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Billion dollar man: Josh Frydenberg meets with Business Council of Australia to talk cuts to red and green tape

The parliamentary secretary to the Prime Minister, Josh Frydenberg, is meeting today with the Business Council of Australia to talk red and green tape cuts. Frydenberg has been charged with reducing red and green tape administration costs by $1 billion per year nationally, and has been meeting with industry groups to find out ways it […]
Melinda Oliver
Melinda Oliver

The parliamentary secretary to the Prime Minister, Josh Frydenberg, is meeting today with the Business Council of Australia to talk red and green tape cuts.

Frydenberg has been charged with reducing red and green tape administration costs by $1 billion per year nationally, and has been meeting with industry groups to find out ways it can be done.

Reports suggest the meeting with the BCA is likely to cover the governmentโ€™s proposal to set a streamlined system for environmental approvals.

The BCA was contacted by SmartCompany for more details this morning, but no response was received prior to publication.

Frydenberg wrote in The Australian newspaper recently that โ€œone of the most effective ways to boost productivity is via the micro-economic reform agenda of deregulationโ€.

โ€œIt is an area where Labor failed and the Coalition must succeed,โ€ he wrote.

โ€œWith the Prime Minister’s own department now taking responsibility for the Deregulation Unit previously housed in Finance, the Prime Minister is well placed to lead this charge.โ€

The meeting today with the BCA will also be attended by representatives of major companies including Rio Tinto, BHP Billiton, Telstra and Credit Suisse, reports suggest.

Frydenberg met with the Australian Chamber of Commerce and Industry chief executive Peter Anderson last week. Anderson was unavailable for comment this morning. However, a representative for ACCI said it was a brief introduction meeting, and a chance to put forward the case for small business and red tape reduction at the โ€œearliest opportunityโ€.

The spokesperson said ACCIโ€™s ongoing โ€œToo Big to Ignoreโ€ campaign would have formed the basis of conversation. The campaign calls for the government to cut red tape, simplify the tax system, make it easier to employ people and build better infrastructure.

Frydenberg has also met with the Australian Institute of Company Directors and SmartCompany understands, the Council of Small Business of Australia. COSBOA chief executive Peter Strong has long been advocating for the government to cut red tape. He told SmartCompany after the federal election that he was looking forward to working with the Coalition on red tape removal.

Australian Institute of Company Directors general manager of communications Steve Burrell told SmartCompany this morning the AICD discussed with Frydenberg the view that deregulation should be a โ€œcritical part of the new governmentโ€™s economic policy challengeโ€.

โ€œWe had a very fruitful and productive discussion which emphasised the need for regulatory reform,โ€ he said. โ€œThat is, itโ€™s not just about having less regulation – we need better and more efficient regulation.

โ€œIt is the whole system of creating and removing regulation that needs to be reformed, not just the individual regulations themselves. While the reforms should be initiated and supported by the Commonwealth Government, there needs to be a consistent national response to the reforms.

โ€œWe are encouraged that the new Government is consulting with us and other business groups.โ€

The Minerals Council of Australia has also reportedly met with Frydenberg. Last week chief executive Mitchell Hooke said in a statement the MCA has โ€œlong advocated the need to streamline federal and state processes.โ€

Hooke was pleased with the Coalitionโ€™s recent announcement for a framework to streamline project approvals between the Commonwealth and states. He said it was a โ€œlong overdue reform of Australiaโ€™s cumbersome and inefficient green tape burdenโ€.

Research by the MCA found that since 2006 there had been more than 120 changes to state and federal government approvals laws and supporting legislation in the minerals industry.