Sunday, May 4, 2014

A Fair Go

A Fair Go

A Fair Go

Image courtesy of the guardian.com
Image courtesy of the guardian.com

Is everybody given a fair go in this country?


Not anymore, says Peter Barnes, and definitely not with a government intent on taking away the services and support most needed by the nation’s poorest.


But what is even more disgraceful,
laments Peter, are the lies that these people have to take a ‘hit’ for
the sake of (what is already) a strong economy.



“A fair go” could be Australia’s motto.


It’s a phrase that’s uniquely Australian, and one on which we pride ourselves: Fair go, mate!


There are other versions that nobody but an Australian would
understand: “Fair dibs”, and of course “Fair suck of the sauce bottle”,
but they all mean roughly the same thing.



Fairness, and balance.


A national poll
a few years ago showed that 9 out of 10 us think “a fair go”
is important. It’s a simple way of summing up most of the things which, when we’re polled, we say are most important : Health, Education, Employment, the cost of living, and more generally the Economy.



We understand, as Australians, that that’s what a fair society is
about. A fair society is one where you look after the sick. A fair
society is one where you look after the old. A fair society is one where
you care for the young, and they get the best education possible. In a
fair society everybody would like to be rich, but nobody wants to be
rich if it means that the sick get sicker, we neglect the old, the poor
get poorer and we endanger our children’s future. Wealth is nice, but
not wealth at any price, and not if there isn’t a fair go.



We understand, as Australians, that sometimes times are tough and
sometimes they’re easy, but a fair go means that if we’re “doing it
tough”, then everybody’s doing it tough, not just some.



In particular, not just the battlers.


This article was first published on Peter’s blog infinate8horizon and has been republished with permission.


“Mate, if we’re doing it tough then everyone deserves a fair go, especially the battlers.”


That is fair dinkum Australian.


Which is why it’s so hard to understand what’s happening in Australian politics right now.


Because we’re not doing it tough, not everyone is getting a fair go, and stone the bloody crows, the people who are getting the worst deal are the battlers!


What the hell is wrong?


All of the national and international statistics show that we’re not
doing it tough. In fact, compared to practically everybody else in the
world, we’re doing it easy. In a recent visit, Andrew Neil laid out his summary of
our economy, and Treasurer Joe Hockey agreed with him. Andrew Neil is
former editor of the Sunday Times, founder of Sky TV News, and publisher
of The Spectator. He compared Australia to the other members of the
G20.



Let’s remember that the G20, of which we are a member, represent 85%
of global GDP, 75% of global trade, and two thirds of the world’s
population. It isn’t everyone, but it’s most of those who matter
economically.



Neil pointed out that there isn’t a single other country in the G20 that can match our economic statistics, and Joe Hockey agreed:


  • A budget deficit of less than 3% of GDP
  • A national debt that’s only 23% of GDP
  • Twenty two years of continuous growth
  • Unemployment less than 6%
  • A strong currency
  • Massive mineral resources

In other words, there may be one or two countries who are better on one measure or another, but taken all together, nobody in the G20 can match us. Nobody. And Joe Hockey agreed.


Economically we are the luckiest country in the G20, and hence probably the world.


That is not doing it tough, by any measure. Quite the opposite.


We are in a better position than just about anybody else in the world
to create a fair society. I won’t bore you with more statistics, but we
actually spend significantly less than most comparable countries on
pensions, health care and other social benefits. There are some graphs
at the end of the article.



Even if we were doing it tough, we’d expect that everyone would share
the pain. In the spirit of fair go, we’d make sure that the weakest and
poorest didn’t end up getting hurt the worst.



But they are about to.


All of the talk leading up to the budget has been about cutting
services, about reducing services, about “unsustainable” services, about
coming economic disaster. Our social welfare is apparently too
expensive, we have to pay again for the health system we’ve already paid for,
we can’t afford as much for education or disability. It’s all doom and
gloom for the sick, the poor, the old and the young. Even though we’re
not really doing it tough.



But there’s no pain or doom and gloom for business.


We have the best economic credentials in the G20, and for some reason
we’re going to make life harder for the battlers, and business isn’t
going to feel a thing. Have you heard the Minerals Council, or the
Business Council, or any other business lobby screaming about the
upcoming budget? No. The only people screaming are the ones who can
least afford it.



This is the opposite of a fair go. This is bullshit.


Other countries with worse economies than ours are managing a fair
society, and are looking after their young, their old, their sick and
their poor. Why can’t we?



This is selfish, greedy, lying, unfair, un-Australian bullshit.


We have one of the luckiest countries in the world, and to make a few
people even richer we’re going to take money and services away from
those who can least afford it, even though we don’t really need to.



That’s a bastard act.


That’s not what Australia is about. That’s not what Australians expect, or respect, or deserve.


It’s not a fair go, it’s bullshit.


This article was first published on Peter’s blog infinite8horizon and has been republished with permission.





poverty rates among over 65s





Budget Emergency?





Are taxes too high?





Where can we find budget savings

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