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Federal budget 2016: Scott Morrison signals tough approach focused on spending cuts

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Treasurer's tough budget talk

There'll be no fantasy funding according to Scott Morrison who says we have to live within our means. Courtesy ABC News 24.

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Treasurer Scott Morrison has given the clearest signal yet his election year budget will place spending restraint front and centre, with the prospect of "big bang" tax reform rapidly receding.

The Turnbull government is whittling down the number of tax changes that could be adopted in the May 3 budget, with a rise in the GST already off the table and a plan to offer simplified tax returns - which would have raised as much as $6 billion in revenue to pay for tax cuts - now apparently off the table.

Tweaks to superannuation tax concessions are still expected to feature in the budget but major cuts to personal or company tax are now considered unlikely - leaving the government little room to move as it attempts to plot a course back to surplus in the medium term while simultaneously seeking to support economic growth.

Treasurer Scott Morrison is preparing to hand down his first budget.

Treasurer Scott Morrison is preparing to hand down his first budget. Photo: Alex Ellinghausen

And Mr Morrison, in an interview with the ABC's Radio National on Friday, confirmed his focus would be on expenditure restraint rather than revenue raising, setting up a clear contrast in economic management with Labor heading into an expected July 2 poll.

The Treasurer also brushed aside suggestions of a royal commission into the banking sector, and Labor calls to mandate the use of Australian steel in infrastructure projects after South Australian steel maker Arrium entered voluntary administration.

Mr Morrison labelled the proposal from Opposition Leader Bill Shorten a "knee-jerk reaction" and pointed out that an $80 million spend on steel for a rail project in Victoria had already been brought forward to support the steel maker.

"What you don't is you don't get involved in a knee-jerk reaction, the sort of thing that says 'lets tear up our trade agreements, lets tear up the jobs in the new economy', to go and play politics with an issue in South Australia," he said.

However Industry Minister Christopher Pyne, who is South Australian, told Nine on Friday that state and territory governments should be using federal taxpayers dollars to buy Australian steel where possible.

"State and territory governments using federal taxpayers dollars for construction and any federal government projects should use Australian steel," he said.

Responding to an analysis in The Australian that found seven spending programs, including the National Disability Insurance Scheme and higher education spending, would wipe out $400 billion from the budget over the next decade, Mr Morrison said he did not think Australia had blown its chance to live within its means.

"Projects like the NDIS, projects like ensuring that our defence force get the support they need, things like this put a lot of pressure on the budget and that means you have to get the discipline to ensure you control your expenditure going forward," he said.

His mid-year budget update late last year had, he said, demonstrated government spending was on a downward trajectory as a share of the economy and that would continue.

"The way you deal with this budget challenge is not to tax more and spend more, the way you deal with it is you get your expenditure under control and you create the room in the economy for private businesses to grow and employ people," he said.

"Our path sees expenditure as a share of the economy falling over the budget and the forward estimates, that will be the trajectory we seek to continue."

He described Labor claims that policies such as the NDIS and Gonski school funding were fully funded over 10 years were "fantasy".

On changes to the tax system, Mr Morrison said it was possible to change the tax mix without raising the overall tax burden.

He dodged questions about whether a proposal for simplified tax deductions had been dumped, and whether company tax cuts would be announced but deferred.

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230 comments

  • That's this week's policy, I wonder what next week's will be?

    Commenter
    Peter
    Location
    The Land of Lattes
    Date and time
    April 08, 2016, 9:45AM
    • Peter

      It won't be :

      More money for Education.

      More money for the NDIS.

      More money for Health.

      It will be :

      Tax cuts for big business (eg Google, News Corp and other Corporations who pay little tax).

      No investigation into Banks.

      Screw the low paid.

      Commenter
      A Green
      Location
      Australia
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:01AM
    • Next week's plan is:
      1) Blame Labor
      2) Blame Greens
      3) Blame LGBTI community
      4) Blame Refugees
      5) Blame Students
      6) Blame Homeless
      7) Blame Belgium Intelligence Services
      8) Blame Gillian Triggs
      9) Blame Scientists
      10) Blame the weather
      11) Blame iron ore prices

      This government just reminds me of Jake Blues in the Blues Brothers when he finally comes face to face with the "Mystery Woman" (Carrie Fisher and has to explain why he did not turn up to their wedding:

      "Honest... I ran out of gas. I... I had a flat tire. I didn't have enough money for cab fare. My tux didn't come back from the cleaners. An old friend came in from out of town. Someone stole my car. There was an earthquake. A terrible flood. Locusts! IT WASN'T MY FAULT, I SWEAR TO GOD!"

      Commenter
      Reverend Cleophus James
      Location
      Triple Rock Baptist Church
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:15AM
    • No, Peter and A Green, it will be "living within our means" exactly as the man says. What planet do you people live on to think that governments can go on increasing their spending exponentially, the trajectory Rudd and Gillard placed us on, and tax us all to death to pay for it without anaesthetising the economy? And don't tell we can find the money by chasing and punishing those naughty multinationals - that's as illusory as a Swan surplus.

      Commenter
      Mike
      Location
      Canberra
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:20AM
    • One thing is for sure our politicians will not be leading by example. Their snouts will well and truly be in the trough with lavish overseas study trips, $4,000 dollar helicopter rides, families accompanying them on business trips. Etc, etc. Y.ou can be sure there will be cuts to lower income people, education and health. Support for private schools will increase, but no funding for state schools. Same old, same old

      Commenter
      ICSBSS
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:28AM
    • The LNP really are a one trick pony aren't they. They claim to be free market idealists whilst subsidising miners, agri-socialists, property investors and wealthy superannuants. Not to mention allowing corporations to offshore profits. Turnbull and Morrison just like Abbott and Hockey continue with the ridiculous claim that we have a spending problem and not a revenue problem. The Abbott/Turnbull experiment has set the nation back decades.

      Commenter
      Scott Hockey misses Tony Turnbull
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:30AM
    • Dear Treasurer
      What happened to that evil bracket creep problem ?

      Commenter
      old news
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:34AM
    • From now on ... government ministers are going to make a real effort to cut down on unnecessary helicopter use. Got to start somewhere and set a good example.

      But after the new policy is run by the party right-wing overlords, the government will back away from it in favour of hiking the fees on helicopter licences that the pilots on average wages have to pay.

      Commenter
      mic
      Location
      s korea
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:35AM
    • Mike
      The Labor Government had us on a trajectory to surplus after the GFC.
      This mob are the highest taxing government since Fraser. Even higher than Howard!!
      But they destroyed all the good work put in by Labor by wrecking entire industries and giving taxes back to coal miners.
      They have blown out the deficits for 10 years and doubled government debt.
      What have we seen for that?
      Nothing!!

      Commenter
      Steve
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:39AM
    • Slomo signals.......
      we have to wait until Turnbull says........
      and he has to wait until.......
      he gets dierection.

      Commenter
      fizzybeer
      Date and time
      April 08, 2016, 10:40AM

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