What the State bank tax means for South Australians

What the State bank tax means for South Australians

It's been a big few weeks in and around SA Parliament with the latest state budget up for debate.

Transforming Health, ramping at Flinders Medical Centre, downgrading services at Noarlunga and closing the Repat were on the agenda.   

Child protection and the fiasco at Oakden Senior Mental Health facility were hot topics along with long conversations about South Australia's economic and unemployment woes. 30 months as the state with the highest unemployment in the nation is a fact that has been hurting our state for too long.   

Attention also turned to the State Bank Tax.   

What we've seen in South Australia is a State Labor Government addicted to taxing South Australians at every turn.  

First it was drastically increasing the ESL hitting families across the state. Now the Weatherill Labor Government is aiming to take more money from every South Australian with a bank account, a mortgage, who uses eftpos or has superannuation. If you deal with a bank Premier Weatherill wants you to pay.  

This mentality from the Premier and Treasurer Koutsantonis is strangling anyone who is wanting to "have a go", "start a business" or "invest in our state". It has dragged South Australia down for far too long.   

If you ask people in your local community (and I do regularly) ‘How is our state going?’ The answer is always "poorly".   

This taxing mentality has hurt our state and made us a laughing stock.  

That's the economic environment State Labor have created and it must end.   

South Australians have paid enough. South Australians have had enough. This taxing mentality of our Premier and Treasurer has dragged South Australia to the bottom of the state rankings on so many levels. It has driven businesses out of our state and our bright young people. 

We have to put South Australians first and we have to create an environment that will generate opportunity. That is what the Marshall Liberal team is focused on doing. 

Visit my website for more www.coreywingard.com.au

To view or add a comment, sign in

Insights from the community

Others also viewed

Explore topics