2016 Budget

Well not long to go before we know what is in store for the country and our pockets.

Part of the budget will be about taxes. Maybe decrease for business and hopefully chase tax avoiders.

But wonder if anything about welfare, education and health which are important to many Australians.

This is as good a place as any to tell us what you think (politely of course) about this years budget.

Will it affect you personally or maybe you would just like to tell us your opinion.

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Apart from expanding the definition of a refugee, the Protocol obliges States
to comply with the substantive provisions of the 1951 Convention to all persons
covered by the refugee definition in Article 1, without any limitation
of date. Although related to the Convention in this way, the Protocol is an
independent instrument, accession to which is not limited to States parties
to the Convention.
Under the Convention and Protocol, there is a particular role for UNHCR.
States undertake to cooperate with UNHCR in the exercise of its functions,
which are set out in its Statute of 1950 along with a range of other General
Assembly resolutions, and, in particular, to facilitate this specific duty of
supervising the application of these instruments. By its Statute, UNHCR is
tasked with, among others, promoting international instruments for the protection
of refugees, and supervising their application.
The fundamental importance and enduring relevance of the Convention and
the Protocol is widely recognized. In 2001, States parties issued a Declaration
reaffirming their commitment to the 1951 Convention and the 1967 Protocol,
and they recognized in particular that the core principle of non-refoulement
is embedded in customary international law.(4) Moroever, the General Assembly
has frequently called upon States to become parties to these instruments.

PDF

http://www.unhcr.org/3b66c2aa10.html

Perhaps geomac if you unscramble the above  post, people can have some chance at understanding what you are trying to say.

It's obvious that the siuation is complex, with different interpretations even aong the well educated people here.

It's therefore also obvious that potential asylum seekers won't understand the rules, especially the bits deliberately made more tricky by our nasty politicians, who were really only ever after the votes of the less well educated bigoted and racist voters.

I can still easily understand the desire of those less well off than most Australians to want to come here, and I wish that those aggressively aiming to keep such people out could come out with better reasons why they deserve to be here and the refugees don't.

How many of the poor economic refugees have you invited to live in your home Barak?

That's personal. Stick to the topic.

You live in Australia which is my home & you insist that I open my arms & my pocket to welcome economic refugees that destroy all ID & passports & are incapable of filling in an application form.  If you think you have that right, in spite of Australian Law, the least you can do is lead by performance.  Don't invite them into my home & tell me that your non existant invitation is private.  The major problem with socialists is the way they only plan the largess of everybody else.

I don't insist on you doing anything.

Some clear thinking and no more misrepresentation would be nice though.

Barak, do you mean that you don't welcome the economis paperless into my home?

Huh?

Barak, How can you possibly teach, when you can't comprehend or read English?

It's your reading skills I have my doubts about. You so frequently declare I've said things I haven't said.

"The government's plan is either very badly designed and underfunded, or very well designed to exploit Australian workers and strip them of their legal rights and pay," said ACTU president Ged Kearney.

"Not since the 1990s has it been legal to pay workers as little as $4 per hour. This policy takes employment standards in this country back almost 30 years and has the potential to drag down wages and conditions for all workers – not just those in lower-paid jobs.

"For a government to change the law to allow big companies to pay workers $4 an hour, while stripping them of protections and entitlements under the Fair Work Act is one of the heaviest betrayals of Australian workers since WorkChoices."

Legal academic Andrew Stewart, who is Adelaide University's John Bray Professor of Law, said it appeared there were problems with the hasty design of the scheme.


Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/federal-politics/federal-election-2016/coalitions-840-million-interns-plan-illegal-lawyers-20160511-gosd1e.html#ixzz48M4flcAr
Follow us: @smh on Twitter | sydneymorningherald on Facebook

 

The excuse Americans give us for their stupid custom of routinely tipping some people in their society is that they pay them as little as $4 an hour, and at least their society recognises that isn't enugh to live on.

Maybe Australians working under this scheme could get a special mark of some sort tattoed on the forheads so we know thier employers are ripping them off, and we can all give these people a small tip each time we come across them. 

(For those here who have had ironyectomies, like a lot of Americans, this is a joke.)

Proof & source of your outlandish claims please Barak

What DO we have here?

An ironyectoy AND illiteracy?

Your post makes no sense innes. I have said nothing that requires proof.

If it is a state-sanctioned wage scandal he is after, then Malcolm Turnbull is absolutely on the right track – and he might even be breaking the law.

This election campaign has started with a promise of jobs and growth but the Turnbull proposed "internship program" threatens to create a new working underclass, in what is essentially corporate welfare and government endorsed 7-Eleven-style worker exploitation.


Read more: http://www.theage.com.au/comment/malcolm-turnbulls-internship-program-will-create-a-new-working-underclass-20160512-got916.html#ixzz48PMOU2z4
Follow us: @theage on Twitter | theageAustralia on Facebook

Yeah, yeah I'm hearing you. Much better to have youth gathering round street corners, nothing to do except smoke and shoot up instead of receiving valuable experience in an internship.

Another union spanner in the works BS, with no thought behind it.

