Chief economist at The Australia Institute, Richard Denniss, on the subject of Coalition economic stories........
Sunday, 9 August 2020
Morrison & Co called out for victim blaming
Chief economist at The Australia Institute, Richard Denniss, on the subject of Coalition economic stories........
The
Guardian, 5 August 2020:
Australian
economic debate relies more heavily on metaphors than it does on
evidence, experience or expertise. While the prime minister,
treasurer and self-appointed business leaders drone endlessly about
what the economy “needs”, they simply refuse to provide any
evidence that they know what they are talking about. For decades the
inanity of Australia’s economic debate has been concealed behind
the sugar hit of surging world demand for our exports, and surging
population growth on house prices and retail profits. But in the
deepest recession in modern history, the shallowness of Australia’s
economic debate is about to become clear for all to see.
Treasurer
Josh Frydenberg’s admission last week that his favourite
politicians were Margaret Thatcher and Ronald Reagan was as
informative as the fact that my favourite Marvel heroes are Thor and
Iron Man. Given that Thatcher oversaw burgeoning unemployment and
Reagan doubled the US government’s debt, you can see why our
current treasurer might have an affinity for his cold war heroes. But
for those of us interested in the Morrison government’s actual
plans to get us out of the hole we are in, the treasurer’s last big
interview told us even less than his recent “mini-budget” did.
According
to Frydenberg, Australia’s economy will shrink by a record 7% in
the current quarter. To put that into perspective, the entire 1991
recession saw GDP fall by 1.4% and the 1983 recession, which saw four
quarters of contraction in a row, saw GDP fall by “only” 3.8%.
For the 60 years we have collected quarterly GDP data, the biggest
previous quarterly contraction of GDP was back in June 1974, when the
economy contracted by 2%. But apart from drawing inspiration from
Thatcher and Reagan, what exactly is the government’s plan to
create jobs for the almost million people who are already unemployed,
let alone for the many more who are predicted to be unemployed by the
end of the year?
In
March and April, the Morrison government was more enthusiastic about
stimulating the economy than many expected but, by July, it had grown
tired of its flirtation with Keynesianism. In his mini-budget,
Frydenberg simply turned his back on all that economics has to offer
and – at the same press conference where he announced the largest
ever decline in GDP – he announced his government would be cutting
spending in September this year. The consequences of that decision
will be disastrous for the economy and, most likely, for the
Coalition.
If
private demand and investment is falling (it is) and if foreign
demand for our exports, including education and tourism, is
collapsing (it is), the only thing that can stop GDP spiralling
downwards is a big increase in government spending. That’s not
ideology or theory, it’s just maths. GDP is the sum of its parts,
and if the private-sector parts are shrinking (they are), virtually
every economist agrees it’s a good idea for the government to spend
more. Morrison and Frydenberg spent the first half of year pretending
to understand and accept this most simple of economic tenets but, as
of last week, they have clearly decided to put storytelling ahead of
solid evidence.
In
explaining why they had to cut government spending on unemployment
benefits – and in turn cut the amount of money the unemployed spend
in their local shops – the prime minister and treasurer dusted off
old anecdotes, unsourced, about unemployed people turning down work
because life was “easier”. To be clear, there are currently 13
unemployed people for every job vacancy.
The
Coalition love to tell stories about what great economic managers
they are, despite ABS data suggesting otherwise. But, of course, in
Australia the key to being a “great economic manager” isn’t
delivering high rates of economic growth or budget surpluses (neither
of which the Abbott/Turnbull/Morrison governments have actually
done). On the contrary, the key to being a great economic manager is
to tell great stories.
Central
to the Coalition’s economic narrative is to take credit for
everything good that happens in the economy and shift the blame for
anything bad. When unemployment is falling, say it’s because your
tax cuts are working to “strengthen” the economy. When
unemployment is rising, blame the unemployed and say you need to cut
unemployment benefits.
The
same applies when telling stories about the budget. When times are
good, cut taxes for your friends and, when times are tough, cut
spending on those who never vote for you. Likewise, with productivity
growth, consumer confidence or private investment. If things are
looking up, link it to your tax and welfare cuts, and if things are
going badly, blame it on union power and lazy workers.
