Last year I paid income tax.
I’m not going to tell you exactly how much tax I paid. Suffice to say it was less than James Packer or Gina Rinehart but more than most university students or Paul Hogan.
My taxes paid for a lot of things that I use – things that me and mine directly benefit from. Smooth roads to drive on, cheaper prescriptions for the pill, subsidised university degrees, trams to take me to and from work, affordable physiotherapy for my partner’s slipped disc, and three seasons of the ABC television series Rake.
My taxes also paid for a whole lot of things that didn’t benefit me personally but contributed to the overall peace and prosperity of the country I live in. Welfare payments to lower income earners who are raising a family, machinery to properly arm our defence forces, pensions for older citizens who are no longer able to earn a living, investment in crisis services for those without a roof over their heads and education for every single Australian child.
The benefits of these payments to me as an individual are perhaps less obvious, but that doesn’t mean they don’t exist. It is in all our interests that we live in an Australia where those who are doing it tough are supported and that investments are made to keep people in education, training and work to ensure our ongoing economic success.
This week Coalition backbenchers have been agitating about paid parental leave and arguing that the payment should be made available to stay at home mums as well. It’s important to note here that this isn’t about Labor’s existing scheme versus Tony Abbott’s, this is about whether the Government should be in the business of paid parental leave at all and if they are – who should get it.