Diary of our stinking opposition

Labor frontbencher Andrew Leigh shifts position on previous support for a GP fee

Labor's shadow assistant treasurer Andrew Leigh was once a strong supporter of a compulsory fee for visits to the doctor - a policy now slammed by the opposition as a “GP tax” that would hurt the community’s most vulnerable.

 

But in a 2003 Sydney Morning Herald article Dr Leigh, then a PhD student in economics at Harvard University, argued a Medicare co-payment was “hardly a radical idea”.

 

“As health researchers have shown, cost-less medical care means that people go to the doctor even when they don't need to, driving up the cost for all of us," Dr Leigh and co-author Richard Holden wrote.

 

“But there's a better way of operating a health system, and the change should hardly hurt at all.

 

“As economists have shown, the ideal model involves a small co-payment - not enough to put a dent in your weekly budget, but enough to make you think twice before you call the doc."

 

Dr Leigh argued the fee should be enough to deter “frivolous GP visits”, but not enough to limit genuine preventive care. The fee should apply to everyone, including pensioners, except those who are chronically ill, he wrote.

 

Dr Leigh, who has opposed the proposal in media appearances over recent weeks, told Fairfax Media: "Since 2003, a lot has changed in the health care system, and I've changed my view on co-payments.

 

 “A GP co-payment was originally a Hawke government proposal led by Brian Howe, a member of the Left faction,” he said.

 

“As long as it is applied fairly across the community, a co-payment is a perfectly valid policy measure. If Andrew Leigh, before he had to toe the party line, recognised that then I welcome his contribution to the debate. I respect Andrew Leigh as a sensible economist.”

 

On Saturday, Dr Leigh, a former professor of economics at the Australian National University, distanced himself from an article he wrote in 2004 supporting fee deregulation for universities – another policy opposed by Labor.

 

http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/political-news/labor-frontbencher-andrew-leigh-shifts-positio...

 

Yes, it’s the very well respected ALP whey-faced Dr Andrew Leigh who virtually declared his previous books and speeches as mere works of fiction. This brings into sharp focus Dr Leigh's economics degree.

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Christopher Pyne cites Labor MP Andrew Leigh on uni fee increases

 

THE government is using the writings of former academic and now Labor MP Andrew Leigh to justify its decision to deregulate fees.

 

Dr Leigh was an internationally recognised economics professor at Australian National University before joining the House of Representatives as a Labor politician in 2010.

 

Now passages from books he co-authored while still an academic are being used by the Coalition to support its position on higher education deregulation.

 

In a speech to a conference in Sydney last week, Education Minister Christopher Pyne said Dr Leigh, who is now opposition assistant Treasury spokesman and competition spokesman, was an advocate for fee deregulation, quoting a paragraph from a 2004 book, Reimagining Australia, that Dr Leigh co-authored:

 

“Australian universities (should) be free to set student fees according to the market value of their degrees. A deregulated or market-based HECS will make the student contribution system fairer, because the fees students pay will more closely approximate the value they receive through future earnings.”

 

Mr Pyne also said Dr Leigh had, in a 2013 book, supported the Coalition’s rationale for fee increases — the benefit to the individual of higher education.

 

Asked whether he still supported fee deregulation, Dr Leigh said: “Labor does not support the changes proposed by the Abbott government. Christopher Pyne, as usual, is trying to create a distraction from the real issue.”

 

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/higher-education/christopher-pyne-cites-labor-mp-andrew-leigh-on-uni...

 

Dr Leigh, the ALP’s unparagoned financial savant needs to explain what he stands for. Given his manifest girouettism people are starting to question his credentials.

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Re: Diary of our stinking opposition

Did you miss post 17 Smiley Wink

 

Could you post the date of that article from The Australian please?, link is paywalled.

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@am*3 wrote:

Did you miss post 17 Smiley Wink

 

 


Not at all. I am full of praise and admiration for the job the mods do. It can't be an easy job but they do it none the less.

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@village_person wrote:

P'dallie, d9275, g58, am3, as is customary for the self-appointed arbiters here I would like to tell you you're in the wrong area. Please post you thoughts in the "Diary of our stinking government".


My post (3) was about an opposition member, so, right on.

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@village_person wrote:

@am*3 wrote:

Did you miss post 17 Smiley Wink

 

 


Not at all. I am full of praise and admiration for the job the mods do. It can't be an easy job but they do it none the less.


Cat LOLMan LOLRobot LOLSmiley LOLWoman LOL

The coveted five laughy-face award

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Re: Diary of our stinking opposition

Abbott still behaving like an OPPOSITION LEADER.

 

Abbott's fiscal strategy that of an opposition leader in The Lodge

 

Tony Abbott sounds suspiciously like a prime minister giving up on difficult fiscal and economic reform.

 

..The change in tone undoubtedly has something to do with the NSW election, but there also is a growing suspicion that Abbott, deeply shaken by the attack on his leadership, is in the process of giving up on ambitious fiscal reform.

 

...This is a difficult period for spending restraint. And Abbott, who is fighting for his survival, is behaving like an opposition leader in The Lodge. 

 

http://www.afr.com/news/politics/abbotts-fiscal-strategy-that-of-an-opposition-leader-in-the-lodge-2...

 

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Not content with trying to promote Dr Leigh as some sort of financial savant the ALP tried to construct an image of being a party that was operating the levers of gov't with prudence and responsibility. Now in opposition we learn of its incompetence.

 

Labor's $1.2 billion bomb rips a hole in the Federal budget
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idlewhile
Community Member

Give me a decent honourable man like the PM any day compared to the insanity of Rudd and the sheer stupidity of Gillard and now the naked ambition of the  political assasin, Shorten.

 

What a line up of detestable individuals.

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@idlewhile wrote:

Give me a decent honourable man like the PM any day 


You can have him. We've had enough of him.

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The treatment of Gillian Triggs and the accusations leveled at Save The Children.Very honourable indeed.

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