Conservatives
have masterfully implemented the old adage to “never let a crisis
go to waste” – successfully blaming the victims of Australia’s
economic system for all of its failings, while taking credit for
managing all of its successes. But they have never had to tell a
story about an economy that shrank 7% in a single quarter, driving
unemployment to 10%……
Unemployment is about to rise, and the economy is not going to “snap back”. Increased training will not create jobs. Cutting unemployment benefits will not create jobs. Industrial relations reform will not create jobs. The reason that companies are shedding staff is that there aren’t enough customers with enough money, or enough confidence, to buy the things that companies sell. The only thing that will pull Australia out of this nosedive is a big increase in government spending, and the government has just announced it plans to cut spending. Strap yourself in – the storytelling is about to go fantastical as the economy goes very, very quiet.
Labels:
#MorrisonGovernmentFAIL,
economy
Saturday, 8 August 2020
Quote of the Week
'“Yeah, it is quantitatively if you look at it, it is. I mean the numbers don’t lie,” Fauci said when asked during an interview with CNN’s Dr. Sanjay Gupta whether the U.S. had the world’s worst coronavirus outbreak. The U.S., which accounts for less than 5% of the world population, leads all other countries in global coronavirus infections and deaths.' [Director of the U.S. National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, Dr. Anthony Fauci, quoted by CNBC on 5 August 2020]
“a
woman who had told NSW Police at the Victorian border she would be
self-isolating at Nimbin on the NSW North Coast was
issued a $1000 fine after she was located 470 kilometres south in a
vehicle at Nabiac. She was also directed to return to Victoria.”
[WAtoday , 7 August 2020]
Labels:
COVID-19,
deaths,
infection rates,
pandemic,
USA
Friday, 7 August 2020
Scott Morrison still running away from scrutiny
The Federal Parliament was supposed to resume today, but as we know, the Prime Minister thinks it's still far too dangerous for our politicians. #auspol | @vanOnselenP pic.twitter.com/rIhTltv0fa— 10 News First (@10NewsFirst) August 4, 2020
Prime Minister Scott 'Job Shirker' Morrison suspension of the Australian Parliament drags on and on.
Even though he has appropriate IT capability at his disposal Morrison is still refusing to let both the House of Representatives and the Senate sit virtually.
This means that the Australian Parliament has only sat for 28 days so far this year.
Which has left Scott Morrison and his cronies free of official scrutiny for most of the last six months.
Even during the 1919 Spanish Influenza pandemic which killed est. 15,000 Australians the Senate sat for 39 days and the House of Representatives for 51 days.
Both houses also sat during the world war years of 1914-1918 and 1939-1945.
However it seems, like his 'mentor' Donald Trump, Scott Morrison is made of lesser stuff.
Labels:
#ScottMorrisonFAIL,
Is democracy dead?
Thursday, 6 August 2020
Queensland locks down its borders once more
ABC
News,
5 August 2020:
Queensland
will close its border to all of New South Wales and the ACT from
1:00am on Saturday.
The
68-year-old Queensland woman was diagnosed with the virus in the past
24 hours and authorities are still investigating the source of the
infection.
Two
historic cases have also been added to the state's total of 1,088
cases.
The
hotspot declaration means anyone travelling from NSW or the nation's
capital will soon be banned from entering the Sunshine State.
Queenslanders
who return after travelling there will be sent to mandatory hotel
quarantine for 14 days at their own expense.
Queensland
COVID-19 snapshot:
Confirmed
cases so far: 1,088
Deaths:
6
Tests
conducted: 581,286
Latest
information from Queensland Health......
New South Wales COVID-19 numbers as of a 5 August 2020 NSW Health update:
Confirmed
cases (including interstate residents in NSW health care
facilities) 3,631
Deaths
(in NSW from confirmed cases) 52
Of
the 12 new cases reported to 8pm last night:
- one is a traveller in hotel quarantine
- 10 were locally acquired linked to known cases including:
- two cases linked to the Thai Rock restaurant in Wetherill Park
- two cases linked to the Apollo restaurant in Potts Point
- six cases associated with the funeral gatherings cluster
- one is locally acquired with unknown source
There
are now:
- 105 cases associated with Thai Rock Wetherill Park cluster
- 58 cases associated with the Crossroads Hotel cluster
- 46 cases associated with the funeral events in Bankstown and surrounding suburbs, including 15 associated with Mounties in Mount Pritchard.
- 30 cases associated with the Potts Point cluster, including 24 cases linked to the Apollo Restaurant cluster and 6 cases linked with the Thai Rock Restaurant Potts Point cluster (two cases attended both and are counted as Thai Rock cases).
