• About Us
  • Contact Us
  • Today Headline
  • Write for us
Today Headline
No Result
View All Result
  • breaking news today
    • Politics news
    • Sports
    • Science News & Society
  • Entertainment News
    • Movie
    • Gaming
  • Technology News
    • Automotive
    • Software & IT
  • Health News
    • Lifestyle
    • Insurance
  • Finance News
    • Money
  • Enterprise
  • Contact Us
  • breaking news today
    • Politics news
    • Sports
    • Science News & Society
  • Entertainment News
    • Movie
    • Gaming
  • Technology News
    • Automotive
    • Software & IT
  • Health News
    • Lifestyle
    • Insurance
  • Finance News
    • Money
  • Enterprise
  • Contact Us
No Result
View All Result
TodayHeadline
No Result
View All Result

The Biggest Takeaways From Labor’s Budget Reply

April 1, 2022
in Technology News
Reading Time: 4 mins read
GettyImages 1388281451 – TodayHeadline


In most years, the opposition leader’s budget reply passes virtually unnoticed.

By convention, it is delivered two days after the budget.

It’s different when an election is imminent. Then it becomes a statement of priorities about what the opposition would do differently if it wins government.

There is hardly ever a difference between government and opposition on the broad directions of spending and taxing – and for that matter, rarely much difference on tax and spending between one budget and the next.

The economic parameters are outside of government control – both government and opposition take the officials’ economic forecasts as given.

Opposition leader Anthony Albanese’s Thursday night speech in reply is no exception. Differences between the parties lie not in macroeconomic settings or in the amount of spending, but in what it is spent on.

The centrepiece is an aged care package with five parts:

  • Every aged care facility required to have a registered, qualified nurse on site, 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
  • Every Australian living in aged care gets at least 215 minutes of care per day
  • Support for the aged care workers pay case in Fair Work Commission and a commitment to fund the outcome
  • Better food for aged care residents
  • Accountability: more powers for the Aged Care Safety Commissioner and a requirement for aged care providers to report publicly what they are spending money on.

These are not new ideas. They come from the report of the Royal Commission into Aged Care Quality and Safety, which made a compelling case for reform.

The government said it supported most of the royal commission’s recommendations, but it has been slow to implement them.

Aged care is the one big difference

Notably, the government has so far declined to support aged care workers’ pursuit of a 25% pay rise in a case presently before the Fair Work Commission.

Away from aged care, many of the other initiatives mentioned in Albanese’s speech have previously been announced – the Powering Australia Plan for renewable energy, the Future Made in Australia plan for manufacturing, funding for infrastructure, funding for training, and cheaper child care.

In other areas, Labor will have similar policies to the Coalition but implement them differently. It will invest in infrastructure, but base the spending on advice from Infrastructure Australia, a body whose recommendations were largely overlooked in a Coalition budget that announced 144 projects, only 21 of which were on the priority list prepared by Infrastructure Australia.Not all are points of difference. The Coalition announced similar measures in the budget, including more funding for training apprentices, and a package to boost manufacturing and address supply chain vulnerabilities.

Five climate mentions instead of one

Treasurer Josh Frydenberg’s speech used the phrase “climate change” once. Albanese’s used it five times. It’s another point of differentiation, but not as big as it might be.

Neither side of politics has an explicit position on the links between climate change and natural disasters.

While it is too soon to draw those links with the latest floods, the broader evidence that the increased frequency and severity of disasters is due to climate change is overwhelming.

This is going to be an increasing challenge for Australian communities, and one budgets will have to address.

Where’s the money?

Albanese’s speech will be vulnerable to the traditional taunt of governments facing proposals from oppositions: “where’s the money coming from?”

For much of Albanese’s speech there are easy answers. Some content has been announced previously and provision made; other elements are similar to government measures, even if different in implementation, so are covered by budget funding.

The biggest gap is in the plan to fix aged care. The government has been avoiding engaging on wages, due mostly to their cost.

Labor has costed its aged care package at $2.5 billion, plus the wage increases arising from the Fair Work Commission case. The wage cost is hard to estimate, but is likely to be huge. The biggest cost in aged care is wages.

It is worth noting whatever party wins government it will need to meet the costs arising from the Commission’s decision.

The required spending could be met by an increased deficit – that is, going deeper into debt. In a deficit forecast to be $78 billion next year, a few extra billion makes little difference.

