Income tax rise to fund Dutton’s $21b for defence

Original article by Michael Read, Andrew Tillett
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 5 : 24-Apr-25

Opposition leader Peter Dutton has justified his decision to delay announcing his defence policy until the final weeks of the election campaign. Dutton says he wanted to wait until the Coalition had a better understanding of the state of the nation’s finances and how much money it could spend on defence if it wins the 3 May election. Dutton has confirmed that a Coalition government would aim to increase defence spending to 2.5 per cent of GDP over five years, and three per cent over the next decade. He has also revealed that the proposed $21bn increase in defence spending will be funded by repealing the ‘top-up’ income tax cuts that Labor unveiled in its pre-election budget in March, and which are slated to take effect in mid-2026.

CORPORATES
LIBERAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY

Dutton in U-turn on EV tax break

Original article by Jack Quail, Greg Brown
The Australian – Page: 5 : 24-Apr-25

Opposition leader Peter Dutton issued a statement on Wednesday in which he committed to scrapping the fringe benefits tax exemption for people who buy electric vehicles. Dutton stated that abolishing the "badly designed" electric car subsidies will generate up to $3bn worth of savings over the forward estimates period and $23bn over the medium-term. However, Dutton had explicity ruled out abolishing the tax break on Monday. A Coalition source has suggested that Dutton might have misheard the question about the tax break on Monday. Dutton had previously backflipped regarding the Coalition’s policy of requiring federal public servants to return to working in the office full-time.

CORPORATES
LIBERAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA

‘Minerals for mates’: PM digs in

Original article by Greg Brown
The Australian – Page: 1 & 4 : 24-Apr-25

Prime Minister Anthony Albanese says the federal government’s proposed strategic reserve of critical minerals and rare earths will make Australia "stronger and safer" in a time of global uncertainty. Albanese will announce details of the proposed national stockpile today; it will aim to ensure that such minerals are available to both local manufacturers and key allies, such as Japan, South Korea and the US. The government is expected to use the strategic reserve as a bargaining chip to negotiate an exemption from the Trump administration’s tariffs regime. The strategic reserve is also aimed at reducing China’s market dominance in the global supply of rare earths and critical minerals.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIA. DEPT OF THE PRIME MINISTER AND CABINET

Housing crisis puts even safest seats at risk

Original article by Ronald Mizen, Nila Sweeney, Tom Rabe
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 4 : 23-Apr-25

Analysis of data from Cotality suggests that the housing affordability crisis could potentially undermine support for the Coalition and Labor in traditionally safe seats at the election on 3 May. The analysis shows that a number of such seats have recorded the biggest decline in housing affordability since the previous federal election in 2022. They include the Labor seats of Watson, Blaxland and Kingsford Smith, and Coalition-held seats such as Banks and Moncrieff. Both major parties have announced new initiatives aimed at helping people to buy their own home.

CORPORATES
COTALITY, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY, LIBERAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA, NATIONAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA

Dutton’s march to a war footing

Original article by Ben Packham, Greg Sheridan
The Australian – Page: 1 & 6 : 23-Apr-25

Opposition leader Peter Dutton will announce details of the Coalition’s defence policy in Perth today. Amongst other things, the Coalition will propose to increase defence spending to 2.4 per cent of GDP by the fourth year of the budget’s forward estimates period, and to 2.5 per cent of GDP by 2030. The Coalition’s ultimate aim will be to lift defence expenditure to three per cent of GDP over the next decade, in line with the Trump administration’s push for America’s allies to meet this benchmark. The Coalition will also commission a new national security strategy, with Dutton noting that the world has changed significantly since the last such strategy was prepared a decade ago.

