Diary of our stinking Govt.

As it's more than 100 days now, it has been suggested that a new thread was needed.  The current govt has been breaking promises and telling lies at a rate so fast it's hard to keep up.Woman Happy

 

This below is worrying, "independent" pffft, as if your own doctor is somehow what? biased, it's ridiculous. So far there is talk of only including people under a certain age 30-35, for now. Remember that if your injured in a car, injured at work or get ill, you too might need to go on the DSP. They have done a similar think in the UK with devastating consequences.

 

and this is the 2nd time recently where the Govt has referred to work as welfare???? So when you go to work tomorrow (or tuesday), just remember that's welfare.

 

http://www.abc.net.au/news/2014-04-20/disability-pensioners-may-be-reassessed-kevin-andrews/5400598

 

Independent doctors could be called in to reassess disability pensioners, Federal Government says

 

The Federal Government is considering using independent doctors to examine disability pensioners and assess whether they should continue to receive payments.

 

Currently family doctors provide reports supporting claims for the Disability Support Pension (DSP).

But Social Services Minister Kevin Andrews is considering a measure that would see independent doctors reassess eligibility.

 

"We are concerned that where people can work, the best form of welfare is work," Mr Andrews said at a press conference.

 

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Ii wonder if Abbott & Hockey read articles (by economists) like the following.

Abbott and Hockey: Why poor people don't matter

It doesnโ€™t seem yet to have dawned on Tony Abbott that he was elected because he wasnโ€™t Julia Gillard or Kevin Rudd, not because voters thought it was time we made a lurch to the Right.

The man who imagines he has a โ€œmandateโ€ to mistreat the children of boat people, ensure free speech for bigots, give top appointments to big business mates and reintroduce knights and dames, represented himself as a harmless populist before the election.

The other thing he doesnโ€™t seem to have realised is that just as he has us moving to reduce our commitment to action against climate change and to make the budget much less fair, the rest of the advanced economies are moving the opposite way.

President Obama is taking steps to overcome Congressโ€™s refusal to act on global warming, the Chinese get more concerned about it as each month passes and the International Monetary Fund is chastising us for our apostasy.
And while we use our budget to widen the gap between rich and poor, people in other countries are realising the need to narrow it.
Wayne Swan, former Labor treasurer, noted in a speech on Monday that โ€œcentre-right political leaders across the globe are acknowledging the obvious truth that capitalism is facing an existential challenge . . . only last week ratings agency Standard and Poorโ€™s emphasised yet again that high inequality is a drag on growthโ€.

....Australians had done much better than the Americans at matching strong economic growth with social equity but, according to Swan, โ€œweโ€™re witnessing the Americanisation of the Right in this country. Obsessed with defending the advantages of the wealthiest in our societyโ€.
In his various efforts to defend rather than correct his first budgetโ€™s unfairness, Joe Hockey seems to be doing just that. Meanwhile, the messages coming from international authorities are very different.

Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, noted in a speech that the 85 richest people in the world control as much wealth as the poorest half of the global population - 3.5 billion people.



Gittins: saving capitalism from its excesses
We simply cannot take the capitalist system, which produces such plenty and so many solutions, for granted. Ross Gittins comments.
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It doesnโ€™t seem yet to have dawned on Tony Abbott that he was elected because he wasnโ€™t Julia Gillard or Kevin Rudd, not because voters thought it was time we made a lurch to the Right.

The man who imagines he has a โ€œmandateโ€ to mistreat the children of boat people, ensure free speech for bigots, give top appointments to big business mates and reintroduce knights and dames, represented himself as a harmless populist before the election.

The other thing he doesnโ€™t seem to have realised is that just as he has us moving to reduce our commitment to action against climate change and to make the budget much less fair, the rest of the advanced economies are moving the opposite way.

President Obama is taking steps to overcome Congressโ€™s refusal to act on global warming, the Chinese get more concerned about it as each month passes and the International Monetary Fund is chastising us for our apostasy.

And while we use our budget to widen the gap between rich and poor, people in other countries are realising the need to narrow it.

Wayne Swan, former Labor treasurer, noted in a speech on Monday that โ€œcentre-right political leaders across the globe are acknowledging the obvious truth that capitalism is facing an existential challenge . . . only last week ratings agency Standard and Poorโ€™s emphasised yet again that high inequality is a drag on growthโ€.

In Australia, however, an increasing โ€œvocal minority has decided to oppose any reform, no matter how necessary and no matter how obvious in its benefits to the whole nation, if they perceive it is in their short-term interests to do so.

โ€œThis is a recipe for unnecessary political division and widening social inequality, and unfortunately permanent reform failure,โ€ he says.

Australians had done much better than the Americans at matching strong economic growth with social equity but, according to Swan, โ€œweโ€™re witnessing the Americanisation of the Right in this country. Obsessed with defending the advantages of the wealthiest in our societyโ€.

In his various efforts to defend rather than correct his first budgetโ€™s unfairness, Joe Hockey seems to be doing just that. Meanwhile, the messages coming from international authorities are very different.

In a recent paper on policy challenges for the next 50 years, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development warned the growing importance of skill-biased technological progress and the rising demand for skills, will continue to widen the gap between high and low wages.

Unless this was corrected by greater redistribution of income, other OECD countries would end up facing almost the same level of inequality as seen in the US today. โ€œRising inequalities may backlash on growth, notably if they reduce economic opportunities available to low-income talented individuals,โ€ it warns.

Christine Lagarde, managing director of the International Monetary Fund, noted in a speech that the 85 richest people in the world control as much wealth as the poorest half of the global population - 3.5 billion people.