Labels:
COVID-19,
New South Wales,
pandemic,
public health order,
Queensland,
Victoria
This is the man Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison consults concerning the way forward in the current global pandemic
CNN Politics, 4 August 2020:
Washington (CNN) Jonathan Swan, a reporter for Axios, has revealed the magic words that expose President Donald Trump's lies for what they are.
Who?
What?
How?
No.
In an interview that aired Monday night on "Axios on HBO," Swan demolished some of Trump's most dishonest talking points with a powerful tactic that has rarely been used by the people Trump has allowed to interview him:
Basic follow-up questions.
Many of Trump's interviewers are right-wing sycophants who have no interest in challenging him. But Trump has defeated even his other interviewers by employing a strategy we can call the hit-and-run -- saying dishonest stuff, then darting ahead to other dishonest stuff before the interviewer reacts.
Swan -- like Fox News' Chris Wallace, to a slightly lesser extent, in an interview that aired July 19 -- came armed with facts and prepared to use them, even if he had to interrupt Trump like Trump interrupts others.
And Trump wasn't ready to respond.
Take their exchange about coronavirus testing. Trump uttered a version of his now-familiar refrain about how testing is overrated -- attributing this nonsense to unnamed "those that say." Swan pressed for details.
Trump: "You know, there are those that say you can test too much, you do know that."
Swan: "Who says that?"
Trump: "Oh, just read the manuals. Read the books."
Swan: "Manuals? What manuals?"
Trump: "Read the books. Read the books."
Swan: "What books?"
Trump moved on without offering a direct answer. While Swan couldn't get the President to concede that he is making up these "manuals" and "books," he exposed him nonetheless.
Swan had similar success when Trump returned to his laughably inaccurate claim that the virus is "under control," which he has now been making for more than six months.
Trump: "Right now, I think it's under control. I'll tell you what --"
Swan: "How? 1,000 Americans are dying a day."
Trump: "They are dying. That's true. And you have -- it is what it is. But that doesn't mean we aren't doing everything we can. It's under control as much as you can control it."
Again, Trump didn't explicitly surrender. But Swan's basic follow-up -- a "how?" and a single key statistic -- forced Trump into a de facto surrender ("It's under control as much as you can control it") and another revealing remark, "It is what it is."
Other false claims
Trump made at least 17 additional false claims in the 35-minute interview. (We're still reviewing the transcript, so the final total might be higher.).....
Read the full article here.
The interview Trump participated in over the bodies of 4.7 million COVID-19 infected Americans and almost 157,000 dead:
Labels:
COVID-19,
Donald Trump,
failure,
pandemic,
Scott Morrison
Wednesday, 5 August 2020
Things you might have missed in the daily news
Financial
Review, 3 August 2020:
Taiwanese
lender Yuanta Securities Investment Trust has sold $27 million worth
of bonds in Adani's Abbot Point coal terminal in Queensland, joining
a rapidly expanding list of Asian and global
lenders that have shunned the controversial project.
Yuanta
was once the second-biggest investor in one of the project's bond
issuances, holding more than 5 per cent of a $US500 million issuance
due to expire at the end of 2022….
According to an ABC News artilce published on 31 July 2020, a senior federal Border Force officer allowed 2,700 people to disembark the Ruby Princess cruise ship mistakenly believing passengers had tested negative to COVID-19, when they had instead tested negative for the common flu.
Border Force command only realised the mistake more than 30 hours after passengers — including 13 who had been isolated in their cabins with fever — had left the ship.
The Ruby Princess COVID-19 cluster resulted in at least 662 infections and 21 deaths, the single biggest arrival of coronavirus on Australian shores.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
According to an ABC News artilce published on 31 July 2020, a senior federal Border Force officer allowed 2,700 people to disembark the Ruby Princess cruise ship mistakenly believing passengers had tested negative to COVID-19, when they had instead tested negative for the common flu.
Border Force command only realised the mistake more than 30 hours after passengers — including 13 who had been isolated in their cabins with fever — had left the ship.
The Ruby Princess COVID-19 cluster resulted in at least 662 infections and 21 deaths, the single biggest arrival of coronavirus on Australian shores.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The
Market Herald, 23 July 2020:
- The Chinese navy has confronted Australian warships in the South China Sea en route to a military exercise with Japan and the U.S.
