Mr HOCKEY (North Sydney—The Treasurer) (14:58): I dealt with that last week. Opposition members interjecting— The SPEAKER: There will be silence! Mr HOCKEY: The reason we are putting in place and we want to put in place a policy that asks Australians to contribute one cent more for petrol is because we need to build the roads that make life easier for Australians. We need to build the infrastructure that helps to make the economy stronger. We are asking Australians to pay 40c a week in order to help us build the roads that are going to make the economy stronger—40c a week. I do not think that is— The SPEAKER: The member for Charlton on a point of order? Mr Conroy: On relevance, Madam Speaker. Is it fair that everyone is against the Treasurer? The SPEAKER: The member for Charlton will remove himself under standing order 94(a). The member for Charlton then left the chamber. Mr HOCKEY: Forty cents a week. The reason why we want to build this infrastructure is because there has been a very significant shift in the Australian economy. Mining and resources have helped to drive the strength of the Australian economy over the last decade. There is no doubt about that. That mining and resources activity, primarily in construction, is coming off in intensity and now we need to build up the other 90 per cent of the Australian economy that is not directly in mining and resources. That includes health and education and financial services, agricultural services, industry more generally, telecommunications and IT. We need to fill the infrastructure that is going to help to drive the remainder of the Australian economy, the great bulk of employment. Because, if we do not spend this money now on the infrastructure of the 21st century, unemployment will rise and our quality of life will deteriorate. The Labor Party does not get that, otherwise they would be dealing in reality rather than in the fantasy that somehow 'she'll be right'. 'She'll be right' is not a policy prescription for Australia's future. 'She'll be right' is not a policy for a political party. We have to earn our growth. We have to earn the jobs of the future. The only way to be able to do that is to pay along the way, to contribute along the way. That is the only way we are able to deal with the challenges— Mr Shorten: Madam Speaker, I rise on a point of order. I have waited patiently. I just want to know one thing, Treasurer: do poor people have cars and do they drive them, and do you know what you are talking about?