Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

nero_bolt
Community Member

 

The federal budget is not about how the government can maintain your lifestyle

Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/money/planning/ask-not-what-the-treasurer-can-do-for-you-20140525-38...

 

 

Unless you are handing out mountains of cash, a federal budget is rarely popular. Even the term "budget" is distasteful to many Australians who generally avoid running one with their own household finances. So it's little wonder when one appears each year that we have no control over, we're a little uncomfortable.

 

The recent federal budget, however, has uncovered a new dimension in unpopularity. I've watched and read with interest the commentary this week surrounding the budget and there is a theme, phrase and question that appears to pop up regularly. I heard it repeated again on Q&A as Joe Hockey faced a community at western Sydney. That theme or question is "How will I maintain my lifestyle?"

 

Now let me just state here I'm not advocating everything within the recent federal budget. I'm as cynical as the next voter when it comes to politicians and the public purse.

 

However, I'm curious as to why a significant portion of the population appears to support this notion that the government's job is to maintain our lifestyles.

 

 

 

Now, I acknowledge here that simply surviving is not always easy for the minority that are suffering genuine setbacks and need to be supported financially by society. As a society I believe we will be judged on how we look after those that are unable to look after themselves. But there is a big difference between supporting those that are unable to support themselves and helping people maintain their lifestyles.

 

I believe the wrong question is currently being asked of our politicians. Instead of asking the Treasurer, "how will I maintain my lifestyle?" the question should be pointed at the majority of us to answer that for ourselves.

 

Perhaps the first question we need to ask ourselves should be, "is my lifestyle sustainable?" The second should be, "will it give me the future I want?"

 

If the answer is no to either of those questions, then it's up to you to take control of your finances and do something about it. Not the government. Doing something about it means looking at your own budget, what you are spending on and taking control of your own financial situation.

 

Perhaps when you do that, you will discover that you may need to go without some luxuries and mod-cons that your current earning capacity really can't support.

 

But it will be a conscious choice rather than feeling that you're forced into it. However, it should also mean you're able to choose to spend on other things that are important and valuable to you. The key word is choice.

 

When we look to the government to maintain our lifestyles, we are really setting ourselves up for disappointment and failure. Instead, by becoming a conscious consumer with our own budget who takes responsibility for our own lifestyles then anything extra received from the government is a bonus that matters little if it is taken away when the next government is ushered in.

 

Let's ensure our leaders face the tough questions when it comes to the budget and the public purse.

 

However, when it comes to money and maintaining our lifestyles, let's decide to do something about that ourselves.  ***

 

 ** sadly I dont think that this will happen with the welfare and hand out mentality we have breed and the socialist left attitude that we are seeing in this country*** 

 

 

Read more: http://www.canberratimes.com.au/money/planning/ask-not-what-the-treasurer-can-do-for-you-20140525-38...

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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you



Message 2 of 35
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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

Perhaps when you do that, you will discover that you may need to go without some luxuries .....

 

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Why the popular support by the rich end of town to abolish the luxury car tax then?

Seems a mite hypocritical......so how does your statement of "The federal budget is not about how the government can maintain your lifestyle" fit here?

 

I would not have used the word 'popular' to have described any take on this budget being proposed. 

This Budget won't get through the Senate btw!!!

 

Double Dissolution - bring it on baby! *La-La-Laaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

So very true the below cartoon and its seen daily this attitude.

 

People that work hard should pay for the lifesyles of the left and the welfare and handouts mentality and these people (welfare and handouts people) are the ones screaming the loudest

 

I for one am fed up with paying for the bludger handout welfare mentality and the fact that these people think we all owe them a living and maintaining their life style. 

10313808_705416186191589_8610953082520987240_n.jpg

 

 

 

 

Message 4 of 35
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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

Luxuries to some are fresh fruit & veges, meat and wholegrain bread.

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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

Oh god this is hilarious!!Smiley LOL 

Abbot's appeasements and misdirections have utterly failed to win people over and now he's taking mortal political damage for measures that won't even pass.

....................such is the lot of the unhinged ideologue. *La-La-Laaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa!

Message 6 of 35
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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

Yes, have been seeing a lot of that around, re food. The people I see denouncing the budget are not those on welfare or those who don't budget.

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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

I already asked the treasurer, he told me to fill in his questionnaire first and if I was on a couple of hundred grand and minimised my income tax i was already doing as planned.

 

hockey-con-job.jpg

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Ask not what the Treasurer can do for you

Fine, Nero.

Perhaps the first question we need to ask ourselves should be, "is my lifestyle sustainable?" The second should be, "will it give me the future I want?"

 

If the answer is no to either of those questions, then it's up to you to take control of your finances and do something about it. Not the government. Doing something about it means looking at your own budget, what you are spending on and taking control of your own financial situation.

 

Perhaps when you do that, you will discover that you may need to go without some luxuries and mod-cons that your current earning capacity really can't support.

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I have three children, paying high income tax. None of them begrudges paying a bit more, as long as Hockey leaves the Age Pension alone. He wants to remove the few dollars a month we get in utilities concessions, that means a couple of thousand dollars extra out of our pension we will have to pay on top of all the other costs he wants to apply. Doctors visits, Medicines etc. Already, yesterday we received a letter that our fortnightly rents will increase from 1st July, because Councils are raising rates. Grocery prices will raise more again. I have not even calculated how our new budget will stretch to pay for everything we NEED.

We were not so lucky to retire on a Super Fund. When Super was introduced my husband only had four years paid super before he had to retire with a terminal illness. The pay-out from Super was only what he contributed and not even enough for his funeral a few years later.

So now you are telling me that I am not entitled to something the Government promised years ago. We have paid taxes all out working life. The subsequent Governments have spent the money that was earmarked for our generations pension. 

Don't generalise your article.

 

Please tell me what luxuries I can do without? The only mod con I have is a second hand computer and a plasma TV. I don't even have a mobile phone. Everything else in my home is second hand, and when it comes to shopping, it is seldom that I can allow myself a block of Chocolate without going broke before the next pension day. Perhaps in the 78 years of my life I have never learned to budget?

 

Erica

 

 

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