“How did they ever make a film of Lolita?” was the tag line for Stanley Kubrick’s adaptation of the infamous novel. As anyone who had read it knew, the answer was of course that they didn’t. In the great Hollywood tradition, the book and the film didn’t have much to do with each other. There was much in the novel that never made it into the film, and much in the film that had nothing to do with the novel.
And so it was about an hour into yesterday’s lock-up (well, it took me an hour, brighter sparks probably worked it out much more quickly) that we realised that we’d been lured in on the basis that the government was unveiling its response to the Henry review, but the response bore little resemblance to the review. The physical documents told the story: the review documents were a couple of inches thick, the response was four booklets and some press releases in a nice sleeve. And half the government’s announcements weren’t in the review.
How did the government respond to the Henry review? It didn’t.
That’s not to say yesterday’s announcements weren’t solid reforms. I suggested a super profits tax a couple of years ago, targeted at the big banks, given that mining profits had slumped in the face of the GFC. The return of high commodity prices restores the case for levying one on the mining sector.
For a while I’ve been suggesting retirement incomes would be boosted by forcing the superannuation industry to remove commissions, rather than the Keating option of moving the Superannuation Guarantee to 12%. The government has instead done both, but phased-in over an extended period.
That meant there was at least one Liberal happy about yesterday — John Brogden could scarcely contain his glee as fronted up to present IFSA’s response to the package.
It also means that, if the commodities boom stays on track, there’ll be an extended, albeit small, counterweight to demand-driven inflation as workers are compelled to progressively move more of their income into superannuation.
After the opposition’s reaction on super yesterday and today, it’s clearer than ever that they simply don’t get it, and never have. Joe Hockey, flanked by Abbott and Andrew Robb, gave a good press conference yesterday afternoon — there was much to agree with in his description of the government’s response, or lack thereof, to the review. And the line that the government is simultaneously gutless for not pursuing some of the review’s recommendations and also plotting to inflict those nasties it hasn’t specifically ruled out doesn’t make any sense if you think about, but that’s a condition that doesn’t apply to most voters, so it should work a treat.
But the Liberals — former senator John Watson honourably excepted — seem only able to see compulsory super as an imposition on business, rather than employees’ contribution to their own retirement income. Maybe it’s because Liberals tend to the view that employees are just one more cost input among many for business, and any government interference there amounts to taxation. Perhaps that’s why the Howard government’s superannuation reforms amounted to little more than trying to push some working Australians’ superannuation back into the corporate sector via superannuation “choice” and lining up an array of handouts to high-income earners. Perhaps that’s why in opposition superannuation has been left to amiable lightweight Luke Hartsuyker when the government has its best up-and-comer, Chris Bowen, on the issue.
Still, if the opposition thinks it’s such a massive tax grab, they can always block the package. They’re blocking everything else this government does. They correctly accuse the government of being gutless in refusing to tackle reform, but then block what reform it does take and refuse to say what reform they support. The only tax policy we have from the coalition three months out from an election is one to raise business taxes.
If the government isn’t credible on economic reform, the other mob aren’t either. What did we do to deserve this Parliament?
Oh so that’s what Hartsuyker is there for. I’d always figured he was the minister for Dropped Pies.
Funny that we might have expected your commentary today to be about Henry’s review and the Govt response. Well it was – for a little bit. Then more than half is about the Opposition. Rudd and Swan have had 6 months to conjure up a bit of common sense, and they failed. Abbott and Hockey had maybe an hour. At least they did front up! Come on you lot – get real!
And when Keating introduced the Super Guarantee, at least he persuaded us all to forego pay rises to offset the Super G’tee. I’ll bet that doesn’t happen this time – Rudd ain’t got the guts to try that, and in the end it will be the employer that pays. You watch!!
On ABC this morning ….
Interviewer to Hockey….what parts of the Henry Review ignored by the Govt, would the Opposition
introduce if it becomes the Govt this year?
Hockey……………………. ah well we will have to have a look at that before annoucing our intentions.
As usual no alternate policy, all critical but nothing else. Thats been the story of the Coalition since Abbott took over.
Dr Harvey M Tarvydas
You’ve done well for 2 days BK although I think you’re over tough on the Govt regarding the Henry report but you have writers privileges which I don’t have and I accept that.
Your astute observation on the oppositions mind set …..‘But the Liberals — former senator John Watson honourably excepted — seem only able to see compulsory super as an imposition on business, rather than employees’ contribution to their own retirement income’ …. is serious to the point of
‘govern with absent qualifications’
‘just dumb or dangerous’ but probably
‘perverted’
Problem is the opposition members adorned with these characteristics are doing all the talking.
The Labour party has learnt enough about a Whitlamesque reform agenda and its effect on the electorate to plough recklessly down that road again. With a senate that blocks pretty much everything, it would seem that the government are being sufficiently canny to move slowly and cautiously with tax reform this side of an election. Consequently, the electorate is being calmed and its hip pocket nerve hasn’t been open to very much prodding at all .
With economic management credentials won by steering the economy through the recent international financial disaster ( and hoping that it’s not going to be a “W” shaped recession, with Europe on the brink of Euro crisis), the Labour party might just get themselves reelected with a tame enough Senate to slip in a bit more Henry.
The thing I hate about them, particularly with the way Swan talked to John Faine this morning, is that they’re going to do SFA about negative gearing. If I’m not mistaken, I heard Swan actually deny that negative gearing was a problem.
Johnny Kesselschmidt