Commission of Audit has been released today ...
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AN EXTRA fee of $15 to see the doctor, raising the pension age to 70 and measures to axe the jobs of 15,000 public servants are among recommendations to the Abbott Government to fix the budget.
The Commission of Audit’s much-anticipated final report has been released, laying out 86 recommendations, offering savings of about $70 billion a year within a decade.
They include slowing minimum wage growth, a slower roll out of the National Disability Insurance Scheme and abolishing whole government agencies.
The lengthy report warns if the government continues a “business as usual” approach, Australia would face 16 years of consecutive deficits with net debt rising to $440 billion by 2023-24, up from $190 billion today.
The Government has already said some of the Commission’s recommendations will be able to be implemented, others will be looked at and some will be ignored completely.
There won’t be an immediate response to each recommendation, Finance Minister Mathias Cormann said.
Instead more will be revealed on Budget night in less than a fortnight.
Here’s a snapshot of where and how the Commission of Audit believes the Abbott Government can save its pennies:
WORK UNTIL 70The Commission of Audit recommends the pension age be lifted to 70 by 2053, up on the current scheduled increase of 67.
The current assets test should be scrapped it argues, and replaced with a means test for new recipients from 2027-28.
The family home should be included in the new test for those above $500,000 for a single pensioner in today’s terms and $750,000 for couples, according to the report.
It also suggest the rate be wound back over time, in line with average weekly earnings.
EXTRA FEE FOR BULK-BILL SERVICESPatients should be hit with a $15 co-payment for services currently covered by bulk billing, the Commission of Audit recommends, with the extra fee then halved to $7.50 after 15 visits a year.
Concession card holders would pay $5.
It would not only cover seeing a GP, but also services like blood tests.
Amid fears it would encourage people to turn up to emergency wards, it recommends State Governments consider bringing in a similar co-payment.
MINIUMUM WAGE REDUCEDThe Commission recommends the minimum wage be scaled back, slowing growth in line with 44 per cent of national average weekly earnings.
It argues each state should also have its own, to avoid its workers being disadvantaged.
WELFARE SHAKE-UPIt recommends Family Tax Benefit B be scrapped and recipients be rolled into Family Tax Benefit A, with the eligibility cap reduced.
The Commission suggests changes to make sure the Disability Support Pension is given to those in genuine need.
New assessment criteria should be implemented it says, with the current income and assets test axed.
It should be replaced with a means test, like the age pension, which would include the family home for singles above $500,000 and $750,000 for couples.
Young people aged between 22 and 30, without children, who have been pocketing benefits for a year should lose their benefits if they don’t move to high employment areas, the Commission also recommends.
PUBLIC SERVICE CUTThe Commission argues 15,000 fewer public servants would be needed if its recommendations, including cutting agencies and handing over some responsibilities to the states, were adopted.
That would represent five per cent of the current public service.
GOVERNMENT AGENCIES SCRAPPEDThe Commission believes seven government agencies, should be abolished, another 35 merged with others, 22 consolidated and nine potentially privatised.
It also recommends the Immigration Department and Customs be rolled into a mega agency.
POWER BACK TO THE STATESThe Commission proposes states be given “all policy and funding responsibility” for government and non-government schools.
It also argues more the States could pick up more responsibility in funding public hospitals.
PAID PARENTAL LEAVE WOUND BACKThe Government is being encouraged to lower the wage replacement cap to average weekly earnings, currently $57,460 a year, instead of Tony Abbott’s plan which is based on the current salary.
Money saved should go towards childcare, the Commission recommends.
SLOWER NDISThe Commission believes the current roll out of the National Disability Scheme is “highly ambitious” and should be slowed down.
The recommendation would require the states to go back to the drawing board on agreements already struck.
HELP LOANS CHANGESStudents should have to start paying back their HELP loans when they earn the minimum wage, currently $32,354 instead of the current threshold of more than $51,000, the Commission recommends.
http://www.news.com.au/finance/commission-of-audit-reveals-spending-cuts/story-e6frfm1i-1226902160516