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WSWS : News
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Australias Rich 200 hold onto wealth despite major share
falls
By Ben Nichols
6 July 2001
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Australias annual survey of the countrys richest
individualsthe Business Review Weekly Rich 200revealed
a marginal drop in their combined wealthdown by $930 million
or 1.5 percent to $60.42 billion. Placed in the context of huge
global share market declines, however, particularly the billions
of dollars lost on hi-tech stocks, the fall amounts to little
more than a glitch.
With a few exceptions, the 200 wealthiest Australians fared
the year and its tribulations very wellwith an average of
over $300 million eachdown just $5 million. The entry point
for the list also fell marginally by $5 million to $80 million.
The majority of those who remained on the list from last year
boosted their wealth98 out of a 153while 42 saw their
assets decline. Some scored extraordinary increases, with the
fastest growing individual fortunes being made in the rural (wine),
services (education), transport, advertising, media, and property
sectors.
At the very top, the so-called billionaires club has expanded
again. Six years ago, there were three billionairesnow there
are 11 up from nine last year and six in 1999. The BRW predicts
on the basis of an expected average annual growth of 8 percent
in the assets of the Rich 200, that there will be another 10 billionaires
in Australia by 2006.
The wealth of Australias richest man, Kerry Packer, fell
by $2 billion to $6.2 billion this year but he is still top of
the list. The next richestproperty and retail tycoon Frank
Lowyincreased his wealth by $700 million to $3.5 billion,
and the assets of third wealthiestpaper and packaging magnate
Richard Prattrose by $600 million to $3.3 billion.
Two new billionaires were created last year.
* Bob Oatleys assets jumped in value by a massive $1.3
billionfrom just $300 million to $1.6 billionthrough
the merger of his Rosemount Estate with Southcorp, Australias
biggest wine company. He originally bought land in the Hunter
Valley in 1968 then used money from a trading venture in Papua
New Guinea to establish himself in the wine industry. The merger
gave him a 13 percent stake in Southcorp and a huge cash payment
of $881 million.
* By comparison, Len Ainsworth increased his wealth by just
$100 million to reach the $1 billion mark. His manufacturing company
supplies 85 percent of the poker machines in use in the lucrative
Australian gaming industry which grew at an annual rate of 10
percent from 1995 to 1999. His murky background emerged last year
when police objected to his company being listed on the Australian
Stock Exchange, claiming he was not a fit and proper
person to hold a poker machine license.
Fifteen people joined the list for the first time. Former department
store manager Michael ODwyer, whose personal wealth is now
valued at $234 million, established Metal Storm, a weapons development
company in 1993. He has received substantial funding from the
US and Australian defence establishments to develop his rapid-fire
gun. Newcomers Peter and Stephen Hill, owners of clothing company
Globe International, leapt into the list with a net worth of $300
million.
The handful who suffered badly over the year were in the hi-tech
areas. Jodee Rich of the failed telecommunications corporation
One.Tel lost $80 million but still had a personal fortune of $220
million when the list was published in late May. Phillip Merrick
of webMethods dropped from $365 million to $170 million and Wayne
Passlow from Open Communications lost $640 million in the last
12 months. None of these losses, however, were enough to knock
these millionaires off the list.
Despite these losses, five new information technology millionaires
joined the list. These included Infomedias Richard Graham
and Myer Herszberg, worth $205 million and $162 million respectively;
Roger May, head of Advanced Communications Technologies; Ken Hansen
from Hansen Technologies and John Mactaggart of Technology One.
A somewhat tongue-in-cheek article entitled If youve
got it, flaunt it airs the imaginary complaints of the very
wealthythe difficulties of managing to keep up with the
rising price of Sydney harbour-side homes, thoroughbred horses,
Steinway pianos, top quality caviar and other luxury items. It
quotes a British magazine bewailing the problems facing those
on just one million pounds ($3.4 million) a yearthe difficulty
of maintaining household staff, holidays in St Moritz and
five-star Aman resorts, $180,000 on personal grooming and wardrobe
requirements.
The article points out that there is no shortage of necessary
luxuries on which the rich can spend their wealth: a $20
million Learjet, $40,000 Louis Vuitton monogrammed suitcase, a
$44,600 gold Worcestershire sauce bottle made by a London society
jeweler, a $700,000-dollar limited edition Porsche Carrera GT,
and diamond dust facial cream by Le Mer for around $200.
The comment does, however, highlight a more significant point.
In the past, the ruling elite has deliberately promoted the myth
of an egalitarian society. A layer of the Rich 200 and the up-and-coming
layers who aspire to a place on the list are openly scornful of
any conception of social equality. Reflecting these sentiments
the magazine calls for wealth to be brought out of the closet
and proclaims the social values of the entrepreneurial spirit.
A comment entitled The Virtues of Wealth laments
that in the past, many Australians have not accepted that
being rich is a worthy pursuit. It trots out the well-worn
justification for the rich that their activities are of great
benefit, not just to themselves, but to society as a whole. One
persons win is not necessarily a consequence of another
persons loss, the magazine states. And if individuals,
companies and countries do things they are good at, the economic
outcome will be beneficial for everyone. In such a situation,
there should be no stigma to being rich, as wealth is a reward
for serving other peoples needs.
But this banal argument flies in the face of reality. The growing
wealth of the super rich has been at the direct expense of the
vast majority of society. The profits of the banks and corporations
have risen in direct proportion to the level of cost-cuttingthat
is, by eliminating jobs and working conditions. And as if that
were not enough, the rich have demanded that governments assist
by privatisating the most profitable state-owned enterprises and
cutting corporate and personal tax rates.
Overall the Rich 200 may have received a setback over the last
year. But in comparison to the value of assets wiped off share
values, they have survived remarkably well. As always they have
been able to pass on the bulk of the losses to others. In addition
to all the usual tax lurks and perks, the wealthy received a huge
bonus last year in the form of a 50 percent drop in the Capital
Gains Tax rate, a reduction in the corporate tax rate from 39
to 34 percent and lower personal tax for high income earners.
This year they can look forward to another cut in the corporate
tax rate from 34 to 30 percent.
The huge rise in the assets of people like Lowy, Pratt and
Oatley has been of absolutely no benefit to the more than 5.5
million Australians now live in households earning less than $23,000
per year. They are struggling daily to put food on the table and
pay for basic necessities such as rent and electricity. The social
gulf is enormous and growing. As one of the BRWs
columnists noted: It would take the average wage earner
636 years to save enough to buy billionaire John Gandels
Gulfstream jet.
Throughout April full-time jobs in Australia were axed at the
rate of 1,300 per day, pushing up the official unemployment figure
from 6.5 percent to 6.8 percent. According to the Australian Council
of Social Services (ACOSS), there are now seven unemployed people
for every job vacancy compared to less than six last year. The
agency predicts that an additional 100,000 will apply for unemployment
benefits over the next year.
All of these processes are to ensure that next year the Rich
200 will not only recover the $930 million they lost over the
last year but augment their wealth even further.
See Also:
A "very good
year" for Australia's richest 200 individuals
[23 June 2000]
Australia's "golden
age" of prosperity ... and poverty
[12 June 1999]
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