February 20 1976. Thought for the Week: "The
history of the world-revolution conspiracy is of absorbing interest
to students. It is so old that its original root is hard to find, but
the continuing development of the idea can be picked up at almost any
period. In this century it has made great gains and the present ambition
is evidently to complete the process during the remainder of the century;
to this end the ruination of all law and order in Africa is obviously
held to be a paramount necessity."
Douglas Reed in "The Siege of Southern Africa". |
RHODESIA TO FIGHT ON
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FORMER LIBERAL MINISTER QUESTIONS INTEGRITY OF TREASURY"Federal Treasury officials had 'misbehaved' and 'misinformed' several governments, a former Social Services Minister, Mr. W. C. Wentworth, said today". -"The Herald" (Melbourne) February 10th. We agree with Mr. Wentworth that the economy could be improved by reducing taxation; this is one of the points of the Petersen Plan. In calling for the control of the amount of money in circulation; he no doubt means, in some sort of way, that we must not have "too much money chasing too few goods" - as this would be inflationary. We are still mystified as to the goods that are not available, if one has the money to buy them. The stores are literally bulging with goods for sale, and there are "post- Christmas", "closing down", "pre-winter", "never- to-be-repeated" sales everywhere! The amount of money in circulation can certainly be reduced by using consumer credits; another point of the Petersen Plan. If the amount of money now necessary to finance the new national wage increases were applied to consumer credits, there would be a marked lowering in overall prices, inflation would be slowed right down, and even reversed, with the reduction in taxation referred to above "No way", says the Treasury. Mr. Wentworth did raise an interesting point. He said: "In proper terms there was no Government deficit because $4,000 million in capital works were charged against the Budget. "Australia was one of the few countries in the world that adopted this practice". All this means really is that if other budgetary practices had been employed there would either have been a most drastic reduction in capital works, and hence severe unemployment, or the capital works would have been financed from taxation; the method used by most other Western countries. If so, then our taxation would have been considerably higher. It's the old story of the swings and the roundabouts! Whilst on the unpleasant subject of unemployment, we cannot see any alleviation of this in the immediate future; rather the reverse. The Melbourne Chamber of Commerce warned, as was reported in "The Age" (Melbourne) February 16th, that unemployment will exceed 400,000 by the end of April, this year. Mr. Ian Spicer, the Secretary of the Victorian Employers' Federation, in the same report said that the new wage increases (6.4%) would add $2,000 million to the national annual wage bill; the cost to employers would be much greater after payroll tax and workers' compensation increases were adjusted. All employers of labour, reading these lines, are fully aware of the implications of the thumping increases in workers' compensation premiums last year. All these massive increases are to be pushed forward into costs, then prices -- to be met with fresh wage demands. And so it goes on. Labour is now a luxury to the small to medium sized business. Proprietors will be looking at every way to cut staff: and certainly to avoid replacing those not absolutely essential. We do not consider that an unemployment figure of even 7-8% by the end of this year in Australia is unrealistic. It is the implications, which are frightening. Yes, the implications are revolutionary. The Communist-controlled unions will have the right causes for industrial warfare; short, sharp clashes as predicted by Laurie Carmichael, and confrontations with a non-Labor Government, catapulted into office by a "conspiracy", a "coup d'etat", brought about by a "wicked, deceitful" Governor-General, aided in his foul plotting by no less a person than the Chief Justice of the High Court. So "Shame, Fraser, Shame"; "restore democracy all over again; but this time with some real revolutionary spice added. The time is approaching when Australians will see revolutionary blood in the streets. |
BRIEF COMMENTSMr. H. W. Herbert, Queensland economist has been
making some pithy observations of late. In his column in the "Sunday
Mail" (Brisbane) February 1st, he says that Australia no longer
needs overseas capital, and that "in a recession, a large Budget deficit
is essential but, unlike overdrafts and business loans, it does not
have to be repaid". A report in "The Australian" (Feb. 16th) has it that high wages and a tendency to over-educate our children are two causes of the massive level of unemployment among teenagers. Latest Australian Bureau of Statistics figures disclose that 15.6% of teenagers in the work force were out of work. This is 4 to 5 times the percentage of their elders. Why? One short answer is that there is a back-lash against "the cult of the teenager" evident in the past 2-3 decades, when there was more spending power at the disposal of wage-earners. Employers, struggling with the wage bill, now want value for money: and teenagers, overall, aren't good value. The principal reason is that their wages are too high; and they just aren't worth it. There are all sorts of other reasons too, which are not applicable to all young people. There is no doubt that many teenagers have been spoiled by over indulgent parents in past decades, and many young people have grown up with a false notion that teenagers are something special. We have asserted many times that the universities, and institutions of higher education are full of people who should never be there. All that is happening is that many young people are being educated beyond their natural ability, and chasing "education" as a sort of ticket to a higher wage. This is a cardinal factor in the dissatisfaction of a growing number of people in the professions - the teaching profession perhaps the worst example of all. |
FULL EMPLOYMENTExport has come to be regarded as an end in itself, instead of the means to its proper end; the obtaining of exports. This is the demand for full employment. Since the only way to keep all workers fully employed is to keep production going full ahead, there is a constant stream of goods for which buyers must be found. As there are not nearly enough buyers in Australia, surpluses must be sold overseas so that producers can keep on producing and providing jobs for workers. With increasingly efficient production these surpluses have become bigger and bigger.Our export-import bargaining is conducted not, as it should be, on the basis of what products we need to import, but on the basis of what we need to export. This must inevitably result in our goods being sold short. (Wheat sales to Red China??? Beef sales to Russia???) When our trade negotiators are prepared to sell goods to overseas buyers at much lower prices than Australian customers are charged for the same goods, it is a sure sign that they are more interested in getting rid of the goods than in getting value for them. |