Ray

You appear to have not read the concerns regarding the hasty intern policy. Its work for the dole with a top up but no work conditions that apply to any worker employed under normal conditions.

You have a 7-Eleven so do you employ a foreign student and rip them off at half pay or get an inter and pay them at 4 bucks an hour ?

Where do you get off assuming that all unemployed youth hang around street corners and shoot up ? What a miserable view of todays younger generation. In general I find them quite agreeable when I am out and about. Maybe you live in an area that has a few problems that are the exemption to the rule.Then again maybe you are using hyperbole but either way you have not discussed the policy.

Hey hang on a minute geomac, I just read Ray's post and he says nothing about ALL youth. Wherever do you get your ideas from? Why  do you  make a habit of misquoting and twisting what people write?? You seem to have great difficulty comprehending posts written by anyone who is not Labor?? I have noticed this a lot but don't comment because I just haven't got the time to be bothered since I'm not in here very often.

Also, a person does not have to live in any area where "problems" exist to KNOW problems exist, that's where newspapers, TV and radio come in handy. Another pretty  daft assumption on your part.

What sort of work do you do geomac and why are you so mad about this internship policy? Or are you out  of work yourself and think it is better for people to live on the dole rather than use any opportunity to gain experience??

 

Ray, heard on ABC news this am about how badly our school children are faring.  At the rate they are perorming   many more will never get a job.

I would have put the link up but it was behind a pay wall so have copied and pasted...well worth a read (well I think so).

Federal election 2016: China’s kids excel at school — at half the costTHE AUSTRALIANMAY 12, 2016 12:00AM

Chinese students are trouncing their Australian counterparts in literacy and maths but cost half as much to educate, the latest data shows, as schools funding becomes a key election issue.

Australia spends $132,945, on average, to educate a student from primary school to Year 10 — double the $66,463 spent on students in Shanghai and 40 per cent more than the $93,630 cost in South Korea, the latest comparative OECD data shows. More than half the students in Shanghai and nearly a third of Korean students top the class internationally in maths — compared with just one in seven Australian students.

One in five Australian students failed the minimum standard in maths in the OECD’s 2012 Program for International Student Assessment (PISA), compared with 3 per cent of Shanghai students and 9 per cent of Korean teenagers.

As Bill Shorten talked up Labor’s $3.8 billion cash splash for schools in 2018-19 yesterday, a new report warned that Australia’s students had fallen behind Asian countries despite record spending on education. The Australian Council for Educational Research criticised a widening gap between the performance of rich and poor students, and a ­“residualisation’’ of struggling students in the poorest government schools.

Shorten’s maths ‘misleading’Shorten’s maths ‘misleading’

“Australia has increased spending on schools and seen standards decline,’’ council chief executive Geoff Masters said yesterday. “It is of concern that so many Australian 15-year-olds are failing to achieve minimally ­adequate levels of reading and mathematical literacy.

“We cannot keep doing what we have been doing and expect performances to improve. The ­answer is to target resources on effective strategies for arresting the drift in Australia’s schools.’’

Professor Masters said it was too soon to tell if the needs-based schools funding model devised by business leader David Gonski — a long-time friend of Malcolm Turnbull — was making a difference. “It’s possible that if funding is better targeted (through Gonski) to where it will make a difference, performance will improve,’’ he said yesterday.

“High-performing countries are focused on trying to reduce disparity between schools so it matters much less what schools students go to. “In Australia the concern is we can see an increase in disparity between schools — we’re ending up with low-achieving disadvantaged students being concentrated in particular types of schools.’’

The previous Labor government signed a six-year Gonski funding deal with most states and territories in 2013, worth an extra $9.4bn in federal funding and $5.1bn in extra state funding. The Abbott government cancelled the last two years of the agreement, worth $4.5bn in federal funding.

Labor is promising to spend the missing $4.5bn, while the Coalition promised $1.2bn in extra funding between 2017 and 2019 in last week’s federal budget.

Disadvantaged schools only began receiving their Gonski funds in 2014 and the results of last year’s PISA exam — which tested half a million 15-year-old students in 70 industrialised countries — will not be known until December.

Labor last night began sending out emails with an in-built calculator for voters to work out “how much Turnbull cut from your school’’, based on the difference between Labor and Coalition spending promises.

The Opposition Leader declared yesterday that Australia’s plummeting performance was “not good enough’’.

“If you look at the success of the emerging nations of our region, they are increasing investment in schools,’’ Mr Shorten said. “If we want to be a smart and successful nation, we need to be an educated nation.”

Opposition education spokeswoman Kate Ellis said a Labor government would spend $4.8m on “targeted teaching’’.

The council report says fewer Australian students are studying advanced maths and science subjects in high school, while 40,000 teenagers failed the minimum international standard for reading at the age of 15. It says teachers are required to teach too much content in a “crowded curriculum”.

The federal and state governments approved a pared-back national curriculum, with a greater focus on phonics-based literacy, for primary school late last year but it has yet to take effect in most classrooms.

The Australian’s analysis of Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development data shows a strong link between attending preschool and success in high school.

