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Source: The Australian [Patricia Karvelas]
THE federal government remains committed to establishing a national support scheme for disabled people, as the Coalition backs away from a potential fight on the issue, despite reports it could cost as much as $11 billion a year and be funded by a politically risky levy.
Parliamentary Secretary for Disabilities Jan McLucas said although the government would not make any commitments about the model of support it would endorse, it looked forward to the Productivity Commission's findings.
Julia Gillard will face another politically difficult decision with the commission expected to recommend this month that the government investigate a levy to fund a universal disability insurance scheme.
One option to fill the $5bn funding gap through a levy would be to add 0.8 of a percentage point to taxpayers' existing 1.5 per cent Medicare levy.
Senator McLucas said the government expected a draft report from the commission at the end of this month.
"I think it's a valuable exercise that we think about how people with disabilities get appropriate services and that's why we've asked the Productivity Commission to conduct this inquiry," she said.
Despite the Coalition's push against all new levies and taxes, Coalition spokesman for disabilities Mitch Fifield said Labor had been slow to act on disability support.
"Successive state and federal governments have failed Australians with disability," Senator Fifield said. copyright News Limited. Printed with permission.
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