Wayne Swan and Kevin Rudd have benefitted from enormous good luck so far in their time in office. But things even out eventually, and for the Government at the moment it’s happening on pensions. They can’t take a trick.
Pensioners did well out of the Budget. Up to an additional $900 a year for various allowances, and a commitment that the base level of the pension – which is already indexed – would be reviewed in the taxation and transfer payment review to be run by Ken Henry. And, you’d have to think, that review ain’t gonna recommend a reduction.
But the idea has taken hold that pensioners had a legitimate expectation that they would get a big handout in the Budget. This is partly John Howard’s fault. Having doled out one-off bonuses in previous Budgets, seniors have grown accustomed to getting handouts every May. It’s as if the malign policy influence of Howard is continuing to wreak havoc from beyond the grave. But it’s also a consequence of a wilful misinterpretation of the Prime Minister’s remarks during the February problems with the carers’ and seniors’ bonuses, that “they wouldn’t be left in the lurch.”
You can, if you were in full-on Howard-hating mode, partly blame this on John Howard too. As if burnt by his history of relying on casuistry and grammatical distortions to claim that he never said inconvenient things, Swan and Rudd are now being held to a very high standard on their public remarks. Say you want to look at ways to ensure petrol and grocery prices are as low as possible, but that there’s no silver bullet? Well, “people heard” that you were going to lower petrol and grocery prices. Declare that pensioners won’t be left in the lurch? That means an increase in the base pension.
Doesn’t really matter what you say – it’s what the punters thought you said.
The Opposition would have gleefully exploited this, except that obscure Gold Coast MP and ageing spokeswoman Margaret May got carried away on Friday and went beyond Coalition policy. Nevertheless, no-one has really picked up on that fact that the Opposition and the Government have exactly the same position – that the base pension will be reviewed before the next election.
Never mind that stuff about the Coalition not doing it for twelve years while running the place.
A $35-a-week increase in the aged pension would, based on calculations done by the Greens during the election, cost the best part of $4b pa. In an era of $21b surpluses, this doesn’t look like a lot, but it’s still a huge figure and, in comparison, will look – forgive the Eastlakeism – even huger if the economy slows by as much as the more pessimistic commentators are predicting. And it’s the reason why even the Coalition in full-blown populist mode is unwilling to embrace the idea.
The Government’s approach is the correct one – properly assess retirement incomes in the Henry Review. At a time when, with the benefit of a week’s analysis, some commentators are starting to seriously attack the Government over its lack of aggressive expenditure cuts, it must be galling indeed for Rudd and Swan to be copping it about pensions. Kerry O’Brien even devoted five pointless minutes of The 7.30 Report last night to trying to get the Prime Minister to agree that pensions were a last-minute addition to the Henry review’s terms of reference.
There’ll be a lot more of this to come. It’s amusing (or sickening, for those with weak stomachs) to have pensioners stripping in protest, but this is a powerful lobby group that is, courtesy of our demographics, growing remorselessly. And we’re only just seeing the arrival of the baby boomers – not exactly known for their selflessness and sense of inter-generational equity – arriving in the seniors cohort.
The longer politicians can stick to rigorous analysis about retirement incomes, the better for the rest of us.
Is there something wrong with comprehension in the electorate? Sure both Howard was sleazy claiming he would do better on keeping interest rates low (given global factors), as Rudd et al were sleazy to claim they would do better on keeping Petrol Inflation Groceries (PIG) costs low (given supply and global factors) while bringing down a stimulatory budget. Not that they would keep them low, only relatively better. Is this such a subtle claim concept? Are the 70% without tertiary education really thick? Nah. o both leaders were sleazy. Mmm. That’s not really news in politics. What it reads like to me is mediocre big media in a same old game of ‘gotcha’ in their own sleazy game of moral panic about ‘decietful’ politicians. That’s funny with the Big Media being so cynical themselves to sell their product, more often than not ‘pseudo news’.
Most of the old people whinging are the people who wanted Howard re-elected so they could skim off the excess.
One old bloke was whinging to ABC that his income from investments was a miserly $60,000 per annum to keep up his million dollar house in a plush suburb and support his hobby of restoring classic cars.
It is not the elderly that are in so much of a mess as they were mostly pretty careful and we have an army of gray nomads who are suddenly pleading poor, it is younger people who are disabled or suddenly single parents with lower skills levels that need support.
And they never get it. Kerry was absurd last night and he should be ashamed of himself for his nonsense. As pensions are paid from tax, it is not possible to have a tax review without reviewing pensions which are currently running at 30% of the budget one way or the other.
Not all pensioners! My wife and I think we have been cared for very well. We do not earn a taxable amount but then we have never ever been on a big income.
I applaud the way the gov’t is going about the whole matter of retirment income. For those who whinge because they can’t maintain their high income lifestyle, then tough bikkies! It’s the single pensioner with no other means of income who is really doing it tough. Incidentally I have never voted for Howard. Me thinks he was more obsessed with retaining power than goverening for the good of the country. Many other of my colleague pensioners feel the same. Maybe we need a little more sensitivity in this matter and say that some pensioners are doing a grizzle. If they include the single pensioner w/o any other means of income, then I can understand and appreciate how difficult it must be for them
Thanks Bernard, yet another aegist comment from Crikey.
Personally I’m fed up to the back teeth with the oldies and of course they aren’t ALP voters. No, these wrinklies, false teeth a chattering and Zimmer-frames a clanking, are graduates of the v.v.hard, right wing school of radio talk -back jocks..
Having spent a whole lifetime squandering what little amount of brain power they had; plus having used up all their passion on sex??? No, no, no, football for Ch*ist’s sake! Thus do they present themselves, quite literally empty -headed to the Neil Mitchell’s and the; what’s his name? Sounds like a drug company Darren, Um, well is it Grinch or something?
Why is it these radio jocks are all so right wing? Anyway, it would have been simplicity itself to plant an idea into these addle-pated pensioners.
NB: These comments were in no way directed at disabled persons.