“We want to see the books,” he told Sky News. “Let’s see how much money is in the bank.”
Speaking in Canberra, Chalmers said while the government had delivered tax relief to all working people through its revamped stage 3 tax cuts that started from July 1, the chances of another round were low.
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“People shouldn’t expect us to take a big new income tax cut policy to the 2025 election,” he said.
“The tax cuts that we put in place from the first of July are rolling out right now. They are an important way that we’re helping people with the cost of living, getting inflation down, getting wages up, rolling out tax cuts and cost-of-living help.”
Any tax and spending plans of both major parties could be upended by the tariff policies of the incoming administration of US President-elect Donald Trump.
Analysis released on Monday by rating agency S&P Global found Trump’s plan to impose 60 per cent tariffs on all imports from China would cause immense damage to the world’s second-largest economy and Australia’s biggest export market.
S&P found China’s economic growth would slump below 2 per cent for 2025 and 2026, less than half current forecasts. Chinese exports would fall by 10 per cent and investment by 5.5 per cent.
While America’s economy would slow and inflation increase due to the tariffs, the impact on China, and its trade partners, would be larger.
“The effect of 60 per cent tariffs on Chinese economic growth would be quite severe,” the agency’s Asia-Pacific chief economist, Louis Kuijs, said.
The government on Tuesday will announce the first project to win funding under its National Reconstruction Fund, which is aimed at diversifying the economy, retaining jobs in Australia and protecting the country from supply issues such as those that hit the world due to the pandemic.
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Toowoomba-based manufacturer Russell Mineral Equipment, which produces specialist milling technology for copper, gold, nickel and zinc mining, will receive $40 million from the fund.
Industry Minister Ed Husic said the funding would build domestic manufacturing while retaining hundreds of jobs in Australia.
But the Business Council of Australia, in a new report on the country’s lagging productivity levels, said governments had to go much further.
The report found productivity growth, which has slowed to just 0.5 per cent a year, would have to quadruple to make up for the drop-off Australia had endured over the past decade.
Council chief executive Bran Black said wages and employment were at risk if productivity did not turn around.
“Unless Australia’s productivity performance is drastically reversed, our high living standards will be put at risk, and that means lower economic growth and lower wages,” he said.
The council said reforms including reducing red tape, reversing the government’s recent industrial relations changes, overhauling the tax system and support for research and development needed to be embraced by all governments.