Julia
In Memoriam
- Joined
- 10 May 2005
- Posts
- 16,986
- Reactions
- 1,973
So for Christ sake stop complaining about what you think you should have or what you have not got in comparison to the other person who has been a lot wiser in the way he or she has lived their past life.
Reading through this last page, I also had the above impression. All this fuss about a $7 co-payment!
In NZ (which, incidentally although struck harder by the GFC and the ChCh earthquake) is now moving upward, the opposite direction to Australia) there have never been free doctor consultations. Most people pay around $30. There is no evidence this has caused any adverse effect to primary care, seen children go unvaccinated or any of the other disasters that Labor and its acolytes are predicting will occur here.
You might instead start to worry when taxes rise and things really do get tough as the country borrows more and more to pay the interest on the debt.
Having read all the waffle from the main contenders in this discussion, I am more than satisfied you will never keep every one happy all the time, half the time or none of the time at all.
Most people are a greedy jealous bunch......why should he get more than me?......why should I work past 65 and not get the aged pension when I have worked hard and paid taxes all my life......Why should I work at all when I can get the dole or a disability pension ( in many cases not entitled to it)?........Why shouldn't I go to the pub every night and pi$$ my money against the wall......smoke my head off and become a burden to the tax payer because I have a liver problem or lung cancer?......Who said I can't go to a casino or pub and send my savings down the slot of a poker machine and when it is all gone apply for social security and a cheap housing commission unit......Yeah...don't worry about where the money comes from or who has to pay for it......She'll be right mate as we so often hear.
Well as I said ,reset the tax levels back to sustainable levels, as they were pre mining boom. Everyone has had fun, now back to reality as per the normal grind years. Obviously the thresholds would have to be higher to reflect higher average wages, but as you say maybe the tax rates shouldn't have been dropped.
Also welfare payments increased at unsustainable rates, over recent years, that needs to be brought back into line also.
We can't change history, but it doesn't mean we can't learn and change the future.
IF you don't believe people have the right to spend their money as they choose then what do you propose to do? Should we remove pokie machines and close all the casinos? Make all forms of gambling illegal?
Have you checked up on that? I am so over it. FFS
If I find you are wrong Banco, I will be all over you forever, I am so pi$$ed of with this budget missinformation. I don't forget and i don't forgive, also I expect to be treated the same way.
So We will check out that statement!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
Well two minutes later first google entry.
Those who have special health needs, such as those with Health Assessments or those on Chronic Disease Management programs, will be exempt from the patient contribution.
Well before this times out, it looks like me and you are going to have issues.lol
Sounds like another brain fart from labor as GG would say.
I hate bad language but you really make me angry, the problem with ill founded scare tactics, it sends us all down the chute.
Also diminishes your credibility.
I don't think it's absurd of itself. Medical research, properly targeted is absolutely necessary and should not be left up to the pharmaceutical industry.FWIW I think Labor and the Greens took the wrong tack by opposing the co-payment outright. The argument should have been on how it was spent. The Medical Research fund idea is absurd.
Not sure about that. Shouldn't the public hospital budget be a separate issue? Aren't the hospitals run by the States? The $7 going to hospitals would seem to increase an already complicated system. I'd prefer to see it simply becoming part of supporting Medicare.If the money went direct to public hospitals the copayment is justifiable.
I don't disagree with that. Would you include in that a reduction in the tax free threshold?Modest tax increases across the board is more justifiable than hitting the neediest people. That way everyone contributes. I think that could be justified as long as it is seen that all sectors make a contribution.
That may be the perception amongst some, but we need to remember that it's business (and government, of course) that provides jobs and if investment conditions are too onerous, companies will just go elsewhere.Axing the 1.5% reduction in company tax (where the average percentage rate actually paid by corporations is around 22%) would signal that the government believes the corporate sector should pay as well. At the moment the impression is that "the big end of town" is not pulling their weight.
Because, syd, as you well know, he was reckless enough to make such a totally unnecessary pre-election promise and is reluctant to be seen to be breaking yet another promise. Of course the compensation is no longer relevant or needed.So why has Abbott chosen to repeal the carbon tax, but not the associated tax cuts and welfare increases? He's chosen to give up over $7B in revenue yet not chosen the easiest and most defensible course of action ie the tax is gone so the compensation provided is no longer needed.
I don't think it's absurd of itself. Medical research, properly targeted is absolutely necessary and should not be left up to the pharmaceutical industry.
Not sure about that. Shouldn't the public hospital budget be a separate issue? Aren't the hospitals run by the States? The $7 going to hospitals would seem to increase an already complicated system. I'd prefer to see it simply becoming part of supporting Medicare.
I don't disagree with that. Would you include in that a reduction in the tax free threshold?
