House debates

Tuesday, 9 February 2016

Matters of Public Importance

Health Care

3:34 pm

Photo of Stephen JonesStephen Jones (Throsby, Australian Labor Party, Shadow Parliamentary Secretary for Regional Development and Infrastructure) Share this | Hansard source

It is now well accepted, at least by all of those on this side of the House, that Australia, which was once known as country of the fair go, as the land where people could pull themselves up by their bootstraps, indifferent to the circumstances of their birth, with the support of the government and the great opportunities this country would bring to them, and make good of themselves. But we know that inequality is growing. It is growing right around the region and right around this country. In fact, in the middle of last year the OECD published a report, which found that inequality in Australia is growing, as it is right throughout the OECD countries, and that it is in fact a drag on our national growth and eroding our social cohesion. It found that in Australia the top 10 per cent held over 45 per cent of the country's wealth and that the gap was going. That is a point that should be of great interest to all those National Party members and regional MPs opposite. The OECD found that in the city you were 20 per cent more likely to be in the top and wealthiest people in the country, as opposed to those people in the regions and in the country.

With growing inequality it is all the more important that we have a government that is dedicated to providing a decent health system. We already know that gaps in access to healthcare services and that health inequality are greater between city and country, and as we will learn tomorrow when the Prime Minister and Leader of the Opposition address this parliament on progress on closing the gap we will learn once again that we are not making sufficient progress on closing the gap in health outcomes between black and white Australia.

Against this background, why on earth would anybody who gives a toss about a fair go, which is seriously committed to addressing inequality in this country, do this government is doing to the health system of this country.

The member for Ballarat has gone through the long list of cuts that this government is attempting to visit upon the Australian people. The member for Ballarat went through the $57 billion worth of cuts to our hospital system, and we are seeing state premiers of Liberal and Labor persuasions saying that if something is not done about this our hospitals will fall over.

In my state we are already seeing the beginning of hospitals without doctors, something unthinkable a decade ago. There are hospitals without doctors, because they simply cannot afford to ensure that they have the full complement of staff.

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