|
WSWS : News
& Analysis : Australia
& South Pacific
Australian Reserve Bank reveals another Howard government
lie
By Mike Head
23 April 2005
Use
this version to print
| Send this
link by email | Email
the author
Yet another set of lies organised by the Howard government
was revealed earlier this monthon this occasion by the countrys
central bank. On April 8, the Reserve Bank made public the fact
that, during last years federal election campaign, it had
taken the unprecedented step of lodging official complaints against
the governments misleading claims on interest rates.
The banks disclosure, made almost exactly six months
after the October 9 election, went to the heart of the scare campaign
that Prime Minister John Howard and his ministers relied upon
to win a fourth term in office. Unable to repeat the falsifications
used in the 2001 electionon refugees throwing their children
overboard and imminent terrorist threats to Australiaor
the lies about weapons of mass destruction concocted
to justify joining the invasion of Iraq, Howards team resorted
to a new tactic.
They flooded the airwaves, newspapers and peoples letterboxes
with inflammatory claims that the return of a Labor government
would send home mortgage interest rates soaring, threatening thousands
of over-stretched families with financial ruin. The Liberals particularly
targetted outer suburban mortgage belt electorates
where house and land prices have soared so much over the past
decade that even a small rise in interest rates would have devastating
consequences for heavily-indebted working people.
Howard set the tone at his opening appearance of the campaign,
where he placed interest rates at the centre of the election.
He declared that it was an historic fact that over
the previous 30 years interest rates had always gone up under
Labor governments. Its been calculated that if interest
rates, under a future Labor government led by Mr Latham, were
to rise to the average of what they were under previous Labor
governments, that would add an additional $960 a month to the
average mortgage of the average Australian family.
In effect, Howard warned that interest rates could more than
double to 12.75 percent, the average mortgage rate during the
Hawke-Keating government, and applied that figure to a loan of
about $200,000. The alleged calculation was fraudulent
on two counts. First, it ignored the high interest rates under
previous Liberal-National Coalition governments, including when
Howard served as treasurer in the Fraser government. More fundamentally,
it flew in the face of the reality that interest rates are primarily
determined by global economic conditions and financial markets,
not national governments.
To bolster Howards argument, the Liberal Party attributed
his positions to the Reserve Bank. The bank was cited as the source
for statements made in the partys campaign advertising.
One typical brochure declared: Over 30 years interest rates
have risen to over 10 percent under every Labor Government. Source:
Reserve Bank of Australia. Given that the Reserve Bank formally
sets the benchmark domestic interest rate each month, this gave
the appearance of confirming Howards dire warnings with
a seal of approval from the rate-setting institution itself.
After keeping quiet for six months, the bank revealed that
voters, angered by the misleading claims, had mailed in some of
the Coalitions leaflets, requesting that the bank demand
their withdrawal. Bank officials concluded that some of the Coalitions
material was exaggerated, while some was factually wrong, but
said nothing publicly.
Instead, the bank wrote to the Australian Electoral Commission,
asking whether the leaflets breached any electoral regulations.
Bank officials told the Sydney Morning Herald that they
did not make their intervention public because they did not want
to politicise the bank.
Even so, the banks actions were without precedent. It
has never before lodged a complaint to the electoral authorities
about the use of its name in deceptive campaign advertising. The
complaint was fruitless, however. The electoral commission told
bank officials that it had no legal power to prevent a party making
false policy claims or predictions.
Significantly, there is no law against false advertising, including
the making of phony promises, in federal elections. Section 329
of the Commonwealth Electoral Act outlaws the circulation of material
that would mislead or deceive voters. However, the High Court
has interpreted that section as not applying to the formation
of a voters voting intention, only to deception about the
identity of a candidate or party (for example, a Liberal Party
member posing as an environmental candidate).
The electoral commission suggested that the bank write to the
local Liberal Party official, W. Meehan, identified on the pamphlet
as having authorised its publication. The bank did so, saying
it was most concerned about the leaflet and wanted
remaining copies scrapped. But it received no reply, and the misleading
claims continued to be published in brochures and media advertisements
across the country.
When the bank revealed these events, Howard invoked what a
Sydney Morning Herald editorial dubbed his three
monkeys defence: he saw nothing, heard nothing, said nothing.
