- Unconventional Wisdom — Neville Kennard on being interesting, exciting and right.
- Federation Has Failed and So Have States — Ronald Kitching hands down his judgement.
- Lang Hancock’s Five Point Plan to Cripple Australia — The most influential and realistic policy proposal ever made.
- Spending your Money — Bert Kelly with some unconventional wisdom.
- Wolfgang Kasper Publications — a goldmine for those of us interested in the history of economic reform in Australia and economics generally.
- A Funeral for Private Property Rights — Mac Nichols reports from the scene at W.A. Parliament House.
- Slogans for Property Rights Funeral — by the editor. Add your own.
[Professor Kasper is one of the most important figures in the history of Australian free market reform. This page is an up-to-date list of his publications. Items marked with an asterisk * are what Professor Kasper considers the more important contributions.] Continue »
by Mac Nichols, engineer and Mannkal Advisory Council member
A report on the funeral service for private property rights, held on the 25th of October 2010 at the Western Australian Parliament House.
On the 26th of July 2010 Maxwell Szulc (60) was incarcerated for the term of 3 months by the Chief Justice of the Western Australian Supreme Court, Wayne Martin, as supported by Department of Environment and Conservation via an interim injunction which stated it “had exhausted all reasonable avenues of engagement and regulation to prevent Mr Szulc from continuing to unlawfully clear native vegetation.”
Szulc was jailed for clearing fire breaks which contained native vegetation on his freehold property, fire breaks which protected his and others private property.
This act clearly lays a foundation for more incarcerations and thus is seen as the death of private property rights by an aggressive bureaucracy and supporting court system. Continue »
by Neville Kennard, veteran preaching and practicing capitalist
Not all Conventional Wisdom is wrong. Sometimes the crowd and the media and the chattering classes get it right. But it’s as well to be sceptical of Conventional Wisdom. And it is also rather boring to adopt the conventional wisdom of the day. Often the Conventional Wisdom is rather shallow, banal and inconsequential. At cocktail parties, at suburban dinner parties, the usual patter is Conventional Wisdom. Most people are compliant, are part of the mainstream, they go along with what is popular, they change with what becomes popular. In other words they are Conventional; they espouse the Conventional Wisdom.
The Mainstream Media often establishes and then pours out the Conventional Wisdom. That is their job and that is their market so we should expect little more. The Mainstream Media likes to be dramatic and provoke emotional responses in us. They like to provoke outrage, condemnation, pity, blame, guilt — and sometimes admiration and respect. The content and the presentation is frequently banal and of little depth. So typically there is little to learn from it. It is “Conventional”. Continue »
by Benjamin Marks, editor
(See Mac Nichols’ report.)
- Don’t speak ill of the dead. Capitalism WAS great.
- Our property rights have been buried in a communist plot.
- Parliament is a nursing home, each piece of legislation a disease and every political speech an obituary.
- Why should we march peacefully, when you do not confiscate our property peacefully? Continue »
Lang Hancock, “Stopping energy chaos,” Mining Review (February, 1980), pp. 7-8. (With thanks to the legendary John Zube and his LMP.) Update: this was written by Viv Forbes, of Carbon Sense fame, who gave Hancock permission to use it without attribution.
We have in the Australian resource industry two distinct sectors — the private sector, which is controlled by government departments, and the public sector, which is controlled by no one.
The key to resource management in the 1980’s will be the extent to which we can reverse this destructive state of affairs. In this article I shall try to outline those government policies which will prove of greatest long term benefit to sensible resource management in the 1980’s.
Unfortunately, everyone seems to have his own special theory on the best minerals and energy policy for Australia. In reviewing these I have some sympathy for the cynic who remarked, “Every government plan for industry consists of a number of policies held together by a few patriotic clichés to form an unworkable blueprint that offends no one.” Continue »
A Modest Member of Parliament [Bert Kelly], “Whose hand is in the honeypot?,” The Australian Financial Review, June 19, 1970, p. 3. Reprinted in Economics Made Easy (Adelaide: Brolga Books, 1982), pp. 129-31, as “Spending your Money.”
I once used to make resounding speeches complaining about the multiplicity of Government departments and how grossly underworked and overpaid were the Civil servants in those departments. These sentiments were usually received with gratification by my rural audiences, which contained very few Civil servants who seldom ventured far from the city.
I justified this stand by pointing out that I was dedicated to saving the citizens’ money. This sentiment was received, as I say, with gratification, but certainly not with rapture. After I came to Canberra, it did not take me long to find out that the Member of Parliament who advocated saving money did not loom very large alongside the man who advocated spending it.
