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Australia: Murdoch-sponsored conference outlines new
agenda for Rudd government
By Patrick OConnor
31 March 2008
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A two-day conference sponsored by the Murdoch-owned Australian
newspaper, held in Melbourne last week and titled New Agenda
for Prosperity, outlined the vicious economic and social
measures being prepared against the working class by the new Labor
government. The discussioninvolving senior Labor and Liberal
politicians, big business representatives, and various academics
and members of right-wing think-tanksprovided considerable
detail regarding the policies being embraced by Prime Minister
Kevin Rudd. In the interests of maintaining Australias international
competitiveness, wages are to be suppressed, the last vestiges
of the welfare state effectively destroyed, and free market
relations extended to social infrastructure, health, and education.
The conference, co-sponsored by the University of Melbournes
Melbourne Institute, has been held annually since 2002. In previous
years the event largely focussed on the perceived failure of the
former Howard government to take advantage of the world minerals
and commodities boom and advance a sufficiently far reaching right-wing
reform agenda. The tone of the 2008 conference was markedly different,
due to the Labor Partys election victory last November.
As the Melbourne Institutes promotional material explained:
The election of the Rudd Labor Government offers the prospect
of a reinvigorated economic reform program targeted at promoting
prosperity and opportunity for all Australians.
Rudd delivered the keynote speech to the conference on Thursday.
His appearance, contrasting with Howards failure to attend
previous conferences, underscored the Labor governments
determination to implement the free market program
long promoted by the Murdoch press. Other senior Labor ministers
were there as well, including Treasurer Wayne Swan, finance minister
Lindsay Tanner, Nicola Roxon (health), Jenny Macklin (indigenous
affairs), Anthony Albanese (infrastructure), Stephen Conroy (communications),
and Kim Carr (industry and science). Opposition leader Brendan
Nelson and shadow treasurer Malcolm Turnbull also addressed the
meeting.
The spectre of the unfolding crisis on US financial markets
and the threat of a 1930s-style depression hung over the proceedings,
although there was a concerted attempt to play down the extent
of the danger posed to the Australian economy. During the first
plenary session, Chris Richardson of Access Economics declared
that Australia is fine as long as China is fine, and in
2008 China is fine. Other economists made similar statements,
sharing Richardsons wishful thinking and his impressionist
and ahistorical perspective. None of the speakers dealt with the
potentially explosive geo-political consequences of a US recession
and the further erosion of American hegemony.
Nevertheless, for the conference organisers, the increasingly
uncertain world economic outlook provided an additional impetus
for domestic reform.
Opening proceedings, Rudd stressed that Australia is
not immune from events abroad and we can take nothing
for granted. In words applauded by the Australians
editorial last Friday, the prime minister emphasised that he would
not respond to the financial crisis by turning inwards
and moving to erect new trade barriers or financial regulations,
but would instead lead one of those governments that choose
to hold firm, keep their nerve, and stay the course on policies
that will promote stability for the present and continue to reform
the economy for the future.
Rudd pledged to advance a productivity revolution
by implementing a national program of action on productivity
growth aimed at boosting productivity growth rates above
those of the US and other advanced economies. He explained that
the Labor governments strategy was based on the three
Ps: productivity, workforce participation, and population
growth. The central organising principle underpinning this
national agenda of economic reform is boosting Australias
long-term global competitiveness, Rudd concluded. Nobody
owes Australia its future. Our responsibility is to build Australias
future. And that is the new governments policy resolve.
Discussion in the subsequent seminars revealed the agenda underlying
Rudds rhetoric, which included obligatory references to
working families and bringing prosperity to all Australians.
In reality, his measures will lead to an enormous escalation of
social inequality through a deliberate and calculated assault
on the social position of the working class.
Participation and productivity
Much of the conference proceeded in code. Workforce participation,
for example, while occasionally presented as a positive means
of boosting peoples income, is actually aimed at resolving
the growing problem of labour shortages that has caused unwelcome
wage demands for sections of business. The preferred solution
is to dragoon hundreds of thousands of long-term unemployed, disabled,
and single parents into low-paid and menial work. A significant
portion of the conference was devoted to discussing how to convert
the estimated one million people who are either underemployed
or out of the workforce into an exploitable pool of cheap labour.
The debate in two plenary sessions, Is Australia Advancing
Fairly? and From Welfare to Work, was dominated
by Peter Saunders of the free market think-tank, the Centre for
Independent Studies. Saunders insisted that eligibility criteria
for the disability support pension should be drastically tightenedand
applied to those currently disabled as well as to new applicantsand
that young people should be barred from claiming unemployment
benefits. He said that training and educating the low-skilled
and poorly qualified was a waste of money and the government should
instead aim to create more menial jobs by slashing the minimum
wage by 20 percent or more.
Representatives of the Brotherhood of Saint Laurence and the
Australian Council of Social Services baulked at some of Saunderss
conclusions but stressed their general agreement with the discussion.
