25 May2013

Auto industry in its death throes

Posted in Op eds

In The Australian today:

"Ford's workers are angry. And rightly so. Only weeks ago, both the Prime Minister and the Leader of the Opposition reaffirmed their passionate commitment to Australia's car industry. Now, with Ford announcing it will shut down carmaking in Australia in October 2016, their jobs will disappear."
20 May2013

It takes brains to be a swindler

Posted in Op eds

Today in The Australian
"Last week's budget seems the farewell card Labor had to have. It constrains spending, while funding DisabilityCare and the Gonski reforms; it projects sustained revenue increases, with receipts rising twice as rapidly as payments to 2014-15; it heralds a surplus in 2015-16; and it paints a strong picture of the outlook to 2023-24, at which time net debt will be negative and the government will be accumulating assets on behalf of taxpayers."
13 May2013

Fiscal fudge worthy of Dr Seuss

Posted in Op eds

In The Australian today:

"Imagine a wage earner, John." But not Julia Gillard's avatar. Rather, the John who was elected prime minister on March 11, 1996. Inheriting a budget deficit of 2.1 per cent of GDP, he promises a surplus: a year later, he delivers it.
06 May2013

Cracks in yellow brick road

Posted in Op eds

In The Australian today:

"In July last year, Julia Gillard curtly dismissed the Liberal premiers' suggestion of a levy to fund the national disability insurance scheme without proposing any alternative. A week ago she "changed her mind". Suddenly, the whole scheme, until then merely aspirational, is suffused in the warm glow of consensus, despite an increasingly dire fiscal outlook."

04 May2013

Bad policy does not just happen

Posted in Op eds

In The Australian today:

"On November 14, 2007, Labor launched its "economically conservative" fiscal policy. In only 10 lines of text, long since removed from the ALP's website, Kevin Rudd and Wayne Swan's media release repeatedly contrasted Labor's promised "restraint" and "discipline" with John Howard's "reckless spending"."
29 Apr2013

T. Rex rises - dim, dangerous, doomed

Posted in Op eds

In The Australian today:

"Faced with Kevin Rudd's initial foray into essay writing, Rossini's quip about Wagner's Lohengrin leapt to mind. "One cannot judge Lohengrin from a first hearing," said Rossini. "And I certainly do not intend to hear it a second time."
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