Luyện nói tiếng Anh bằng Shadowing qua video: Budget 2026: Anthony Albanese asked about gas tax, JobSeeker and transparency

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Prime Minister, thanks for joining me.
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Prime Minister, thanks for joining me.
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Good to be with you.
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Can I first ask you,
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you were elected promising transparency and credibility, now broken promises.
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How can voters trust what you say?
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What we've done with this budget is a budget of reform,
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a budget of building resilience and a budget to really make some hard decisions.
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I was elected as Prime Minister not to just occupy the space.
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And we know that young people are feeling more
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and more like they're not going to have the opportunity to ever own their own home.
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When we receive that advice and it becomes stronger and stronger and stronger,
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the only option that we have is to act.
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And we are acting to make sure that we change the way the tax system works.
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And the truth is
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that people have called for tax reform for a long period
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of time to make sure we get a better balance between income earned from working with income earned from owning assets.
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That's what these changes do.
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Do you have to apologise to the people who voted for you thinking these changes weren't going to happen?
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Importantly what we've done as grandfather all of these changes.
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There's no one who currently has a negatively geared home who have any impact on this.
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But those who might have aspirationally wanted to do that into the future?
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Guess what?
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They can.
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They can buy a new home where what they're doing is not just helping themselves and building an asset for themselves,
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they're building an asset for the nation.
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Because instead of competing with first home buyers on an existing property,
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what they'll be doing is investing in new builds,
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new properties that helps to build supply and that makes a positive difference,
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not just for them but for their nation.
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and they can also choose to continue to have a 50% discount on capital gains if they choose to do so.
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Are you prepared to go further in this term if the dial doesn't shift?
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No, what we've done is get the balance right.
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So nothing else in this term?
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We've done a whole range of measures already.
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We are now putting this in place to make a difference.
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This comes on top of our $47 billion Homes for Australians plan that consists of new infrastructure.
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Those small infrastructure, whether it be sewerage or water or energy or roads,
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that will make a difference and allow progress to go ahead.
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Our increased public housing spending through the Housing Australia Future Fund.
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Our build to rent scheme,
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our shared equity scheme, our 5% home deposits that have been accessed by over 200,000 first home buyers.
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These are all measures we are throwing everything at the housing issue
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because it's the number one issue that not just young people raised with us but their parents and grandparents as well.
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One question from our audience is have you benefited from negative gearing?
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Well it's not about me.
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But in the past?
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Well it's not about me.
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All of my affairs are documented publicly and the good thing is
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that people will be able to if they choose
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so negatively gear into the future they'll be able to do that through their buying a new home.
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So you're saying you have in the past
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but you know I'm saying this isn't about me
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or about you yeah this is about the Australian people
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and making sure that they get the measures right all of my affairs are declared they're open for all to see.
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One Nation has been tapping into this sense of grievance around
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trust with major parties have you just handed them a new campaign tactic in Western Sydney?
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No, One Nation have benefited from trying to pit Australian against Australian.
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What we're doing is to ensure
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that young Australians get a fair crack whilst maintaining all of the measures
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that are there that have been enjoyed by people for a long period of time
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but what has happened over a period of time is
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that it has got harder and harder for young people to access the housing market.
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We want an Australia where everyone can aspire to having a roof over their head.
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That is what these measures support.
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We're hearing this rhetoric from the conservative side of politics that migration is to blame for the housing shortage.
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In that environment there's a push to reduce permanent migration.
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Will you commit to keep the permanent migration level where it is for the rest of your term?
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Well we've got the figures in the budget last night.
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We have reduced the net overseas migration by about 45% from its peak.
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And of course, it went up post-COVID because Australians and visitors were locked out for a long period of time.
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What we've been doing is working on getting those numbers down,
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the budget figures show the numbers going further down from 295,000 to 225,000.
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When we look at the reality of interest rates,
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it's the poorest who are hit first.
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Your offset in the tax area that you announced last night for working Australians,
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it doesn't go to those who are the poorest and it's not means tested.
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So if the budget's in better shape next year,
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will you look at raising JobSeeker?
