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A desperate vote-buying budget in Australia
By Mike Head
12 May 2004
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Facing a disaster in Iraq and plunging opinion poll ratings,
the Howard government last night delivered a blatant vote-buying
budget, offering unprecedented cash handouts and tax cuts in a
bid to win this years scheduled general election, which
could be called as early as August.
Never before has an Australian government offered to hand out
so much cash in such a short time. It plans to immediately start
sending out cheques for $600 per child to families who qualify
for its so-called family tax package. Another $600 bribe will
follow after July 1, that is, just before the election.
The recipients of this largesse have been carefully targetted.
Over the next five years, by one means or another, the government
will divert $37 billion to the pockets of upper and middle income
earners, whose votes it is desperately seeking. In this coming
year alone, the spending spree will total $5.3 billion, reducing
the projected budget surplus of $7 billion to less than $2 billion.
Treasurer Peter Costellos budgethis ninth since
1996has a vicious class content. For the first time in history,
tax cuts are being offered exclusively to the wealthiest layers
of society. Some 70 percent of the population, those earning less
than $52,000 a year, will get no tax relief at all.
Nothing could more clearly express the governments contempt
and indifference toward the vast majority of the population. Those
who will get nothing include students, sole parents, aged and
disabled pensioners, single working people and most families without
children.
Worst off will be the 4.1 million people22.6 percent
of the populationwho are living in poverty, according to
a Senate report issued just two months ago. Through a combination
of the tax system and the harsh means tests for social welfare
benefits, many low-income earners will continue to face notorious
poverty trapspunitive tax rates of more than
70 percent for any increase in their incomes. In addition, they
face ever-escalating everyday bills, because of the governments
highly regressive Goods and Services Tax.
By contrast, high-income earners will receive a bonanza, totalling
$3.8 billion by 2006. Everyone earning more than $52,000 per year
will benefit from tax cuts, with those above $80,000 taking the
biggest sliceup to $84 a week for a wealthy couple. In addition,
high-income earners will have their superannuation surcharge dropped
from 14.5 percent to 7.5 percent by 2006-07. The richest layers
have already had substantial income tax cuts since the government
imposed the GST in 2000. By one estimate, those earning more than
$90,000 a year have now enjoyed an 18 percent tax cut since 2000.
This obscene redistribution of wealth has been financed through
the gutting of public and social services and the restructuring
of society along user pays lines. Last nights
budget continued the process. It cements the demolition of universal
access to Medicare bulk-billing, which used to enable patients
to see doctors without paying up-front fees; the transfer of billions
of dollars to private schools at the expense of public schools;
the imposition of 25 percent fee hikes on university students;
and the slashing of spending on pensions and welfare benefits.
In a revealing comment, Prime Minister John Howard boasted
that the budget was the best since the firsta
reference to the governments inaugural 1996 budget, which
delivered devastating blows to public health, education, housing
and welfare programs.
As well as the rich, the other primary recipients of the governments
cynical cash for votes ploy are struggling middle-income
families with young children. Treasurer Costello claimed that
dual-income families earning around $52,000 to $70,000 could gain
more than $100 a week through a combination of tax cuts and a
family assistance package. It is these layersdubbed
by the media aspirational votersthat the government
is anxiously wooing for its political survival.
In addition to the straight $1,200 family cash handouts, Costello
is offering baby bonuses, commencing at $3,000 and
rising to $5,000, for every newborn child. Altogether, his family
assistance package will cost $19.2 billion over five years.
It is far from certain, however, that this transparent electoral
bribery will succeed. Opinion polls have consistently shown that
ordinary people want additional spending on public health and
education, rather than tax cuts. For most of the targetted families,
Costellos handouts will be more than swallowed up by the
crippling costs of private health insurance, private school fees,
essential social services, public transport and utilities, not
to speak of higher mortgage and credit card interest rates.
Many of the targetted families will not see either of the $600
cheques promised before the election, because they allegedly owe
the government more than that. What Costello did not mention in
his budget speech is that their payments will be eaten up by repayments
they have previously been ordered to make under the governments
bungled family tax benefits scheme.
Moreover, the baby bonuses will replace a failed
scheme to financially encourage mothers to stay at home with their
children. Howards 1996 vision of a return to a family model
based on a male breadwinner and a non-working housewife has collapsed
under the weight of economic necessity, with most families unable
to survive on one income.
