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A "very good year" for Australia's richest 200 individuals
By Jason Nichols
23 June 2000
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The wealth of the richest 200 individuals in Australia has
climbed $4.25 billion over the past 12 months, or 7.4 percent,
according to the annual Rich 200 edition of the Business Review
Weekly (BRW). Their combined wealth is now estimated to be
a staggering $61.35 billion, an average of $307 million each.
The various reports and figures published in the magazine show
that the rich are enjoying unprecedented levels of wealth. It
was a very good year, the BRW concluded.
Nevertheless, the increase in wealth was somewhat more subdued
than previous years. In 1997-98 it leapt 17.5 percent and in 1998-99
nearly 20 percent. As then, the bonanza over the past year has
come largely on the back of a booming stock market. In fact, if
it were not for the market correction in April, which
saw share prices plummet, particularly for telecommunications
and Internet stocks, the rate of increase would have been considerably
higher.
Indeed, many of the fortunes that were consolidated and those
newly founded had the stock market to thank. One can gauge the
bloated extent of the recent boom by looking at the history of
the All Ordinaries, the main share index on the Australian Stock
Exchange (ASX). The All Ords was first established in 1980 at
500 index points. It took 13 years to reach the 2,000 mark. At
its peak in April it hit 3,200 and is now around 3,100.
Australia's richest man is still Kerry Packer, whose interests
predominantly lie in the media and publishing industries. He left
others in his wake, increasing his wealth by nearly one third
in 12 months, from $6.4 billion to $8.2 billion. On the assumption
that he worked five days and 40 hours per week, he collected more
than $34 million a week, nearly $7 million a day and close to
$900,000 an hour. To put it another way, his income last year
was more than 69,000 times greater than that of the average worker
on $26,000.
About half of the increase was the result of higher share prices
for his company Publishing and Broadcasting Limited, which has
moved into the Internet and e-commerce markets.
The majority of those on the list are still establishment figures.
In the top 10 one finds men in command of retail and shopping
empires, property developers, media moguls and manufacturers.
One striking aspect, however, is that it included 40 new entrants,
each exceeding the required $85 million to make the list, a prerequisite
that has doubled in the last five years. Of these, 21 or more
than half, made their money in the information technology and
telecommunications industries.
The stories of these new millionaires are similar: their newly-founded
companies listed on the stockmarket and/or were bought by a transnational,
transforming them into instant multi-millionaires.
The wealthiest new entry on the list, Wayne Paslow, is worth
$890 million. His company, Open Telecommunications, listed on
the ASX and its price immediately skyrocketed 400 percent.
Caren DeWitt and Phillip Merrick, a couple, benefited from
an even larger first-day share price increase for their company
Webmethods. It recorded the fourth-highest one-day gain on the
Nasdaq, soaring from $US35 to $US212 per share. Eighteen days
later it peaked at $US360, making them instant billionaires.
Another couple, founders of the Internet search engine Looksmart,
also hit the jackpot when it listed on the Nasdaq last year. In
the beginning they had trouble paying their staff. Now Evan Thornley
and Tracey Ellery (both in their mid-thirties and the latter a
former president of the National Union of Students) are worth
$585 million. Their company was founded only five years ago.
The number of new entrants, large as it is, would have been
higher if it were not for the April downturn on world stockmarkets.
Many aspiring climbers saw the paper value of their companies
plummet. Take, for example, Johnson Wang, founder of the Internet
Service Provider (ISP) Eisa. Earlier this year Eisa made a bid
to buy Australia's second-largest internet service provider Ozemail,
already the subject of one takeover last year in which its three
main shareholders each pocketed tens of millions of dollars. But
then Eisa's share price took a nose-dive, from a high of $3.18
three months ago to 25c, with Wang losing close to $200 million.
The BRW applauds the fact that there are now approximately
240,000 millionaires, an increase of around 30,000 since last
year and 166,000 since 1993. On top of this, a further 250,000
are sitting on assets valued between $900,000 and $1 million.
This new layer of wealthy, its numerical size unprecedented in
Australia's history, has created a substantial market for luxury
goods, something previously unknown in a country with a relatively
small population.
High-end real estate prices in Sydney, for example, have climbed
15 percent in the past 12 months. According to one survey, prices
in some of Sydney's most exclusive suburbs are higher than those
on New York's Park Avenue.
Sales of luxury cars have surged ahead, despite a general lull
in overall car sales. In the first three months of this year sales
figures were up for Lexus (36 percent), BMW (24 percent), Mercedes
Benz (17 percent), Jaguar (15 percent) and Porsche (13 percent).
