above: Australian Labor Treasurer Wayne Swan made the right call on the surplus
The Federal Labor Government's reversal on the Federal Budget Surplus was considered a failure by some, but grassroots Labor activist, Tristan Ewins argues that Wayne Swan has made the right call on this one: Although unfair attacks on sole parents, the disabled and others need to be re-thought in the new context. Labor needs a bold social wage reform package, fundeded broadly by progressively extracting a fairer contribution from the top 15 per cent.
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Tristan Ewins
December 27th 2012
The headlines of the Melbourne Herald-Sun on
December 21st proclaimed “Julia Clean Bowled – Third Broken Promise as $1
billion surplus axed.” Other headlines
further into the paper announced: “Swan comes clean on deficit” and “Budget blows credibility of Gillard,
Swan.”
To be fair, within the pages of the Herald-Sun there
was some deeper and more balanced analysis – admitting the objective necessity
of abandoning the surplus at this particular conjuncture. But clearly the editors of the publication
were aiming to influence via first impressions: via the power of headlines; and
the likelihood that many readers would not actually read through all the
material.
So what of the reality, then?
With a world economy in crisis, even affecting
Chinese growth – Australia has been hit; and so too have Australian tax
revenues – including the GST and Company tax. Notably business is actually supporting Labor
with regard postponing the surplus – well aware of the “multiplier effect”
stimulus has upon the economy, and thus upon consumer and investor
confidence. Tony Abbott is decrying
Labor as “spending like a drunken sailor” – but this is nothing more than a
play upon people’s misassumptions and prejudices. In reality Labor has held tax revenues down
as a proportion of GDP, and has ‘robbed Peter to pay Paul’ – hitting Single
mothers and many disability pensioners to provide some ‘fiscal room’ for Gonski
and the National Disability Insurance Scheme. (NDIS)
For his part, also, Abbott has to explain how he
will deliver his Paid Parental Leave for the upper middle class, while
withdrawing the minerals resource rent
tax, as well as the carbon tax, and restoring upper middle-class welfare in the
form of a broad-based Private Health Insurance Rebate. And Liberal support for the NDIS is
compromised by hysterical and deceptive panic-mongering about its price-tag; projecting
into the future – without explaining the context of inflation – to provide a
distorted impression of its ultimate cost. Lastly: Abbott’s agenda of cutting
expenditure at this particular conjuncture would be deflationary and
contractionary – a criticism of him which Labor and the corporates seem to have
in common.
At the same
time Liberal State governments are imposing austerity in their irrational drive
for a ‘surplus at any cost’. Again, this
is about retaining the political advantage on “perceived economic
competence”. Having consistently distorted
the question of economic management as approximating the management of a
household budget, at all levels the Conservatives cannot confess the truth
without undermining their political position.
Thus in Victoria Ballieu has gutted TAFE expenditure to achieve a
surplus: when in fact stimulus is required; as is investment on infrastructure,
education and training to overcome capacity constraints. User pays mechanisms – for instance increased
public transport charges and increased costs for license renewal – are also
being imposed to bridge ‘the fiscal gap’ from falling GST revenue. While the Liberals like to avoid the word
‘tax’ – the effect of these measures approximate regressive, flat taxation.
But what should be done?
Budgets need to be balanced – but not always: only
over the course of the economic cycle. And this need not imply ‘small
government’ during periods of growth either: so long as the ‘inflation genie’
is contained some way or another – preferably progressively via taxation on the
wealthy and upon conspicuous consumption. (also inflation shouldn't be raised as an excuse for distributive injustice and exploitation)
During times of relative stagnation (ie: right now!) – and in some parts of the world outright
Depression – the time is still right to bring forward big infrastructure
programs for quality of life and to overcome capacity constraints. Again: this has a ‘multiplier effect’ on
growth and confidence.
At a state level the Liberal State Governments also
need to face reality. Without investment
in education, health and infrastructure the economy will wither – and human
beings will suffer. The Conservative
State Governments have argued meekly for an increased GST to overcome the
‘fiscal gap’ – but surely they perceive the bind Labor is in: restrained by the
same ‘small government and surplus at any cost’ mentality which the
Conservatives themselves have nurtured.
If the State Governments are to acquire the funds they need it is
imperative that they come out consistently, openly, clearly and loudly in
favour of increased taxes, and against the lie that surpluses are always appropriate. No matter how politically unpalatable it may
seem, a bipartisan consensus is necessary right now, here - in the national interest.
And in other words the Conservative State Governments
need to publicly refute the position taken so far on this theme by the Abbott
Federal Opposition. Only by doing can
they provide Federal Labor the “political breathing room” to do what is
necessary to restore State Government finances.
To avoid embarrassment, Abbott himself could finally be responsible:
taking the lead in conceding that we still live in precarious economic times;
and hence action on the tax/stimulus/services/infrastructure front is necessary.
Finally: both Labor and the States need agree to
progressive taxation reform – which is fair both to most working class families
and to the disadvantaged. Increasing a
flat, regressive GST is not acceptable.
Yet if these conditions are met – then ‘the ball will be in Federal
Labor’s court’ – to reform tax, maintain and expand infrastructure and
services, and provide economic stimulus in uncertain times.
