An injection of $300million into local infrastructure projects will be the third stage of the Rudd Government's economic stimulus package.
Prime Minister Kevin Rudd returns to Canberra this morning from the G20 summit, where he met world leaders working to tackle the global financial crisis which sent Japan into recession yesterday.
Mr Rudd will shift his attention to domestic issues, such as a slowing retail sector.
Despite the Government's $10.4billion economic stimulus package announced last month, new Australian Bureau of Statistics figures issued yesterday show Australians are still reluctant to loosen their purse strings, with retail turnover growing by 0.1per cent when economists had expected it to recover by 0.4per cent in the September quarter.
The ACT had the biggest slump in retail sales 3per cent down on the three months to September.
In another move to boost the economy, Mr Rudd and Infrastructure Minister Anthony Albanese are expected to announce new funding today at the historic Australian Council of Local Government meeting at Parliament House.
The money will be shared between councils and can be used for quality-of-life infrastructure, such as ovals, parks, swimming pools and town centres, but not roads.
If divided equally, it will mean about $530,000 each. The money will be delivered this financial year, meaning councils can begin projects straight away and create jobs quickly.
Australian Council of Trade Unions president Sharan Burrow said increased infrastructure spending would provide a stimulus to the economy.
''Any extra funding for local government infrastructure should target areas where the downturn is more severe and create lasting benefits to improve quality of life for working Australians and their families in those areas,'' she said.
The association's president, Paul Bell, said each council had a wish list of projects ready to go.
''Local government has been deferring this expenditure not for one year, but 15 years now ... the beauty of the types of assets that we are talking about here is that we can spend the money tomorrow,'' he said.
The association's chief executive, Adrian Beresford-Wylie, said councils had a $14.5billion backlog in infrastructure renewal work, and mayors wanted the Government to produce a four-year $1billion package to deal with that.
Today’s meeting brings together more than 400 of Australia’s 565 mayors and shire presidents for the first time with federal, state and territory ministers and is designed to build stronger links between the three tiers of government.
There will also be discussion about formal constitutional recognition for councils, perhaps in a preamble. With Mr Rudd returning from the G20 summit, Finance Minister Lindsay Tanner said the summit’s outcomes were ‘‘enormously important’’.
‘‘The commitment by all the countries involved to regulatory reform and to report back on reform within about six months is very significant and equally the commitment not to increase any trade barriers, not to lapse into protectionism, is enormously important for the world economy and, inevitably, for Australia,’’ he said.
Opposition finance spokesman Joe Hockey said it had failed to deliver an ‘‘immediate stimulus’’ to the global economy. ‘‘We hope as an Opposition, that out of the G20 meeting over the weekend, that governments will continue to focus on their economies,’’ he said. ‘‘And domestically, Kevin Rudd needs to focus on getting credit card rates down of their highs of over 19 per cent, small business lending and borrowing rates down from exorbitant levels that they’re still at.’’
The $300 million package comes after the $10.4 billion stimulus package, and the $6.2 billion rescue plan for the car industry.
The Government is also leaving open the option of another big stimulus package, although Mr Tanner said yesterday he did not believe it would be needed. ‘‘I certainly hope there won’t be a need for further major stimulatory action but we can’t rule that out because we are not clear about exactly how bad the recession internationally is going to end up being,’’ he said.