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Why both Labor and Liberal will provide billions for tax cuts,
but not for social services
By Nick Beams, Socialist Equality Party candidate for the
Senate in NSW
29 October 2007
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Why have both major parties in the 2007 election campaign committed
themselves to multi-billion dollar tax cuts, when successive opinion
polls indicate that an overwhelming majority of voters believe
these resources should be devoted to hospitals, education and
other social infrastructure?
The answer provides a revealing insight into the vast changes
that have taken place in the very structure of the Australian
economyand society more generallyduring the past quarter
century. It also underscores the practical necessity of the socialist
program advanced by the Socialist Equality Party.
Prime Minister John Howard unveiled the Liberals $34
billion tax-cut package on the first day of the campaign. As expected,
just three days later, Labor leader Kevin Rudd announced
his partys $31 billion tax-cut plan. The only difference
was that Labor delayed the introduction of a cut in the very top
rates, with the additional revenue going to finance a tax rebate
for parents who purchase a laptop computer for their children,
billed as part of Rudds education revolution.
Multi-billion tax-cut packages have become a regular feature
of the Howard governments budgets over the last three years,
with its tax revenues exceeding budgetary expectations, largely
as a result of the export boom to China. The aim has been to redistribute
these resources up the income scale, with the top income earners
receiving by far the greatest benefits.
For working class families, the tax cuts have failed to keep
up with ever-increasing costs, particularly increased mortgage
repayments, a combination of the escalation in house prices and
five interest rate rises in the last three years.
Figures published in the Sydney Morning Herald last
Thursday show that, taking into account the effects of tax cuts
and increased mortgage payments since the 2004 election, taxpayers
with earnings of $70,000 and below were between $13 and $93 per
week worse off. With the median household income [the income level
with equal numbers above and below] at around $66,000 per year,
this means that many home-buyers are worse off, some by a considerable
amount.
Little wonder that Howards successive tax cut initiatives
have failed to stem the rapid decline in popular support for his
government.
In 2004 an AC Neilsen poll found that 22 percent favoured a
tax cut, while 75 percent wanted increased spending on services.
In 2005, 29 percent wanted a tax cut and 69 percent supported
increased public spending. The results were almost exactly the
same in 2006: 29 percent for a tax cut and 68 percent for increased
spending. And the majority for increased spending appears to be
growing. More than 30,000 people responded to a phone-in on the
Channel 7 Sunrise program conducted the day after
Howards latest tax cut promise, and 90 percent preferred
increased spending.
If parliamentary democracy really functioned in the manner
described by its apologists, then one would find the Labor Party
strenuously advocating increasing spending on social services
and infrastructure, expressing the will of the people.
Instead, Labors position on this area of policy reflects
the coalitionism between the two major parties characterising
every other major issue.
How is this to be explained, when it is obvious that Labor
would stand to gain electorally if it went with majority opinion?
A major factor is the role that big business, wealthy elites
and the media organisations play in setting the policy agenda
of both parties. In 2005, the Business Council of Australia produced
a major report calling for a reform of the taxation
system to lower the tax rates for upper income levels.
According to BCA chief Hugh Morgan, national economies, like
businesses, were in competition with each other. Thus governments
could not remain wedded to tax structure and rates without
considering their impact on their economys competitiveness
internationally. This was especially so under the present
conditions, where capital was mobile.
In other words, if tax rates were too high, the major corporations
and their high paid executives would move elsewhere. The BCA called
for a decline in the personal income tax rate on high earners
to 30 per cent, in line with company rates.
Similar views were voiced in a report prepared two and a half
years ago by Liberal front-bencher and prime ministerial aspirant
Malcolm Turnbull, reputedly the richest man in parliament, who
has close connections to Sydneys financial elites.
The attitude prevailing among significant sections of these
layers was personified by the late media baron, Kerry Packer,
who became a specialist in tax avoidance, but was habitually lauded
by both sides of the parliamentary divide. Almost three decades
ago, the eminent accounting academic Professor Russell Matthews
explained that the problem was not so much getting the rich to
pay more tax, as getting them to pay any tax at all.
The privatisation of social services
However, pressure from the financial and corporate elites is
by no means the only factor.
Far-reaching structural changes, which have seen the penetration
of the free market into every area of social life,
have spawned powerful interests opposed to any additional public
funding of health, education and other social services.
Large global corporations, driven by the search for higher
and higher profits, have entered areas once considered completely
outside the realm of profit-making. This was the result of the
privatisation program initiated under the Hawke-Keating Labor
governments of 1983-1996 and deepened under Howard.
Consider the issue of hospital spending. Last Thursday, the
Australian Medical Association (AMA) published a report on the
state of the public hospital system. It found that while more
than half the population depended on the public hospital system,
hospitals have not been given sufficient resources ... to
meet their needs threatening the quality and the safety
of the system.
