14 April 2000. Thought for the Week:
"Money is not a thing created by God, nor is it produced or
obtainable by the taxpayer from Nature, but is a pure artifact,
a numerical expression of 'credit' or belief created and controlled
by a very restricted group of men. The conditions under which
this medium, indispensable to taxpayers and all other debtors,
may be obtained from those who bring it into existence inescapably
determine whether or not, in the aggregate, demands for money
such as taxes, can be met in full without injustice and without
merely transferring the debt elsewhere."
"The Just Tax" by Geoffrey Dobbs 1964 |
THE LIB-NAT DEATH WISHby Jeremy LeeThe GST 'bad-news' is becoming a flood. A phone call from a building subcontractor in Victoria. who had just returned from another interminable seminar, said that the ATO representative confirmed an expectation that 25% to 35% of small businesses would fold up. I can't document this, but a host of similar stories from many parts of Australia keep the phone ringing. A medium-size printer who is considering closing his doors; an engineer in Queensland who says his position will be impossible; etc., etc. Suddenly, the reality behind the Government's glossy, PR-sanitised "simplified-new-tax-system" is hitting Australians between the eyes - and they don't like it. The biggest advertising campaign cannot, in the end, mask reality. Ask the major Australian Trading Banks, with their half-million-dollar daily advertising budget. |
AMERICAN EXPERT ASTOUNDEDA recent Australian Financial Review article recorded: "The Chief Economic Adviser to Republican front-runner for the US Presidency, George W Bush, is astonished by Australia's Tax system. "Why is there no tax revolt in Australia?' he asks. "Mr. Larry Lindsay finds it difficult to understand that Australia's rate of tax is 48.5%, and will remain so even after all the tax reform proposals and the GST are in place. "Mr. Lindsay believes that Australia has a punitive approach to small business proprietors. "In the US a couple with two children would pay no Federal income tax on income up to $53,668. The highest tax rate payable for middle class families would be 25%. "The Government is not an equal partner in your risks or in your failures - why should it be an equal partner in your success?" (No date, but March or April) |
THE COST OF THIS SIMPLE TAXWhat will the average cost to business be? The National Tax and Accountants Association estimates $7,000 for each business. The Victorian Employers' Chamber and Commerce and Industry, which ran a survey, reckoned a small business with less than 20 employees would spend $3,500 plus 80 working hours, while medium-sized firms would spend $9,000 plus 100 working hours. It is NOT a simple tax! It will require extensive review of existing systems, changes to enable the extraction of information for the quarterly Business Activity Statements, significant upgrading of existing computer hardware and software. Training for staff, correction of mistakes, discussions between producers and customers, bigger burdens for already-overstressed advisers and accountants.The accountancy firm Arthur Andersen has estimated the cost of getting ready for the GST could be as high as $24 billion - twice the cost of becoming GST-compliant! Accountants are being advised to reduce the numbers of their clients, as they will be so busy they wont have time to deal with those whose records are not 'system-perfect'. Many rural businesses will simply be unable to obtain the advice and help they need. |
THE DEVIL IS IN THE DETAILWhat is being put into place is a monstrosity which even Lenin or Stalin would have admired. If the Grand Plan is not routed by angry Australians, the Government will have arrived at a position where, firstly, employers collect and deliver all Pay-As-You-Earn tax from employees: secondly, Australian businesses will collect all the GST and Withholding Tax for the Australian Tax Office; thirdly, all businesses will have to self-assess and pay their own taxes, with the threat of huge fines and audits to keep them in line; fourthly, the population will be put in a situation where they have to police each other, checking ABN numbers and keeping back part of the purchase price under penalty if they don't get it right. Every instance of compulsory withholding of payment under the legislation will, in effect, be a 'dob-in' to the ATO of another company. If allowed to prevail it will pit one part of Australia against its