Mr ALBANESE (Grayndler—Prime Minister) (15:11): Thank you for the question. The truth is that the current account figures today show that the Australian economy is growing at the fastest rate it has in three years, and it's growing faster than any economy—any advanced economy—in the world. That's what the facts show. They also show that per capita living standards are positive and are growing. That's what the figures show today. They also show an improvement in productivity across the year. The figures today— Dr Chalmers: It's up one per cent in a year. The SPEAKER: Order! Members on my left. The Leader of the Opposition will cease interjecting, and the Treasurer will cease interjecting. Dr Chalmers: They've got no idea. The SPEAKER: Order! The Treasurer is now warned. Honestly! I want to hear what the Prime Minister has to say. He's giving information to the House. He's been asked a question. The member for Capricornia deserves an answer as well. So the Prime Minister is going to be heard in silence. Mr ALBANESE: It's because we have put in place the measures that we took to the Australian people last May, and we've been ticking them off one by one as we implement them to make a difference to people's cost-of-living issues. We know that people have been under pressure. That is why we have put these measures in place. But all those measures were opposed by those opposite. Just two days before the election, of course, the two economic shadow ministers put forward their costings. Their costings would have cut the three-day guarantee, removing affordable child care for 100,000 families; cut 41,000 frontline workers; cut student debt relief; cut free TAFE; cut the Commonwealth prac payment; cut cheaper home batteries; cut five per cent deposits for first home buyers; cut Help to Buy; cut Build to Rent; cut the National Reconstruction Fund— The SPEAKER: Order! The Manager of Opposition Business. Mr ALBANESE: He hasn't been on TV for a minute. The SPEAKER: Order! We're going to hear this point of order. The manager will state the point of order. Mr Tehan: Direct relevance. The question was about today's national accounts and productivity. Mr Burke: Mr Speaker, in every point of order that the Manager of Opposition Business has taken today, he has referred to a tiny part of a much longer question in every single instance. The tag that has been used on almost every question opens the relevance rule right up. Now, the Manager of Opposition Business knows this. He's been around long enough to know that every one of the points of order is not valid, and it's simply being used as a way to disrupt the House. The SPEAKER: The Leader of the House is correct. I'm almost at the end of my tolerance of accepting points of order. If you're going to have a broad political question—I made this point earlier today. Questions earlier in the week have been tighter and specific, and we've been dealing with those. But these broad questions about when the buck stops with someone—come on, there are going to be really broad answers with that, and you're just having a go if you try and disrupt this now. So, if you want tight answers and you want to take points of order, that's fine. But don't ask very broad questions, because you're going to get a really broad answer. I'll keep saying it, and hopefully it'll get through. Mr ALBANESE: What I'm comparing is the growth that we've seen in today's national accounts with what would have happened had we not been elected. So, yes, I accept responsibility, to go directly to the question of what we have put in place. But, two days beforehand, the then shadow Treasurer and shadow finance minister's plan—it was hidden, of course, a bit like they tried to hide their election review. If most Australians had known that all these cuts were there, including cutting production tax credits for the resources sector and cutting the Housing Australia Future Fund—we all know they wanted to cut the income tax cuts that we put in place. But what is absolutely extraordinary is that the then shadow economic ministers, the now Leader and Deputy Leader of the Opposition, managed to do all that—and here's the kicker—with bigger deficits over two years, and more debt.