How about increasing the GST? Or broadening the base?
That may be the perception amongst some, but we need to remember that it's business (and government, of course) that provides jobs and if investment conditions are too onerous, companies will just go elsewhere.
Because, syd, as you well know, he was reckless enough to make such a totally unnecessary pre-election promise and is reluctant to be seen to be breaking yet another promise. Of course the compensation is no longer relevant or needed.
Mr Abbott made so many promises which he had no need to make in the first place. Labor was covered in opprobrium, there was obviously going to be a change of government, yet he continued with the sloganeering (is that a word?) and the gratuitous promises.
IF you don't believe people have the right to spend their money as they choose then what do you propose to do? Should we remove pokie machines and close all the casinos? Make all forms of gambling illegal?
Do we close all the pubs and bottle shops. maybe back to prohibition?
Would you like to quote some stats as to the level of fraud within the welfare system? How does that compare with the fraud going on in the financial services industry? CBA and the silver doughnut would put any avid welfare cheater to shame.
The level of housing commission units has been declining as a % of total housing, so in relative terms there's less of the population receiving that benefit.
As for being greedy and jealous, can you point to statements within this discussion that show this to be the case?
Makes sense, if in fact research is funded by Medicare. I'm not sure that's the case. You might like to expand on this.Indeed yes, but under the Coalition plan it is old people who will contribute the most because they see the doctor more and use more medicines.
If you want a fairer system of financing a medical research fund, then increase the Medicare levy so that everyone contributes. The money could then be distributed immediately to those currently doing research and not in 10 years.
Agree, but that's not really what we're discussing here. There's a case to be made for just local government plus a federal government, bypassing the states. Might be worth starting a thread on this.Yes, the public hospital system is run by the States, but they need to be run Federally, coordinated with the rest of the Health system run by the Federal government, instead of the States and territories doing their own thing and putting their hands out to the Feds during COAG.
That's still messy. What about the NZ system where all income is taxable, including pensions, no tax free threshold, and the levels of taxation are appropriately adjusted?Just a modest increase in the tax rates across the board. Lowering the threshold hits lower paid people more than others as does increasing the GST rate or broadening the base. Taxing super as a proportion of the highest marginal rate paid by the taxpayer would help correct the disproportionate benefits gained by upper income earners.
That happens with a very few companies. The company tax rate is amongst the highest in the world. You have ignored my point about needing to be careful not to provide a disincentive to companies to operate here because of the jobs factor.As I said, companies are on a good wicket now, because most of them don't pay the amount of tax that they should, by reason of avoidance measures such as cost shifting to foreign tax havens.
Presumably we should take the above as comment, rather than any questions you actually expect any of us to answer.So rather than come out presenting a rational argument as to why he's going to remove the CT compensation, he's instead come up with a load of poorly designed policy. That's not Labor's fault. That's not the Senate's fault. As Rudd was knee capped by a lot of his stoopid promises, so too is Abbott. Thye are own goals and the sooner people stop trying to lay the blame elsewhere the sooner the Government might actually take ownership of the problems.
I'm sure there'd still be some stupid opposition of policies even if they were all reasonable and economically rational, but the fact is a lot of the current budget policies aren't very rational. As Abbott and the Liberals have often used the household budget metaphor, if you have 1 area of spending costing 2.8% of your annual spending, and another at 15%, which is easier to cut back on the provide the easier path to spending less? Yet the Govt has chosen to target income and disability support spending over clamping down on spending on the aged which are the above levels of Govt spending. Not one tax expenditure was touched in the budget.
If you can argue that the medical research fund is good policy, then why wait 6 to 7 years before it begins to fund any research? That's what Hockey has provided as the current timeline to hit the $20B target before any research is funded.
How does that compare with CSIRO funding cuts that are leading to the closure of some research of highly infectious diseases? When / If funding becomes available in 6 or so years it's highly unlikely the talent we've lost will return.
Makes sense, if in fact research is funded by Medicare. I'm not sure that's the case. You might like to expand on this.
That's still messy. What about the NZ system where all income is taxable, including pensions, no tax free threshold, and the levels of taxation are appropriately adjusted?
Julia's comment got me interested to look up the NZ tax system, as usual they appear to be advanced compared to Oz.
True, I am not a tax law specialist, but NZ just appears to have a simpler system that runs at a lower cost to us.
I also really love their accident compensation system.
Instead of following their lead we have followed the US and now we have the overhead of lawyers fees and ambulance chasing adds on TV.
Capital gains & dividends
Capital gains: generally not on New Zealand investments but applies to foreign debt and equity investments
Do your own research next time Syd.
Total tax take is substantially higher in nz. In addition, the effective tax rate on those with low income is very burdensome.
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