You can't predict anything any more. Look

at Victoria. I will regard the next election whenever it occurs and it

is due at the end of next year and I'm in no hurry to make it any

earlier let me assure you of that. I think things are going very well

at the present time and I am a great believer in people getting, great

believer in people getting full value. Three years is pretty short and

there's no reason to make it even shorter but it will be a tough

fight. The nature of the electoral process in this country has changed.

People expect good governments and they have a right to expect good governments

and understandably they look for new hope, new definitions, new proposals,

new ideas. But if we work together we can make it, we need your support,

we thank you for the support you've given over the years. You've

got a terrific young energetic Local Member whose got a great future in

Federal politics as your representative. Give him all the support you

can over the next couple of years.

Thank you.

[End]

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