The Morrison Government’s plan to secure Australia and the Mornington Peninsula’s recovery will rebuild our economy and create more jobs to ensure we come back stronger from the COVID-19 induced recession.
As part of our COVID-19 response, the Morrison Government has committed $291 billion or
14.7 per cent of GDP in direct economic support for Australians, including thousands of Mornington Peninsula residents, households, and businesses.
As a result of this support, Australia and the Mornington Peninsula are well on the road to recovery.
Federal Member for Flinders, the Hon. Greg Hunt MP said, Australia entered the crisis from a position of economic strength having brought the Budget back to balance for the first time in 11 years.
“This provided us with the fiscal firepower to support the Mornington Peninsula community when we needed it most including record funding for schools, hospitals, aged care, mental health and the NDIS,” Minister Hunt said.
“Our plan to secure Australia’s recovery will create more jobs, rebuild our economy and set the country and the Mornington Peninsula’s communities up for the future.”
To secure Australia’s recovery the Budget provides an additional tax cut to more than 10 million low and middle income earners, including around 54,900 people across the Mornington Peninsula.
It will see low and middle income earners benefit by up to $1,080 for individuals or $2,160 for couples.
This is more money to spend in local businesses, giving them the confidence to take on an extra worker, offer an extra shift, or buy a new piece of equipment.
To support further job creation the Morrison Government will extend temporary full expensing and the loss carry-back measure announced in last year’s Budget for another year.
This will allow more than 99 per cent of businesses employing 11.5 million Australians to deduct the full cost of eligible depreciable assets of any value in the year they are installed until 30 June 2023.
The Morrison Government is doubling its commitment to the JobTrainer Fund to support a further 163,000 new training places to upskill job seekers and meet skills shortages.
The Budget also funds more than 170,000 new apprenticeships and traineeships, 5,000 higher
education short courses and 2,700 places in Indigenous girls academies to help them finish school and get a job.
Digitals skills training will also be accelerated for job seekers with low levels of reading, writing, maths, and computer skills.
Women will also benefit from STEM scholarships and programs to help them to break into
non-traditional trades.
“The Government is building the infrastructure the Mornington Peninsula community needs for the future,” Minister Hunt said.
“With the Morrison Government’s record 10-year $110 billion infrastructure pipeline, which is already supporting 100,000 jobs across the country, including vital local projects such as the Uralla Road and Forest Drive Nepean Highway Intersections, we are well on the road to recovery.”
“This also includes local road safety upgrades such as the Boneo Road and Besgrove Street Intersection Improvements, Hayes Avenue Rosebud Kerb and Channel Renewal, Leon Avenue Rosebud Kerb and Channel Renewal, Murray Anderson Road Rosebud Kerb and Channel Renewal, Wattle Grove Portsea Kerb and Channel Renewal, Jordan Street Somerville Kerb and Channel Renewal, Mt Eliza Way Pavement Reconstruction and Drainage Upgrade.”
To cut the cost of living for over 840 families in the Mornington Peninsula and to help boost workforce participation, the Government is making an additional $1.7 billion investment in child care.
The Morrison Government will:
- Increase the child care subsidies available to families with more than one child aged five and under in child care, benefitting around 250,000 families; and
- Abolish the $10,560 cap on the Child Care Subsidy, benefitting around 18,000
families.
For those families with more than one child aged five and under in child care, the level of subsidy received will increase by 30 percentage points to a maximum subsidy of 95 per cent for their second and subsequent children.
In last year’s Budget, the Morrison Government invested $1.5 billion in a Modern Manufacturing Strategy to ensure our international competitiveness and to create more jobs.
The 2021-22 Budget goes further with a new ‘patent box’ starting on 1 July 2022.
Under the patent box, income earned from new patents that have been developed in Australia will be taxed at a concessional rate of 17 per cent, applying to the medical and biotech sectors, and consulting on expanding it to the clean energy sector.
The comprehensive manufacturing plan will help Australian businesses to develop the next bionic ear or cervical cancer vaccine.
Federal Member for Flinders, the Hon Greg Hunt MP said, “The Morrison Government’s comprehensive economic plan will create jobs and secure Australia’s recovery.”
For more information, visit: www.budget.gov.au.