House debates

Thursday, 31 May 2012

Questions without Notice

Carbon Pricing

2:29 pm

Photo of Julia GillardJulia Gillard (Lalor, Australian Labor Party, Prime Minister) Share this | Hansard source

I say to the member for North Sydney, first, as usual, the question from the opposition contains a misrepresentation about the Australian carbon pricing scheme and the description of it as the 'world's largest'. That is a misrepresentation constantly restated by the opposition. I suggest to them that perhaps they get in contact with some of their sister political parties around the world, including the British Conservative Party, and have a discussion about things like putting a price on carbon. I suspect they should talk to them about what is happening in Europe and around the rest of the world rather than come in here and fearmonger in the way in which they do.

On the ease of doing business in our economy, we continue to work to make sure that businesses large and small can prosper in our nation. We are working with small businesses through the instant asset write-off, something the opposition has repudiated because it would prefer the big mining companies to have the money, to give them back the minerals resource rent tax. We are working through the Council of Australian Governments to reduce red tape, through the seamless national economy initiatives—things that were too hard, left undone, neglected, and left by the wayside under those opposite when they were in government—and things like national occupational health and safety laws, which was something that was always too hard and too difficult for the opposition. We continue too to add to the ease of doing business through infrastructure investments, including very importantly the National Broadband Network, with a clear productivity benefit for businesses large and small and for our nation overall—something repudiated by those opposite; something that they would rip out of the ground and take away the associated productivity benefits.

The Leader of the Opposition and the member for North Sydney continue their carbon pricing fear campaign, but I bet neither of them will come to the dispatch box today and guarantee that the claims that they have made will come true on 1 July—guarantee that the coal industry will shut down on 1 July; guarantee that the cement industry will shut down on 1 July; and guarantee that price rises will be astronomical on 1 July; guarantee that their claims about electricity pricing will come true on 1 July. In my last answer, the member for Bowman said, 'It is not about 1 July'—another clear sign that the opposition knows that its aggressive negativity is going to fall foul of the facts on 1 July and many members of goodwill opposite know that too. (Time expired)

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