Barely half the Australian teenagers who took the PISA test in 2012 had attended preschool for more than a year, compared to 88 per cent of students in Shanghai, 90 per cent in Singapore, 97 per cent in Japan and 83 per cent in Korea.

The OECD data reveals that a third of Australian teenagers skip classes or wag school — 10 times the rate in Shanghai.

The US spends even more than Australia — $157,270 to educate a child to Year 10 — yet its students performed even worse.

Singapore spends slightly less than Australia — $115,665 per child — yet its students are twice as likely to top the tests in maths and reading.

Federal Education Minister Simon Birmingham yesterday said the council report “smacks down’’ Labor’s big-spending approach to education.

“We need to focus on what actually makes a difference for our students because, while spending on Australian schools has increased, the results of our students has gone backwards,’’ he said. Senator Birmingham said the Coalition’s “back to basics’’ education policy would improve outcomes in literacy, numeracy, the STEM.

Just remembered I'm taking a vacation from the Political forum, so will be brief Radish.

That's an excellent article, it's not only revealing, it cuts close to the bone, thanks for putting it up. Yes, compared to other countries and particularly China, Australia is moving backwards. It's not how much money that's thrown at schools, it's how that money is utilised. It stands to reason, if our kids are just doing average or below average at their grades, and, if by some lucky chance they get to uni, some of them will go on to be teachers, so the same old story,those inadequate teachers will be teaching kids, it is necessary to do something and soon.

I don't think Labor's plan is going to improve education the way they are making out because they are not making enough reference to improving the quality of teachers. Some teachers and many of those in high school are often less informed than their students.

It's a disgrace that the unions and Labor want to hinder the government in any plans they have for improving education in this country.

You guys amaze me. A report on the poor performance of our students turns into an attack on the ALP, unions and teachers. 

Pure bias.

One of the sad things is that almost all adults think they are experts on education because they all went to school once.

Ray, I certainly believe what Professor Masters has said considering what an authority he is on education.

"Geoff Masters AO Australian Council for Educational Research Professor Geoff Masters is Chief Executive Officer and a member of the Board of ACER – roles he has held since 1998. He has a PhD in educational measurement from the University of Chicago and has published widely in the fields of educational assessment and research.

Professor Masters has served on a range of bodies, including terms as President of the Australian College of Educators; founding President of the Asia-Pacific Educational Research Association; member of the Business Council of Australia’s Education, Skills and Innovation Taskforce; member of the Australian National Commission for UNESCO; and member of the International Baccalaureate Research Committee.

He is currently a member of the Advisory Board for the Science of Learning Research Centre, the ABC Digital Education Advisory Group and the national Board of Life Education Australia.

He has conducted a number of reviews for governments, including a review of examination procedures in the NSW Higher School Certificate (2002); an investigation of options for the introduction of an Australian Certificate of Education (2005); a national review of options for reporting and comparing school performances (2008); and reviews of strategies for improving literacy and numeracy learning in government schools in Queensland (2009) and the Northern Territory (2011).

He is currently undertaking a review of senior secondary assessment and tertiary entrance procedures in Queensland. Professor Masters is an adjunct professor in the Queensland Brain Institute.

His contributions to education have been recognised through the award of the Australian College of Educators’ Medal in 2009 and his appointment as an Officer of the Order of Australia in 2014"

I know. Let's spend nothing on education and our kids will all be geniuses.

I haven't seen so much garbage on education for quite some time.

Rad

There is no question in  my mind Professor Masters is an expert on education, thanks for putting that up - here's a video on his brilliant address on education and what needs to be done in schools:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i2PHu5wOpIw

It's an hour's long but you only need to listen to the first 15 mins or so to realise that the emphasis should be on the quality of teaching and not how much money is thrown at the school. This is one of the things I have always argued about in educational circles.

I have been to countries where there are minimum funds to spare, but brilliant and dedicated teachers and the results from students are astonishing.

OK Ray, what is wrong with the currrent quality of teaching in Australia?

If you can prove there is something wrong with it, how would you fix it?

I supervised NAPLAN tests at my school today. 

Several students didn't sit the tests because their parents sent them along with notes saying they didn't have to do them. A few others simply didn't turn up. Of those there, several wrote nothing, and spent their time making paper planes out of the sheets of paper supplied to them.

Several others stopped writing very early into the test. Told me later they thought it was too boring.

One of the biggest mistakes researchers (and some teachers) make is to assume that the results of tests accurately reflect the ability of those sitting the test.

Abbott claim No 2Advertisement

We’ll get the budget back under control by ending Labor’s waste”. He added, “By the end of a Coalition government’s first term, the budget will be on-track to a believable surplus”.

Unfortunately for the Liberals, its third budget confirmed a three-fold increase in the budget deficit, a blowout in net government debt to the highest level in 60 years and government spending as a share of GDP above 25.2% in every year, to outpace the level of spending of just 24.1% in the last full year of the Labor government in 2012-13.

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2016/may/13/how-the-coalition-has-failed-on-three-key-economic-promises

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