Crisis? What Crisis? Australian National Supply Chain Faces Imminent Collapse By James Reed

Petrol prices in Oz are set to hit record levels, with there being no end in sight, and the same problem, we see from reports from our two US and one UK correspondents, is happening across the West. Petrol is now over $2 a litre, and this trend, said by those in the know, is set to sky rocket. It is all part of the orchestrated global crisis of the Great Reset, the West is now experiencing, including food. Some US supermarket shelves are empty, and we can expect the same here.

But taking one crisis at a time, over half of the state of South Australia’s trucking companies, for example, face bankruptcy, and it is much the same story across the country. Truckers lost their diesel tax discount when the former Morrison government gave a six-month halving of the fuel excise tax in response to exploding prices arising from the Ukrainian War. Thus, the truckers took the brunt of the fuel discount for other motorists. And discount there must be, but the price should not be taken by the trucking industry. Industry insiders say that a collapse of the national supply chain is imminent unless the policy, which expires on September 30, is reversed. At that date, it may be too late for the majority of truckers.

This was another Sco Mo bozo disaster.

https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/lifestyle/temporary-petrol-tax-relief-cant-last-forever-raa/news-story/89f4780caeb398a5655bfd27f591e1fb

https://www.adelaidenow.com.au/news/south-australia/more-than-half-of-the-states-truck-companies-face-bankruptcy/news-story/c77ff5b52f0d37258d462c310413f9f0

“The national supply chain faces imminent collapse as truckies are forced to keep funding the federal government’s fuel tax discount for other motorists, an industry body warns.

A South Australian Road Transport Association survey found 57 per cent of respondents said their companies would be bankrupted by the “disastrous” policy.

Truckies lost their diesel tax discount when the former Morrison government announced a six-month halving of the fuel excise tax in response to surging prices stemming from the Russian invasion of Ukraine.

The discount deal runs until September 30 but the association’s chief executive, Steve Shearer, said it would be too late for many struggling businesses.

He said that, with little consultation, the government decision had forced the industry to pay for the halving of the 44c a litre discount.

“The former Coalition government made a disastrous and ill-advised decision on the run to abolish the fuel tax credit payable to truck operators to fund 80 per cent of the fuel excise cut,’’ Mr Shearer said.

“What that meant was that the taxpayer funded only 4.3c a litre of the 22.1c a litre cut in fuel tax and the truck industry funded the other 17.8c a litre in a sleight-of-hand move.

“Truck operators claim the tax credit each quarter, ranging from $2000 to over $150,000, and no business can sustain the loss of such a significant portion of their funds.”

Unlike motorists, most truck operators purchase their fuel wholesale in advance and did not benefit when fuel retailers passed on the 22.1c a litre tax cut at the bowser.

Diamond Bros chief executive Kym McDermid said the tax changes had disrupted cashflow.

“Many small operators in particular may not survive to the reintroduction in September,’’ Mr McDermid said.

“There was no reduction as the fuel prices soared leaving operators bearing the cashflow and revenue implications.”

Mr Shearer said the national supply chain for food and products relied on trucks that soon would be forced off the road.

“The supply chain is now facing imminent collapse, as the trucking industry on which it depends is collapsing with 57 per cent of truck operators facing financial collapse if the tax credit is not restored prior to the scheduled September 30 date,’’ he said.

Mr Shearer said a national trucking survey was not expected to produce different results.

“Ninety-two per cent of SA companies that feared bankruptcy said they could survive if the new Labor government fixed the Coalition’s blunder and restore the tax credit from July 1,’’ he said.

“To do so will mean the government itself would fund the full 22.1c a litre cut in fuel excise, as the (former) Coalition government should have done, instead of making the trucking industry pay 17.8c a litre of it and send the industry into a financially fatal spiral.

“The cost of fixing the Coalition’s blunder is $350m, which is a drop in the ocean of the federal budget and pales into insignificance in comparison with the looming economic collapse.”

The incoming government will not be drawn on what it plans to do with the fuel tax policy.”

You would have hoped that the new government would have at least give lip service to dealing with this crisis, but the Labor leaders are too busy with globalist talkfests at the moment. Davos and the World Economic Forum must come first.

 

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Saturday, 04 May 2024

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