Bert Kelly, The Bulletin, October 19, 1982, p. 166.
The South Australian Development Council published last November a discussion paper which set out its ideas of how our State should tackle the future. This startled me because it showed quite unexpected attitudes to our problems and opportunities, particularly in policy on tariff protection.
Eccles became quite excited when he saw it but soon lapsed back into his customary state of misery. “They will never get away with talking such sense, not in South Australia,” he said gloomily. “The Adelaide Establishment has been brought up to believe that the rest of the world owes you a living because you think you are better than the common herd in other States. They will soon put a stop to that kind of thinking.”
I agreed with Eccles. I thought the paper would be sunk without trace, except for a few pages of pious platitudes to mark where it had been. But this has not happened and the final document which has appeared is even better than the discussion paper. The winds of change must have been blowing even through the Adelaide Establishment and I owe them an apology.
We can now take down the “GERIATRIC COMPANIES CARED FOR” notice that they say used to be at our State borders.
On tariffs, the final paper is more definite even than the first. Just heed this:
The council believe that one of the major economic mistakes made by Australia in the past two decades has been the maintenance of high levels of protection for industries which have been unable or unwilling to improve their efficiency and international competitiveness. Sheltered industry adjusts much more slowly to changed circumstances than those exposed to the winds of economic reality. They suck resources from more productive activities and lower the rate of productivity and tend to push up costs and significantly contribute to inflation. The failure to reconstruct the highly protected industries, such as the textiles, clothing, footwear and motor vehicle industries has left the community with a legacy of prices which are higher than they need be.
Eccles could not have put it better than that.
However, the strategy document is not only sound about tariffs; it breaks new ground on other matters in a way quite startling to us South Australians.
We spend most of our time and energy complaining that governments of all colours, State and Federal, are not doing enough for us. The Council seems to have the odd idea that we should rely more on ourselves.
I know that we Liberals are supposed to be dedicated to free enterprise but this is only when things are going well with us. When things go badly, we quickly try to cast our burdens on the Lord or, if He is not around, on the government.
I guess the reason for this startling change of attitude has come from the New Class whom Repco’s R. N. Walford sees as the originators of this new style of thinking, instead of relying — as Walford would — on the government’s everlasting alms. And when you look at the people who make up the council, you find that some of the really exciting manufacturing companies in this State are represented on it — companies which are right at the top of their job and also exporters.
John Shearers, who export farm machinery all round the world; Sola, who export optical lenses everywhere; Hills Hoist, who are doing the same with a surprising range of metal manufactures … these people would be as well aware as are farmers of the burden tariffs impose on exporters. So, it is not surprising that these people, like worms, have turned.
However, not only the manufacturing names leap out at you. The chairman of the council is R. J. Mierisch of Baulderstones, the big construction company. He would know how the tariff increases cost in his industry. Then there is J. D. Elliot, the new broom sweeping through the musty halls of Elders. And Ian Webber, late of Chrysler and now with Mayne Nickless, would know better than most the mess that government intervention has made of the car industry. These people would, like the toad under the harrow, know where every tariff toothpoint goes.
Don Laidlaw, MLC, is shown in the report as an observer, so I tried to discover whether he supports the council’s report. He is a powerful person in the State Liberal Party and you would expect him to support liberal principles. However, many Liberals try to run with the hares while hunting with the hounds that favour less government intervention.
I have tried again to find out where Laidlaw stands on this matter. He says he doesn’t know.
Thoughts on a verse about Balfour « Economics.org.au
February 12, 2016 @ 8:21 am
[…] Some weeks ago I discussed the surprising and gratifying attitude of the South Australian Developmen… which advocated less dependence on tariff protection and not more, which has been the traditional SA line. I pointed out that the council was composed of some of our top industrialists who, like farmers, were painfully aware of where each tariff tooth point went. […]