All are incentives that governments around the world are embracing as they race to get as many people as possible vaccinated against coronavirus.
Labor leader Anthony Albanese is now channelling the incentive argument,calling for the federal governmentto offer $300 to anyone who is fully vaccinated by December 1. It would include anyone already vaccinated with a price tag of an eye-watering $6 billion.
The government was quick to argue it was a load of nonsense.
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“We’ve looked carefully at the types of and the evidence from those (the) government worked with shows that these types of cash incentives are not necessary,won’t change it and prove to be quite wasteful in terms of the overall scale of public expenditure,” Finance Minister Simon Birminghamsaid on Tuesday morning.
Brave words from a government that has long argued the merits of incentives via its personal income tax cuts or business assistance to its “no jab,no pay” policy for childhood vaccinations.
And even braver given the amount of research coming in from around the world,and locally,that shows if Australia is going vaccinate 80 per cent of the population over the age of 16 it is going to need incentives of some sort.