Nine million empty bedrooms a waste

As someone who is interested in how we can make more efficient use of existing assets and help families with their cost of living, I'm excited by the potential posed by the emerging 'sharing economy'. In this op-ed for the Daily Telegraph, I've explained how I reckon services like AirBnB can help make a difference.

Nine million empty bedrooms a waste, Daily Telegraph, Tuesday 6 January

How many bedrooms would you say are going spare right now across Australia? How many perfectly good rooms are being used for storing disused dumb-bells and dusty DVDs?

The latest Census says the answer is about nine million more than one for every three Australians.

That's nine million spare rooms which could be put to productive use if only there was some way to match people who own rooms with people who'd like to stay in them.

As it turns out, there is. AirBnB is one of a host of new "sharing economy'' services linking people who own stuff they're not using with those willing to pay to do so.

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Squash this GST broken promise now

The new year has barely got going and already there's more Liberals coming out of the woodwork calling for the GST to be added to fresh food and other basic necessities. Joe Hockey needs to knock this on the head right now.

MEDIA RELEASE

SQUASH THIS GST BROKEN PROMISE NOW

Australians who had hoped the Abbott Government’s year of broken promises were behind them must be dismayed to see it gearing up for a whopper on the GST.

When WA Liberal Premier Colin Barnett called for GST to be added to fresh food in December, Abbott Government ministers pointedly refused to rule it out.

Senior Victorian Liberal Dan Tehan has loudly added his support to slugging families with more GST at the checkout but wants to go further – he wants to include a GST on school education, university education, healthcare and financial advice.

According to Mr Tehan, this would represent a $21.6 billion increase in the GST – around $1,000 for every Australian man, woman and child. 

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The economic case for renewable energy

In today's Canberra Times, I've got an opinion piece explaining why even Liberals like Tony Abbott should value renewable energy for its contribution to jobs, investment and the economy.

The economic case for renewable energy, Canberra TimesFriday 26 December

As a progressive, I've always believed that a clean environment is an intrinsic good - not a means to some other end, but the end in itself. But the more I see of the Abbott government's approach to environmental policy, the more it becomes apparent that they do not share this view. Instead, they adopt the instrumentalist approach of seeing things as having value only if they boost GDP. The intrinsic value of fresh air, clean rivers and flourishing forests simply doesn't fit with the far right worldview.

Yet as it happens, there's also a strong instrumental case to be made for taking action that will protect our environment. Transitioning to renewable energy isn't just good for our quality of life, it's also good for economic growth

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No hiding the fact that not-for-profits want the charities commission

I've been campaigning all year against the government's plans to scrap the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission. A new report from the government's consultations with charities shows I'm definitely not alone in thinking the commission offers the best model for helping charities and protecting Australians from scammers.

MEDIA RELEASE

NO HIDING THE FACT THAT NOT-FOR-PROFITS WANT THE CHARITIES COMMISSION

In a report dumped out days before Christmas, Australia’s charities have yet again shown that they value the model of the Australian Charities and Not-for-profits Commission.

The report from the Abbott Government’s consultations with over 300 charities clearly shows they back transparency, independent regulation and a public charities register – everything the charities commission provides.

The government plans to scrap the commission. Yet the report shows many not-for-profits were critical of its plan to return charity rulings to the Australian Tax Office and require charities to self-report on their finances.

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Tackling tax dodges is a problem of will, not power

I've got an op-ed in today's Business Spectator on why Joe Hockey shouldn't walk away from his promise to fairly tax multinational firms. It doesn't seem a big ask to make sure all companies pay their fair share.

Tackling tax dodges is a problem of will, not power, Business Spectator, 22 December

It’s rare to see stories about tax taking up the front pages of some of Australia’s biggest newspapers.

But then again, it is thankfully also rare to see a Treasurer slash almost $4 billion from foreign aid while simultaneously giving hundreds of millions of dollars back to multinational firms.

That’s what Joe Hockey did in his 2014 mid-year budget update by backing down on a promise made in November 2013, just after last year’s election.

Back then, the freshly-minted Treasurer promised to come up with a targeted rule stopping companies artificially shrinking their tax bills by loading up on debt and then claiming deductions for the interest paid.

We know this is a problem because Treasury and the Australian Tax Office told us so during Labor’s comprehensive crackdown on multinational tax in 2013. 

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New Assistant Treasurer must act on multinational profit shifting

Tony Abbott has announced that Josh Frydenberg will take over as Assistant Treasurer in his Ministerial reshuffle. With a new Minister in the job, it's time for the government to show some real commitment to tackling tax avoidance by big corporates.

MEDIA RELEASE

NEW ASSISTANT TREASURER MUST ACT ON MULTINATIONAL PROFIT SHIFTING

Since coming to office, the Abbott Government has given $1.1 billion back to multinationals, while cutting the pension and slugging Australians with new taxes.