Isn’t it a queer business? The Government has no money of its own, and all it spends it gets from the citizens. And much of the year, these citizens spend most of their time gathering together in small groups, complaining about the proliferation of Civil servants, how little work they do and how much they are paid, and how high is income tax and how it is dampening their incentive to work and so on.
But about twice a year these same citizens go along to a public meeting of some kind, perhaps a political meeting, and then they spend almost all their time complaining about the lack of vision and the absolute stinginess of the Government because it won’t give more of their money away to someone else. Continue »
by Ronald Kitching, dissenting editor
Was Federation A Mistake?
It is time we questioned whether having a Federal Government is a valid proposition. Originally, Federation was touted to be the co-ordinating body for Defence and Foreign Affairs.
However, from day one, political opportunists have seen it as an opportunity to promote their favourite ideology. For instance:
- Those who have a redistributionist philosophy have seen it as an income redistributing apparatus. (The Labor Party).
- Those who have adopted the Rousseauean philosophy of “shaking off the very restraints to which they owe their productivity and numbers” and return to the glorious state of the native savage. (The Greens).
- Those who see the free market system (christened capitalism by Marx), as necessary, but who desire to see a more egalitarian society, by adopting some redistributionist policies. (The Liberal/National Coalition).
This leaves the productive sector with no political party to defend and promote the personal liberty-free market-low taxation philosophy upon which the modern highly productive industrial society was founded.
The result is the activities of the above mentioned parties are slowly but surely removing the foundations of modern productivity and hence prosperity.
Under the circumstances the dissolution of the Federal Government seems to be a highly desirable objective. Continue »
- Why Not the Drug Olympics? — Neville Kennard with some politically incorrect words on the political glorification games.
- Capitalism, Coal, Dam and other Profanities — Ronald Kitching will not be elected to public office.
- Defending Paul Hogan, Properly — Luke McGrath shows the IPA how it is done.
- Government is the Spirit of Conquest — Peter Hume on how government is the ethic of conquest carried forward.
- The MPS 2010 Consensus — the editor reviews the MPS consensus.
by Ronald Kitching, dissenting editor
Production, Not War is What the Nation Needs Most
The thought that Afghanistani trained terrorists pose any real threat to Australia is about as remote as an asteroid colliding with a packed Capital city sports-ground. Always a possibility, but remote.
A much more serious threat to the Nation’s population is the Labor/Green coalition threat to cut water supplies to the Murray Darling Farmers thus jeopardising the existence of entire rural communities.
The alternative proven viable solution of a dam on the Clarence is being totally ignored by the opposition, as today the word “dam” is one of the two most vulgar words, (the other unmentionable is “nuclear”), absolutely banned from use in the Canberra Kremlin. Continue »
by Benjamin Marks, Economics.org.au editor-in-chief
There are some uncritically accepted positions that most MPS 2010 Sydney Meeting attendees and speakers, and, while we’re at it, CIS and IPA types, believe. I think the following sequences crystallise a few of the areas where their thinking differs with mine, making it easy to see my criticism, without me needing to quote from their papers, which would violate Chatham House Rules. Some of the sequences list ideas that were neglected and some juxtapose simultaneously held conflicting ideas.1 Continue »
- The format is inspired by Flaubert’s Dictionary of Accepted Ideas and Mencken and Nathan’s American Credo. ↩
by Neville Kennard, veteran preaching and practicing capitalist
With the pathetic little event known as the Commonwealth Games now safely behind us (isn’t it time this was laid to rest instead of trying to ginger up interest every four years?), it’s a good time to look at Drugs in Sport.
Drugs and sport is a given, and a constant battle to define, to mask, to test and discover and to define what is and isn’t OK (how many cappuccinos, for example, before an athlete is loaded and “performance-enhanced”). So why not bring in some new events where “anything goes”, where drugs are allowed, where maximum performance is the only goal?
Let’s have a “Drug Olympics”! Let’s see what the human body when combined with medical science can produce. How will we ever know what feats may be possible when man’s finely tuned and trained body is combined with the best medical brains and technology unless we allow them to be used together and pushed to, and past, the limits?
I can imagine the Drug Olympics out-attracting the Clean Olympics (if there is such a thing) Continue »
by Luke McGrath, Mannkal fellow
Last month in the SMH, Chris Berg of the IPA came to the defence of Paul Hogan. He criticised the government’s aggressive tactics, saying that this whole episode gives us “a window into just how draconian the government’s taxation and regulatory powers have become.” But though Berg acknowledges the importance of “defend[ing] the rights of individuals against coercive and unjust state power,” libertarians will find his article lacking.
The major reason for this is simple: Berg concedes the legitimacy of taxation. In no way does he dispute the government’s right to force Paul Hogan to hand over his wealth; he just takes issues with the way in which the government is executing this expropriation. Continue »