Last Budget Night was on Tuesday 13th May, 2014 and it is still not finalised -apparently $27Billion still unresolved!
We now look forward to see what we might see next time. I am sure this will be fun.
Last week was just huge with early leaks and a Tax White Paper and a Competition Final Report released. Too much for most to even start to get their heads around!
This week the leaks have started in earnest so it begins to get interesting! News on Super, Pensions and new Taxes are all coming into view!
Making it hard to avoid vaccination is a great idea!
Budget Night is May 12, 2015.
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Articles looking forward and back this week include.
General Budget Issues.
Australia is suffering from a “contaminated” political process that is weakening community support for difficult reforms according to a scathing new assessment from the nation’s peak business group that warns against repeating the folly in next month’s federal budget.
Urging a return to a robust cabinet process, the Business Council of Australia is calling for major reforms to be carved out of the federal budget in order to provoke full public debate over contentious ideas.
The call comes with a rebuke to national leaders over the tactics of obstruction in parliament, raising fears that political parties are putting their own quest for power ahead of serving the national interest by being willing to compromise.
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- Editorial
- The Daily Telegraph
- April 07, 2015 12:00AM
MEDICAL professionals are familiar with one infrequent but regrettable response from patients receiving bad health news. Occasionally, people will initially become angry with the doctor or specialist delivering that news. In time, that sort of response usually gives way to something more mature.
This scenario is analogous to Australia’s economic situation. The Coalition not only inherited woeful budget figures from the incompetent Labor government, which promised surpluses even as it drove the country deeper into debt. The Coalition was also elected, at least in part, to repair that budget.
Treasurer Hockey’s first budget, handed down almost one year ago, made steps towards achieving that repair, with a range of prudent but far from extensive cuts. Everybody knows what happened next. Led by Labor, a broad characterisation of the budget as unfair took hold across a wide section of the public.
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April 7, 2015
by Phillip Coorey
Prime Minister Tony Abbott's political caution and Labor leader Bill Shorten's focus on fairness have been attacked by the nation's peak business and industry lobby groups for setting the nation on a path to "economic despair".
In a joint statement, nine groups have urged all sides of politics to show the same courage and zeal for economic reform as shown by the Hawke and Keating governments and the Howard government in order to rebalance the budget and drive economic growth.
"With the Prime Minister signalling a 'dull' budget and the Opposition Leader continuing to focus almost exclusively on budget 'fairness' you could be mistaken for thinking there is no significant problem with the state of the nation's finances," the groups said.
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4:08pm April 8, 2015
The Abbott government's insistence its May budget will not be as harsh as last year's does not appear to be holding sway with the public.
Just weeks from Treasurer Joe Hockey's second budget, consumer confidence has sunk to its lowest level in eight months.
The latest ANZ-Roy Morgan consumer confidence gauge fell 2.3 per cent in the past week, continuing a steady decline since the end of last year.
Mr Hockey was keen to spruik his budget measures on Wednesday as "responsible, reasonable and fair" with a focus on growth, jobs, families and small business.
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Closing the deficit gap
Joe Hockey could raise billions in extra revenue by extending the GST to services provided by offshore companies such as Netflix, and an Australian version of Britain’s “Google’’ tax that is expected to be announced in the May budget.
The Treasurer yesterday flagged a crackdown on tax avoidance by multinational companies in the budget, declaring that tax should be paid in the jurisdiction where it was earned.
Mr Hockey said the government was working on GST integrity measures to require offshore service providers, such as the online entertainment provider Netflix, to register for GST and remit the money to the government.
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Date April 11, 2015 - 12:15AM
Mark Kenny and Julia Medew
Parents who do not vaccinate their children will lose welfare payments of up to $2100 per child under a federal government policy set to be announced before the May budget.
Under changes that could save more than $50 million a year, Social Services Minister Scott Morrison is preparing to scrap a "conscientious objection" provision which allows anti-vaccination parents to still claim welfare benefits including childcare assistance and Family Tax Benefit A.
Fairfax Media understands the Family Tax Benefit A is worth up to $2100 per child.
