Bert Kelly, “Pressure groups are indeed the foes of progress,”
The Australian, July 14, 1986, p. 7.

On July 4 I went to Sydney to hear Lord Harris, the president of the London-based Institute of Economic Affairs, give the third Bonython Lecture to celebrate the tenth birthday of the Centre of Independent Studies. The IEA is recognised as being one of the most influential think-tanks which have sprung up all over the world in an effort to find ways through our economic jungle.

In Sydney the CIS is one of Australia’s foremost such think-tanks. Its originator and mainspring is Greg Lindsay, who resigned a secure teaching job in 1976 to cast his bread on the waters in the rough cruel world because he was fearful that the torch of free enterprise was not being carried high enough to be seen by ordinary people. It is very fitting then that Lord Harris should be asked to celebrate CIS’s tenth birthday.

In his paper, The Enemies of Progress, Lord Harris began by saying that the two preceding Bonython lectures had made out an excellent case for capitalism to be regarded as the mainspring of economic progress. Five years ago this would have been bitterly contested, but now few people will publicly defend socialism because it has performed so badly.

Harris then asked, “Why is it then, that politicians of all parties shrink from giving enterprise, competition and consumer choice their head, so as to spread increasing bounty even more widely?” He then pins the blame for our inaction on the “enemies of progress”, that is, those pressure groups who frighten governments from taking actions that would make us more productive so that we could produce a bigger cake.

Harris was writing about his experience in Britain. Perhaps if he had been writing about Australia he may have branded our obsession for equality as our main enemy of progress. This was brought home to me when our family was watching the repeat of the July 4 celebration of the 100th birthday of the Statue of Liberty in New York. We watched the tremendous display of fireworks with excitement, then one of my grandchildren asked if we had a Statue of Liberty of our own.

I had to admit that we did not, but I hesitated to say that we probably never would because we did not really believe in liberty. A Statue of Equality would be more suitable.

But this was not the Harris thesis. He says that the political pressure from groups adversely affected by change — even change for the better — is often strong enough and concentrated enough to prevent change. Certainly this kind of pressure has made beneficial change more politically hazardous than it should be.

Let me give an example. Only economic troglodytes are now prepared to defend the general policy of tariff protection. That battle is over and won. However, that does not prevent textile and clothing employees from combining with the owners of clothing factories to form a pressure group that is trying desperately to scare the Government from adopting the supremely logical IAC report on the textile, clothing and footwear industries. If the Government gives in to this kind of pressure, as the Fraser Government did to its shame, then the movement towards a more efficient secondary industry structure will be longer delayed.

Harris quoted many examples of how pressure groups have been holding up the march of progress: the coal miners in Britain fought to prevent uneconomic coal mines being closed; the print unions are fighting to prevent the adoption of better ways of printing papers; British farmers are combining with EC farmers to encourage inefficient farm sizes to stay in production.

Our waterside workers and maritime unions discourage the use of ships which use less labour, with the Waterside Workers Federation even insisting on its members being paid even when there is nothing for them to do on such ships. The railway unions try to prevent the use of two-man crews on trains. All along the path of progress governments have to battle against pressure groups who want things to be left as they are.