above: Arguably Bill Shorten won the recent Leaders' Debate for Labor ; But the leader needs to make clearer the connection between education and infrastructure, and a strong and fair economy. Labor could also do with more policy ambition ; and needs to 'do the right thing' for the elderly, and other vulnerable people.
Tristan
Ewins
IN the recent Leader’s Debate
(29/5/16) for the coming Australian
Federal Election it could reasonably be argued that Labor leader Bill Shorten
did a pretty good job. Slogans such as
‘Budget Repair that is Fair’ are arguably cutting through ; though Labor needs
to come up with more detail as the election day approaches.
Shorten’s approach is basically to defend Australia’s minimalist welfare state and social wage – but without such significant new initiatives – say on the scale of the NDIS. (National Disability Insurance Scheme) His strategy is ‘to hold the line’ against Turnbull’s Ideological drive for ‘smaller government’ at the expense of pensioners and other vulnerable Australians. The opposition of the Australian Medical Association to the erosion of Medicare and bulk-billing could be crucial. Shorten is also ‘holding the line’ on Gonski and against the projected deregulation of Higher Education.
But Labor’s back-down on restoring Aged Care funding was especially disappointing: and will have bad consequences for some of our most vulnerable Australians. Labor needs to revisit these areas if actually elected. Labor Governments cannot take it for granted they will enjoy the protracted time in office as enjoyed during the Hawke/Keating years. Labor has to ‘seize the day’, and entrench important reforms while it can. Personally I have advocated for the vulnerable elderly and the mentally ill: suggesting the importance of addressing a mental-health related life expectancy crisis. (where about 300,000 people are dying 25 years earlier that the general average) And also I have suggested the necessity of tackling unfair user-pays in Aged Care ; as well as the crisis there with regard quality of life, and in resourcing and staffing the system.
Shorten’s approach is basically to defend Australia’s minimalist welfare state and social wage – but without such significant new initiatives – say on the scale of the NDIS. (National Disability Insurance Scheme) His strategy is ‘to hold the line’ against Turnbull’s Ideological drive for ‘smaller government’ at the expense of pensioners and other vulnerable Australians. The opposition of the Australian Medical Association to the erosion of Medicare and bulk-billing could be crucial. Shorten is also ‘holding the line’ on Gonski and against the projected deregulation of Higher Education.
But Labor’s back-down on restoring Aged Care funding was especially disappointing: and will have bad consequences for some of our most vulnerable Australians. Labor needs to revisit these areas if actually elected. Labor Governments cannot take it for granted they will enjoy the protracted time in office as enjoyed during the Hawke/Keating years. Labor has to ‘seize the day’, and entrench important reforms while it can. Personally I have advocated for the vulnerable elderly and the mentally ill: suggesting the importance of addressing a mental-health related life expectancy crisis. (where about 300,000 people are dying 25 years earlier that the general average) And also I have suggested the necessity of tackling unfair user-pays in Aged Care ; as well as the crisis there with regard quality of life, and in resourcing and staffing the system.
But Shorten needed to do a better job making
the connections between education, infrastructure, human capital and a strong
economy. He was spot-on identifying the waste and unfairness of Turnbull's $50
billion corporate tax cut over 10 years.
(A measure which will likely result in real increased economic growth
over decades of only a
tiny fraction of one per cent according to Treasury.)
But cuts to public investment in education
and infrastructure especially are bad for the economy, bad for growth, bad for
investment. Businesses will take what they can get. But they also look for an
educated workforce and top quality infrastructure. The ‘trade off’ between reduced Company Tax,
and reduced spending on infrastructure and education – will leave the
Australian economy worse off.
Amidst talk on the economy Labor’s Negative Gearing measure is perhaps its most significant new initiative: with the hope it will make housing more affordable, partly as a consequence of encouraging investment in new stock. This would also stimulate growth.
Amidst talk on the economy Labor’s Negative Gearing measure is perhaps its most significant new initiative: with the hope it will make housing more affordable, partly as a consequence of encouraging investment in new stock. This would also stimulate growth.
Ultimately, there is the choice of whether
we pay for infrastructure and Education fairly through progressive tax; or unfairly through 'corporate welfare' (an
unfair tax system); or whether we just cop out entirely - 'leaving it to the
market' - which will mean privatisation.
