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Western Australian resources boom leads to deepening social
inequality
By Joe Lopez, Socialist Equality Party candidate for Swan
23 October 2007
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The Western Australian economy has experienced unprecedented
rates of growth in recent years due to increases in the export
of iron ore, natural gas and other minerals to China. Mining corporations
have amassed huge profits and governments, state and federal,
have enjoyed rapidly rising revenues.
Politicians from all the parties, along with the media, are
trumpeting the old pro-capitalist theme, that the rising
tide of economic prosperity lifts all boats. This may have
had some truth for a limited period, in the years after World
War II, and the hey-day of reformism, but it is certainly not
the case today. The current export boom has, instead,
brought a deepening social gulf between a super wealthy few and
hundreds of thousands of ordinary working people, struggling to
pay their bills and make ends meet.
The output from the states mining and energy projects
is now worth $80 million a day. China has overtaken Japan as the
top destination, accounting for 28 percent of Western Australian
exports. For the year to April 2007, WA exports to China were
worth $13.3 billion, up 41 percent from the previous year, 317
percent in the past five years and a staggering 966 percent over
a decade.
Profits have soared, share prices have skyrocketed and a tiny
handful of ultra-rich are raking in obscene amounts of money.
Last year, Gina Rinehart, who inherited her fathers iron
ore business, became Australias first female billionaire,
with a fortune worth $1.8 billion, according to the Business
Review Weekly (BRW). This year, she doubled her assets to
$4 billion and was place fourth on the 2007 BRW Rich 200 list.
Just behind her, in fifth spot on the Rich 200 list, is Andrew
Forrest of the Fortescue Metals Group. He increased his fortune
from $810 million last year to a staggering $3.89 billion this
year. Moreover, his company has yet to dig any ore from the $3.7
billion Chichester Range project, due to begin exports, mainly
to China, in mid-May 2008.
This feverish expansion has taken its toll in human lives.
In March this year, in the course of Fortescues drive to
meet its May 2008 deadline, two workers died at a Fortescue railway
camp when a category-4 cyclone demolished their shoddy temporary
accommodation. The company refused to evacuate the men, despite
repeated weather warnings.
In June, the increasingly unsafe conditions produced by the
relentless drive for profit were also underscored by a protest
at BHP Billitons iron ore operations near Mount Newman.
More than 200 workers took the unprecedented step of signing a
petition and speaking out on national television against poor
safety standards and management intimidation.
Nevertheless, workers continue to pour into WA, lured by the
prospect of a job and higher wages in mining and construction.
The states population is growing by more than 125 people
a day, and mining industry analysts predict that 40,000 extra
workers will be needed in WA mine sites alone by 2015.
Absurd claims are being made about the WA success
story. John Nicolaou, chief economist for the WA Chamber of Commerce
and Industry, told the New Zealand Herald last year: In
Perth shoppers are deciding the colour of their new Porsche, whilst
a Sydney shopper is trying to afford another box of cereal.
A WA Council of Social Services report entitled The rising
cost of living in Western Australia tells a completely different
story. It concluded: This boom is not producing benefits
for all Western Australians, and in fact, it is producing adverse
conditions for many people who live on middle or low incomes.
The main reason for this is that the boom has caused the cost
of living in WA to soar.
Lack of services and infrastructure
The rising cost of living has been compounded by the failure
of state and federal governments to invest their new-found revenues
into much-needed physical and social infrastructure. While mining
royalties have proven a boon to state and federal governments
alikethis year, the Howard governments revenue is
estimated to increase by $5 billion and the WA Labor government
has recorded a record $2.3 billion budget surplusthe money
has gone into tax cuts for the rich and infrastructure for business,
not services for the needy.
Public schools and hospitals are crumbling and record numbers
of people are on waiting lists for public housing.
Housing costs have risen dramatically. In the state capital
of Perth, the median weekly rent jumped from $189 in June 2005
to $270 in March 2007an increase of almost 43 percent. Private
rental vacancies have hit an all-time low of 0.8 percentdown
from 4.8 percent in mid-2003. Rising property prices and higher
interest rates have lifted mortgage repayments from less than
20 percent of family income in the late 1990s to well over 30
percent today.
For families on low incomes, household costs for fuel, food
and transport have increased by $70 per week during the past year,
rising at a rate more than 2.5 times that in average wages. Community
service agencies and charity groups report that the number of
people in desperate straits is growing. From 2005 to 2006, there
was a 54 percent increase in the number of people in need whom
agencies had to turn away.
High rents have led to long waiting lists for public housing.
To meet the WA governments stated goal of public housing
comprising 6 percent of total housing stock, an additional 2,380
dwellings would have to be built each year. Last month, the government
announced, with much fanfare, the building of 124 more dwellings
for the year.
Public schools across the state are overcrowded, underfunded
and understaffed. The school year began with a shortage of around
300 teachers, with regional cities and towns facing the biggest
problems.
Likewise, the public health system faces an acute crisis. In
early 2001, Labor was elected to power promising improvements,
but the opposite has taken place. Problems abound in every areafrom
public hospitals and mental health services to childrens
health, Aboriginal health and regional services.
One glaring example is the lack of public hospital beds. Between
1999-2000 and today, Perths population has increased by
38 percent, from 1.3 million to 1.8 millionthat is, by half
a million people. Over the same period, the number of public hospital
beds has increased by a total of just 77from 3,490 in 1999-2000
to 3,567 now. In that period, public hospital admissions have
jumped by 15 percent from 298,871 to 343,900an increase
of more than 45,000.
The socialist alternative
Corporations and governments seem to assume that the WA resources
boom will last forever, with economic analysts generally predicting
another 15 to 25 years of high growth. But the reality is far
more uncertain. Not only is China itself wracked by deep social
divisions and financial instability, its rapid growth is heavily
dependent on exports, particularly to the US. Any downturn or
major financial crisis in the US or Europe would have immediate
ramifications in China, impacting directly on Australian exports.
If this were to happen, Western Australia, in particular, would
face an immediate and precipitous downturn, with the burden being
placed squarely on the shoulders of the working classnot
only in WA but throughout the country.
The Socialist Equality Party is standing candidates in the
federal election in New South Wales, Victoria and in Western Australiain
the seat of Swanto place before the working class a genuine
alternative to the two parties of big businessLabor and
Liberal. We are fighting to develop an independent political movement
against militarism and war, against deepening social inequality,
and against the ongoing assault on democratic rights. The aim
of such a movement will be the socialist transformation of societyto
put an end to a social and economic system that benefits the wealthy
few at the direct expense of the majority of ordinary working
people.
The SEP calls for the major corporations, including the mining
companies, banks and financial institutions, to be placed under
public ownership with the fullest democratic control by the producers
themselves over economic policies and priorities. Only when social
need, not private profit, becomes the organising principle of
production and all aspects of social life, will the extraordinary
human and technical resources now available be utilised to provide
decent working conditions, a better living standard and a safe
environment for all.
Authorised by N. Beams, 100B Sydenham Rd, Marrickville,
NSW
Visit the Socialist Equality
Party Election Web Site
See Also:
Australian election debate: Howard and
Rudd compete as economic conservatives
[22 October 2007]
Socialist Equality Party (Australia)
2007 federal election statement
A socialist program to fight war, social inequality and the
assault on democratic rights
[16 October 2007]
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