A Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly], “Growth — malignant or benign?,” The Australian Financial Review, July 20, 1973, p. 3.
Reprinted in Economics Made Easy (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1982), pp. 154-56, as “Growth (2).” [“Growth (1)” is here.]

Ten years ago, when I noticed members of my audience either dozing in the front seats or slipping out the back, I learnt to change gear and give them a blast about “growth.”

“Don’t you believe in the growth of this great country of ours,” I would shout in ringing tones.

No one ever bothered to answer the question and, indeed, there were seldom many left to do so.

All the same, the few that were there would nod in tired approval, and, when I finally subsided, they would clap apathetically.

But, at a recent meeting, I tried the same act before an audience in one of my bigger towns and got a nasty shock.

“Certainly not,” they replied when I asked them if they believed in growth. “We’ve had too much of it already. We can’t stand any more of it.”

I ground to a stop at this and they took over the meeting and told me that the world had limited resources and there were too many people, and too much pollution, and so on.

They had a lot to say about the “Club of Rome,” evidently a learned lot of people who reckon we are all ruined.

“We will all run out of hydrocarbons if we keep using them at such a frightening pace,” they explained. “We want fewer material things, not more.”

I hate having to get out of a rut in which I have been running along comfortably for years, so their attitude saddened me.

Besides, I couldn’t help noticing they looked pretty well endowed with the world’s goods.

And, after the meeting, I saw that most of them drove away one to a car, and pretty luxurious cars they were.

But I worried about their statements, and, the next time I saw Eccles, I asked him what he thought.

“I’m glad you asked me, my dear fellow,” he said in his most unctuous tone.

“I have been hoping that someone would ask me that today. I’ve got all the answers here.”

And he opened his brief case, which he carries to give himself an air of importance, and he gave me a pamphlet to read.

Now Eccles is always giving me pamphlets to read and the duller they are, the stronger is his recommendation.

So, when I saw that his pamphlet was written by Treasury and called Economic growth: Is it worth having? I took it home, fearing the worst.

But it wasn’t so bad, really, not for a Treasury bulletin.

I admit that it would have been improved (for me, at least) with a picture of a scantily clad damsel or two, or even a joke in italics (so that I could recognise it) here and there.

But it had a pretty clear message — that increasing the pace of economic growth did not automatically mean “the more we are together, the dirtier we will be.”

Indeed, economic growth would make more resources available which we could use, if we so choose, to tackle the problems of the environment — to cure them not cause them.

And I guess this is true, when you come to think of it.

If we produce more wealth, we could use it to buy more motor cars and so compound the problems of city traffic, or we could use it to upgrade public transport and so diminish the traffic problem.

We can decide to use the increased wealth as we want, for good or ill, but we have to produce it first.

The pamphlet is rather rude about the doomwatchers, the people who sit despondently on the sidelines, prophesying imminent disaster, warning us that we are using up our limited resources so that it won’t be long before our whole civilisation will grind to a halt.

We are running out of petrol, they say; we are using up our fossil fuels far faster than they are being replaced.

That is true, but technology taught us to develop atomic power as a replacement fuel, and now we are on the edge of taking the next step, of using the sun to make pollutant-free power with which we could drive the pollutant-free, battery-driven cars of the future.

The lesson of the past is clear — if a situation looms up to threaten the future, a dynamic people will take the threat by the throat.

But a static community sits down alongside its problem, prophesying doom.

Growth is not necessarily a bad thing, indeed it can be good for us if we choose to use it well.

But we must have it first, before we choose.