Tuesday, January 20, 2015

Where are the Visionaries? - The AIM Network

Where are the Visionaries? - The AIM Network



Where are the Visionaries?














If ever Tony Abbott had an opportunity to become
the infrastructure Prime Minister he boasted he wanted to be, right now
it is staring him in the face. Right now he could authorise a massive
capital spending program that would literally electrify the nation and
elevate it back to near full employment.



It could be an economic revival to exceed anything our country has
ever experienced. All it needs is leadership of the Whitlam and Chifley
kind. The sort we haven’t seen since the early 1970s.



As Peter Martin demonstrates in The Age
this morning, the money is there for the taking at an historic low
interest rate (2.55%), the projects are numerous, the workforce is
available, with resources able to be sourced locally and the prospect of
multiple auxiliary contracts being let out to small and medium sized
manufacturing plants.



What an opportunity! This is what visionary governments do. It is the
stuff that future generations would look back upon and say, “This is what I’m talkin’ about!” But where are those who could place their imprimatur on such an undertaking?



scroogeThey
are counting pennies, robbing the elderly, depriving the sick,
forsaking proper educational opportunities for the young. They are
engaging in the regressive, conservative, miserly, backward thinking of
Dicken’s Ebenezer Scrooge; of bean counters intent on consolidating what
they think is a finite resource.



The Abbott government could become the most far-sighted in our
history. But they won’t. Neither Abbott nor anyone in his cabinet has
the foresight. His words are meaningless, his vision worthless, his
cabinet full of backward thinking, thought deprived, mediocrity.



While a score of major national projects sit expectantly on engineer’
and architects’ desks, begging to be commissioned, these so-called
leaders are all looking the other way.



The current 10 year target bond rate in Australia is higher at 2.5%
than practically anywhere else in the world. In the US it is 1.81%. In
Britain it is 1.54%, in Germany, 0.40%, in Japan, it is 0.24%. Investors
all over the world are looking for government bonds that offer a better
rate than that.



They have mountains of money to invest and would jump at the
opportunity to bring it down under. We have mountains of projects we
could kick-start. We have a serious unemployment problem destined to
become worse as our economy contracts.



We have an inflation rate of 2.3% which is certain to fall further
with the present slump in oil prices. The timing for a massive
infrastructure program is perfect. There is the Brisbane to Sydney to
Melbourne fast rail project, we could restore the NBN to its original
specifications; the Sydney WestConnex road project and Melbourne’s North
South Metro Rail tunnel are major infrastructure projects waiting to be
given the nod.



So where is the pretend infrastructure Prime Minister? He’s still
counting the repeal of the carbon tax as his greatest achievement.



fastAny
number of projects up to a combined cost of $100 billion whose benefits
exceed their cost could be undertaken, all of which could be financed
with government bonds locked in at 2.55% for 10 years. It is a golden
opportunity but with a limited window in which to take advantage. The
bond market is set for a correction sooner, rather than later.



But what chance is there that a government that rails against debt
and deficits, would grasp such an opportunity? What chance is there that
a government that is determined to strangle our economy as it tries to
produce worthless surpluses, could see the benefits that would result?



What chance is there that a government whose only plan was to stop
the boats, repeal the carbon and mining taxes and whose leader thinks
coal is good for humanity, would have the intellectual capacity to seize
their moment in history?



What chance? None.


solarSaul
Eastlake, economist with Bank of America Merrill Lynch says, we could
speed up the commercial availability of battery technologies that could
power solar panels on our roofs and enable them to be removed from the
grid.



Where are the visionaries that could create such a project? Where are
the visionaries that have the potential to put half a million people
back to work, increase tax revenues accordingly, reduce welfare costs
and improve the overall health of the economy?



They would much rather have those overseas investment bodies own
those projects such that the wealth they produce would remain in the
hands of the 1%. The future prosperity of Australia could never be
realised while under the management of neo liberal thinking
conservatives whose leader thinks coal is good for humanity.



Not here. Not now. While The LNP are in power, the computer says no.


australia



No comments:

Post a Comment