on 12-11-2013 10:37 AM
The hand-picked head of Tony Abbott's business advisory group has urged cuts to Australia's minimum wages and demanded more power for corporate Australia at the expense of consumers.
Maurice Newman, a former chairman of the ABC and the Australian Securities Exchange, used a speech last night to also urge the Prime Minister to consider ditching some election promises to make the necessary changes to "save" the country.
Mr Abbott wants the business group to advise him and Cabinet on ways to "develop the economy".
In a speech to the Committee for the Economic Development of Australia, Mr Newman was critical of the former government, claiming it had engaged in reckless spending and class warfare to the detriment of the nation.
Australians had become too used to high wages and an industrial relations system that was too rigid. Changes in both were necessary.
"We have long since breached our salary cap, not just by the standards of our low-cost regional neighbours, but also our peers," he said. "In the end, regardless of union pressure and criticism from political progressives, relative international wage alignment will occur, either through exchange rate adjustment, unemployment, technology inflation or a combination."
While wanting lower wages, Mr Newman said corporate Australia was being held back by laws that gave too much power to consumers. He said an overhaul of competition laws, with an eye to enable firms to merge into bigger entities, had to be considered.
"If we are not ultimately to become a branch economy, the opportunity for Australian companies to become national champions at home must be considered by rebalancing the interests of consumers and businesses," he said. "To do otherwise is to encourage companies to shift to more friendly domiciles, sell to foreigners or, if all else fails, to close their doors."
Mr Newman has not been afraid to express strong views, previously attacking the CSIRO and the Bureau of Meteorology for their research into the "myth" of anthropological climate change.
The businessman said while government debt levels were too high and had to be wound back, more debt was needed to finance major infrastructure projects.
"Given that mining investment will be winding down and employment prospects may become challenging for displaced workers, early commencement on commercially sound infrastructure projects could be very well timed," he said.
on 12-11-2013 07:07 PM
12-11-2013 07:08 PM - edited 12-11-2013 07:09 PM
What cost $17,000 to fit out in his office?
Did they need to replace all the walls he punched in?
on 13-11-2013 01:32 AM
To save the country a fortune all needs to be done is:
1. Cut out all government funded aged and disability pensions.
2. Cut out all unemployment payments.
3. Cut out all parent/family benefit payments.
4. Cut out free health.
5. Cut out all free education.
There, billions saved instantly LOL.
Oh, Hi all!
Bet ya'll missed me.
13-11-2013 01:41 AM - edited 13-11-2013 01:43 AM
To save the country a real fortune all it takes is to cut out all income tax deductions for those earning more than say, $150,000 per year.
it's not as if it's going send them broke or anything, like cutting minimum wage will send broke(r) those already struggling to survive.
on 13-11-2013 01:48 AM
A country needs to pay its' workers a decent wage if those people are to be able to afford to buy things in the shops.
Recipe for economic collapse? Cut the wages of the largest group of wage earners in the country. You can't patronise the shops and businesses if you have no money.
13-11-2013 02:07 AM - edited 13-11-2013 02:07 AM
The "trickle down" economic theory doesn't work because businesses keep the profits and trickles them down primarily to their shareholders and their highly paid executives.
It doesn't make good economic sense to me to buy a new car because i get a much better deal by buying a second-hand one.
Same with most other products. Food is about the only exception. And even then, processed food is a bad deal for so many reasons.
Even if Ford and Holden move production overseas, I'd still only buy a used one.
What needs to be done is to take a cold hard look at how much money these companies make and then to legislate against profiteering.
Oh, but we need to stimulate business so that business can employ people. But businesses also go broke if no one can afford to buy their over-priced, aggressively advertised junk. And if they price themselves out of the market, then they will go broke.
on 13-11-2013 03:04 AM
What happens when you buy a new car or a new mobile phone or a new washing machine or a new tv?
What happens is that in a few months time the manufacturers bring out a "new improved" model and aggressively advertise it as the current must-have product, making you feel dissatisfied with your current purchase.
We get sucked into wanting the new and the current only to find that we can never stop "up-grading".
I jumped off this merry go round years ago. I don't even own a mobile phone. A phone is for my convenience. I don't want to be at evryone's beck and call 24 hours a day. if I don't want to, I (gasp!) don't even answer my home phone. It's there for my convenience, not for the convenience of marketeers and beggars and other people who would drag me away from a home cooked real-food meal just so they can blather in my ear about something I don't want to hear about.
And no, I don't have a facebook account either. I don't want or need to put my private life out there.
I hear that Microsoft is going to stop supporting Windows XP soon. So they want to force me into buying another of their new "improved" "thneeds", sigh. Vista wasn't much of an improvement, so I have heard. It's never going to stop unless we choose to stop being seduced by all the chicanery.
Cut my wages and I can't buy things and I might not even notice. How much do you buy that you don't really even need?
I do rave on don't I on my old second-hand computer running a soon to be axed operating system. But it cost me very little and it still does the job I need it do do.
Cut my wages? And I'll cut buying the products of a business system which continually puts the prices up just because they want to make more than a reasonable living from what they do.