- Five ships, lead by HMA Canberra, were travelling through disputed waterways when they encountered the Chinese military
- The Joint Task Force was heading to the Philippine Sea at the time, where it planned to conduct military movements ahead of the biennial RIMPAC conference
- The exercise aimed to increase interoperability between the Australian, American, and Japnese navies, but came amid increasing tensions between the U.S. and China over territory in the South China Sea
- Speaking to the encounter, the Department of Defence said all "unplanned interactions with foreign warships throughout the deployment were conducted in a safe and professional manner"….
Next
month, all three navies will head to the biannual Exercise Rim of the
Pacific (RIMPAC) in Hawaii — the biggest global maritime warfare
activity.
However,
in 2018, China invitation to RIMPAC was withdrawn based on its
'aggressive' territorial claims in the South China Sea.
It's
understood China won't participate in this year's RIMPAC event
either.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
The
Daily Telegraph,
1 August 2020, p.27:
The
crowd pleaser
With
world-famous surf breaks, natural springs and coastal charm, Yamba is
the beach break you never knew you needed.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
'Eve Black' dramatically arrested in Melbourne week after she filmed hersel laughing her way through a Bunyip Victoria police checkpoint. She was detained around 2pm on 29 July in arrest that forced police to smash her car window. Now facing up to $10k fine [News Corp 31.07.20]— no_filter_Yamba (@no_filter_Yamba) August 1, 2020
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
According
to recently released Australian
Taxation Office data, in the 2017-18 financial year the amount of
tax paid in main urban areas went as followed in the NSW Northern
Rivers region:
- Grafton postcode 2460 – 14,500 individuals paid $117.32 million.
- Kyogle postcode 2474 – 3,336 individuals paid $24.66 million
- Ballina postcode 2478 – 15,690 individuals paid $186.06 million
- Lismore postcode 2480 – 24,989 individuals paid $207.96 million
- Byron Bay postcode 2481 – 9,050 individuals paid $114.50 million
- Tweed Heads postcode 2485 – 7,709 individuals paid $66.43million
- Tweed Heads postcode 2486 – 17,127 individuals paid $150.65 million.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Former PM Tony Abbott, Alan Jones & George Pell ate at an exclusive club days before a staff member tested positive for COVID-19 [Daily Mail 01.08.70]. So were these men guests of a member. Or has the Australian Club sunk so low that it would now accept one this trio as a member?— no_filter_Yamba (@no_filter_Yamba) August 2, 2020
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
ABC News, 4 August 2020:
A growing group of anti-maskers have been "baiting" and antagonising Victorian police, and in one instance smashed the head of a female officer into concrete until she was concussed, authorities say.
Police said two female police officers approached a 38-year-old woman, who was not wearing a face covering, in the Frankston area last night.
After questioning the woman about why she was not wearing one, police allege she pushed one officer and struck the other in the head.
"After a confrontation and being assaulted by that woman, those police officers went to ground and there was a scuffle,"
Victoria Police Chief Commissioner Shane Patton said.
"During that scuffle, this 38-year-old woman smashed the head of the [26-year-old] policewoman several times into a concrete area on the ground."
Police said the constable was taken to Frankston Hospital with "significant head injuries".
The woman's alleged assault left the young police officer with a concussion and a missing clump of hair, Police Association of Victoria secretary Wayne Gatt said.
"The offender had a clump of our member's hair in her hands and said to our member 'what's it like to have your hair in my hands' or words to that effect," he said.
"That's just horrible conduct — it's not human-like to be quite honest."
Police have charged the alleged attacker with nine offences, including two counts of assaulting an emergency worker and one count of recklessly causing injury.
She had no previous criminal history and was granted bail to appear before the Frankston Magistrates' Court on March 31, 2021....
Chief Commissioner Patton said in the past week police had seen a trend of people calling themselves "sovereign citizens" who "don't think the law applies to them".
"We've seen them at checkpoints baiting police, not providing a name and address," he said.
"On at least four occasions in the last week, we've had to smash the windows of cars and pull people out to provide details because they weren't adhering to the Chief Health Officer's guidelines, they weren't providing their name and address."
Chief Commissioner Patton said in the past week police had seen a trend of people calling themselves "sovereign citizens" who "don't think the law applies to them".
"We've seen them at checkpoints baiting police, not providing a name and address," he said.
"On at least four occasions in the last week, we've had to smash the windows of cars and pull people out to provide details because they weren't adhering to the Chief Health Officer's guidelines, they weren't providing their name and address."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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