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A recurring theme of the 30-year reign of neoliberalism is the gross inconsistency of many of its advocates. Socially conservative economic liberals live this inconsistency every moment of their lives: they’re all for letting corporations and investors do what they like, unburdened by the dead hand of government, untaxed and unregulated to the extent that democratic politics will allow, but very keen to use government to control individuals. Companies should be able to do as they please, but anyone not a heterosexual white Christian male is to be tightly regulated in their reproductive, relationship and social behaviours. It’s the sort of mentality that leads to occupational health and safety rules that protect employees from dying in their workplaces as annoying red tape, but also pushes to ban abortion and prevent euthanasia.
[Welcome to Honest Mal’s Used Coal-Fired Power Plants]
But even many economic liberals who consistently apply their liberalism when it comes to social issues are also prone to another inconsistency. They’re all for letting the market, as the repository of all wisdom, operate unencumbered — until it produces outcomes they don’t like. At that point, the cry goes up for regulation. We saw this spectacularly during the mining investment boom when some of the world’s biggest companies poured billions into the construction of new mining and extraction projects all at once, bidding against each other to pick up engineering and construction talent from around the country. Strangely enough, this surge in demand for workers prompted the price of labour to rise significantly — just as the surge in Chinese steel manufacturing had prompted a surge in the price of iron ore. But the surge in wages was apparently an outrage that required government intervention, as mining companies and their industry peak bodies demanded government intervention against greedy unions trying to inflate the price of mining projects. “Australia is a high cost place to do business,” they moaned as one, along with their cheerleaders in the national newspapers. “Industrial relations deregulation is needed urgently.”
Ditto when Australian National University decided to divest itself of some fossil fuel companies. Investors, surely, can make their own decisions about where they wish to invest? Isn’t it a free market in which investors pick and choose what they want to fund? Apparently not: Tony Abbott and his ministers lined up to give ANU a kicking for divesting in Santos, labelling the ANU decision “stupid”. That was about a month before the Santos share price fell of a cliff, at the bottom of which it has remained ever since.
[The Australian’s clean coal magic trick]
Now AGL is copping the same treatment. AGL owns Liddell power station, an ancient and nearly dead coal-fired plant that the company intends to close in 2022. Conservatives are normally the most solid supporters of private property, and look aghast at any unmerited policy that in any way, shape or form could be construed as infringing on the rights of a property owner to use their property as they see fit.
But AGL is being savaged by conservatives for planning to close a power station at the end of its life. David Leyonhjelm, usually to be found enthusiastically supporting freedom, deregulation and allowing people to do what they bloody well like, took to Sky News yesterday to condemn AGL. “I’ll be closing my AGL account and going elsewhere,” he piously intoned, before moving out of the Sky studio to give a media conference to reannounce his boycott (alas, no one showed up because he’d called it at the same time as Scott Morrison was holding a presser, but never mind). Leyonhjelm is normally the type to mock consumer boycotts as the antics of childish twitterati. Suddenly he’s gung-ho for them. Ditto Cory Bernardi, that paragon of conservatism who suddenly has as much of a problem with a company taking a commercial decision as he does with LGBTI Australians taking relationship decisions. Australia’s least-trusted newspaper, The Daily Telegraph, joined in to attack AGL, but we don’t expect consistency from News Corp’s junior journalists even within the same article, let alone as a company philosophy.
Guess it just goes to show that neoliberalism really is dead when even its stoutest defenders are calling for some good old-fashioned economic Stalinism.
“Socially conservative economic liberals live this inconsistency every moment of their lives”
I still live in hope that the sheer pressure of cognitive dissonance makes their heads explode. No luck yet on that front.
Of particular interest is the lack of business nous in this intervention. As an asset such as this comes to the end of its useful life, maintenance and other costs are minimised, leading to gaffer tape and chicken wire repairs all over the place (figuratively, I hope).
That is factored in to how often the facility is run, how close to peak load, where and when it comes into the market, how many turbines are on-line at any given time. Those numbers will ramp down as 2022 approaches. It won’t be a case of all guns blazing until they trun them all off at the stroke of midnight, one day in 2022.
Anyone taking that over will be up for a hefty maintenance bill before it can switch on one turbine. Any sale would require up front capital prior to sale just to keep them running above the maintenance level that AGL would have scheduled. Turnbull’s statement that the cheapest electricity available was in keeping existing assets going isn’t as clear cut as you might think, given these constraints.
Well put DB 😉
I also agree DB, but more disappointingly, while expecting “exploding heads” when the blatant inconsistency / sheer incongurity is laid out before folk, my experience is that the hypocrisy either doesn’t register or somehow is shrugged off. What is the apparent untroubled capacity to be cognitively dissonant a sign of? Baffles me.
Actually, Bernard, I suspect they’re about to discover/fabricate a bunch of positive externalities in coal-fired power generation!
If Australia doesn’t wake up to the pack of idiots in charge and vote them out as soon as they can I will despair for the future here. New Zealand anyone? Turnball is trashing his place in our history books yet to be written.
Takeaway – “neoliberalism is psychosociopathic hypocrisy”.
In other news, water flows uphill and the pope does not shit in the woods.
Coming up after the ad break, ‘Being a tory means never having to give a flying.’
Following the lambasting of AGL by those free marketeers mentioned, the icing on the cake is that AGL shares rose by approx 2.75%.
Ha!
What good is being Guvmint if you can’t govern to primarily benefit your mates/benefactors/sponsors/donors – paid for by Plebs R Us?