House debates

Thursday, 10 November 2022

Questions without Notice

Budget

2:19 pm

Photo of Ted O'BrienTed O'Brien (Fairfax, Liberal Party, Shadow Minister for Climate Change and Energy) Share this | | Hansard source

My question is to the Minister for Climate Change and Energy. The budget projects that, after two years of Labor's energy policies, gas prices will be up by 44 per cent. Since the budget, government ministers have spoken about price caps and no price caps, direct assistance and no direct assistance, extra supply and limited supply, and taxes on companies and no extra company taxes. Does the minister have any idea what he is doing or is this just, yet again, Labor proving it doesn't know how to manage money and doesn't know how to manage the economy?

Opposition Members:

Opposition members interjecting

Photo of Milton DickMilton Dick (Speaker) Share this | | Hansard source

Order! Members on my right, the member for Fairfax was heard in silence. And I'm asking the House. Members on my right! I give the call to the Minister for Climate Change and Energy.

2:20 pm

Photo of Chris BowenChris Bowen (McMahon, Australian Labor Party, Minister for Climate Change and Energy) Share this | | Hansard source

I'm trying to take a statesmanlike tone over here, but it's rather hard when you hear questions like that—questions from an opposition about gas prices and how much they are going up, when, on the day the member for Hume became the minister for energy, gas was $9.40 a gigajoule and at the time of the election it was $34.75—a 270 per cent increase. That's pretty good! Some would say that's fantastic. Maybe the gas companies would say that's fantastic, but Australian consumers would not. The honourable member refers to work the government is doing to make sure gas and energy price rises do not flow through to industries and Australian businesses. I thank him for bringing that to the attention of the House, and that work will continue.

2:21 pm

Photo of Cassandra FernandoCassandra Fernando (Holt, Australian Labor Party) Share this | | Hansard source

My question is to the Treasurer. How do the budget and the Albanese Labor government's economic policies help Australians manage the cost of living without adding to inflation?

2:22 pm

Photo of Jim ChalmersJim Chalmers (Rankin, Australian Labor Party, Treasurer) Share this | | Hansard source

I thank the member for Holt for her question and also for all of the work that she has done on behalf of the ordinary working people of this country before she came here and since she arrived here. I pay tribute to her and to her contribution.

Australians are under pressure from the rising costs of living, and governments need to strike the right balance in providing responsible cost-of-living relief without adding to inflation in our economy. This is the point that the Deputy Governor of the Reserve Bank was making earlier this afternoon at estimates when she described our approach as sensible and appropriate to the times that we confront. Because of this challenge, the budget provided cost-of-living relief in a responsible and targeted way: $7½ billion across cheaper early childhood education, cheaper medicine and the expansion of paid parental leave, as well as a whole range of other measures around housing. But perhaps most important of all is getting wages moving again in our economy. That is, as I said yesterday, a deliberate design feature of our economic policy. That's why, in the budget, there were policies to enable people to train for higher wage opportunities; there was cheaper child care so that parents can work more and earn more if they want to; and there were investments in industries where the secure well-paid jobs of the future will come from. And also, of course—and we saw this today with the passage through the House of the minister for industrial relations' legislation—we have put our backs into making sure that, across all those areas I nominated in the budget as well as in industrial relations, we are getting wages moving again in this country.

For too long in Australia, wages growth has been stagnant. For too long wages growth has been too low. For too long in this country, ordinary working people who make the biggest contribution to our national prosperity have not been getting the reward they deserve for their efforts. For too long in this country and in this economy, ordinary working people have been copping it in the neck at the same time as profits have been rising. So what we want to see in this country is everybody getting just reward for their efforts so that, when we grow our economy, Australian working people get a slice of the action. That's what the legislation that passed through here this morning was all about, that's what the budget was all about and that's what this government is all about.