If the new minister – the Government’s first Assistant Treasurer in 274 days – wants to show that he is serious about multinational profit-shifting, he needs to demonstrate policies that will fairly tax multinationals.

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Gifts for the top, pain for the bottom in the Abbott Government's mini-budget

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

DOORSTOP INTERVIEW

PARLIAMENT HOUSE, CANBERRA

FRIDAY, 19 DECEMBER 2014

SUBJECT/S: Mini-Budget; Tony Abbott’s Christmas gift to multinationals; Cabinet reshuffle; Trade Unions Royal Commission; Andrew Crook

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: We've now got six days til Christmas, and it's very clear the Abbott Government's giveaways are for those at the top, not those at the bottom. They're trying to re-gift their GP tax - wrapping it up and hoping the Australian people won't notice - and they've still got their cuts to pensions, to health and education. Yet at the same time, in Monday's mini-budget Joe Hockey broke a promise to get tax back from multinational firms. He said very clearly in last year's mini-budget that he would fairly tax multinationals with a targeted anti-avoidance measure. But on Monday he broke that promise. Why is it that under this Government, the only presents are for those at the top, and all the pain is felt by those at the bottom? I think it's very clear that with only five sitting weeks left until the next Budget, this Budget already stinks worse than a plate of prawns left out in the Christmas sun. Australians are seeing the lack of consumer confidence that has come from a Treasurer talking down the economy, and behaving more like a Shadow Treasurer in drag than like someone who is responsible for a $1.6 trillion economy. Happy to take questions.

JOURNALIST: What do you make of the Cabinet reshuffle, and do you think Arthur Sinodinos has a place in the Government?

LEIGH: Well it's been 272 days now since Australia had a full-time Assistant Treasurer. I think it's clearly showing through Joe Hockey's many gaffes that Australia needs a full-time Assistant Treasurer. But you don't envy the Prime Minister, because there's plenty more ministers who have been naughty than nice. 

JOURNALIST: Do you think there should be more women in the Abbott Cabinet?

LEIGH: I think Australians would like to see a Cabinet that reflects the diversity of Australia. Simply having one woman in Cabinet puts us well back from where we've been in the last generation.

JOURNALIST: Who do you believe should be Assistant Treasurer?

LEIGH: Well that's a decision to be made by the Government, but you wouldn't exactly say that they're spoiled for choice.

JOURNALIST: Do you see this as a sign that the Government is in trouble? We've seen policy backflips in recent weeks, and now rumours of a reshuffle - is this a case of the Government trying to clear the slate and start next year better off in the polls?

LEIGH: I think this Government is in more trouble than a Santa Claus impersonator stuck down a chimney. It's got all kinds of strife going on, with ministers who think that there's a link between abortion and breast cancer, a Prime Minister who wants to campaign on knights and dames, and with a Treasurer who thinks it's ok to smoke cigars while handing down the most unfair Budget in political history. This is a Government that needs a fundamental reboot - not of its strategy, but out of office.

JOURNALIST: On another issue, Prime Minister Julia Gillard has been cleared of any wrongdoing in the Interim Report of the Trade Union Commission - is that welcome to the ALP?

LEIGH: This is a political Royal Commission set up by the Abbott Government. I'm not going to be providing any commentary on it. 

JOURNALIST: Speaking of charges and possible arrests, Andrew Crook - Clive Palmer's chief media adviser - appears to have been detained by Queensland Police. That's a pretty extraordinary turn of events, don't you think?

LEIGH: There's a general principle that parliamentarians shouldn't comment on matters that are before the courts or could come before the courts, and this matter certainly seems to be in that category. Thanks everyone.

ENDS

MEDIA CONTACT: JENNIFER RAYNER 0428 214 856

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Hockey breaks promise to tax multinationals

In his mid-year budget update, Joe Hockey reneged on a promise to crack down on corporate tax avoidance by closing an important loophole. So at a time when he's taking an ax to Medicare, pensions and the foreign aid budget, he's still found room to give money back to big firms. Nice.

MEDIA RELEASE

HOCKEY BREAKS PROMISE TO TAX MULTINATIONALS

Despite almost doubling the 2014-15 deficit, Treasurer Joe Hockey has still managed to sneak in another giveaway for multinational corporations.

Monday’s Budget update shows the Government is going back on its commitment to introduce a targeted anti-avoidance measure which would stop companies siphoning profits offshore.

Yet again the Treasurer has shown that he is happy to let big companies off the hook while hacking into foreign aid, schools, hospitals and pensions.

His priorities stink worse than a plate of Christmas prawns that have been left out in the sun.

