"Smash
the rich, save the base": This is how the Australian corporate
press describes Labor's budget.
Cash
splash to calm carbon fears
THE
Gillard government has sought to reconnect with voters angry about
the carbon tax and the cost of living with a budget that axes planned
tax cuts for big business and instead hands out another $5 billion in
cost-of-living assistance to low- and middle-income earners.
SMH,
9
May, 2012
THE
Gillard government has sought to reconnect with voters angry about
the carbon tax and the cost of living with a budget that axes planned
tax cuts for big business and instead hands out another $5 billion in
cost-of-living assistance to low- and middle-income earners.
The
rise in cost-of-living outlays takes to $20 billion the total in tax
cuts, bonuses and higher payments that low- and middle-income earners
will receive during the next four years.
The
budget, which the Treasurer, Wayne Swan, described as ''a Labor
budget to its bootstraps'', forecasts a $1.5 billion surplus in
2012-13 - from a $44 billion deficit this financial year - and
provides funding to kickstart aged-care reforms and a national
disability insurance scheme.
Despite
a gloomy global outlook caused by events in Europe, the budget
forecasts the economy to grow at a healthy 3.25 per cent next year
and stay at trend or above afterwards.
The
budget has been delivered with Labor in crisis in the polls, battling
twin scandals concerning Craig Thomson and Peter Slipper, and renewed
speculation about Julia Gillard's leadership
.
With
voter and backbench anxiety growing in anticipation of the
introduction of the carbon tax on July 1, the budget seeks to calm
internal jitters and send a message to voters fretting over the cost
of living, that the government is listening.
On
top of the $15 billion in tax cuts and payments already promised as
direct carbon tax compensation, the budget contained a new $1.1
billion supplementary allowance worth $210 a year for singles, and
$350 for couples, who are either on the dole, youth allowance or the
parenting payment.
Family
tax benefit Part A payments will be boosted by $1.8 billion, which is
worth as much as an extra $300 a year for families with one child and
$600 for families with two or more children.
As
well, an extra $2.1 billion has been dedicated to converting the
education tax refund to the ''school kids bonus'' in which low- and
middle-income earners will receive $410 a year for each child at
primary school and $820 for each high school student.
Depending
on their circumstances, families could receive as much as $3450 a
year.
''We
understand the pressures Australians face, paying for electricity,
housing, groceries, petrol or even a simple family outing,'' Mr Swan
said, adding that everyone should feel the benefits of the mining
boom. ''They don't feel this boom is their boom,'' he said.
The
supplementary allowance and the family tax benefit A rises, worth a
combined $2.9 billion over four years, will be funded by abolishing
the $4.7 billion in company tax cuts that were to be funded by the
mining tax.
The
Greens and the Coalition opposed the company tax cuts which Mr Swan
said would never have passed Parliament anyway.
Big
business reacted angrily. In a pointed message to business, Mr Swan
said he still supported company tax cuts but business had to help
make the case for how such cuts would be funded. Labor received next
to no support for the mining tax.
The
Opposition Leader, Tony Abbott, who has vowed to abolish the mining
tax and every measure it funds, now must say whether the Coalition
will abolish $2.9 billion in cost-of-living assistance.
The
opposition gave notice of its intention in Parliament yesterday when
it stopped the government introducing legislation for the school
children's bonus.
A
concession to business - allowing loss-making companies to claim up
to $300,000 in deductions against previous losses - will cost $700
million and will be funded by the proceeds of the mining tax.
The
budget, Mr Swan's fifth, cuts spending by a net $17 billion over four
years.
The
biggest casualties are Defence, which took a hit of $5.4 billion over
four years, and the promised rises in the foreign aid budget which
were deferred for a year, saving $2.9 billion over four years.
The
government scrapped plans to allow a 50 per cent tax deduction on
interest on savings, which saved $900 million, and also plans for a
standard annual tax deduction, saving another $2.1 billion.
It
deferred for another two years plans to allow people to contribute up
to $50,000 to their superannuation at the concessional 15 per cent
rate. The cap will stay at $25,000, saving $1.5 billion.
Two-tier
economy hits offices
.
NATIONAL
office capital values are reflecting the two-tier economy, with the
mining states and those with lower vacancies moving back to former
peaks while the rest of the country recovers more slowly.
About
$11 billion of assets are on the market
9
May, 2012
This
is despite the lagging number of large asset sales in the capitals,
as vendors refuse to drop prices and buyers are reluctant to pay over
the odds.
The
latest JPMorgan research shows about $11 billion of assets on the
market, with the largest being the 50 per cent stakes in three Centro
shopping centres in Victoria, South Australia and Western Australia.
Interested
buyers are said to range from the private Gandel Group to Westfield
and funds such as LaSalle Investments.
The
new chief executive of Centro Retail Australia, Steven Sewell, has
said the sales are not being completed under duress and only
appropriate market values will be considered.
Stockland
is also marketing its commercial and industrial assets, but again
only at what it considers appropriate market values.
A
new report by CBRE says capital values for prime assets in the
central business districts of Melbourne, Perth and even Adelaide are
on the way to recovering the losses caused by the global financial
crisis.
However,
Sydney, Brisbane and Canberra continue to lag, saddled by higher
vacancy rates, CBRE's senior manager of global research and
consulting, Luke Nixon, said.
Damage
from the 2011 floods in Brisbane also offset some of the strong
demand from the mining sector.
CBRE's
Australian Office Market report tracks the recovery in office values
since December 2007, the point at which valuations began to decline
in most central business districts.
The
report says, on data from clients and recent sales, that the
Melbourne market is expected to be the first to fully recover prime
office values, followed closely by Perth and Adelaide.
''The
Melbourne CBD enjoyed the benefit of a strong local economy at the
start of the GFC, while the Perth CBD has been buoyed by
strengthening commodity prices and a lack of new supply,'' Mr Nixon
said
CBRE's
regional director of office services, James Patterson, said a
recovery in Perth was well under way.
''With
the Australian economy likely to continue growing at two distinct
speeds, mining and resource projects are expected to drive the Perth
CBD to the head of the pack as the city's vacancy trends towards
zero,'' Mr Patterson said.
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