CORPORATES
LIBERAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA

Dutton’s tax oath

Original article by Paul McIntyre, Dennis Shanahan
The Australian – Page: 1 & 4 : 17-Apr-25

Opposition leader Peter Dutton has indicated that income tax reform will be one of his long-term goals if the Coalition wins the election on 3 May. He has identified tax indexation as an issue that he particularly wants to address, arguing that ‘bracket creep’ stifles productivity, ­entrepreneurialism and hard work. However, Dutton has emphasised that returning the budget to surplus would be the priority in the first term of a Coalition government, given that Labor has forecast deficits for the next decade. Dutton likens his approach to that of John Howard and Peter Costello in the 1990s, whereby they focused on budget repair during their first term in office before putting tax reform on their second-term agenda.

CORPORATES
LIBERAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY

Peter Dutton’s nuclear power plan could lead to major electricity shortages, analysis says

Original article by Graham Readfearn
The Guardian Australia – Page: Online : 16-Apr-25

Modelling by Frontier Economics concluded that Australia’s remaining coal-fired power stations would need to keep operating until the Coalition’s proposed nuclear plants are built. However, the Institute for Energy Economics & Financial Analysis contends that Frontier Economics has not taken into account the growing unreliability of coal-fired power stations as they get older. The IEEFA argues that the modelling is based on the assumption that the coal-fired plants would be able to keep operating at 72-81 per cent of their generation capacity. The IEEFA notes that the 13 coal-fired plants that have closed down since 2000 operated at just 66 per cent of their capacity in the last 10 years of their operating life.

CORPORATES
FRONTIER ECONOMICS PTY LTD, INSTITUTE FOR ENERGY ECONOMICS AND FINANCIAL ANALYSIS

Coalition scores just 1/100 points for environment and climate policies from conservation organisation

Original article by Petra Stock
The Guardian Australia – Page: Online : 15-Apr-25

The Greens have performed best in the Australian Conservation Foundation’s pre-election scorecard, receiving a rating of 98 per cent for its environment and climate change policies. The federal government in turn has been given a rating of 54 per cent, with ACF CEO Kelly O’Shanassy praising policies such as its commitment to renewable energy and a continued ban on nuclear power; however, she says Labor was marked down over policies such as environmental protection laws and approvals for new coal and gas projects. Meanwhile, O’Shanassy says the Coalition has "failed every single test", resulting in a rating of just one per cent.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN CONSERVATION FOUNDATION INCORPORATED, AUSTRALIAN GREENS, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY, LIBERAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA, NATIONAL PARTY OF AUSTRALIA

Taylor vows costings will beat Labor’s

Original article by Phillip Coorey
The Australian Financial Review – Page: 1 & 4 : 15-Apr-25

Shadow treasurer Angus Taylor says the Coalition will not adopt Labor’s policy that would involve an optional $1,000 tax deduction for work-related expenses, which is slated to cost $2.4 billion over four years. Taylor says this is because the Coalition’s election spending promises that aim to ease cost-of-living measures are temporary ones, whereas he says Labor is focused on recurrent spending, and that the Coalition’s costings will result in a stronger bottom line than under Labor because of their temporary nature. His comments were echoed by Opposition Leader Peter Dutton on Monday, who likened the Coalition’s temporary measures to the government assistance that was issued during the pandemic.

CORPORATES
AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY

Australia does not have enough tradies to fulfill Labor’s housing promise, experts say

Original article by Luca Ittimani
The Guardian Australia – Page: Online : 15-Apr-25

About 170,000 new homes are currently built nationwide every year, but Labor aims to lift this to 250,000 annually for the next four years it wins the federal election on 3 May. However, the Housing Industry Association’s chief economist Tim Reardon contends that labour constraints within the construction industry means that the nation currently has the capacity to build 200,000 to 220,000 new homes each year. The HIA estimates that an additional 80,000 tradespeople are required nationwide. Reardon notes that many ‘tradies’ are opting to move to industries such as mining, while many school leavers are rejecting a career in the construction sector.

CORPORATES
HOUSING INDUSTRY ASSOCIATION LIMITED, AUSTRALIAN LABOR PARTY