Parents of about 39,000 children have signed "conscientious objection" forms that certify they have a "personal, philosophical, religious or medical" objection to immunisation. This form, which requires a consultation with a doctor or immunisation nurse, is necessary for the parents to receive Family Tax Benfit A. But access is means tested so not every one of those parents would be receiving the payment.
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Abbott announces 'no jab, no pay' policy
- April 12, 2015 10:58AM
- AAP
NO jab, no pay.
IT'S a catchy title for a policy designed to stop children catching diseases.
The federal government wants to strip childcare and welfare benefits from any parent who refuses to immunise their children.
It's in response to an "escalation of objections" to childhood immunisation under the conscientious objection clause for payments.
That clause will be removed under the policy.
Prime Minister Tony Abbott on Sunday announced the policy, which could leave non-complying parents up to $15,000 worse off.
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Apparent Budget Leaks.
The government is clearing the way for a fresh review into retirement incomes in a bid to deliver more equitable budget savings and wedge Labor over its position on superannuation and Age Pension reform.
With Labor refusing to entertain GST changes that could open the door to a broader tax mix shake-up, Joe Hockey is considering a review to shift the debate towards the interrelationship between the taxation system, the pension and compulsory superannuation.
Assistant Treasurer Josh Frydenberg flagged the likely review yesterday after key crossbenchers welcomed moves by Social Services Minister Scott Morrison to initiate a new debate on tightening up eligibility rules for the pension, including the assets test for wealthy retirees.
Any new review would be anchored around improving equity in the pension and superannuation systems while providing structural budget savings over the long term, putting pressure on Labor after it elevated fairness as a guiding principle for economic reform.
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The federal government is preparing to unwind a $1 billion annual boost to the Age Pension that was announced almost a decade ago amid growing evidence it has failed to achieve its promised benefits despite its soaring cost.
Offering a new compromise on pension reform, the government is willing to reverse John Howard’s generous increase in payment rates for retirees with substantial private assets in addition to their family homes.
The Australian understands the cut in the pension taper rate for wealthier retirees is now a leading target for savings to replace the changes proposed in last year’s budget to the way payments are indexed for all the nation’s 2.4 million age pensioners.
Talks on the compromise are being stepped up this week as social welfare organisations, seniors’ groups and crossbench senators admit the pension is unsustainable in its current form.
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Date April 8, 2015 - 8:31AM
Political reporter
Exclusive
Tax breaks enjoyed by mainly wealthy superannuation account holders are costing the federal budget $6 billion a year in lost revenue, independent analysis shows.
The true extent of the damage to tax receipts by a system which allows tax-free earnings for those over 60 is revealed in research by the Parliamentary Budget Office.
It found that the refund of franking credits on share dividends – which has resulted in people with millions of dollars in self-managed super receiving cash cheques from the Australian Taxation Office at the end of the year – are a net negative on tax receipts.
That's despite the pool of superannuation growing from a few hundred billion dollars just over a decade ago to more than $1.9 trillion today.
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Agreement on pension reform is within reach as the federal government negotiates an $8 billion saving that is gaining qualified support from the Greens as long as it is part of a thorough review of retirement incomes.
The Greens are willing to consider voting for the new savings proposal as the first stage of a wider reform to retirement incomes that will throw the spotlight on generous tax breaks on superannuation.
The move builds support in the Senate to reverse the Howard government’s decision in 2006 to allow wealthier retirees to keep more of their pension payments even as their personal investments rise to as much as $1.1 million in addition to their family homes. In a clear sign a sweeping review is being planned, Treasury secretary John Fraser declared yesterday that the nation needed a fresh look at the interaction between super and tax and the entire welfare system.
“The design of our safety net must protect and serve the most vulnerable — and it is hard not to speak about middle-class welfare and the array of concessions and incentives around the Age Pension, super and housings,” Mr Fraser said. Joe Hockey revealed the government was “quite actively considering” a thorough “stocktake” of the retirement incomes system.
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There is a "compelling" case to split access to health concession cards from pensions, particularly for high income earners, Treasurer Joe Hockey says, while ruling out major retirement income changes in next month's budget.
