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Diary of a B+ Grade Polymath ([personal profile] tcpip) wrote2010-08-19 09:20 am

Descending Into Farce

During this election campaign the LNP coalition has avoided the recommendations of the Charter of Budget Honesty (legislation passed by the previous conservative government) of having costings conducted by Treasury. Instead they had the costings conducted by an unnamed private third party, who apparently know more about the Australian economy than the Department of Treasury and Finance. Yesterday, at 3pm they claimed all would be revealed. With a big media conference planned, the sycophants lined up eagerly. But there was no spokesorc there - delayed until 3.30 apparently. Then 4.00pm, then 4.30 and finally at 4.45pm Andrew Robb and Joe Hockey, the Laurel and Hardy of financial management, finally made their announcements albeit not before some major media had decided to run their news with an empty stage. The firm which did their costings was a Liberal Party family firm, Horwath (not Hogwarts, although vey close) simply crunching the numbers given to them and came out with a bigger future budget surplus than the government. This of course includes such brilliant policies as cutting PBS medicines to the tune of 1.1 billion, and a ridiculous "Stop the Boats Dividend" of 250 million, and with an education tax refund error of 350 million immediately picked up. Most of the claimed savings will come scrapping the National Broadband Network, sacking public servants, and cutting into the "contingency reserve", used for emergency expenses. Clearly this is a forward thinking plan.

In comparison, 50 prominent economists have published an open letter, where they "are convinced by the evidence that the coordinated policies of the Australian Labor Government have prevented the Australian economy from a deep recession and prevented a massive increase in unemployment", not to mention avoiding a shortfall in public income. Nobel Laureate Joseph Stiglitz, former chief economist of the World Bank, praised the government for managing to steer a path through through the global financial crisis, with strong unemployment, low inflation and very low public debt (about 6 per cent of GDP, compared with 40 to 120 per cent in other OECD countries). As Ross Gittens points out; yes, there was some waste. Engaging in a rapid stimulus expenditure meant that some is inevitable. But these amounts are utterly trivial compared to the waste of widespread unemployment and economic depression which threatened us; the BER program, for example, has been an overwhelming success.

As with any election campaign, there are many issues of relative importance. But when it come to the country's economic management and infrastructure future, which I consider to be a very high priority, we have a clear choice. Utterly farcical nonsense from the Coalition, or skillful management from Labor.
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[identity profile] kremmen.livejournal.com 2010-08-19 03:09 pm (UTC)(link)
More or less of an insult than Labor's internet filter and warrant-less spying plans?

Personally, I don't care if the ALP's economics are slightly less dodgy than the Libs, when it comes packaged with the Communications ministry taking on a role akin to the Stasi.

I don't think I have ever been less happy about a major election, as we're going to get some grade-A wankers either way. I'll be putting both major parties at the bottom of my ballot (apart from Family First ... actually, I might put Conroy even below them) but, sadly, I don't think enough others will do likewise for it to make any difference.

[identity profile] amazinggoatgirl.livejournal.com 2010-08-19 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
Ohhhh shit, sounds like Australia is becoming the USA.

[identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com 2010-08-19 09:33 pm (UTC)(link)
From the article:


The "data retention regime" the government is proposing to implement is similar to that adopted by the European Union after terrorist attacks several years ago.


Apparently the western world believes in order to protect our freedom governments have to engage in mass surveillance...

[identity profile] amazinggoatgirl.livejournal.com 2010-08-19 09:37 pm (UTC)(link)
You've just had this insight? D:

[identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com 2010-08-19 10:21 pm (UTC)(link)
Hahaha.. no, of course not :D Although it never ceases to amaze me, either :(

[identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com 2010-08-19 09:25 pm (UTC)(link)
More of an insult. Oh, don't get me wrong. The Internet filter and the browser history collection is abhorrent in principle, but what is illegal is still constrained by public law, as much of an ass as it can be at times. I understand that it is part of the evidence collection chain, and that it is being used in places which we understand to be formal democracies. That doesn't make me condone it in any way whatsoever.

But that's the thing of preferential voting. I can weight my opposition to the filter on the negative side with those things I consider positives. Oddly enough, Hockey stated that the Coalition would block the filter in the Senate if Labor was elected.. which means I can avoid both the Labor filter and the Coalition's alternative by supporting the Greens in the Senate, if that is a higher priority.

I can do this weighting with all the parties involved. And when it comes to economic management and planning the Coalition has just lost any credibility with the release of these costings.

[identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com 2010-08-19 09:34 pm (UTC)(link)
Speaking of the Stasi...

"Comrade, do you have your papers?"
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[identity profile] kremmen.livejournal.com 2010-08-20 02:56 am (UTC)(link)
And do you think the ALP would try to stop them? Or would they agree that that fits in nicely with their own current authoritarian control regime?

There was a time when the decision, for me, was between the preferable social policies of the ALP or the preferable fiscal policies of the Libs. Whichever I voted for, the other side would give me something too. Now, we have the ALP taking up some of the worst of the Libs' social attitudes and the Libs losing their way on finance. End result: Two shit parties, neither of whom I want having any part of running the country.

The best party statement I've read all election is this one from the Sex Party. I have no delusions that such a party will get real power, just the faint hope that enough votes for them might make the major parties react in some worthwhile way in future.

[identity profile] tcpip.livejournal.com 2010-08-22 12:19 pm (UTC)(link)
Yeah the Sex Party are very good at their areas of speciality and any reader of this 'blog would know that I strongly approve of what they do and help them as much as I can. They (currently) don't however have much outside of that; environment, economy, population and industrial relations - which are pretty big issues which most will consider has priority.