Treasurer Downplays Record Business Collapses in Australia

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Business Collapses,Australia,Economy

Australian Treasurer Jim Chalmers has played down the record number of business collapses this year, attributing the issue to difficult business conditions. While acknowledging the hardships faced by businesses, Chalmers emphasized government support measures such as energy bill assistance and tax breaks for small businesses. He also argued that the insolvency rate, as a proportion of businesses, is actually lower than pre-COVID levels and under previous administrations.

Treasurer Jim Chalmers has played down the record number of business collapses in Australia this calendar year while being grilled on Sunrise about the dire statistic. Australian Securities & Investments Commission (ASIC) data shows a record 12,405 businesses collapsed between January and November, The Australian reported on Wednesday. The outlet also reported that 26,000 businesses have collapsed since Labor came to power in the 2022 election, including a record 1442 last month alone.

The ASIC figures showed 6925 construction firms, 4012 hospitality businesses, 1706 retailers and 1329 manufacturers had all hit the wall since June 2022, The Australian reported. And as the cost-of-living crisis continues to play havoc with the country’s economy, some 930,000 Australians now relying on JobSeeker and Youth Allowance payments — 83,000 higher than at the same time last year. On Wednesday, Sunrise host Monique Wright put the damning figures to Chalmers. “Australian businesses collapsing at record numbers at the moment. Why do you think that this is so? 12,000 this year alone, businesses that have closed. Why is that happening?” Wright asked. “First of all we acknowledge that business conditions are difficult. That’s why in our budgets we have been providing help with energy bills that our opponents didn’t support,” Chalmers said. “It is why we have been providing tax breaks for small businesses to invest in the sort of capital and kit that they need to be successful because we acknowledge that those business conditions are tough.” Chalmers then argued the figures were not quite as dire as they appeared. “As a proportion of businesses, the amount of insolvencies in our economy is actually much lower than the pre-COVID average,” he said. “It is actually lower than it was under John Howard and, again, this is a point that the Reserve Bank governor has mad

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