Mr Hockey says many higher income earners are arranging their financial affairs so that they can get the age pension, purely so that they can, in turn, become eligible for health concession cards, which give them access to cheap healthcare and medicines.
In an interview with AFR Weekend, Mr Hockey foreshadowed there were likely to be "integrity measures" in the budget on superannuation and pensions – measures designed to stop rorting of particular payments.
But at a broader level, retirement incomes policy – covering superannuation, the aged pension, the aged-care system and housing – had become even more complex than it was 10 years ago, he said.
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- Business Spectator
- April 10, 2015 8:29AM
All groups of taxpayers need to be on red alert. Australia, along with many other Western countries, is engaged in a complete review of taxation and pensions. There is simply less money available, so long-term changes must be made.
The “rich” are the most obvious targets — both large corporations and individuals. But there are simply not enough rich individuals to make a significant difference. Accordingly, in Australia, on the individuals’ front we are going to attack the battlers with small amounts of savings. As I will explain below, this will take place because Opposition Leader Bill Shorten and his shadow treasurer Chris Bowen have removed themselves from the debate.
But first, the sight of the Australian chiefs of Google, Microsoft and Apple appearing before our politicians and not performing all that well is a clear sign they will also be hit. We are looking at a global attack on the way multinationals do business.
Many decades ago, global companies would organise their operations so that the local chief of a global company had real authority and would ensure the tax due was fully paid.
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- April 10, 2015 4:12PM
- Daniel Strudwick and wires
- News Corp Australia Network
Netflix to net-tax
THE movies, songs, books and streaming services Australians buy online could be more expensive from next month as Joe Hockey looks to extend the reach of the GST.
Such a move — being dubbed the “Netflix Tax” — would make those products 10 per cent dearer for consumers but could add billions of dollars to the public purse.
Mr Hockey said the plan was an “integrity” measure, not a broadening of the GST; something the Abbott Government has promised it wouldn’t do.
The plan would update the GST to include “intangible services” such as online downloads, which obviously weren’t thought of when the Goods and Services Tax was conceived two decades ago.
It’s been flagged after a week of tax-related hearings in Canberra, including a Senate inquiry into big companies avoiding Australian tax and a meeting of state treasurers discussing a fairer carve-up of GST revenue.
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- The Sunday Telegraph
- April 12, 2015 12:00AM
WHEN Peter Dutton was health minister, colleagues recall he used to privately wonder out aloud why they didn’t just sever the link between the aged pension and the seniors healthcare card.
Not take it away from people who need it, but do something about the incentive to claim the aged pension simply to get the card.
The Willy Wonka style golden ticket of seniors, the card ensures that cashed up retirees can spin into the chemist for $6 a script PBS medicines, even if they are living in million dollar houses with tax-free retirement income and assets beyond that.
Maybe they should just give one to just about every senior in Australia and tell them to stop madly applying for piddling amounts of part-pension just to get one.
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Health Budget Issues.
Date April 7, 2015 - 11:02PM
Harriet Alexander
The peak lobby group for American pharmaceutical manufacturers has been given privileged access to negotiations for a major regional trade pact that could see the cost of medicines skyrocket in Australia.
Public health advocates and business groups are concerned that pharmaceutical giants will be able to advance their commercial interests in the once-in-a-lifetime pact through their seat at the negotiating table, while the details are kept secret from the Australian public.
Some of the measures that Pharmaceutical Research and Manufacturers of America (PhRMA) has publicly lobbied to be included in the Trans Pacific Partnership have subsequently appeared in draft versions of the agreement that have been leaked by Wikileaks.
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- TERRY BARNES
- Herald Sun
- April 09, 2015 12:00AM
WHILE the Abbott Government’s flawed and overreaching plan for mandatory GP co-payments is, in the words of the PM, “dead, buried and cremated”, and the Australian Medical Association keeps warning of “co-payments by stealth” due to Medicare rebate freezes, Health Minister Sussan Ley insists the principle of a “value signal” for those who could afford it is still on the agenda. Good on her!
