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NewsELECTION COUNTDOWN
ELECTION COUNTDOWN

ELECTION COUNTDOWN

On Tuesday as the FiftyUp Club launched in South Australia. Malcolm Turnbull, via the phone, proceeded us on Radio 5AA.

He got to discuss matters which have dominated the election: jobs, the banks etc plus a few which haven’t got much airplay but do concern voters: foreign investment in farms for example.

Right at the end host Leon Byner asked him about electricity prices, already high in the state and due for another hike, and what he could do about it.

It might come as no surprise the answer concerned what the government had achieved on climate change and how much more power would cost under a Shorten government.

While not very helpful to the consumer, and particularly older ones who are suffering to meet their bills, it highlighted the limits to what politicians can actually do.

In this case not very much except to say the opposition would make whatever the policy is : far more costly/do more badly or take too long.

However in a bid to summarise the positions of the two major parties in relation to a few areas which arguably affect older Australians more here’s a digest.

Digital literacy

Just this week the Coalition committed to spend $50 million to improve the digital literacy and security of senior Australians.

It will involve smart device training, delivered in partnership with existing organisations, and the development of a digital inclusion strategy.

It’s about supporting older Australians who already have smart devices to make the most of them and participate more in the digital economy.

Superannuation—your number two issue according to FiftyUp polls

It’s been the hot button topic since the Budget and the confusions about what is or isn’t retrospective, continue to be debated.

Both sides agree on increasing the tax on super contributions from 15% to 30% for those on more than $250,000 a year.

Labor proposes taxing the super earnings on retirees at 15% when their annual amount exceeds $75,000.

The Coalition want to cap the amount you can have tax-free in super on retirement at $1.6 million and replace the current annual $180,000 limit on after-tax contributions with a lifetime cap of $500,000.

Healthcare costs- the number one concern for our members

There’s been a lot of heat around Medicare and it’s alleged privatisation even though that only involved bringing some business smarts into the sometimes creaky payments part of the system. Now even that is off the table.

The freeze on the rebate paid to GPs would be ended by Labor amidst competing claims about just how much this policy, once supported by both sides, had led to great co-payments and a lower rate of bulk billing.

This week Labor announced it would end the private health insurance rebate (itself currently ‘frozen’ to save funds) from the so-called ‘junk’ policies, which only cover public hospital treatment.

But there are warnings the policy could increase the cost of cover to families by $500 a year and see 300,000 drop out of the system in the next decade.

Negative Gearing

Again highly contested with various reports either claiming house prices will collapse or Labor’s policy will return some affordability to the housing market.

Labor wants to end all negative gearing on existing homes from July next year but continue the practice on new homes. It also wants to half the Capital Gains Tax discount on new housing investments to 25%.

D-Day tomorrow – over to you dear voter…..

Click here  to read Christopher Zinn's comments through out the campaign in our Election Distiller

Originally posted on .

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Noel
Noel from QLD commented:

One big issue that needs to be addressed is the question of Aged Pensions. Everyone who reaches 65, the pension age should received the age pension regardless of income our asset backing. If they have other income just add the pension on to the same and tax it. This is the process in New Zealand. I am 87 and applied for the pension last year and was faced with about eight pages of questions and about 6 questions per page. Then there was an interview at Centre Link which must be an enormous overhead to run. Everyone who reaches the required age has earned the pension. Some one needs to take up the issue on behalf of the pensioners. Tom from Queensland 

Janette
Janette from QLD commented:

Hi Christopher, I am an aged pensioner and have yet to hear anything from any of the politicians about any relief for us. Even reversing the decision on our pay rises would help. The last rise was insulting. It appears no one has woken up to the fact that it is the older generations who have made this country what it is today. There were no handouts for us. No maternity leave (we got the sack instead) very little child endowment and if we returned to work we paid for our own child care (no subsidies). There was no superannuation for most of our working lives either. We also paid all our own medical bills before medicare was introduced. We struggled in those times and it appears that we now have to struggle at the end of our lives because the government does not recognise that we even exist, let alone that we need help to exist. The cost of extra age related medical and pharmacy bills, along with the rise in electricity etc. is not even acknowledged. IS THERE A POLITICAL PARTY OUT THERE WHO WILL RECOGNISE OUR NEEDS???? 