Less likely – because of the negative headlines it would generate – is that Australians would be charged a levy for the proper provisioning of aged care, as has happened before for both Medicare and disability.

Another option is that savings could be made in other areas of spending, reflecting the priority placed on aged care.

Or perhaps, after huge additional spending on COVID response proved not only affordable but good for the economy, the question about “where the money is coming from” is losing its potency.

A new budget, real soon

Whatever the case, if Labor wins the election, it will need a new budget.

Shadow Treasurer Jim Chalmers announced his intention to deliver a second post-election budget in a speech to the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry in March.

Albanese’s budget reply speech was economically cautious.

Many of the specific initiatives have been announced previously. The largest new component by far, the aged care plan, is likely to attract widespread support.

Investments in education and training, childcare, renewable energy and infrastructure are all likely to have a positive return for Australia.

There are big differences in rhetoric between Labor and the Coalition, but on the economic fundamentals, there is little – other than aged care reform – to separate the two.The Conversation


Stephen Bartos, Professor of Economics, University of Canberra

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.

  • Trending
  • Comments
  • Latest
Copy of RM Pin Toddler Chairs – TodayHeadline

The Famous Pottery Barn Toddler Chair [And the Dupe You Need to Know About!]

world first researcher – TodayHeadline

Researchers identify specific regions of the brain damaged by high blood pressure, involved in mental decline, dementia

image 1247112081 – TodayHeadline

CCD CEF: An 11% Yield Paid Monthly From Convertibles

eco efficient cement c 1 – TodayHeadline

Eco-efficient cement could pave the way to a greener future

1680056113 Donne Biryani Recipe Chicken Dhonnai Biryani Recipe – TodayHeadline

Donne Biryani Recipe | Chicken Dhonnai Biryani Recipe

Sergio Aguero makes Premier League title prediction with Mikel Arteta admission

Sergio Aguero makes Premier League title prediction with Mikel Arteta admission

90010195 gettyimages 531592676 – TodayHeadline

Gateshead 3-0 Dagenham & Redbridge

international team use scaled – TodayHeadline

Using natural catalysts to develop low-cost way of producing green hydrogen

PopularStories

1680056113 Donne Biryani Recipe Chicken Dhonnai Biryani Recipe – TodayHeadline
Cooking

Donne Biryani Recipe | Chicken Dhonnai Biryani Recipe

Sergio Aguero makes Premier League title prediction with Mikel Arteta admission
Politics news

Sergio Aguero makes Premier League title prediction with Mikel Arteta admission

90010195 gettyimages 531592676 – TodayHeadline
breaking news today

Gateshead 3-0 Dagenham & Redbridge

international team use scaled – TodayHeadline
Technology News

Using natural catalysts to develop low-cost way of producing green hydrogen

About Us

Todayheadline the independent news and topics discovery
A home-grown and independent news and topic aggregation . displays breaking news linking to news websites all around the world.

Follow Us

Latest News

1680056113 Donne Biryani Recipe Chicken Dhonnai Biryani Recipe – TodayHeadline

Donne Biryani Recipe | Chicken Dhonnai Biryani Recipe

Sergio Aguero makes Premier League title prediction with Mikel Arteta admission

Sergio Aguero makes Premier League title prediction with Mikel Arteta admission

90010195 gettyimages 531592676 – TodayHeadline

Gateshead 3-0 Dagenham & Redbridge

1680056113 Donne Biryani Recipe Chicken Dhonnai Biryani Recipe – TodayHeadline

Donne Biryani Recipe | Chicken Dhonnai Biryani Recipe

Sergio Aguero makes Premier League title prediction with Mikel Arteta admission

Sergio Aguero makes Premier League title prediction with Mikel Arteta admission

90010195 gettyimages 531592676 – TodayHeadline

Gateshead 3-0 Dagenham & Redbridge

  • Real Estate
  • Parenting
  • Cooking
  • NFL Games On TV Today
  • Travel and Tourism
  • Home & Garden
  • Pets
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • About

© 2023 All rights are reserved Today headline

No Result
View All Result
  • Real Estate
  • Parenting
  • Cooking
  • NFL Games On TV Today
  • Travel and Tourism
  • Home & Garden
  • Pets
  • Privacy & Policy
  • Contact
  • About

© 2023 All rights are reserved Today headline

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.