Turnbull is suggesting an arbitrary
‘locking in’ of smaller government, aiming for around 23.9% of
GDP . By
locking into the 'even smaller government' option (by some tens of billions)
Turnbull will have no choice except to privatise. But privatisation comes with big
inefficiencies. The higher cost of private finance ; the costs of
marketing; private dividends; corporate
salaries and so on. And there is the
possibility of private monopolies or oligopolies with unacceptable market power
to fleece consumers. Not only will that
create unfairness - it will also create inefficiencies that flow on to the
whole economy. Shorten needs to be crystal clear that not only is Labor
strongest on health and education - But that Labor's commitment to public
education and infrastructure is best for the economy as well. This is a great
Labor strength if only Shorten is willing to play to it!
Turnbull argues he ‘has a plan’. But all this ‘plan’ boils down to in the end
is a massive corporate tax cut: premised on discredited ‘trickle down
economics’. The expected ‘surge in new
investment’ will never come. As opposed
to an economic plan, Turnbull’s approach is only to ‘talk about having a
plan’. There is no substance. Just a mantra about ‘jobs and growth’, and
references to Turnbull’s past business background. Turnbull assumes a highly conditioned
electorate will ‘trust’ the Liberals on the economy: and will trust in his
business background as opposed to Shorten’s personal background representing
workers.
Also importantly: Turnbull is attempting to trade on his commitment to build new subs in South Australia. Building the subs will cost $50 billion and create 3,000 jobs. But by comparison the Conservative LNPs withdrawal of only modest support for the auto industry will cost 50,000 jobs. And it was projected about half of those jobs (about 24,000 of them) are lost in South Australia alone. Hopefully workers have long memories; and if not so then Shorten should remind them!
Also importantly: Turnbull is attempting to trade on his commitment to build new subs in South Australia. Building the subs will cost $50 billion and create 3,000 jobs. But by comparison the Conservative LNPs withdrawal of only modest support for the auto industry will cost 50,000 jobs. And it was projected about half of those jobs (about 24,000 of them) are lost in South Australia alone. Hopefully workers have long memories; and if not so then Shorten should remind them!
This is also an area that Shorten should
arguably revisit if he wins the election.
Former Prime
Minister Kevin Rudd had suggested an initiative which may
have saved those 50,000 jobs for only a $2 billion subsidy. Australia could potentially develop an
ongoing ship-building capacity: building vessels not only for ourselves, but
for the world. But if the auto industry
could be restored, arguably there are more jobs in the balance there. Winning back the trust of the auto-manufacturing
companies would be difficult, though, after Tony Abbott effectively ‘drove them
out of town’.
Tellingly, during the debate Turnbull
suffered on the theme of climate change.
The problem with high expectations is that when they fail to be realised
the disappointment is all the more bitter.
There is a Centrist, politically and social liberal demographic out
there which may have swung the election for Turnbull. But Turnbull’s compromises have given the
impression of ‘weak leadership’.
Finally: during the debate both leaders
were asked to clarify whether or not either one of them would ‘lock in’ with no
further changes to superannuation concessions.
In an act of irresponsible opportunism, Malcolm Turnbull indicated he
would make just such a commitment. But
Shorten did not answer the question clearly.
Let’s be upfront. According to many
commentators superannuation concessions could soon
cost close to $50 billion a year. That is: more than the entire Aged Pension
budget. This will be partially mitigated
by the modest measures taken by both the major parties: reducing concessions
for the richest of the rich. But while
average income earners should not be targeted, there arguably remains a broader
demographic including the indisputably well-off and the upper middle class. Let’s say at least the top 10% income and
wealth demographics. In order to reel
in this massive imposition on average tax-payers a broader base needs to be targeted. Broad enough to save tens of billions , but
narrow enough to be fair. Labor itself
has not yet found this balance -aiming for too-narrow-a-demographic to make the
difference to the Budget which is needed.
For Shorten what is also absolutely
necessary is to create a ‘sense of proportion’ around claims in the
Conservative tabloid media that Labor are ‘irresponsible big spenders.’
Spending has hovered around 25% of GDP across BOTH Labor and Liberal
governments for many years now. In fact both Labor and Liberal have maintained
a regime of ‘small government’, and any Australian government would need to double spending by approximately $400
BILLION a year to reach proportionate Swedish levels of expenditure! (ie: at approx. 50% of GDP) As an
admirer of the Swedish welfare state, nonetheless that may not be within our
grasp! But in fact, if we want to INVEST
in education, health, aged care, transport and communications infrastructure,
then we do need more progressive tax and higher spending. The alternative is
that our services and infrastructure will decay. People will suffer ; and so
will the economy.