Gertraud
Gertraud from ACT replied to Janette:

Your age pension is increased twice each year (in March and September) based on the higher of the CPI (Consumer Price Index) and the MAWTE (Male Average Weekly Total Earnings). If your last increase was less than you expected, it is due to the fact that earnings have hardly risen over the past year and the CPI has only marginally moved - in fact, it was negative in the March quarter. 

Gertraud
Gertraud from ACT replied to Janette:

Your age pension is increased twice each year (in March and September) based on the higher of the CPI (Consumer Price Index) and the MAWTE (Male Average Weekly Total Earnings). If your last increase was less than you expected, it is due to the fact that earnings have hardly risen over the past year and the CPI has only marginally moved - in fact, it was negative in the March quarter. 

margaret
margaret from NSW replied to Janette:

Janette, I do not think it is a case of 'waking up'. They just do not care and all the explanation about the last 40 or 50 years of our life, our contributions , and how unfair it all is, is absolutely useless. As this constant complaining just falls on deaf and uncaring ears a different strategy is needed. I have no idea as to what this should be, however the current method is useless and pointless. 

Nola
Nola from NSW commented:

Bill Shorten announced (in his policy speech) that Labor would no longer fund Natural health sector as part of cost cutting measures. I understand this will mean no more funding for those wishing to study in these careers, and an end to rebate on claims for Naturopath, Chiropractic, Remedial Massage, Physiotherapy). Shorten's lies about Medicare shown up by Labor's shadow Health Minister stating Labor would look into making changes to Medicare - the same changes Bill is screaming that the Liberals would do! Why the silence on the end to rebates on these important services for injured and older people? 

Someone
Someone from SA commented:

Your comment on negative gearing is somewhat ambiguous. The ALP will maintain negative gearing on all current properties but only on newly built once rules are changed. 

Paul
Paul from NSW commented:

Hi Christopher, When will politicians listen to Australians? They have missed the REAL issues of Australians and refused to cover them in any of their speeches of any significance. I feel most Australians would accept an across the board pro rata on income levy of some kind to tackle the deficit and return us to a positive financial standing for the future of our children! BUT it is too hard! OR cut the public service and let us control our own lives! I am also all over the LIES 

Michael
Michael from NSW commented:

anyone who believes Bill Shorten must be living in cloud cuckoo land.First we had Juliar and now Bill is trying to scare everyone with his lies !!!!!! 

Peter
Peter from QLD commented:

Turnbull is a very annoying waffler with not much to excite you. He simply does not understand that we Australians like the british have had a gutful of the "nanny state' and want to stop being told what we must do and what we are. We want to make our own decisions and be accountable for them. Unfortunately the alternative prime minister, Shorten, is worse in his "nanny state" mentality plus a liar plus a corrupt single minded unionist. We pray that one day a statesman will come along and we don't have to put up with the Turnbulls & Shortens and their cronies and hanger ons 

Dana
Dana from QLD commented:

As an aged pensioner, I worry about the future of the children of today growing in an uncertain world, where Australian governments don't have an independent Foreign Policy and get dragged into conflicts by other countries, where countries are run by corporate interests, where the catastrophe of Fukushima is being covered up. 

Michael
Michael from NSW commented:

High electricity prices is a direct result of Greens/Labor policy to close cheap coal fired power stations and install stupid highly subsidised windmills to attempt to replace the stations. Doesn't work - no power when the wind stops and no solar when the sun sets. SA has the highest power prices because the SA Govt has gone down the "renewable" path. 

Someone
Someone from NSW commented:

I believe in the 2 party restrictive government we have tolerated for so many years, the only way to keep any chance of honesty and integrity over decision making is to have a volatile and forum style senate.. So being much more careful about the senate vote is more crucial then ever as we all become more disillusioned with the 2 major parties. 

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