โ€œWith facts like these, it is no wonder that rising inequality has risen to the top of the agenda - not only among groups normally focused on social justice, but also increasingly among politicians, central bankers and business leaders,โ€ she said.

โ€œMany would argue, however, that we should ultimately care about equality of opportunity, not equality of outcome.โ€ As it happens, Hockey has defended his budgetโ€™s unfairness with just that argument.

โ€œThe problem is that opportunities are not equal. Money will always buy better-quality education and health care, for example. But due to current levels of inequality, too many people in too many countries have only the most basic access to these services, if at all. The evidence also shows that social mobility is more stunted in less equal societies.โ€

Disparity also brings division, she said. โ€œThe principles of solidarity and reciprocity that bind societies together are more likely to erode in excessively unequal societies. History also teaches us that democracy begins to fray at the edges once political battles separate the haves against the have-nots.โ€

Pope Francis put this in stark terms when he called increasing inequality โ€œthe root of social evilโ€.

โ€œIt is therefore not surprising that IMF research - which looked at 173 countries over the past 50 years - found that more unequal countries tend to have lower and less durable economic growth,โ€ Legarde also said.

Get that? Until now, the conventional wisdom among economists has been that efforts to reduce inequality come at the expense of economic growth. Now a pillar of economic orthodoxy, the IMF, has found it works the other way round: rising inequality - as is occurring in Australia, the US and almost all advanced economies - seems to lead to slower growth.

Lagarde said other IMF research had found that, in general, budgetary policies had a good record of reducing social disparities. Social security benefits and income taxes โ€œhave been able to reduce inequality by about a third, on average, among the advanced economiesโ€.

What can we do? โ€œSome potentially beneficial options can include making income tax systems more progressive without being excessive; making greater use of property taxes; expanding access to education and health; and relying more on active labour market programs and in-work social benefits.โ€

Perhaps in his efforts to get a modified version of his budget passed by the Senate, Hockey could bring in the IMF as consultants.

Ross Gittins is economics editor.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/comment/abbott-and-hockey-why-poor-people-dont-matter-20140819-105nyx.html#ixz...




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ref ..............expanding access to education and health...........................

 

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Currently, Australia and Australians are *bleeping* well doomed while this neolib mob continue to slash, burn and rampage

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I suppose that doesn't matter (expanding access to education & health..) as long as the share prices are up..........
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Just a form of gambling for the rich in our society......did you say 'Buy, buy.....or Bye-bye?'.....

 

Where's the future jobs for our young in this attitude and action ref share market 'betting' or hedging?

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.....when it all comes crashing down....they will simply just blame Labor I guess Smiley LOL

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Our Commonwealth of Australia Constitution enacted by Queen on the 9th of July 1900 states:

A State shall not coin money, nor make anything but gold and silver coin a legal tender in payment of debts.

 

But we seem to be operating under a Constitution of a corporation registered in the US called Australian Government.

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mmmm, I was reading last night about the BHPBilliton demerger and that they were putting in Illawarra Coal as a sweetener in the new group, NewCo - the photos of the BHPBilliton boss smugly grinning with the glint in his eye - profits up 23% but no mention anywhere  by anyone about those that actually created the profits - the workers. These bosses strut around like they have done this all on their own, with their millions and millions in salaries and perks a plenty - then they complain about penalty rates and "high" wages - really gives me the bleeps. Not to mention the privatisation of Telstra and the Comm bank, yes I know who did it - all that money going to the bosses and shareholders that could have been our public money. I see kennett was lamenting privatising the TAB yesterday...

 

Kennett admitted making "an admission I don't often make", conceding that one of his reforms on winning office - privatising the TAB in 1994 - was wrong. He said he had not predicted the negative implications of the change, as it paved the way for betting competition from privately owned bookmakers that pay a lot less to the racing industry.

Read more: http://www.smh.com.au/sport/horseracing/jeff-kennett-savages-damien-oliver-ban-calls-corporate-bookm...
 

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the once clever country...sigh

 

http://www.smh.com.au/technology/sci-tech/csiro-cuts-researchers-at-high-containment-laboratory-2014...

 

CSIRO cuts researchers at high containment laboratory

 

The CSIRO will cut the number of infectious disease researchers at its Australian Animal Health Laboratory in Geelong, the countryโ€™s only facility capable of working with live samples of some of the most deadly diseases, including Ebola and MERS.

 

As the world's health authorities grapple to contain the largest outbreak of Ebola, infectious disease experts warned cuts to research would leave the country vulnerable to new and emerging diseases.

 

The CSIRO Staff Association said up to eight researchers would lose their jobs at the facility, which studies Ebola. 

 

Director of CSIRO's Biosecurity Flagship Kurt Zuelke said the changes would affect scientists studying food-borne pathogens and infectious viral enteritis in poultry. He said researchers looking into Hendra virus and Avian flu were safe from the restructure.

 

The CSIRO also said Ebola researchers would not be directly affected by the cuts and that the organisationโ€™s response to emerging infectious diseases would be protected. 

 

Director of Queensland Universityโ€™s Australian Infectious Disease Research Centre Mark Walker said CSIRO's AAHL was a world-leading research facility and the only laboratory in the country operating at level four, the highest biosafety level possible.

"Funding cuts will leave the nation exposed to new and emerging infectious disease agents," Professor Walker said.

 

"The country requires this type of expertise, as we donโ€™t know which new virus will be a major health threat. It could be Ebola, or is could be something completely different," he said.

 

Nobel Laureate Peter Doherty expressed concern at the impact the staff cuts would have on research, which was dependent on continuity.

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