We're crippled by welfare and waste

nero_bolt
Community Member

MAYBE it's too late already. But our slackers' paradise is in strife if we don't end this Age of Entitlement.    


 


We can measure that strife with figures: by the May Budget, the Gillard Government will have blown another $75 billion of borrowed money.


 


That's on top of the $90 billion debt left by the Rudd government.


 


Or take these figures: more than six million Australians now live off government benefits or salaries, with only another six million Australians working full-time in the private sector to pay for them.


 


Or measure our entitlement mentality with anecdotes, like those in this week's Lowy Institute report on the blowout in demand for government help from Australians abroad.


 


There was the couple who wanted frequent-flyer points for being evacuated from Cairo on a government-chartered rescue flight.


 


There was the person who rang the the Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade's emergency service to ask: "Could DFAT feed my dogs while I'm away?"


 


Or measure the Age of Entitlement by the handouts offered by both sides of politics.


 


Labor, the most reckless, is shovelling out $500 million a year for a "Schoolkids Bonus" that recipients can blow on holidays, booze or a new TV, if they prefer, and it now promises an $8 billion-a-year disability scheme it can't pay for.


 


Meanwhile, the Coalition promises a salary substitute of up to $75,000 over six months to working women having a baby.


 


This cannot go on. This is the road to Greece or Cyprus.


 


We are spending money we don't have and don't look like earning for a long time. And we're too often spending it on welfare and waste, including billions on pointless green schemes.


 


Deloitte Access Economics now predicts that without cutting spending, federal and state deficits will rise by 2050 to $70 billion a year in today's money.


 


The fundamental problem, notes the Centre for Independent Studies, is that governments keep spending big, even though they're no longer getting the big rises in income we took for granted before the global financial crisis.


 


Yes, the Government laughs off "road to Greece" warnings. And, true, we are a long way from European levels of debt.


 


It is also true we don't yet match Europe's worst for welfarism. France spends close to 30 per cent of GDP on public social expenditure, Australia 16 per cent.


 


So why the urgency to cut the entitlement culture?


 


First, because we're still propped up by incredibly high prices for our minerals, which in turn depend on the still-high growth of China. We're riding our luck.


 


And second, we're at that dangerous pivot between too small to worry about and too big to change.


 


Mitt Romney, the Republican presidential candidate last year, faced that same pivot in the US and rightly predicted too many people could now be on the teat to let him slim the government cash cow.


 


"All right, there are 47 per cent who are with (President Barack Obama), who are dependent upon government, who believe that they are victims, who believe that government has a responsibility to care for them, who believe that they are entitled to healthcare, to food, to housing, to you name it," he said in a secretly taped speech. " I'll never convince them that they should take personal responsibility ... "


We are almost at that ratio beyond which no politician dares talk of saving and cutting.


 


ASK the Liberals. Last year, shadow treasurer Joe Hockey, in a speech in London, did talk of Western nations needing to end this Age of Entitlement. Huge spending on welfare and big drops in income had left many countries with unsustainable debt, Hockey said, but when asked what cuts he'd make back home, he stalled: "Australia hasn't got the enormous challenge that other countries have."


 


Hockey has since been overruled by colleagues when he wanted to back one of the Government's rare welfare cuts, to the baby bonus.


 


Even when Opposition Leader Tony Abbott decided to announce one saving of his own - scrapping the Schoolkids Bonus - a media adviser warned in an email: "I think it's really a bad idea."


 


Sure enough, the Government ran a scare, warning Abbott's cut would leave "western Sydney families ... $15,000 worse off".


 


These games must stop. These handouts are with borrowed money and can finance idleness.


 


A country with our healthcare cannot be so feeble that 819,000 of us are deemed too sick to work.


 


We cannot afford to be so picky or work-unready that 530,000 of us are on the dole.


 


We cannot all be so unfrugal or tired at 65 (or 60 for women) that more than two million of us are on the age pension.


 


No. We are not Greece. But we can't miss this chance to make sure we never will be.


 


http://www.heraldsun.com.au/opinion/were-crippled-by-welfare-and-easte/story-e6frfifx-1226607943523 


 


 

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

the only value in that article is the mention of greece (more than once) and cyprus . the 'journalst' attempts to run down our (rather good) economy with poor argument and a good dose of fear. australia does not appear on any chart or graph at the same end of the scale as these two basket case economies, so in fact the author demonstrates (if you remove the inferred link between greece cyprus and australia, which doesn't exist) the strength of australias position .

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

We're crippled by welfare and waste


 


Andrew Bolt article. Say no more. Same old same old. He never tires of the same rubbish week after week. I read him just to see if he can continue to outdo himself. And, he does. How anyone can believe or follow him just confounds me.

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

i remember the other journalists laughing in his face on insiders, and they were and are a rather conservative lot.:-)

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

Cyprus or Greece - that old chestnut again.

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

It is a really hard line to balance welfare funding... 


 


We do not want to leave people unable to live yet we do not want to pay people so much that they have no incentive to get a job. 


 


I have spent years on welfare... form being a single parent to sickness that left me unable to work... I know both sides of the divide. 


 


 


I was one of those people too sick to work... for three years... I am still on struggle street when it comes to working and my health.. If you had looked at me in the shopping center you would have no idea I was incredibly sick. 


 


I also live in a place where there are lots of people that are unemployable... for no other reason that they no one would want to employ them... what do we do with them? We can't let some parts of society totally collapse as they will become the thieves and drug dealers of the future... 


 


 

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

i agree with you cat, its the same here. nobody will employ a lot of these people.. if they are cut adrift completely things will really get out of hand. the other point being is the work their fathers did is gone. maybe they can all invent a google app or something.

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

Can't help wondering how much nero wulf gets paid for putting up the continual assult against labor, they don't even have to come back and make an original comment of their own. :^O

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

Agree Cat. There has and always will be people who are unemployable for all sorts of reasons.


 


What's the difference, morally, of someone who can't get work, for whatever reason, from someone who minimises their tax or works for cash? They're both effectively taking money from the government. It's really no different except for those who believe it's their right to deny paying their fair share and those who collaborate with them.


 


I remember Kerry Packer saying that anyone who paid all their taxes was a fool. Says it all really.


 


And if we cut welfare to those who are unemployable we will end up like other countries. You only have to look at the USA and the tens of thousands of homeless people who can't get jobs and are cut off from welfare. We don't ever want to go down that track. I would like to think we are better than that.

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We're crippled by welfare and waste

At what point does obsession become paranoia?

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