Fairness, security and opportunity is how Treasurer Scott Morrison described his 2017-18 Budget last night, which he believes makes the right choices to pull Australians out of a "difficult period".
Throughout the Hunter today, we're all trying to figure out just who the winners and losers are.
Among the winners, the Medicare co-payment will be scrapped from July 1 next year meaning it will cost less to visit the GP, seniors will get one-off payments towards the cost of power bills, and Hunter schools will have a share in the $18.6 billion announced for Gonski funding with a per student funding increase of around 2.5 per cent.
"It's a great news budget for Australia because it's fair, it rewards opportunity and it delivers economic security going forward - there's a massive infrastructure bill, there's $18.6 billion dollars extra for education over the next 10 years," said Lyne MP David Gillespie.
First home buyers have come out with some positives - Scott Morrison believes the plan for first home buyers to be able to salary sacrifice into their superannuation in order to save for a house deposit is a better, and more targeted measure to make housing more affordable.
Treasurer Scott Morrison Image smh.com.au |
David Gillespie says the problem is housing supply not keeping up with demand and the federal government can only do so much.
"Supply and demand principals of housing has affected affordability. We do have in the big cities quite large numbers of people moving but the housing supply hasn't kept up with the population growth and that's something that state government's and local governments need to buy into just as much as what we're trying to help at the Federal level," he said.
Member for the Hunter Joel Fitzgibbon can't see many benefits for the region at all particularly in terms of infrastructure, with no money on the table for the Glendale Interchange or Muswellbrook and Singleton bypasses.
"A real slap in the face for the Hunter last night, and of course the Glendale interchange project is one supported by all the councils throughout the region so valuable they see it for the economy and to the community. This of course was a budget simply to save Malcolm Turnbull in the party room," said Joel Fitzgibbon.
The National Disability Insurance Scheme will be funded through increasing the Medicare Levy by half a per cent in two years time to close the $5 billion gap.
The Samaritans are delighted with the scheme which Chief Executive Peter Gardiner says "is really critical, so really pleased to see that confirmation from 2019 because people with a disability really do need to have a valued role in our community and that funding will help secure that".
Also, there's $12.5 million over 4 years towards a national health study into the impact of PFAS chemicals which will benefit those affected by the Williamtown RAAF Base contamination. A further $14 million will go towards health-related initiatives, but there's no money yet to pay compensation to residents and business owners.
Shortland MP Pat Conroy |
"There's $3.5 billion of uni cuts and increasing uni fees by 7.5 per cent will have a disproportionate impact on our uni students (The University of Newcastle) because our students are typically mature age students or studying part time - people who are more deterred by high debt than students typically coming straight from school," said Shortland MP Pat Conroy.