Given my usual stance on these kind of things, this is a bit of a personal backflip. I actually have a lot of respect for this budget.
Echoing many media reports, this budget looks nothing like an election budget. It cuts a bunch of handouts that reflect a more prosperous era, and a bunch of others that were emergency stimulus, and in doing so have pissed off the lower, middle and upper class unanimously. Cuts to certain sectors such as coal hits the workers just as hard as the corporations (watch the union get mad over the next few days). Wayne Swan shows a lot of balls in bringing out an election budget that asks people to toughen up. I am glad that we are recognising how precarious our economy really is.
There are a few things I am disappointed about, mainly the delay of the Australian Renewable Energy Agency, and the cut to corporate R&D subsidies. With how uncertain the mining boom looks (look at how well they are 'profiting' Australia, accounting for most of the GDP growth but little of the tax receipts), we must absolutely hold on to innovation as one of the driving force behind economic expansion.
Now, if the media has taught us anything for the past 8 years, over the next few days Abbott and some of the idiots of the Liberal party are going to make giant fools of themselves.
From 1 January 2014, the Government will offer Student Start-up Scholarships as income contingent loans to new full time higher education students, providing $1.2 billion of savings. The Government has ensured that students continue to have access to the same level of financial assistance while studying and will only repay any loans once their HELP debt is repaid.
The local screen industry will be strengthened with $41.6 million to attract major international film production including Walt Disney's 20,000 Leagues Under The Sea: Captain Nemo.
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The Government will provide $1.4 million over four years to enable the Bureau of Meteorology to host commercial advertising on its website on an ongoing basis. This measure follows the previously announced advertising trial. The introduction of website advertising was one of the options identified in the Review of the Bureau of Meteorology's capacity to respond to future extreme weather and natural disaster events and to provide seasonal forecasting services. Revenue from this measure will partially offset the costs of the services provided by the Bureau.
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