To
reinforce that ‘sense of proportion’: Labor’s proposed changes to Capital Gains
Tax and Negative Gearing will save only $7 billion a
year. And Labor’s measures on superannuation
concessions will save only $14 billion over ten
years. (which is not so much as it sounds when you
consider it is staggered over a decade!)
But
Malcolm Turnbull’s approach of cutting Company Tax by $50 billion over ten years
– while opposing Labor’s savings via progressive tax measures - cannot but
result in a big hit to Education and Health, services and infrastructure. At the same time it could make any return to
surplus impossible. (once the tax cut
reaches its full amount it will cost the Budget even more over time)
All in all Shorten ‘won the debate’. But this is no guarantee of winning the
election. Shorten’s defensive posture -
for the most part ‘protecting what we’ve got’ – will appeal to many
people. But ultimately we need more if
we are to protect the vulnerable, and promote the rights and interests of the
working class, and of low to middle income earners. Here’s hoping for more
ambition from Labor as the campaign continues.
You don't build wealth with subsistence agriculture by illiterate farmers.
ReplyDeleteEducating the masses is a precondition for economic development, even just treading water in the internationally competitive trade wars it is imperative that Australia educate the masses not only in reading writing and arithmetic but also in the twenty first century basic computer literacy too.
The Liberals mollycoddle international finance types working for the billion dollar corporates whose plans for Australia as a quarry and farm don't take into consideration the wishes or needs of our population. There is no plan for jobs and growth, that's just hot air. They have nothing to say.
Labor on the other hand has done things that give Australia a chance. NAPLAN, systematic testing of the basics, might be better computerised. And, the beginnings of a national curriculum.
The Liberals with their policy of only funding elitist education of the ruling class thereby side with the corporate sharks the asset strippers the international business looters and tax avoiders who think of the working class as redundant factory fodder not required anymore.
Houston! We have a problem:
ReplyDelete"Shadow Treasurer Chris Bowen says Labor accepts that company tax falls hardest on workers rather than wealthy shareholders, and aims for a 25 per cent company tax rate to spur economic growth.
Asked if he accepted former Treasury secretary Martin Parkinson's statement that company tax falls hardest on workers, Mr Bowen told the AFR Tax Reform Summit on Tuesday "It's a statement of fact, which I agree with."
"I would like to see the corporate tax rate come down over time. I have previously said the nation should be aiming for a 25 per cent corporate tax rate," Mr Bowen said, adding that it would not be easy to do."
Read more: http://www.afr.com/news/special-reports/afr-national-policy-series/chris-bowen-says-labor-aims-for-25pc-corporate-tax-rate-20150922-gjrym0#ixzz4A8z6R3O7
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The fundamental problem is that the right controls the leadership of the ALP now and the right's shadow treasurer supports reducing the company tax to 25%. That'll lose the same $8.3 billion a year to the budget bottomline as the LNP's company tax cut.
ReplyDeleteYou see, Comrade Bowen is a relic of the Hawke/Keating era. He believes that you create jobs by cutting the company tax. He's also quite amenable to raising regressive sin taxes on the addicted. And guess what? So is the LNP. (sigh)
To say that I feel exasperated would be mild.
As I've been pointing out, what needs doing is to raise the company tax and put that revenue into the social wage. As it stands, workers are producing way more wealth than they were in 1975, but their share of the GDP has fallen 13% since that fateful year. The ALP left needs to push for a greater share of the social product of workers' labour time coming back to its producers i.e. labour. Publicly speaking out about this need is crucial for only the rank and file can change the direction the ALP is being sucked into. Just playing Thatcher-lite to the LNP Austerians won't cut it with the rank and file.
Bowen is conflicted. ON the one hand he's made the comments you allude to before. On the other hand he wants "equal opportunity in Education and Equal Outcomes in Health." But he doesn't explain how he will achieve it. He has to decide which way he will ultimately turn. I'm hoping he 'listens to his better angels'. Right now he promotes the position taken by Conference and the Shadow Cabinet.
ReplyDeleteWe can only hope that it's not another case of, "Labor in government is not the same thing as Labor in opposition."
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