Medicare ensures affordable access to world-class healthcare, regardless of means. Those on very low incomes and pensions, the elderly or those with chronic conditions do need protection from the financial impact of their health needs. They’re the ones for whom bulk-billed “free” medical services were intended. But for millions of us in good health and on equally healthy incomes who visit a GP just two or three times a year, Medicare should be about fair, not free, access. If a key underlying principle of Medicare is that everyone pays according to their means, surely those with adequate means can pay more as they go.
It’s misguided to say, self-righteously, “I pay my Medicare levy so I’m entitled to bulk-billing”. That levy covers just two-fifths of the cost of Medicare and pharmaceutical benefits. Other taxes and government borrowings do the heavy lifting.
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Pharmacy Issues.
Date April 7, 2015 - 12:40AM
Economics Editor, The Age
Existing rules for pharmacies protect them from price competition.
Do you ever yearn for a return to the days before supermarkets, when shopping meant a separate trip to the greengrocer, the dry goods grocer, the butcher, the baker and the delicatessen?
Me neither. Life has become busy. Two-earner families shop at one-stop shops because we no longer have time for repeated stops.
The rules governing pharmacies are so strange we’ve come to think of them as normal.
Except for chemists, where we are forced to.
"By ensuring that pharmacy ownership is widely spread, the major supermarket chains are prevented from securing the high degree of market dominance they have obtained in other areas such as grocery retailing" it said, apparently under the delusion that we would prefer our groceries to be sold by someone other than the big supermarket chains.
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Media criticism of community pharmacy regulation has continued unabated over the Easter long weekend.
A series of articles in major newspapers has sustained the ongoing public critique of the lobbying power of the Pharmacy Guild of Australia.
The Age’s economics editor Peter Martin posed the question “do you ever yearn for a return to the days before supermarkets, when shopping meant a separate trip to the greengrocer, the dry goods grocer, the butcher, the baker and the delicatessen?”
“Me neither. Life has become busy. Two-earner families shop at one-stop shops because we no longer have time for repeated stops. Except for chemists, where we are forced to”.
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A large majority of pharmacists fear that their business will suffer from the spate of recent media attacks on the profession.
More than 67% of respondents to a Pharmacy News poll said that “recent negative media reports” have “hurt” their business.
Only 19.91% believed there had been no adverse effect from the coverage
In the wake of recent reports from the Australian National Audit Office and the Competition Policy Review, national media has regularly run articles critical of the administration of the Fifth Community Pharmacy Agreement, advocating deregulation of the sector, and even lambasting the riches supposedly accumulated by some pharmacists.
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Community pharmacists are taking the fight over deregulation to their local politicians and media organisations.
Local pharmacists are speaking out to their local media and politicians in a bid to have the Harper Competition Review recommendations reconsidered for the fear of pharmacy deregulation.
Pharmacists have rejected proposals in the review which deregulate the industry and boost competition, making pharmacy a profession about profit not healthcare.
Culburra Beach pharmacist David Heffernan told his NSW local newspaper, South Coast Register, that he believes allowing pharmacies to be set up in supermarket giants endangers patient care.
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- LINDA SILMALIS chief reporter
- The Sunday Telegraph
- April 12, 2015 12:00AM
PHARMACISTS have won a protracted battle to administer flu injections to walk-in customers with the NSW government changing its laws to give chemists a greater role in treating the community.
Under the move, pharmacists will no longer have to hire a nurse or doctor to give the jab with customers able to request a vaccination costing from $24.90 to $30 on the spot from as early as midyear.
However, pharmacists are already lobbying both the State and Federal governments to take on a greater role in treating their customers such as dispensing antibiotics for ailments such urinary tract infections and chlamydia, dressing wounds and sorting medications for hospital discharge patients.
In a move opposed by the NSW Australian Medical Association (AMA), the State government quietly amended its Poisons and Therapeutic Goods laws last month to allow trained pharmacists to administer the flu vaccine to customers aged over 18 years with patient records to be sent back to their local GP.
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Comment:
I also have to say reading all the articles I still have no idea what is actually going to happen with the 2016 Budget (or the Government) at the end of the day.
Nonetheless I am sure there will be lots of fun to observe over the next few weeks.
Enjoy.
David.