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Australia: Behind the $33.49 million package for Macquarie
Banks chief executive
By Richard Phillips
24 May 2007
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The announcement last week that Australias highest paid
executive Macquarie Bank chief Allan Moss received a massive 57
percent hike in his annual remuneration package last year further
highlights the vast and widening gulf between ordinary workers
and the handful of super-rich that control the economy.
Moss was paid $33.49 million, including $23 million in performance
disbursements and $1.4 million in share options, or approximately
601 times the $55,640 that an Australian worker on average receives
per year. In other words, Mossat approximately $92,000 per
dayreceives more in a day than the overwhelming majority
of employees earn in a year. Macquarie Banks top 20 executives
split nearly $209 million between them after the bank boosted
its profits by 60 percent to $1.46 billion. At the same time,
its share price grew by 27 percent.
Under conditions where workers living standards are being
pushed back and wage rates have only grown to just over 4 percent
during the same period, talkback radio and letters to the print
media were dominated by furious denunciations of the Macquarie
chiefs earnings. The most common descriptions were shameful,
obscene, disgusting, unjustified
and outrageous. Several letter writers pointed out
that growing inequality had produced a social disaster in Australia;
others called for massive tax increases on all those earning over
$1 million per year.
Such was the depth of anger that Prime Minister John Howard
felt obliged to feign concern over the salary hike, telling ABC
radio that some executive salaries were over the top.
Howards remarks are utterly bogus and driven entirely
by the approaching national election, which, according to recent
polling, could produce a landslide defeat for the government.
The Howard government and its Labor predecessorsstate and
federalover the past two and a half decades have done their
utmost to remove any obstacles to the amassing of huge profits
by Macquarie Bank and other companies.
Naturally enough, the corporate media and various business
chiefs defended Mosss remuneration package, declaring that
it was in line with international business practice. Institute
of Public Affairs executive director John Roskam, writing in the
Australian Financial Review on May 18, claimed that Macquaries
operations ultimately led to a higher standard of living
because they lowered government and business costs.
Many Australians, he declared, are afraid,
and even ashamed, of the financial rewards that come from hard
work.... For many Australians (including our politicians) the
world of $30 million bonuses to company executives is very unfamiliar
and very uncomfortable. But it is a world we had better get used
to.
Roskams claim that Macquarie Bank, commonly referred
to as the Millionaires Factory, improves overall
living standards is false. In fact, the companys operations
produce nothing of any real social value.
Macquarie Bank emerged in the early 1970s and currently manages
assets worth about $56 billion, including $25 billion invested
in infrastructure, transport, property, energy and numerous other
enterprises.
The corporation has investments in over 24 countries and is
the worlds largest operator of private toll roads and airports.
It owns the Sydney, Bristol, Birmingham, Brussels, Rome and Copenhagen
airports and major share portfolios in media, communications,
healthcare companies and other vital social services. In Britain
it owns Thames Water, one of the worlds largest water companies,
the M6 Toll road, Wales and West Utilities and Airwave O2, Britains
police and emergency services radio network.
The conditions for Macquarie Banks rapid growth initially
emerged in the late 1980s with the privatisation of state-run
assets in Australia and the establishment of compulsory superannuation
by the Hawke and Keating Labor governments. This provided the
bank with access to large amounts of capital to fund its forays
into profit opportunities opened up by the privatisation of state-owned
industries and services internationally in the 1990s.
A key component in Macquaries profit making has been
from the fees and commissions it charges for Public Private Partnerships
and other complex financial mechanisms devised to sell-off or
contract out government services. In the last 12 months, the bank
increased its earnings for this sort of financial advice by 25
percent to $3.5 billion.
It is not possible to provide here a detailed overview of the
companys myriad activities, but a few examples make clear
that its operations are thoroughly parasitic, with terrible social
consequences for masses of ordinary people.
Last year Macquarie Bank purchased Dyno Nobel, the Norwegian
explosives company, for $2.3 billion. It then sold $913 million
worth of the business to its long-time client Orica, underwrote
the transaction for Orica and then floated the rest of the company
in a $1.9 billion share operation while retaining a 4 percent
stake for itself. The operation, which added $1.4 billion or about
19 percent to the banks total revenue and over $100 million
to its profit line in the past 12 months, did not create a single
job.
