Jacqueline Rees, “Why the rolling Stone stories abounded,”
The Bulletin, March 22, 1983, pp. 26-27.

John Stone is probably the only man in government who believes in a free enterprise fire brigade. In fact all Canberra buildings except Treasury are guarded by a private security firm.

Stone became head of Treasury in 1979. His intractable belief in free enterprise and market forces has always given rise to speculation that he would be removed from Treasury under a Labor Government.

Bob Hawke came to office promising no wholesale scalpings. Only Alan Neaves, head of the Attorney-General’s department which became embroiled in the Costigan Report’s tax evasion scandals, was to be ousted immediately, to the Federal Court.

Other mandarins were to be shuffled among departments. The main shuffle involved putting John Stone in Defence, Defence head Bill Pritchett in Foreign Affairs, Foreign Affairs head Peter Henderson in London and the Fraser-appointed London High Commissioner, Sir Victor Garland, into the ashes of history.

Foreign Affairs Minister Bill Hayden was not happy with this line-up, so last weekend was devoted to a re-think.

On the previous Friday, Hawke told radio listeners that he was “bored with all these rolling Stone stories.”

In the Canberra bureaucracy, Stone has always been the symbolic case. Labor politicians and sympathisers have been fulminating on what they would do to him since the Whitlam administration crumbled in 1974-75 and the Treasury quickly became convenient scapegoats.

Like Bob Hawke, John Stone was bred in Western Australia. They went to the same school, Perth Modern School. Both men were Rhodes scholars from the WA University. Stone had done science in Perth. At Oxford, he changed to politics, philosophy and economics, allegedly because his scientific studies were leading into nuclear physics which he did not wish to pursue.

There was an inevitability about both men’s rise to the top. Stone joined the Federal Treasury in 1954. He was to establish a reputation as a brilliant analyst and a man who was fearless in telling his political masters where they were going wrong.

He has had no time for various political apparachiks who have tried to usurp the Treasury role as primary economics advisor to government. After Professors Cliff Walsh and John Hewson had a substantial input into the Fraser budget last year, Stone wrote “… public servants … have longer memories than the more meretricious players who flit across the private ministerial stage …”

He told Owen Harries, former Foreign Affairs adviser to the Fraser regime, that a speech Harries wrote for Fraser could mean that “the Australian Emperor is going to appear remarkably unclothed.”

John Stone has clashed with most politicians whom he has had to work. He clashed with Sir William McMahon over new drawing rights for the International Monetary Fund and in retrospect appears to have been correct. He clashed with the Whitlam Government over its prolific spending and the now notorious loans affair, which he advised forcefully against. Last year, he argued frequently that the Fraser Government was on the wrong track.

Given the fate of all those with whom he has fought, it is small wonder Stone quoted Mark Twain to graduates he addressed on election day this year. On politicians, Twain said, “The more they protest their honor, the more we count the teaspoons.”