by Padraic P. McGuinness, presented at the Tasman Institute in 1991

Max Newton died a few months ago after a very chequered career, which began as a brilliant student of economics, passed through the Commonwealth Treasury, and then diverged into journalism.

His career in journalism in its first phase is well known.

This began with his recruitment by Fairfax’s Rags Henderson. He progressed into the job of Managing Editor of the Australian Financial Review, then a struggling and very tame business paper, chiefly noted for its obsequiousness to the great and the good. He ruthlessly shoved aside the old guard, and persuaded the management to allow him to take the paper daily — the first national daily paper. In his quite short time at the AFR he revolutionised the treatment of economic issues in Australia, taking the economic debate not only into a more sophisticated treatment than had been known in the Australian press (with the partial exception of Tom Fitzgerald’s articles when he was Finance Editor of the SMH), but what proved to be important, a new focus on microeconomic issues. That terminology was unknown outside academic circles at the time. Read the rest of this entry »