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Hard choices and budget savings - 2CC interview

Balancing the budget involves hard choices. As I explained to Mark Parton in this interview with Radio 2CC ahead of the mid-year budget update, my party will always support fair budget savings. But by the same token, we will fight budget decisions which fail the fairness test. Here's the transcript:

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

RADIO INTERVIEW

RADIO 2CC

MONDAY, 15 DECEMBER 2014

SUBJECT/S: Joe Hockey’s mini-budget 

MARK PARTON: Treasurer Joe Hockey is going to have a shocker of a day today. He's expected to reveal revenue has taken a further hit of just over $6.2 billion in just over six months. Things that are out of his control but he knows he's going to get smashed for it. So if we had a budget emergency at Budget time, we've got a potential catastrophe now. Mr Hockey will deliver his mid-year economic update today and there are reports of forecasts of $379 billion in receipts, that follows figures of $389 billion in May. So it's down substantially and many of the experts are saying that deficits over the period will more than double to $100 billion. There's little hope of economic improvement without radical action.

Andrew Leigh is waiting in the wings; Andrew's specialty is economics so he knows how to assess figures much better than you and I. He's about to suggest to us that Joe Hockey is a fool – I'm assuming he is – he's about to slam the Treasurer for failing to reign the deficit in and tell us how diabolically bad it is. But I just don't know that you can have it both ways because for years Andrew has been telling us that there is no budget emergency and that running a deficit isn't a bad thing. It certainly wasn't when Labor was doing it, it was fine. I had many conversations with Andrew, during which he compared our deficit to a home loan and basically said it was nothing to worry about. Unless the other mob is in power, and then it's a disaster. I'm sick of the theatre. Andrew Leigh is the Shadow Assistant Treasurer and the Member for Fraser – morning Andrew.

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Good morning Mark. 

[Introductory banter]

PARTON: Budget deficits will almost double to $100 billion over the next four years – is this a budget emergency?

LEIGH: Well Mark, it's certainly a problem for the nation if Joe Hockey keeps on giving money back to multinationals, keeps on giving money to people with more than $2 million in their superannuation accounts, and wants to give $50,000 to millionaire families to have a child.

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A massive deficit for Hockey's mini-budget

Ahead of the release of Joe Hockey's mini-budget, I joined Sky AM Agenda to talk about the importance of governments taking responsibility for their own economic decision-making. Here's the transcript:

E&OE TRANSCRIPT

TELEVISION INTERVIEW

SKY AM AGENDA

MONDAY, 15 DECEMBER 2014

SUBJECT/S: Joe Hockey’s mini-budget; economic priorities; jobs.

KIERAN GILBERT: We're joined by Shadow Assistant Treasurer Andrew Leigh and the Assistant Minister for Social Services, Senator Mitch Fifield. Senator Fifield, it's all a bit gloomy but the government has really got to take accountability for all this now, after more than a year in office?

SENATOR MITCH FIFIELD, ASSISTANT MINISTER FOR SOCIAL SERVICES: Well, I think the MYEFO today, Kieran, will really be a bit of a wake-up call for the Australian Labor Party, about the damage that they caused to the budget and their responsibility to play a role in budget repair. We've seen Labor voting against something of the order of $20 billion in savings measures in the Senate, including about $5 billion of savings measures that they themselves proposed when they were in government. So I hope today's MYEFO causes Labor to take stock, to recognise that they share in the responsibility to help fix this problem that they created.

GILBERT: But Minister, do you accept  15 months now into office – that voters don't really cop that sort of explanation, that they want the government to come up with the answers instead of the finger pointing? 

FIFIELD: Well Kieran, I think we have come up with the answers; Joe Hockey's first budget was a good document. The problem is that the Labor party fail to take any responsibility for the damage that they caused. Now let me speak for a moment as the Manager of Government Business in the Senate, in a Senate chamber where the government of the day does not command a majority in its own right. Management of the Senate and the legislation that goes through it, including budget legislation, is a shared responsibility of all political parties and the Australian Labor Party have abrogated that responsibility.

GILBERT: That's something that Chris Richardson from Deloitte Access Economics has pointed to time and time again – Andrew Leigh, is there a point when Labor is going to cop some of the blowback here? It's trying to be obstructionist and say ‘no’ as we saw the Coalition do in opposition, but when you're trying to rebuild your own economic credibility surely there's got to be some concession that the structural improvements to the Budget need to happen?

ANDREW LEIGH, SHADOW ASSISTANT TREASURER: Well Kieran, I was frankly a bit surprised to hear Mitch speaking in that way. He's a smart guy and I would have thought he would want to step up to the plate and take responsibility. I'd assumed he'd want to be owning promises that the Coalition made last year, such as saying that a Coalition Government would have budget in surplus in its first year and in every subsequent year; that there'd be no surprises, no excuses and the adults would be in charge. But instead he seems to be taking a leaf from his Joe Hockey play book of going around and smoking a cigar while blaming poor people and blaming everyone else but yourself. If this budget's problems are marketing, then I've got a bridge you might like to buy. This budget is a product that the Australian people don't want, at a price our society can't afford.

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Cnr Gungahlin Pl and Efkarpidis Street, Gungahlin ACT 2912 | 02 6247 4396 | [email protected] | Authorised by A. Leigh MP, Australian Labor Party (ACT Branch), Canberra.