The development of this layer of nouveau riche, alongside the
old establishment wealth, is the product of several processes
that point to contradictions deep within the capitalist system
itself. Relentless global cost-cutting and rationalisation have
seen some company profits soar. Overall, however, average profit
rates have continued to decline, driving investors into increasingly
speculative activity.
Many companies, particularly those exploiting the technological
revolution in fields such as communications systems and biotechnology,
have been swamped by financiers keen to realise much larger and
quicker returns on the stock market than are possible in the process
of producing commodities.
The wholesale privatisation of state-owned enterprises has
also opened up new areas for lucrative investment. In Australia
this includes Qantas, the Commonwealth Bank and Telstra, now half-privatised.
Tens of thousands of workers have lost their jobs with these corporations.
In some cases they have been re-hired on far worse conditions
as contractors, often having to re-train in new technologies at
their own expense.
But for the editors of BRW, times couldn't be better.
Their introductory article for the Rich 200 edition, under the
headline The joy of wealth, celebrates the fact that,
in their opinion, the entire population is benefiting from increases
in productivity.
The spoils of Australia's buoyant economy are being distributed
fairly evenly. For example, in the workplace the old tensions
between capital and labour are changing. In a low-inflation environment,
workers' earnings have grown and productivity has increased. The
increase in average weekly earnings in the past year has been
about 4 percent.
The reality is a far cry from these proclamations. According
to the latest figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics,
average wages for the year to February 2000 increased by only
2 percent, just above the lowest increase recorded of 1.7 percent
in May 1993. By contrast company profits rose by 22.8 percent
in the year to March 2000.
Even these average figures mask the worsening social inequality.
Research just published by the National Centre for Social and
Economic Modelling indicates that the income of those on less
than half the median wage actually fell by 2 percent in the 15-year
period to 1996-97. Those earning more than 175 percent of the
median enjoyed an increase of 18 percent, or $229 per week.
After nearly 10 years of continuous economic growth, the poorest
20 percent of the population survived on an average weekly income
of just $124 during the financial year 1997-98. The richest 20
percent took home an average of $1,590 per week. Although the
average wage for that year was $658, around 70 percent of the
population earned less.
One particularly obscene indication of the social polarisation
is the difference in spending levels on basic goods and services.
On food, for example, Australia's millionaires spend around twice
as much each as the rest of the population. On education, the
factor is seven and for health and clothing it is three. Moreover,
the millionaires spend about seven times more on superannuation
contributions.
These figures are all the more significant because there is
a major shift away from government provision of basic social services
and toward the privatisation of health and education in particular.
In addition, successive governments have introduced measures designed
to ultimately replace retirement pensions altogether with superannuation
schemes.
Such is the glaring social gap that BRW felt compelled
to feature two articles attempting to argue for the virtues of
wealth and inequality.
The first, It is not a sin to be rich, was penned
by a Catholic moral scholar, Dr Samuel Gregg. He argues
that, The poor, Christ once said, will always be with us.
So too will the rich.
Taking the Bible as his point of departure, Gregg defends unlimited
wealth accumulation and presents the current social and economic
order as divine and natural, while preaching the virtues of submission.
The economic processes lying behind social inequality are mystified
and covered over with entreaties to accept thy lot.
The second article, written by regular columnist Peter Ruehl
in an effort to inject a bit of humour, is even cruder. Under
the headline A wealth of jealousy he insists that
the rich are no different to anyone else. The less well-off are
simply unwilling to put in slightly more effort, slightly
more brains and about 10,000 fewer beers.
His approach is hardly new. Apologists for the profit system
have long claimed that the rich are simply ordinary people made
good, with their wealth a just reward for hard work.
As a matter of fact, the wealth of the few is accumulated,
within the current social and economic order, at the direct expense
of the great majority. All society's wealthits products
and servicesare produced by the labour of the working class,
whether in the form of mental or physical work. The source of
profit is the difference between the value created by workers'
labour in the process of production and the wages they are paidtwo
entirely different amounts.
As Gregg and Ruehl are clearly aware, growing levels of social
inequality inevitably produce resentment. Such resentment takes
an even sharper form today amid a computer and technological revolution,
where an ever-widening gulf exists between the astounding potential
of technology and the deteriorating living conditions experienced
by masses of ordinary people. Why should workers accept the line
that society will always have a rich and poor when enough goods
and services can easily be produced to provide everyone with a
high standard of living?
Though the BRW's arguments are as old as the capitalist
system itself, their publication in this edition is a sign that
things are not quite as rosy as the BRW would like them
to be; a sign that those within the ruling elite sense mounting
opposition from below.
See Also:
Australia's "golden
age" of prosperity ... and poverty
[12 June 1999]
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