Cynicism will only be intensified by the puny promised increases
in the number of child care and after-school care places. Because
both parents need to work, the demand for these services has soared
in recent years. Between 2000 and 2002 alone, there was a 40 percent
increase in demand for after-school care places, leaving a waiting
list estimated at 30,000. Similar queues exist for child care
places, even for mothers who register their babies before birth.
Yet, the budget promises that there will be just an extra 1,500
family day care places and 30,000 after-school places, and only
after five years.
For elderly people and their families, the budget is just as
duplicitous. Under the guise of improving conditions in aged care
facilities, the government is doling out some $2 billion over
five years to the nursing home barons, such as Doug Moran. They
will receive $3,500 per resident to address fire and other safety
defects, plus a $2.34 a day hike in their residents fees.
The most spectacular spending boost is for the military and
the intelligence agencies to step up the war on terrorism.
This is the governments other overriding election focus.
Amid worsening social inequality, it is counting on diverting
mounting political discontent by fuelling fears of terrorist atrocities,
while strengthening political surveillance and the repressive
capacities of the domestic security agencies to deal with dissent
and unrest.
The defence budget will rise by $1.8 billion over the next
four years, with military spending in 2004-05 to top $16 billion
for the first time. Allocations for the war on Iraqwhich
has already cost $776.3 million according to the budget paperswill
continue until at least June 2005, with further allocations under
review. This confirms that Howard intends to keep troops
in Iraq well after the supposed US transfer of sovereignty to
a puppet Iraqi regime.
Funding for counter-terrorism measures$755
million over five yearsdwarfs the previously leaked figure
of $400 million. The lions share will go to the same intelligence
agenciesthe Australian Security Intelligence Organisation
(ASIO), the Australian Secret Intelligence Service (ASIS), the
Defence Intelligence Organisation (DIO) and the Office of National
Assessments (ONA)that the government relied upon for its
lying claims that Iraq possessed threatening stockpiles of weapons
of mass destruction.
ASIO, the domestic spy agency, will have its funding increased
by $127 million, taking its staffing level to a record 1,000 by
2006. It will then have doubled its size from the 530 officers
it had in 1998. ASIOs capacity to use its new powers, including
detention and interrogation without trial, will thus be greatly
enhanced, further eroding basic democratic rights.
In the name of increasing overseas aid, the government has
dedicated record sums to its neo-colonial military and policing
operations in the Pacific region. Its pitifully small aid budget
will rise to $2.1 billion in 2004-05, but almost a third will
be spent on the police, prison warders, finance officials and
highly-paid consultants being sent to take control of the economies
and legal systems of Papua New Guinea and the Solomon Islands.
By contrast, aid to devastated and impoverished East Timor will
be cut from $42.5 million to $39.9 million, further exposing the
lie that the Howard government intervened there militarily in
1999 for humanitarian reasons.
The governments vote-buying tactics are so flagrant that
the normally compliant corporate media, while largely praising
the tax cuts and handouts, resorted to headlines such as Mother
of all bribes to woo voters (Australian), Mother
of all spending sprees (Sydney Morning Herald) and
Costellos 37 bn vote grab (Australian Financial
Review). Even Rupert Murdochs Sydney Daily Telegraph
editorial commented that cynics would conclude that behind the
governments professed desire to make life easier for battling
families, its real motivation was to prime itself to win
the next election through tax and spending largesse.
The other striking feature of budget night was the response
of the Labor Party opposition. While offering unspecified promises
to broaden the tax cuts, Labor leader Mark Latham and shadow treasurer
Simon Crean immediately pledged to pass the budget. In previous
years, the Laborites have threatened to block aspects of the budget
in the Senate, where the government lacks a majority. Lathams
pledge demonstrates the degree of bipartisanship that exists,
within the parliamentary establishment as a whole, on the reshaping
of Australian society according to market forces.
In fact, Latham vowed to outdo the Howard government in slashing
public spending. He insisted that a Labor government would guarantee
to keep the budget in surplus for the next three years, after
identifying $8 billion worth of waste to eliminate.
Labors pledge ensures that this deeply inequitable budget
will be rubberstamped by parliament, regardless of any token amendments
moved by Labor, the Australian Democrats or Greens.
See Also:
Senate committee finds four
million Australians living in poverty
[20 April 2004]
Australian government uses
Madrid bombings to justify further police-state powers
[7 April 2004]
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