neighbour, friend against friend, even family against family. You won't even be able to pay your money to the ATO, but to your nearest Post Office. Freed from personal involvement in actually collecting the money, the Australian Taxation Office will be in a position to devise new regulations, and punish those who miss complying. TIMING On March 21st, Max Walsh wrote in The Bulletin: "The state of the stock markets, in particular Wall Street, is the biggest single threat to global economic health. Central bankers, who have defined their responsibility as solely concerned with consumer price inflation, have joined everyone else on the sidelines the bottom line is that at no time in recorded history has there been such a disparity between stock prices and the earnings that those prices are supposed to capture." There is a so far muted, but growing anger against the modest interest-rate increases. The Chronicle (Toowoomba, April 7th, 2000) gave one small example: "An angry AgForce vice-president has slammed the Reserve Bank of Australia's decision to increase interest rates and claims the rural sector will be the hardest hit In a statement Mr. Woods said the rural industry was 'caught in the crossfire between the Reserve Bank and concern over exchange rates'. A further jump has been predicted before the GST is introduced in July. It would be the fourth since November... The anger in Australia is palpable, but not quite explosive. The full fury will probably break AFTER the tax officially starts. It will be directed fairly and squarely at the Coalition Government. It is often said the memory of voters is notoriously short. But with the GST jogging the memory every moment of every day, Liberals and Nationals would be foolish to think the electorate will somehow forgive them before the next election. The Coalition is digging its own grave - just as surely as the Liberals in Canada, who introduced that country's GST subsequently found out. Will Australia ever get rid of the GST, once in? The experience in other countries says 'no', but things are never that certain. There is a growing "coalition of voters" with more muscle than a few years ago. They have more technology at their disposal. Australia's version of the GST is even more draconian than that in Canada and New Zealand. Anything could happen. In other words, the 'will-to-power' of dictatorial politicians, and faceless bureaucrats is going to be tested over the next year or so as never before. In the meantime, it is the urgent duty of all of us to put on public record as best we can the fact that we are personally opposed to the GST and that it is being forced in without our consent or agreement. We suspect Prime Minister Howard and Treasurer Costello are beginning to see the position. The complacent smirk seems to have left Costello's face. He will be left standing in the ashes of past platitudes about Australia being "the strongest economy in the world" before long. As the dollar drops, the foreign debt continues to grow, interest rates rise, and the GST produces mayhem, Costello needs to be reminded of every propaganda statement he has made in the last four years! And he needs to be reminded that the IMF - on whose Board he sits - is behind this unwanted tax. |
POLITICIANS 'BOUGHT MEN'If you're wondering how seemingly-intelligent
party members in Parliament pretend that everything is rosy
in Australia's economy, the reason which a growing number
understand is that politicians are simply obeying their financial
benefactors. Take next week's Liberal Party Federal Convention
The Australian Financial Review (April 7th, 2000) reported:
$5,000 multiplied by 80 equals $400,000 - the sum that 80 'observers' from the largely foreign-owned corporate world will pay to attend the Liberal Party Federal Convention. They will probably lay on splendid lunches. But they are not philanthropists! They are hard-nosed, shrewd businessmen, who are investing to make sure the Liberals play it their way in future government decisions. The future of the Australian people will be a small consideration. |
JUST THE TICKET!The Bulletin (March 28th, 2000)
started a feature article with these words: "The NSW Independent
Commission Against Corruption is considering whether to launch
an investigation into the tendering process that led to a
decision by SOCOG (i.e. the Sydney Olympic Games Organising
Committee - Ed.) to accept the tender for printing tickets
for this year's Sydney Olympic Games from an American company...."