Tony Nicholson, executive director of the Brotherhood of Saint
Laurence, said the government must bite the political bullet
and choose which of the most disadvantaged sectors of society
to assist, as existing resources shouldnt be spread too
thinly. He added that he felt the welfare state model developed
after World War II was now inadequate and made clear he did not
agree with raising the level of social security payments to welfare
recipients.
Plenary sessions and seminars were invariably dominated by
the most right-wing and reactionary voices. In the session on
tax reform, for example, Melbourne Business School Professor Paul
Kerin acknowledged that tax cuts were really aimed at cutting
social spending, and that the goal should be to reduce this spending
by at least $150 billion, or half the existing level. There was
general agreement that the Labor governments planned cuts
of at least $13 billion in its first budget, due to be handed
down in May, should mark merely the first step.
Discussion on boosting productivity focussed on
raising skills and education levels as well as on infrastructure.
The Howard government was widely condemned for failing to adequately
invest in projects boosting the ability of Australian mining corporations
to keep up with rising world demand driven by the China
boom. Specific demands were raised for improving port facilities,
rail networks, road links between major cities, as well as for
urban infrastructure, including electricity, water, and transport.
Two themes were repeatedly raised. One was that ordinary people
will soon face far higher living costsincluding for water,
electricity, petrol and inner-city congestion charges.
The other was that none of the projects being demanded will be
developed without private investmenti.e., Public-Private
Partnerships (PPPs). Long-term planning and public investment
in social infrastructure is now regarded as incompatible with
the agenda of slashing government spending and opening up every
area of social and economic life to the market.
Gary Bowditch, of Infrastructure Partnerships Australia, raised
the example of the Sydney Harbour Bridge, which opened in 1932
and was designed to sustain projected traffic demand for decades
into the future. Bowditch admitted that the Harbour Bridge proposal,
with its initial excess capacity, would today be labelled
mad, wasteful, and inappropriate. He went on to express
his concern that the public was yet to be convinced about the
value of PPPs and did not understand why business should be able
to profit from social infrastructure investment.
Labors infrastructure minister Anthony Albanese enthusiastically
promoted the prospects for a massive increase in private investment.
The Labor left insisted that people needed to move
beyond the old ideological framework and the assumption
that private investment is bad. Albanese stressed
that the Labor government wanted to mobilise private capital and
open up opportunities for Australian business, as well as for
major international investors who would be able to compete for
contracts.
Winners and losers
Underlying much of the New Agenda for Prosperity
conference was a general concern that while, on the one hand,
the 2007 election delivered a Labor government willing to advance
the measures long demanded by big business, it also reflected
a political shift to the left among broad layers of the population,
making the implementation of such an agenda highly problematic.
In the concluding address to the meeting, the Australians
editor-at-large Paul Kelly demonstrated the acute consciousness
of this dilemma within the ruling elite. The Rudd government
has generated a lot of energy, and the interesting thing is that
the prime minister came to Melbourne via Damascus, Kelly
declared. He basically signed up to the agenda that weve
been talking about all these previous conferences. And its
most interesting; Ive never seen a prime minister before
talking about productivity the way Kevin Rudd talked about productivity...
This is not a new framework; it is a framework which has been
developed in Canberra for quite a period of time. We havent
had a prime minister commit to this framework in such a specific
way before. I think thats particularly important and particularly
interesting.
Kelly then got to the nub of the problem by referring to the
perennial question about winners and losers in the
economic reform process. I remind you that John Howard won
the 1996 election by promising that there would be no losers,
he told the delegates. And he lost the 2007 election when
he allowed an industrial relations policy to go forward that permitted
losers. The Labor Party won the 2007 election very much upon a
platform in which it was campaigning against the principle of
government tolerating losers in terms of the reform process. So
there are very, very important issues which arise for an economic
reform agenda in the coming years. That is, the extent to which
the price mechanism and the market will be used for reform, [and]
if they are, the extent to which there will be losers, what will
be the compensation arrangements for losers, how governments will
present this to electorates, and the extent to which compensation
arrangements will be comprehensive. I think this is a very big
issue coming off the back of the 2007 election.
Many of the Rudd governments first actions in governmentincluding
the ratification of the Kyoto Protocol and the parliamentary apology
to the Aboriginal stolen generationhave been aimed at providing
a progressive colouration to its fundamentally reactionary
economic and social program. Rudds forthcoming Australia
2020 summit, to be convened in Canberra in mid-April, is
being organised for precisely the same reason. Involving 1,000
of the countrys best and brightest brainsincluding
various celebrities such as Cate Blanchettthe summit is
being touted as the means for specialists across-the-board to
help shape a long term strategy for the nations future.
In reality, its essential purpose is to help augment the Labor
governments public relations spin on the policies
elaborated at Murdochs New Agenda for Prosperity
gathering.
See Also:
Despite a nervous backflip,
Australian government plans deep welfare cuts
[17 March 2008]
Australian PM marks first 100 days as
Murdoch demands stiff dose of Brutopia
[13 March 2008]
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