Senator CORMANN (Western Australia—Leader of the Government in the Senate, Minister for Finance, Special Minister of State and Vice-President of the Executive Council) (14:09): The government has released all of the appropriate information and more, and let me just correct what Senator Keneally just said. This is a saving, a major saving, for working families around Australia. We on this side of the chamber want to help working families get ahead. We are providing income tax relief to provide cost-of-living-pressure relief for low- and middle-income earners but, of course, we want to ensure that we address bracket creep right across the board. We want to ensure that all Australians, all working Australians, have the right incentive, the right encouragement and the right reward for effort, because we understand that bracket creep is a drag on economic growth. If the economy grows more slowly, you know who is the first to hurt the most? Low-income earners. A stronger economy is good for low-income earners because it means they get better opportunities to get ahead—to get a job, to get a well-paid job, to get a better-paid job and continue to get ahead. The Labor Party doesn't understand this. The Labor Party under Bill Shorten is pursuing an antibusiness, anti-opportunity, antigrowth policy. The PRESIDENT: Order! Senator Cormann, please resume your seat. Senator Collins on a point of order. Senator Jacinta Collins: The point of order is that the minister is failing to respond to the question. The question is not what he thinks the Labor Party does or does not understand. The question is again quite clear: will the Turnbull government finally tell the parliament the year-by-year cost of each element of its Personal Income Tax Plan? It's not, 'What do you think is appropriate, Minister?' The PRESIDENT: Senator Collins, there were other elements to that. That was one element of the question. I caught Senator Cormann's answer to part of the question upon his commencing his answer, and he is continuing to present material that's relevant to it. Senator CORMANN: We on this side of the chamber stand for encouraging the Australian people so that they have the best possible opportunity to get ahead. We stand for more investment, stronger growth, more jobs and higher wages. Those on that side of the chamber stand for a socialist agenda that will make all Australians poorer. You stand for an antibusiness, anti-opportunity, socialist, politics-of-envy agenda that will leave all Australians worse off; that will lead to less investment, lower growth, fewer jobs, higher unemployment and lower wages. That is going to be the choice for the Australian people at the next election: do they want more jobs and higher wages or fewer jobs, higher unemployment and lower wages under Bill Shorten and the Labor Party? The PRESIDENT: Senator Keneally, a supplementary question.