Adorable moment during budget

An adorable moment between Jim Chalmers and his young daughter has been captured during budget night.

The Treasurer was under immense pressure on Tuesday as he handed down the government’s second budget in under a year.

The budget will see a mich needed increase to Jobseeker payment and a small rise to rent assistance, while handing down a small but short lived surplus for the first time in 15 years.

After delivering his speech he was greeted by his family who were waiting for him in the House of Representatives in Parliament House.

Dr Chalmers embraced his daughter Annabel, five, as his wife Laura watched on with a grin.

It’s the second time young Annabel has been front and centre during a budget announcement, she seated with her mother in the public gallery when Dr Chalmer’s deliver Labor’s first Budget in October last year.

The “centrepiece of this budget” is tripling the Medicare bulk billing incentive.

Chalmers has pledged the “largest ever” increase to the bulk billing incentive in an effort to make GP appointments moreaffordable and ease pressure on emergency departments around the country.

As a “centrepiece” of its second budget, the Albanese government will spend $3.5m to significantly increase these incentivesto entice more GPs to offer free consultations to eligible patients.

The Treasurer made the funding commitment as he addressed Australians from the floor of parliament in a speech unveiling theAlbanese government’s second budget on Tuesday night.

Dr Chalmers said Australian families struggling with the cost of living crisis were being forced into a “lose-lose” choice between getting the medical help they needed or paying their bills.

“This robs parents of peace of mind; it puts families under strain,” he said.

“It means more problems go undiagnosed or untreated.”

The increased incentives will be paid to GPs who bulk bill 11.6m eligible Australians including children under 16, pensionersand other concession card holders.

GPs will be able to claim the higher incentives for face-to-face consultations more than 6 minutes in length and certain telehealthconsultations.

Bulk billing is when a doctor accepts a Medicare rebate from the federal government as a complete payment for a consultationand doesn’t charge patients an additional “gap” fee for the service.

GPs who bulk bill patients in the city will be paid a new incentive of $20.65 compared with the old rate of $6.60.

Regional GPs will receive a $31.40 incentive, up from $10.05.

In the most remote parts of Australia, the incentive will more than double from $12.70 to $39.65.

An increase to the bulk billing incentive was a key demand from the Royal College of General Practitioners, one of two requeststhe government agreed to in this federal budget.

The RACGP was also successful in advocating for a Medicare rebate for GP consultations longer than 60 minutes, up from theprevious limit of 40 minutes.

But Tuesday’s budget includes only a modest increase to Medicare rebates despite long-running pleas from doctors for a substantialboost to keep pace with inflation.

The RACGP has argued the rebates GPs receive from the federal government for their services are so low it is simply not possibleto bulk bill patients in many cases.

Even Australians who usually pay for their GP appointments out-of-pocket may well have found the cost has gone up as theyare charged higher gap fees as the cost of living crunch continues to bite.

Finance Minister Katy Gallagher conceded on Tuesday the small increase to across-the-board Medicare rebates was a result ofautomatic indexation rather than any additional funding from the government.

She said the government chose strengthening bulk billing incentives as a priority investment it had “room to make” in thebudget.

The increase to incentives should be seen in the context of a “major” health reform package included in the budget, she said.

Tuesday’s budget includes $5.7bn over five years as an initial investment to provide better access and more affordable carefor patients in response to the Strengthening Medicare Taskforce Report.

The report was handed down last year following an inquiry by a government-commissioned group of experts into the ailing Medicaresystem and the problems in general practice.

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