Treasurer Jim Chalmers speaks on foreign investment reform

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Jim Chalmers Foreign Investment Reform Treasurer I Nouvelles

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Sarah Ferguson presents Australia's premier daily current affairs program, delivering agenda-setting public affairs journalism and interviews that hold the powerful to account. Plus political analysis from Laura Tingle.

SARAH FERGUSON: You're delivering a major economic speech tomorrow at a foreign policy think tank much in the way that the US national security advisor Jake Sullivan did last year. Are you proposing a significant rewrite of foreign investment rules based on national security?

JIM CHALMERS: No, the focus is more forward-looking than that, Sarah and what I'm intending to announce tomorrow is a major overhaul of our foreign investment framework in three ways. If it is higher risk, it will get more scrutiny, stronger, more robust examination to how it relates to our national interest and some of the things that we are worried about will be familiar to you, Sarah.

SARAH FERGUSON: Let's talk the risky investments. You just used the word interference, risk of interference. What you mean by that? JIM CHALMERS: Well, first of all, the regime in Australia is already a bit tougher for state-owned enterprises and I think that's appropriate. I don't intend to change that when it comes to the zero threshold and the like, that's an important part of the current framework that we are looking to enhance and improve.

JIM CHALMERS: Well, it's just one of a suite of tools that we want to make more substantial when it comes to the scrutiny on foreign investment. SARAH FERGUSON: And would you be sending security officials from ASIO for example to accompany those Treasury officials because an on-site visit at a company that is digging a rare earths out of the ground, it is very hard to imagine a Treasury official can make an on-site visit and discover anything crucial.

But fundamentally, it's about looking forward. It is about how do attract more, less risky investment and how do we better screen the more risky investment because if you think about A Future Made in Australia, you think about our capacity to be a renewable energy superpower, you think about the future of our economy.

No investment stays exactly the same over a long period of time and so, any normal self-respecting country like Australia should have the ability to go back into those deals, if that's necessary and what the changes I'll announce tomorrow will be about beefing that up, as you say, but also having a much more robust information base to make those kinds of often difficult decisions.

JIM CHALMERS: The tests that we apply are who's making the investment? So state-owned enterprises, obviously attract a different level of scrutiny; how they are making that investment, the structure of the deal and in what industries they're investing in, and those tests apply across the board whether it is China or Singapore or Canada or other places where we get a lot of interest, a lot of foreign investment.

And so, what I will be releasing and working up initially tomorrow but over the course of the next couple of months is much clearer and more transparent tax guidance so there is a bit less of the back and forth between decision-makers and the Foreign Investment Review Board and the bidders, trying to understand what their tax obligations are.SARAH FERGUSON: Jim Chalmers, thank you for coming to talk to us and particular on this fascinating subject. Thank you very much indeed.

But I think it's that critical infrastructure issue that is at the heart of this and of course, while the Treasurer is saying to you in that interview, it's all about the future, in fact, the horse has bolted on this. LAURA TINGLE: I suspect business here will be pretty pragmatic about it, Sarah. You can see in the Treasurers language, there is sort of offsets here. He is talking about strengthening the regime, but he is also talking about streamlining it which business always like and making sure it's transparent.

He made a few announcements about money including extending a boost to police funding, but I think if you think about his visit to Alice Springs in terms of Indigenous affairs policy and how it has been run post Voice, it's still a little bit arbitrary or a bit piecemeal, a bit of money here for education, a bit for health, we are waiting to see a broader strategic approach to the issues that come up in Alice Springs.

 

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