PM, Treasurer grilled over fairness of $300 power bill rebate
Independent senator Jacqui Lambie has led a chorus of criticism over the government’s controversial $300 power bill rebate for all Australian households outlined in last night’s Budget.
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Treasurer Jim Chalmers and Prime Minister Anthony Albanese have been bombarded with questions over the government’s $300 energy bill rebate in the wake of Tuesday night’s budget.
The government is betting the $75 quarterly rebate will be enough to calm household anger about rising power bills and the cost of living crisis, as it gears up for an election in the next 12 months.
Hamstrung by persistently high inflation, Labor is hoping voters will give them credit for spending restraint and remember the $300 energy rebate for every Australian household and revamped stage three tax cuts flowing from July 1 when they head to polling booths.
But the budget move came under fire after the prime minister confirmed the rebate would include the Gina Rineharts of the country, and Australians who own multiple homes will benefit from multiple rebates.
Today show host Karl Stefanovic questioned how that was fair, saying Ms Rinehart and her cohort “don’t need support”.
Mr Albanese said the government wanted to deliver support across the board, just as it had done in its stage 3 tax cut revamp.
Sunrise host Nat Barr on Wednesday questioned the fairness of the rebate, saying “If you’re earning a million dollars, why do you need a $300 power rebate?”
“Well, the energy bill rebate is primarily for people doing it tough,” Dr Chalmers replied.
“You know, millions and millions of Australians are under cost-of-living pressure, we’re doing more than just acknowledging that in the budget. We’re trying to help.”
When asked again by the Sunrise host why high-income earners receive the rebate, he said: “Because cost of living pressures are being felt right around the country.”
Independent senator Jacqui Lambie also took aim at the rebate.
“We don’t need $300. I can assure you. That should have been passed forward. I find it bizarre,” Senator Lambie said on Tuesday night.
“Are we back in Covid days? We’re just chucking money, left, right and centre. (The Albanese government are) too lazy to do some means testing.”
Dr Chalmers said he was confident Labor had struck the balance in fighting inflation without “smashing the economy” or “people who are already under pressure”.
He said Labor had recalibrated its energy bill relief to go to all households in recognition that cost of living pressures were felt by Australians “up and down the income scale”.
“Middle Australia is under pressure too, so we’ve found a responsible way of providing that assistance more broadly when it comes to energy and the tax system, and in a more targeted way when it comes to the other assistance,” he said.
Dr Chalmers is trusting the measures unveiled in his third federal budget on Wednesday will mean inflation drops to within the Reserve Bank’s target range by December, paving the way for an interest-rate cut early next year.
According to Treasury, the $3.5bn energy bill relief package, which also includes $325 for about a million eligible small businesses, will slash half a per cent of headline inflation in 2024-25 and “is not expected to add to broader inflationary pressures”.
Dr Chalmers stood by this advice, but acknowledged there were differing opinions among economists about the impact of injecting more cash into the economy.
Record-high income tax receipts totalling $334.6bn in 2023-24 have helped prop up the budget bottom line and deliver an expected $9.3bn surplus, before the nation’s finances slide back into the red over the next four years.
Labor will run combined deficits of $122bn over the next four years, fuelled by more than $32.5bn in new spending - including $7.8bn on the extra cost of living measures.
While the government is expecting a decline in income tax revenue when the stage three cuts kick in 2024-25 this drop is short lived, and by 2027-28 the total tax take from Australian workers is forecast to reach $392.8bn.
Net debt is forecast to hit $552.5bn this year, while gross debt is expected to soar to beyond $1.1 trillion – or 34.9 per cent of GDP – in 2027-28.
Dr Chalmers said cost of living and fighting inflation were the “primary objective” of the budget, with housing, boosting Medicare, university and skills reform among the government’s other core priorities.
Labor’s much-hyped Future Made in Australia policy will dish out an estimated $23bn in tax incentives and cash to incentivise investment in industries like the energy transition and critical minerals processing over a decade from 2027-28.
The Coalition has signalled it is gearing up to fight Labor over the processes behind how projects are funded, but Dr Chalmers said there was a very “rigorous and robust” framework around the plan.
A massive $26bn has been set aside over the next four years as a “contingency reserve” to fund existing policies, which includes an expected minimum wage rise for aged care and early childhood workers.
Dr Chalmers said Labor was committed to ensuring workers in the care economy were “paid fairly,” but did not want to pre-empt ongoing negotiations.
An extra 29 Medicare Urgent Care Clinics will be opened across the country offering bulk billed appointments for people with emergency but non-life threatening injuries or illness, while $888.1m will be invested in the nation’s mental health and suicide prevention system over eight years.
For older Australians who wish to remain at home for longer the government is tipping an extra $531.4m to fund an additional 24,100 Home Care Packages in 2024-25 to reduce average wait times.
As part of cost of living measures, low income households receiving Commonwealth Rent Assistance will get a 10 per cent boost at a cost of $1.9 billion over five years, while Labor will freeze the maximum co-payment for a medicine on the Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme at $31.60 for all Australians with a Medicare card and $7.70 for pensioners and concession card holders.
The low-income threshold for the Medicare Levy will be lifted to $26,000 for singles and $57,198 for families meaning more than one million Australians will continue to be exempt or pay a reduced rate.
Eligibility for the existing higher rate of Jobseeker will be extended to single Australians who are assessed to have partial capacity to work up to 14 hours a week.
Labor’s overhauled stage three tax cuts will deliver an average $1888 saving to working Australians, but those earning $146,000 or above are worse off under the government’s changes compared to the originally legislated plan.
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Originally published as PM, Treasurer grilled over fairness of $300 power bill rebate