The AMA report revealed that public hospital capacity had been
cut by nearly 60 percent over the past 20 years and that cuts
to hospital bed numbers have been too deep and the risk of systemic
breakdowns is too high.
The hospital system was under constant pressure, operating
for too much of the time at unsafe levels of capacity
utilisation (above 85 percent). In large teaching hospitals, the
situation was even worse, with capacity utilisation more likely
to be 95 percent or even above.
Less than two-thirds of emergency department patients classified
as urgent were seen within the recommended period of 30 minutes,
and there was no evidence of any recent improvement. As well,
there had been a marked deterioration in recent years
in the admission of people for so-called elective surgery.
Let us imagine, for example, that each of the 220 or so major
hospitals was allocated an additional $100 million, making a total
health expenditure of $22 billion, this would represent a huge
leap towards resolving all of these problems. And it would still
leave at least $12 billion out of Howards tax cut budget
for expenditure in other areas.
But such an injection of funds, leading to the provision of
a top-class health service, freely available to all, would immediately
arouse what Karl Marx once called the furies of private
interest. It would strike a major blow, for example, at
the private health insurance industry, which has rapidly expanded
as more and more people have been forced to take out coverage
due to the decline in public facilities.
Private health insurance, now covering about 44 percent of
the population, is big business. Expenditure on health care was
more than $87 billion in 2004, with insurance premiums far outstripping
the general rate of inflation. In the 10 years to 2010, premiums
are expected to increase by 86 percent, compared to an expected
increase in the consumer price index of 27 percent over the same
period.
If increased resources were devoted to the public health system,
the health insurance industry would collapse, as would the profits
of the private hospital industry.
Likewise in another vitally important area of social serviceschild
care.
In the space of little more than a decade, child care has been
transformed from a community-based service into a multi-million
dollar industry, with at least one major corporation extending
its operations internationally.
The first crucial step in this transformation was the Hawke
Labor governments decision in 1991 to open up funding of
the industry to the profit sector. Previously, non-profit services
received government funding.
Following these initial steps, in 1997 the Howard government
abolished direct grants to community centres, introducing a new
system under which payments were made directly to parents. This
measure was accompanied by the usual free market rhetoric
about freedom of choice. Its real purpose was to open
the way for private capital to move in. As a result, some 70 percent
of the industry is now privately owned. In comparison, in 1991
85 percent of child care was provided by non-profit organisations.
And a very lucrative business it has turned out to be. Shareholder
companies involved in child care only appeared on the stock market
in 2000. But by 2003, it had become a $3 billion industry. As
Business Review Weekly reported on November 17 of that
year, with profit margins of up to 50 percent and $1.6 billion
of taxpayers money flowing into the sector each year, everyone
wants a piece of the child-care action. The two biggest
companies listed on the stock marketABC Learning Centres
and Peppercorn Management Groupwere recording performance
figures that are the envy of the market.
Since then ABC Learning has taken over Peppercorn and extended
its operations to the United States to become the largest privately-owned
child-care provider in the world. Its annual report for 2006 showed
revenue of $631 million, an increase of almost 150 percent for
the year, an operating profit of more than $81 million, up more
than 86 percent, with earnings per share rising by more than 20
percent. The number of child-care places provided by the company
increased from almost 23,000 in 2004 to more than 112,000 in 2006.
The provision of top quality child care is a basic necessity
in todays society. But any proposal to fund it with government
resources would meet with frenzied opposition from powerful business
interests whose profits depend on it remaining in private hands.
The same is true of many other areas. Universities have increasingly
been turned into businessesa process that, again, was begun
under the Labor government, with the introduction of fees for
overseas students and HECS. It was also accelerated under the
Howard government, which made huge cuts in university funding
in 1996.
Public schools, too, have been progressively run down, resulting
in more and more parents deciding to send their children to private
schools, sometimes suffering considerable financial hardship,
in order to ensure the best possible education. If only a portion
of the government resources being used to finance tax cuts were
diverted to expand top quality education, then these sacrifices
would be unnecessary.
But neither Liberal nor Labor will implement such measures
because they are both beholden to the corporate interests that
have taken control of all these social services.
In the past, reformists of all stripes used to insist, against
the socialists, that social advancement would take place by means
of the welfare state. It was not necessary, they argued, to tackle
and break corporate control of industry and finance. Now, in the
first decade of the twenty-first century, history has settled
that argument. Ensuring the provision of the most basic social
necessitiesincluding hospitals and health services, education
and child carefor the entire population has become a revolutionary
issue. It involves nothing less than the complete reorganisation
of society from top to bottom, ending the domination of private
profit, and replacing it with a social system in which top priority
is given to the satisfaction of human need.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
How to fight militarism and war....
Nick Beams addresses SEP election meetings
[26 October 2007]
Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
2007 federal election statement
A socialist program to fight war, social inequality and the
assault on democratic rights
[16 October 2007]
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