Environmental disasters
Last year Thames Waterprivatised under Britains
Thatcher government in 1986was sold to a consortium led
by Macquarie Bank. Purchase of the company was preceded by the
axing of 4,000 jobs, the slashing of operating costs and the run-down
of basic maintenance. These measures led to Thames Water becoming
England and Wales worst polluter, incurring massive fines
from the Environmental Protection Agency.
Nothing changed under Macquarie Bank ownership. Soon after
the purchase the bank announced it would sell off a number of
the water companys subsidiaries, guaranteeing more job losses
and environmental damage. Last April, for example, its Scottish
subsidiary was responsible for millions of gallons of untreated
human excrement flowing into the Forth River estuary after a pump
broke down.
The spill, which endangered the health of hundreds of thousands
of local residents, was a direct result of cost cutting. And the
company did not bother to inform the public of the catastrophe
for more than 40 hours after the breakdown.
Likewise Macquaries aged-care and retirement home investments
have generated lucrative earnings for the company to the detriment
of basic health standards.
Last year the Macquarie Capital Alliance Group purchased Retirement
Care Australia, which owned 26 aged-care facilities previously
controlled by the Salvation Army and the Moran Health Care Group.
Macquarie is now Australias largest investor in retirement
facilities. Along with rentals, which are taken directly from
retirees pensions, residents are charged an upfront lump
sum payment, sometimes as high as $500,000, in order to gain entry.
The company keeps a portion of this money when the resident dies
or leaves the village. Retirement home operators are also paid
$35,000 per year by the federal government for every person in
a nursing home.
All this provides windfall profits for the company, which,
like its competitors, is constantly devising ways to cut operating
costs. Homes for poorer retirees are invariably health risks with
regular and increasing incidents of chronic ill health or death
resulting from inadequate health care.
Macquarie Bank and the Beaconsfield mine tragedy
A few days after Macquarie Bank announced its record annual
profit another example of the destructive human consequences of
the corporations operations was exposed by Brant Webb, one
of two miners trapped inside the Beaconsfield gold mine for five
days last year following a massive cave-in.
The now closed Tasmanian mine was a joint venture between Macquarie
Bank and Beaconsfield Gold and Allstate Explorations. In 2001,
Allstate went into receivership and in 2002 Macquarie bought $77
million of its debt for $300,000. It reportedly earned $27 million
from the mine before the tragedy in April 2006.
Although Macquarie has denied any influence over the mines
operations, Webb told the Australian newspaper on May 19
that unsafe work practices at the mine were the product of desperate
attempts by the operating management to repay its debts to Macquarie.
Webb explained that the accident, which not only trapped Webb
and work mate Todd Russell but killed 44-year-old miner Larry
Knight, occurred because management had repeatedly ignored
workers safety warnings. Greed for gold, he
said, was the only reason he and others were working in an area
that had collapsed six months previously.
All they kept saying at every meeting was, We owe
Macquarie Bank this much money and this is our budget and if we
mine this weve got a chance of staying here and if we dont
do this or that we havent got any chance, he
continued. We were always threatened with Macquarie
Bank will close us upone more month of us making no money
and Macquarie Bank closes us up. They used Macquarie Bank
as this pawn all the time.
While an official investigation into the accident by the Tasmanian
government is due to hand down its findings in September, Macquarie
Bank is currently opposing a Freedom of Information request in
the Administrative Appeals Tribunal for the Australian Securities
and Investments Commission to reveal documents related to Allstate.
In other words, the company is trying to prevent any exposure
of the human impact of its profit-gouging operations.
Last years tragedy at Beaconsfield gold mine is only
one of a litany of social disasters created by the market forces
from which Macquarie Bank makes its huge profits. It is these
disasters that lie behind the massive salary packages made by
the banks senior executives.
See Also:
Corporate raid on Australian airline collapses
[12 May 2007]
Huge sewage pollution in Scotland
linked to Thames Water's cost-cutting
[24 April 2007]
Australia: Management
ignored danger warnings at Beaconsfield gold mine
[30 October 2006]
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