With punters flocking back to festivals and concerts, the Greens are proposing artists should always have a financial cushion to fall back on.
Up to 10,000 artists could sign up for the Greens’ proposed pilot program in which they would be paid $772.60 a week for a year.
The party argues the Artists Wage would free creatives to focus on their craft after struggling to make ends meet following two years of cancellations due to the pandemic and cuts to government arts funding.
‘The arts are a core part of Australian culture and contribute so much to our economy. We must do everything we can to make sure our artists can continue creating,’ Greens senator Sarah Hanson-Young said on Saturday.
‘The arts helped us all get through lockdowns and now it’s time we are there for them.’
The program, to the tune of nearly $280 million contingent on a hung parliament following the May 21 federal election, would also have an Artists in Residence component that would place an artist in every school and library across the country.
‘In today’s fast inflationary world, $772.60 will quickly run out for a single income family of mum and dad and two kids at school,’ said David Bradbury, an Academy Award-nominated documentary filmmaker, said in support of the scheme.
‘But it’s a bloody lot better than most of us earn in today’s fast polarising Australia between the rich and the poor.’
Greens Senate candidate David Shoebridge said the arts sector employed almost 200,000 people, making it four times the coalmining workforce, and contributed about $15 billion a year to Australia’s GDP.
‘Imagine a pub without music, galleries without artwork, cinemas without films, bookstores without fiction,’ he said.
Struggling artists could look forward to a weekly wage of nearly $800 a week to make ends meet under a Greens proposal.
Inside the Greens’ very ambitious plan to change Australia
The Australian Greens have pledged to legalise marijuana, wipe student debt, make childcare free and ban petrol cars in an ambitious election agenda.
But the audacious plan – which would cost billions and change Australia as we know it – is mostly pie in the sky with the party only holding one seat in the House of Representatives.
In the latest Newspoll ahead of the May election the Greens have a primary vote of 10 per cent which is the same as their 2019 result.
Last month, the Greens announced they would spend at least $66billion of taxpayers’ money to wipe all student debt and leader Adam Bandt is set to announce more big-spending plans in the coming weeks.
Here Daily Mail Australia takes a look at what they have promised so far in policies that will cost hundreds of billions.
Wipe student debt
The Greens want to wipe all student loan debts, meaning Aussies with student loan debt would not be required to pay it back.
‘Student debt should not be an added burden on people who are already struggling, especially after the impacts of the pandemic,’ said Education spokeswoman Mehreen Faruqi.
‘Many current MPs, including the Prime Minister, went to university when it was free, but now students are being saddled with tens of thousands of dollars in study debt that often takes decades to repay.’
In 2020-21, the average student debt in Australia was $23,685. The total value of HELP debt in 2020 was $66.6billion.
The Greens also want to make childcare, school, TAFE and university free.
University was free in Australia from 1974 but fees were re-introduced in the 1980s.
Legalise weed
The Greens believe drug use should be treated as a health issue, not a criminal issue.
They would legalise, tax and regulate cannabis, fund pill testing at festivals and establish safe injecting facilities in each capital city.
The Greens want to set up a regulated cannabis market with an Australian Cannabis Agency to issue licences for production and sale and ensure quality.
The Greens believe drug use should be treated as a health issue, not a criminal issue
Aussies would be allowed to grow six plants at home for personal use but there would be big fines for selling without a licence.
Adverts for the drug would be banned.
‘The major parties in this countries are intent on pushing forward a policy that criminalises drug users, supports an unregulated and dangerous market and makes people fear seeking help when they need it,’ the Greens say on their website.
Ban petrol cars
The Greens want to immediately ban the construction of new coal, oil and gas infrastructure.
Their target is to phase out the mining, burning and export of thermal coal by 2030.
They also want to stop subsidies for fossil fuel companies, ban political donations from these industries and re-introduce a carbon price.
The Greens would also end the sale of new petrol and diesel cars from 2030, subsidise electric cars and build charging stations across the country
They would spend billions on renewable energy and storage to make sure Australia’s electricity comes from 100 per cent renewable sources.
The Greens would also end the sale of new petrol and diesel cars from 2030, subsidise electric cars and build charging stations across the country.
They want to spend $25 billion on more rail and bus services and build a high-speed rail line from Melbourne to Brisbane.
The Greens also want to end land clearing and native forest logging and plant millions of trees.
Make more healthcare free
The Greens want to make dental care free at the point of use under the Medicare system.
They would also spend $4.8billion to provide unlimited psychologist or psychiatrist mental health sessions under Medicare.
The Greens want to make dental care free at the point of use under the Medicare system
Parental leave at $100,000 a year
The Greens want to shake up parental leave to give parents 26 weeks off.
Their plan involves giving each parent six weeks off on a ‘use it or lose it’ basis and another 14 weeks on top of that for a couple to share between them.
The leave would be paid by taxpayers at the carer’s wage up to $100,000 per year, instead of at minimum wage.
There would also be superannuation paid on all parental leave.
Minimum wage hike
The Greens want to make the minimum wage 60 per cent of the median wage.
The median wage for full-time people in Australia is currently $1,835 a week and 60 per cent of this would be $1,101.
This would make the minimum annual wage $57,264 per year, up from $40,175 per year or $772.60 per week.
Slash defence spending
The Greens – who call their defence spokesman the peace and disarmament spokesman – want to slash defence spending to 1.5 per cent of GDP.
They want to cut down on guns and tanks and instead maintain a ‘light, readily deployable and highly mobile force that meets the needs of our place in the world’.
The Greens – who call their defence spokesman the peace and disarmament spokesman – want to slash defence spending to 1.5 per cent of GDP
The Greens also want laws to stop Governments going to war without Parliamentary approval, a move that critics say would damage the nation’s ability to act swiftly in face of threats.
The Greens also want to ‘renegotiate’ the nation’s alliance with the US and ban killer drones.
They want to end the offshore detention of illegal immigrants and increase refugee intake to 50,000 a year.
End racism and sexism
The Greens say ‘racism is widespread in Australia’ and ‘racial trauma is an everyday reality for so many people’.
They would mandate anti-racism training for all federal MPs and Commonwealth employees and spend $5million on an anti-racism campaign.
The Greens also say ‘we live in a rape culture: one that normalises sexual assault as ”boys will be boys”.’
They would mandate that all MPs undertake regular, comprehensive anti-bullying and harassment training and fund a national respectful relationships program in public schools.
Tax the rich even more
The Greens have proposed a billionaires’ tax which takes six per cent of wealth from anyone with a net worth of more than $1billion.
They say this tax on 122 Australian citizens would raise approximately $40billion over 10 years.
They also want a Corporate Super-Profits Tax, which applies a 40 per cent tax to companies with revenue over $100million a year.
Australia’s richest person Gina Rinehart (pictured) would be hit by the Greens’ billionaires’ tax
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