"Standing up for what matters" is the name of the Greens policy document ... and it outlines the party's plans to raise an extra $42.7 billion over three years by taxing Australia's richest people and businesses.
The Greens have a very long list of spending promises.
They plan to spend $9.2 billion on boosting welfare, including increasing Newstart and Youth Allowance by $50 a week and providing an extra $40 a week for single parents.
$3 billion would go to housing the homeless.
And in terms of education funding, Greens leader Senator Christine Milne says Australian students will get more from the Gonski reforms under the Greens.
"We will bring forward funding into schools so that instead of three billion (dollars), we'll be putting five billion into schools so that the advantage of going to better funding for people with disabilities, for students that are disadvantaged, can flow earlier and not just at the end of the decade."
Education funding would also be boosted under a Greens government, by reversing Labor's 2.3 billion-dollar cuts to universities and increasing university base funding by ten per cent over forward estimates.
On overseas aid, the Greens are committing to increase spending to 0.7 per cent of Gross National Income by 2020.
In contrast, over the last two years Labor has put off its promise to the United Nations to increase aid to 0.5 per cent of Gross National Income.
Regional Arts programs, Clean Energy programs and Research and Development would also get significant funding boosts.
Greens leader Christine Milne says the spending is about setting Australia up for short-term and long-term challenges, and caring for Australians over the next 50 to 100 years.
"We want to see an environment that can sustain us, a society that cares for us and an economy that responds to the major challenges of this century because the Greens are not just about the next thee years, we are about the next 50 to 100 years."
But before the Greens can deliver on any of its promises, it would need to find the funds.
Currently the only Greens MP in the Lower House, Adam Bandt says that's where the party's four-step plan comes in.
"If we stand up to the big miners and put in place a proper mining tax, if we ask the big banks to pay a fair levy as is being done in Europe, if we ask those who are earning over a million dollars a year to pay a new fair tax rate and if we cut the unfair and inefficient subsidies that are going to fossil fuels, we will raise an extra 42 billion dollars."
To raise that 42.7 billion dollars over three years, the Greens say they'll fix the mining tax to make sure multinational mining corporations pay their fair share - they expect that to raise 21.8 billion dollars over the three years.
A further 8.4 billion dollars would come from a public support levy on big banks.
Under the plan, bank assets worth over 100-billion dollars would be subject to a 20 basis point levy.
Mr Bandt says the big banks are well and truly wealthy enough to absorb the costs.
"Our banks are in rude financial health and are the world's most profitable banks. The reason that they are the world's most profitable banks is that they've got the public and the government standing behind them and giving them a leg-up that no other industry has. Manufacturing, tourism, education, they don't get the kind of support that the banks do because the banks know that the government will step in and bail them out if they get in trouble."
Australia's richest individuals would also have to help pay for the Greens' promises through an increase in the marginal tax rate.
The plan would see incomes over a million dollars taxed at 50 per cent, which would raise 500 million dollars over forward estimates.
The final 12 billion dollars needed by the Greens would come from abolishing tax breaks for the fossil fuel industry.
But the federal opposition is criticising the Greens platform for failing to outline the cost of its asylum-seeker policy.
Coalition Employment and Workplace Relations spokesman Eric Abetz says the Greens have an "open door" policy on asylum-seekers which is economically irresponsible.
But Senator Milne says the Greens policy is actually much cheaper than the policies of the major parties.
"Actually bringing people in and giving them community support is a lot cheaper than trying to maintain the gulag that they've got on Manus Island; than trying to spend a fortune on being cruel to people. What we need to do is uphold our responsibilities and uphold the law of the sea for a start."
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