But even this compromise should not be enough for a
reforming Labor Government. Gonski and
the NDIS need to be “locked in” (with a price tag of about $14 billion) – and
without ‘robbing Peter to Pay Paul’ again with regards critical social programs
– or else reducing ourselves to empty, token and distant promises. To ‘deliver
the goods’ for 2013 there is a need to raise tax as a proportion of GDP.
As against the popular assumption any tax reform
would comprise ‘electoral poison’ there is the contrary argument that improved
infrastructure and services – paid for via the progressive targeting of the top
15% wealth and income demographic – could appeal to a broad class base of
support. Such an emphasis would be electorally viable
on the basis of the economic interests of most Australians; but broad-based
enough to bring in meaningful revenue.
Specific measures could include removing
superannuation concessions for the top 5 per cent income demographic – bringing
in over $10 billion. Meanwhile reverting
to 75% dividend imputation (tax concessions of investments) could bring in over
$5 billion while affecting mainly the wealthy: and with other (small) investors
compensated via tax and social wage reform elsewhere. Should an incremental approach work, here,
Dividend Imputation could later be reduced to 50% - bringing in over $10
billion. (in today’s terms) Company Tax cuts could – and should – be put on
hold indefinitely (business needs to contribute to the training and
infrastructure it benefits from); and income tax reform could also target the
top 15% income demographic. A minimum
Company Tax rate could be imposed; land tax imposed on properties valued over
$1 million; and further taxes imposed
upon economic rent in oligopolistic sectors such as mining and banking. Finally the Medicare Levy could be reformed
to broaden its scope, apply a more progressive and graduated structure, and
provide a desperately-needed boost to Aged Care – caring for the most
vulnerable, and removing regressive user-pays charges that hit working class
families hard.
The
aim would be to free about $25 billion of new money for socially necessary
programs – including desperately-necessary funding for the States - while at
the same time providing economic stimulus. To put this in perspective, this would
comprise about 1.5 per cent of a $1.6
Trillion economy) Further funds could be
freed via even better targeting of programs such as the Private Health
Insurance Rebate.
The
programs that would emerge from such measures there must strike a balance
between providing for the most vulnerable (the aged, the disabled, single
parents, the poor); and in providing broad-based improvements of infrastructure, welfare and services that
favour the “mainstream” – ie: the great majority of citizens, workers,
families.
But
time is running out for Labor. Vague and unrealized promises for the future
will not be sufficient for the revival of Labor’s fortunes in 2013. Labor
needs to ‘deliver the goods’ with infrastructure, services and social welfare
programs well before the approaching 2013 election. And in doing so it could also do worse than
to nail down the Conservatives’ economic irresponsibility in opposing stimulus
and crucial social investment with their deceptive ploys on the theme of
economic responsibility.
A Labor
government which remains authentically on-message;
succinctly explaining such themes as stimulus, economic multiplier effects,
capacity constraints, and the economic role of infrastructure, education and
training – could outflank the Conservatives with their claims to economic
responsibility and competence. They
could break the myth of Conservative economic credentials and competence.
Julia
Gillard herself proclaimed at one point that Labor is a cause: and not a ‘brand’.
Yet if the Labor cause is authentic, constantly “robbing Peter to pay Paul’,
with “one step forward, two steps back” should not be acceptable. And neither
should incessant mutual attacks upon character be considered a substitute for
policy substance.
Labor needs to reconsider its recent attacks
on single parents and disability pensioners. It needs new initiatives provided without
unfair austerity elsewhere. We need to overcome infrastructure backlogs
progressively; without inefficient, Ideological and perhaps even corrupt Public
Private Partnerships. A public fast-rail
line along the east coast could revolutionize transport logistics for business,
and provide opportunities for citizens. And we need to implement the NDIS and
Gonski; but also provide for other crucial yet less-politically convenient
causes such as reform of Newstart. We
need big new initiatives in Aged Care and mental health – because the most
vulnerable of all cannot afford to wait.
Crucial
to these initiatives could be the concept of ‘collective consumption’. That is: If we do not pay for health, aged
care, infrastructure and education progressively (and relatively cheaply) as taxpayers – we will instead
pay more for these regressively as private consumers.
Swan
and Gillard have done the right thing – and the responsible thing - in
abandoning the surplus for the time being. While it may have seemed politically
prudential at one point, to follow through now would undermine the economy, and
also Labor’s credentials. Now Labor needs
to turn the economic debate around – so it is possible to conduct that debate
on its own terms. Yet even if Labor does
all this, victory in 2013 is not assured.
Best, then, to lock a big reform agenda in: reforms in tax, social services,
infrastructure and welfare that will put the Conservatives on the defensive;
reforms they will not dare to wind back.
$25
billion in new social expenditure – and more accommodated through socially
progressive savings elsewhere – could provide the vital ‘Labor war-chest’ – to
provide much ahead of the 2013 election – and to promise even more in its
wake. Yet even this is relatively modest
in the big picture of a $1.6 Trillion economy. That sense of perspective
is so often missing in Conservative critiques of Labor programs which
(just like Conservative initiatives) necessarily go into the hundreds of millions or even billions. Even on the Labor Left - which is largely acquiescent on the issue of 'small government' these days - learning to think on this scale is necessary in coming to grips with a genuine reform agenda.
The
bottom line is that an end be put to Labor’s decades-long retreat: that by
appealing to and providing for both the disadvantaged and vulnerable – and to
the ‘mainstream’ of working Australia – we can consolidate an electoral bloc,
and begin anew ‘the steady march forward of Labor’.