He simply denied having any knowledge of the Reserve Banks
complaintas if his party officials would not have notified
him immediately of such a high-level objection. Although authorised
by Meehan, the pamphlet originated in Liberal head office and
appeared in different forms throughout Australia. Moreover, Howard
was intimately involved in planning every detail of the election
campaign.
Howard also flatly defended what he said about rates during
the election campaign. With his customary duplicity, he claimed
that the government had not promised to keep rates down, merely
reminded voters of higher rates under Labor.
Treasurer Peter Costello sought to dismiss the entire affair.
The Reserve Bank has lodged no complaint with me,
he declared. He claimed that the electoral commission had concluded
there was no problem with the Liberal Party ads because
they were in accordance with the [Electoral] Act.
As for the Liberal Party national secretariat, it labelled
the incident as a clerical error stemming from a missing
asterisk, which should have sourced the specific interest rate
data to the bank. Without the asterisk, it appeared that the bank
endorsed the pamphlet as a whole. Yet, it beggars belief to say
that the omission was an innocent or isolated error. Similar brochures
were produced in many electorates.
Interest rate tensions
The timing of the Reserve Banks revelations points to
mounting tensions between the government and sections of the business
elite. The bank went public just two days after it came under
criticism on financial markets for not increasing interest rates
again in April, following a 0.25 percent rise in March, despite
earlier indications that it would.
In the days before the April decision, Howard and his ministers
publicly opposed a rate rise. Their statements were widely interpreted
as applying intense pressure on the Reserve Bank. Howard displayed
little regard for the supposed independence of the bankwhich
essentially acts on behalf of the money marketsto set rates
without political interference.
Given its election claims, the government could ill afford
further rate rises. Media polls showed that its electoral stocks
were already plummetting, with the fall attributed to rising rates
and the governments deployment of more troops to the US-led
occupation of Iraq.
Those sections of business likely to suffer most from rising
rates, such as manufacturers, retailers and the housing industry,
joined Howards stand. Others however, notably several major
banks and financial institutions, reacted with dismay to Howards
intervention, seeing it as a retreat from their demands for renewed
economic reform.
In the lead up to the handing down of the governments
annual budget on May 10, corporate Australia has stepped up its
demands for a reduction in taxes for high-income earners, the
slashing of social spending, the cutting of labour costs and further
attacks on workers rights and conditions. In this context,
higher interest rates are regarded as a necessary tool to slow
down consumer spending and help suppress wage demands and other
forms of working class resistance.
The bank raised rates in March, amid the release of statistics
showing near-zero economic growth, a massive balance of payments
deficit, and soaring foreign debtmainly to finance the housing
and consumer spending bubble on which the Howard government has
rested since 1996.
Two weeks before the rate rise, Reserve Bank governor Ian Macfarlane
warned that the dangers of inflation would mean years of stunted
growth and higher rates. He pointedly blamed the housing boom
for diverting investment from economic infrastructure. His comments
made clear that the bank was unlikely to stop at one 0.25 percent
rate rise.
When the bank failed to raise rates for a second time in April,
apparently buckling to the governments pressure, rumours
began circulating on the markets that Macfarlane had been overruled
by the Reserve Bank board. Financial commentators accused the
government of heavying the bank, with Alan Wood writing
in Murdochs Australian that the Prime Minister
is politicising interest rates again.
Two board members felt obliged to publicly defend the banks
decision, breaching a convention that individual members do not
disclose board discussions. Warwick McKibbin, an economics professor,
and Jillian Broadbent, a company director, insisted that the boards
decision had been unanimous. At the same time, they indicated
that the board remained inclined to raise rates in coming months.
Howard denied the charge of politicising interest rates, saying
the Reserve Bank board members were not shrinking violets.
Nevertheless, he welcomed the outcome, saying the bank made
the right decision. This appears to have triggered retaliation
in the form of the belated exposure of last years campaign
lies.
Predictably, the affair was soon dropped by the media. The
opposition Labor Party called for a public inquiryprimarily
in order to provide the Reserve Bank with the opportunity to restore
its reputation.
Top of page
The WSWS invites your comments.
Copyright 1998-2008
World Socialist Web Site
All rights reserved |