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A beleaguered Liberal prime minister dines in the boardroom of a multinational law firm, up sixty-something floors in one of Sydney’s most prestigious office towers. With him are some of the most senior Australian business leaders and the representatives of the top corporate lobby group, the Business Council of Australia. The Prime Minister berates those assembled for failing to donate enough to his party, and failing to advocate forcefully enough for his policies. The complaint falls on deaf ears — the business dignitaries assembled respond that his policies aren’t pro-business enough. There are complaints about the bank tax. And one complains that the government is proposing to introduce its company tax cut for multinationals and giant corporations over ten years when it should be much quicker, and that there hasn’t been enough industrial relations reform.
Then the whole thing promptly leaks.
What’s fascinating about this great story from the The Australian Financial Review’s Phil Coorey is how utterly normal this is regarded as: a Prime Minister forced to the indignity of rattling the tin for donations at an elaborate version of a BBQ fundraiser, the blatant quid pro quo of donations for policies — and business leaders demanding that wages be further cut and corporate taxes be slashed further.
Yes, at a time of record low industrial disputation, falling real wages, cuts to penalty rates for our lowest-income earners and growing labour productivity, there remain business leaders who think the problem is the government not trying to gut unions savagely enough and not driving wages down aggressively enough.
Turnbull has partly worked out neoliberalism-as-usual is no longer going to cut it politically. The experience of nearly losing power will do that to you. Business leaders, on multimillion-dollar remuneration packages and in comfortable boardrooms with spectacular views, have a vague idea something is up, but can’t quite understand it, because, to use Upton Sinclair’s phrase, their salary depends on not understanding it: the neoliberal era of governments bending over backwards to give corporations what they want is finished. And one of the reasons it is finished is exactly what was on display in Coorey’s article: they have no idea when to stop. No matter how much wages are cut, no matter how much of national income is shifted from labour to capital, no matter how much they dodge taxes, they always want more attacks on industrial relations laws, more deregulation and more tax cuts, even as the governments that implement such policies are punished by voters.
This is classic “you call it democracy, we call it sovereign risk” thinking from business: democratic governments should simply ignore what the electorate wants and take care of corporations, regardless of the consequences.
Turnbull hasn’t fully worked it out yet either, despite, pursuing protectionism, adopting Labor’s Gonski policy and going after the much-hated banks. He appears convinced that big business advocating for policies will help him politically. Why he thinks such a tarnished, indeed toxic, group like large corporations will add to the appeal of any policy is a mystery: large corporations are perceived as the beneficiaries of a system that is no longer delivering for ordinary households — that, indeed, is exploiting ordinary households.
Perhaps, just as is forecasted in the budget, wages growth will suddenly surge (doubtless to the chagrin of the unnamed CEO who wants more IR reform) and voters will get over their bitterness toward our current suite of economic policies. Don’t count on it. And if you’re a politician, don’t gamble your future on it.
Yes not sure big business understands the people in the street no longer cheer at record profit reports. These days we count it as one more reason to vote out the LNP and their corporate cheerleaders.
Business is totally blind, deaf and mute regarding people in the street. We just don’t come into their thoughts. I agree with you that all their bragging about their ill gotten profits is one of the many reasons to get rid of the LNP as soon as possible as they will never change and this country needs to change.
hmmm…
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2017/jul/19/despot-disguise-democracy-james-mcgill-buchanan-totalitarian-capitalism
Yes I read that review with interest too.
And there is also “Game of Mates: how favours bleed the nation” written by Cameron Murray and Paul Frijters and published earlier this year. I read a review of it by Ross Gittins in Fairfax press and bought it. It is specifically about Australia and paints a picture that is breath-taking and gob-smacking. The major “baddie”/beneficiary of the game is named James, just like Buchanan, and the Aussie battler suffering all the big losses in these games is named Bruce. It reminds me of reading The Stalking of Julia Gillard – I can read it only in short bursts as it must raise my blood pressure terribly.
Chapter 5 is titled The Great Superannuation Game. In Fairfax press this morning there is an article about how women are worse off under superannuation schemes than the Bruces of this nation.
Bernard is correct “What’s fascinating about this great story from the The Australian Financial Review’s Phil Coorey is how utterly normal this is regarded as: .. ” I am longing for the revolution and, interestingly, wonder if it might be brought about by Dutton’s elevation to mega minister.
I agree, MJM…but there is a way out of this, and the corporations and business people know what it is. That is why they spend every waking moment demonising the unions and their fellow travellers…it works a treat on those who don’t know any better.
The only way to change what is now happening to the ordinary worker is for them to gain POWER…and here is where history shows us the way. Just look at the fall in union membership over the last 40 years, and the rise of the ‘corporations’ to their (almost) all powerful position…especially in industrial relations. A glance at the ABS figures shows the amount of GDP going to wages and profits has completely reversed over that time…and is getting worse.
So…while I’m all for the revolution, could the workers please wake up to themselves and JOIN A UNION. The handful of drongos in said unions who have done the wrong thing, fade into insignificance when compared to the total rip-off of workers by their bosses.
I am gobsmacked that most people can’t see this!!
A lot of it’s desperation, CML. I have a 27 year old son whose employer rips him off, but he’s in regional Queensland where work is bloody hard to come by and he has a wife and a mortgage. A letter from a union to his employer would see him sacked and he knows it, so he cops it to put food on the table. A lot of people are in my son’s boat. That was the whole point of demonising the unions in the first place.
Charlie…your son’s story is very sad, but that is what I’m talking about. We need to get back to the situation where it would not just be your son against his boss, but ALL workers in that particular industry taking industrial action to support him and others in that situation. I’m sure he is not alone, but it takes collective action to gain the power that is needed to fight for the rights of everyone.
Otherwise the ‘desperation’ will just continue…along with the rip-off of individual workers…and inequality will continue to grow.
I should say that I am retired, and have no particular interest in promoting unionism personally. But IMHO it may be the only avenue open to people like your son…and millions of others.
Let them eat cake!
I hope that Turnbull quoted one of Menzies better lines to these business leeches- about believing in free enterprise, but less in the men running it.
Stagnant wages; cuts to penalty rates; spiralling house-hold debt; the best part of a generation, at least, surgically removed from the prospect of home ownership (to the benefit of landlords) – thanks in no small part to Limited News Party (of which he’s been a big cog) policies going back 2 decades……
Watching Fauntleroy on TV today – going on about how his party’s helped encourage investment….?
…… Where does he park his space ships on those occasions he graces us with his “presents”?