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No, it goes to workers is what it does
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and we make no apologies for wanting people to earn more and to keep more of what they earn.
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And the other thing that we want to do is to make sure that people can get into a job.
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That's how you lift people out of poverty,
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through things like free TAFE,
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that we have now had about 800,000 Australians go through,
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by making sure that we have an economy that works for people.
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The unemployment rate at 4.3% is still at a historic low.
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We have prioritised creating jobs,
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whilst we've been in government,
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we'll continue to do so.
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So job seekers is not something on your agenda in this term,
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in terms of an increase?
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What's on the agenda, we had a budget just last night.
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Yep.
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So, how about we talk about last night's budget?
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That is our priority.
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But our priority as well,
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as shown last night, is getting people into work,
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making sure that the employment services system works for them,
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making sure that they can get the skills and training that they need to get those jobs.
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Just in terms of the gas tax,
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which you completely ruled out in this budget,
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if there is a change the circumstances
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so the war is over the fuel situation is is not a pressure on the economy is it something
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that you would revisit with respect what what is it
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that you refer to
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because no one seems to know increasing the tax on gas
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for export well it's not there is a prrt there now there is
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and in the budget it rose 400 million dollars people speak as if there isn't one there's There's company tax,
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there's the resources tax that goes to state as well and in addition to that there's the PRRT.
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The PRRT was designed to ramp up over time as the
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cost of investment to create these projects is paid down and that is what you would expect to occur.
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We made changes to the PRRT in our first term.
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But the issue that we are concerned about at the moment,
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of course, is supply.
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Is supply of fuel into our economy.
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That's what overwhelmingly your listeners are interested in as well.
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In terms of the budget money in Indigenous Affairs,
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there is no additional money this year for Makarata.
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Is that a signal that the Uluru Statement from the heart is not something
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that you want to invest in at this point?
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Look, I've made very clear what our priorities are when it comes to Indigenous affairs.
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And in this budget, for example,
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one of the things we've done to go back to jobs is that we've doubled the remote job scheme.
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Now, that has replaced essentially a Make Work program that didn't achieve any real jobs with real wages,
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with real jobs, with real wages and real training.
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That's an absolute priority.
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It's just one of the measures that we have in this budget to assist on Indigenous affairs.
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Are we to take, though,
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from the lack of funding for Makarrata that in this term or particularly in this budget it's not something you're funding,
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it's not something you're investing in?
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You can take from our budget what we are doing positively
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and the positive thing that we have is the remote jobs program
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but there's other funding in there as well for social services,
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for a range of areas across the board.
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You're facing criticism within the Parliament for releasing the government's response to the gambling review yesterday
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while we were in budget lockup
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and you were also focused on the budget why did you do it at
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that time seriously you were at the National Press Club I think
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when I announced these changes it wasn't done in the chamber
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yesterday it was done at the National Press Club before the
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entire National Press Gallery on a broadcast on ABC live
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and then replayed on ABC iview and I said as part of
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that speech I said that we would table the response at the first possible opportunity
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when Parliament came back that was weeks ago in the full glare of the public
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and what that says to me is that we've got the response right
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because people are arguing about a process
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that you can't be more transparent in any policy announcement than
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doing it at the National Press Club taking questions for a long time we went over time during
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that that speech at the National Press Club
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so I found it rather bizarre that people suggested somehow
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that this was hidden well
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if it was it was hidden in full public view on live television at at the National Press Club.
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You can't decouple this budget from what's happening across the world.
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And we have a meeting that's about to occur between President Xi and President Trump.
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What would you like to see come out of that engagement?
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Well, it's a good thing that this meeting is taking place.
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These are the world's two superpowers.
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I have a constructive relationship with both President Trump and President Xi.
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What I want to see is a relationship
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that builds on the first meeting that they had in the United States a little
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while ago and then meetings that have taken place and I know that phone conversations have taken place as well.
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We want peace and security and stability around the world.
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The United States and China have a critical role to play in that.
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Prime Minister, we appreciate your time on an incredibly busy day.
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Thank you very much.

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