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John Howard’s Welfare State

Guess who wrote the following?

Only John Howard could deliver the socialist dream: a welfare state that supplies more than 14 per cent of household disposable income, up from 9 per cent at the end of the Hawke government and 6 per cent in the Whitlam era.

Since the Howard Government came to office in 1996, real disposable incomes have risen by about 15 per cent and unemployment has fallen to its lowest level in 30 years. That’s good. But it also means welfare dependency has fallen sharply.

So why has the Howard Government increased real social security spending by almost half? The answer has nothing to do with national welfare dependency and everything to do with politics. Howard’s welfare state has been highly effective in taxing single people and couples without children and giving the proceeds to couples with children…

The latest Treasury Economic Round-up backs the findings reported in The Australian. It reveals that almost 40 per cent of families receive more in welfare than they pay in tax…

But the welfare state is out of control. The wealthy do not need government cash handouts and low and middle-income earners don’t need the punishing tax rates used to finance them.

Labor MP Craig Emerson.  We look forward to hearing what the Australian Labor Party intends to do about it.

posted on 13 September 2005 by skirchner in Economics

(1) Comments | Permalink | Main


Comments

At least Emerson, Tanner and Bill Shorten have been contributing to the (tax reform) debate, which is more than I can say for Beazley and Swan (and Howard and Costello for that matter)

Didn’t Latham propose some reform to the FTB at the last election?  I can’t remember, all I remember is interest rates and the [L] plate.

Posted by .(JavaScript must be enabled to view this email address)  on  09/13  at  12:26 PM



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