wayneL
VIVA LA LIBERTAD, CARAJO!
- Joined
- 9 July 2004
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A policy is no more than a party or Government idea.
Where there is no action, there is no substance and no result. So far the Rabbit Guvmints policies are about absolute nought.
A policy is no more than a party or Government idea.
Where there is no action, there is no substance and no result. So far the Rabbit Guvmints policies are about absolute nought.
You believe pollie promises?
Personally, I don't care about promises, I just want good policy. Promises get you elected, good policy doesn't.
Had the worlds best treasurer (the GOOSE ) told the truth about the deficit being $48 billion instead of $18 billion, then perhaps Abbott may not have found it necessary to break some promises.
The GOOSE said the budget was in surplus before the election then it suddenly rose to $11 billion then to $18 billion when in fact it was $48 billion.
I mean to say just how could the worlds greatest treasurer be so far out.
And then don't forget Penny Wrong who made errors totaling $123 billion over her period as finance Minister.
Do not disagree. But you harp on about the past noco. It is not productive but only, in most cases, to deflect attention away from the new Governments innabilities. The blame game is zero sum Champ.
So there is some debt there but it is minor compared to company and personal debt. To borrow for good projects for the future means that those benefitting in the future also contribute. The Government needs to get over this mentality and do something for youth in particular. How about bringing in some form of National Service, would substancially reduce dole numbers and may turn thier lives around and improve discipline.
Now instead of going crook noco, over to you, your turn for some positive ideas with some substance.
For you to try and make such comparisons between Government and company debt. shows your ignorance in business management.
"... your ignorance... " if you have no answers you attack the man,
as earlier pointed out.
With such a negative approach I wonder if you understand management at all. And how DID my example indicate ignorance?
The Green/Labor left wing socialist should start thinking of the national interest and stop blocking saving in the senate.....Savings of some $6billion which they proposed themselves before the election ....another broken promise by Shorten.
Shorten also agreed to the construction of the East west freeway and the unions changed his mind for him..
You cannot compare company debt to government debt...that is just crazy talk. Companies can borrow for a certain project like setting up the infrastructure for a mining venture which eventually pays off the debt.
As you well know, the stupid Labor party borrowed to the kilts on hare brain schemes which are still costing the tax payers $1 billion a month in interest.
The blame for all our financial mess is squarely at the feet of the Labor Party just like it is in Queensland....I am still waiting for Palaszczuk to tell us how she is going to pay back the $80 billion debt left by the Beattie/ government.
For you to try and make such comparisons between Government and company debt. shows your ignorance in business management.
I don't fully agree with that
Good policy is usually attractive to a lot of voters. It might not sway those rusted on to a particular party, but policies that let parents think the future will be better for the children, that pass the pub test on fairness, they generally garner respect and enough swing voters to be enacted.
I don't fully agree with that
Good policy is usually attractive to a lot of voters. It might not sway those rusted on to a particular party, but policies that let parents think the future will be better for the children, that pass the pub test on fairness, they generally garner respect and enough swing voters to be enacted.
but the Abbott Govt has woven a straight jacket around itself by demonising debt.
So Government investing in infrastructure, say a new port, road, rail line, airport, these are not investments that eventually pay themselves off? It's what happened in Australia pretty much since federation till the dud idea of getting the private sector involved and inflated user charges.
On the face of it that makes sense, Im one more in favour of public ownership of utilities for a number the of reasons you've highlighted.
Two questions
1/ I dont think that accounts for the whole reason cost if business is so high here. Can you think of othet factors
2/ How does Oz compare with other similarly privatized economies including US & UK?
and selling off natural resources like there's no tomorrow.
The rate of return that we modelled in the study was 12 per cent - that probably wouldn't cut it when you're talking about private investment, not to say you couldn't find some financial model that would make it work, but at the current cost for this technology, it's not something that a private company would invest in
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-04-24/latest-study-finds-alinta-solar-thermal-power/6418680
And therein lies the great trouble with government's aversion to debt.
The Port Augusta power station (coal) is closing in the next decade or so regardless, and that's a huge blow to the local economy. And here's a proposal for a new power station (solar) to replace both the energy supply and at least some of the employment created by the present plant.
Private sector can't or won't do it at 12%? Government could do it for half that at most.
I don't blame Alinta by the way, it's the flawed overall structure that is to blame. First the creation of unnecessary financial risk in what is otherwise a very stable industry (electricity) and secondly, using that unnecessarily created risk as justification for higher rates of return. Meanwhile, the real economy gets screwed by higher than necessary prices for an input cost that affects practically every business and household.
There's a proper place for private enterprise certainly, but I'd prefer that it didn't involve rent seeking via critical infrastructure at the expense of the entire productive economy.
Note that I'm not singling out Alinta in that, just using the situation in Port Augusta as an example. The sad thing is, government is more likely to throw money at "make work" schemes or keeping the coal plant running than to address the bigger picture without costing taxpayers a cent.
A new report estimates that more than half the benefits of negative gearing and capital gains tax discounts go to the top 10 per cent of income earners.
The report by GetUp and The Australia Institute, using economic modelling by NATSEM, finds that over a third of negative gearing tax benefits went to the top 10 per cent, while almost three quarters (73 per cent) of capital gains tax (CGT) discounts went to that top income bracket.
The report estimates that negative gearing is costing the Federal Government about $3.7 billion a year in lost revenue, while the 50 per cent capital gains tax discount wipes off $4 billion.
It finds that 56 per cent of this lost revenue, or $4.3 billion, goes to the top 10 per cent of income earners, with just over two-thirds going to the top fifth of households.
The Australia Institute's senior economist Matt Grudnoff told ABC News Online that the typical negatively geared property investor earns substantially more than the typical person who does not use the tax break.
"The median taxable income for those who don't negatively gear is $38,500 a year, whereas the median taxable income for people who do negatively gear is about 45 per cent higher than that," he said.
More at...
http://www.abc.net.au/news/2015-04-...al-gains-tax-discount-benefit-wealthy/6428202
As if we didn't know...
Negative gearing and capital gains tax discount benefit wealthy by $4.3b: report
Reserve Bank calculations suggest the top 20 per cent of earners owe the bulk of investor housing debt (60 per cent). The bottom 20 per cent owe just 2 per cent.
It is disturbing that a government minister would prefer the assessment of the Property Council to that of the Reserve Bank – all the more so when that minister is in charge of social services, the department responsible for working out who really is a battler…
The ANU Tax and Transfer Policy Institute says dumping negative gearing could save up to $7 billion and fund “Reagan-style tax cuts”. The US president Ronald Reagan moved against negative gearing in 1986.
What do we get for it? Very few new homes. The more popular negative gearing has become, the less it has been used to build new homes and the more it has been used to bid up the price of existing ones. Back in the 1980s, every fifth new investor loan built a home. It is now every 15th.
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