The contract, worth $3 million, went to Weldon, Williams and Lick, an Arkansas-based printing firm. The same company printed the tickets for the 1994 World Soccer Cup and the 1996 Olympics. There are literally hundreds of Australian printing firms, which could have handled the job, but, apparently, they are not in the luncheon business! Weldon, Williams and Lick? An apt sounding name, at any rate. |
AFRICA COLLAPSINGby Tom Fielder Reports coming through on the situation in Zimbabwe (former Rhodesia) are just as grim. It would seem the remaining white population is going to be forced out by Marxist Robert Mugabe. Is this a scenario that white Australians may yet experience if they do not take a united stand against the powerful evil forces working against them today? |
DIFFERENCE OF OPINION IS "INEFFICIENT"by Alfred King The big lie of the independent Fourth Estate is proudly proclaimed to anyone willing to ignore the evidence of his own eyes and listen. The daily evidence is that among the various newspapers (and TV news) reporting there is complete convergence of outlook and policy. They all serve the purpose of promoting goals of the establishment of internationalism, racial integration and liberalism. Just as the political parties are obedient to the same masters and offer the same policies, all newspapers administer the same poisons marketed in different coloured bottles and to suit individual palates and levels of literacy. It is against this background that an interesting insight into media trends appeared in an Age, March 29th, article by Paul Barry, the presenter of Media Watch on ABC TV. Mr. Barry makes the point that the recent trend towards 24-hour news on TV and Online is proving highly detrimental to the quality of the reports we receive. Like the rest of us in other professions, journalists are continually expected to produce more from less, all in the name of the great god of efficiency. "We'll be so busy filing for our 24-hour news or our on-line sites that we won't have time to find what the real stories are or whether we've got them right," laments Mr. Barry. "We haven't got four times the number of TV journalists we used to have, but my guess is we have, or will soon have, four times the news output. So how do we produce that? By people doing more and more stories and possibly less and less journalism... So how do they get the story? Well, increasingly, all these journalists get it from wire services or the TV equivalent - a Reuters or an AP camera team whose pictures are used by everyone. Or they get it by asking other journalists. So everybody tells the same story, either because they've got it from the same source - generally an official source, a politician or a PR man - or because they've got it from each other. No one has the time to find the real stories. And this is the second direction in which we are going. For all the 24-hour news, I think we're turning inward. We are less and less interested in stories from the outside world unless they're about footy stars, TV stars, soapie stories or film stars. . . in a sense this global village is as cut off from the real world as any mediaeval village ever was... If you look at newspapers, the same is in evidence. If you took almost any Australian or British paper five or 10 years ago, and compared it to the same paper today, I think you'd find that the number of editorial pages had increased dramatically. Most if not all of that increase would be supplements about our bodies, our houses, our finances, our cars, our leisure time, our shopping and so on...The Chairman of The West Australian in Perth said a newspaper was basically a media for distributing advertising. He added that the news was wrapped around it to make it more attractive." Again the level of control is being increased. This time to a more international level as all the world's news come from four or five overseas news agencies. Our whole daily diet of TV, radio and newspapers is as thoroughly controlled by the establishment as that of Communist China being controlled by the Communist Party and the media of Nazi Germany was controlled by Goebbels. Only the structure and methods of control are different. Whereas the latter two regimes are/were openly frank in their acknowledgement of their regulation, our own system of public mind control is shrouded in a haze of hypocrisy and soothing jargon designed to maintain the pretence that it is "free". But even this level of control cannot stop you from speaking the truth to your neighbours, friends and work colleagues. The reality will also be that all the darkness in the world cannot put out one candle of Truth. |
COUNCIL DEBT NEARLY DOUBLES IN JUST TWO YEARSby Betty Luks Councillor Cooksley rightly pointed out ratepayers had Council amalgamations forced upon them with the claim that costs would be reduced, services would be increased and rates would be kept down. Not one of these goals has been attained in fact many residents felt the only thing they had gained from amalgamation was increased rates. Even the mobile library service is under threat, with a review recommending it be discontinued. The Chief Executive Officer has put the onus on "Council decisions and extra expenditure". The new Council has spent $1.836m more than the previous Councils over its first two years. The original budget included an asset sale figure of $l.2m - only $55,322 of this figure was realised and the (bigger, better?) Council took out a loan of $1.2m to fund the costs incurred in amalgamation! This is a story that can be repeated right across the land. How silly of us! We thought - were we not told this? - there would be benefits from amalgamations. "The responsibility for the situation lies with the Council and the Chief Executive Officer," said Councillor Cooksley. "I have decided the community's right to know is far more important than any obligation I might have, as a member of Council, to corporate solidarity." Here is a Councillor who needs to be supported and encouraged. |