Kevin Rudd wants to make nation-building fashionable again and it seems like the times suit him. He was already selling the merits of his “$76 billion” infrastructure program earlier in the year, before the talk turned to recessions and depressions.
Quite a bit of that “$76 billion” is notional money from this year’s budget surplus, which may not yet eventuate. There suddenly seems to be an awful rush to allocate it before it has materialised in Consolidated Revenue, which would appear to be an act of optimism in the current economic climate.
As disturbing as it is to find oneself in agreement with the right-wing economist and fine friend of oligopolists Henry Ergas, his description of the Government’s assessment criteria for major infrastructure projects as “bad haiku” is dead right. Yesterday’s release of the criteria engendered – at least in this naive writer — an expectation of detailed requirements, weightings, an explanation of the information and benchmarks that would be used to assess projects, and what sort of evaluation framework would be put in place for the construction and operation of the projects.
Instead, all we got was:
All proposals will be assessed against their ability to:
- lift national productivit
- strengthen Australia’s international competitiveness
- develop our cities and regions
- reduce greenhouse gas emissions
- And (sic) improve the quality of life of Australians.
They even skipped the semi-colons.
It’s a cracker of a statement of the bleeding obvious; state treasurers across the nation must be kicking themselves for including all those projects that were going to cut productivity and degrade Australians’ quality of life.
The Coalition’s complaint that the Building Australia fund was a slush fund initially looked silly, especially coming from the side of politics that proudly gave us the Alice Springs-Darwin railway — the world’s longest ghost train ride — and a program, Regional Partnerships, that achieved new heights of rorting and pork-barrelling even by the National Party’s particularly grubby standards.
But it has been given a boost by the Herald’s unsourced reports about Swan and Rudd considering the electoral implications of projects put forward by Morris Iemma.
Some context is needed for that story, however. No politician would ever consider a major project without checking what electorates it goes through. It’s second nature to them. And it doesn’t necessarily mean political motivations become the key criteria for allocating money. Much was made of the previous Government having electoral maps prepared when considering regional broadband rollout, but the faux-outrage in that instance missed the point that the Howard Government was only doing what every Government does – check what the political implications are of a project.
Thus, though Rudd and Swan have strongly denied the claims, it’s hardly unlikely they would have done the same thing — or that it means infrastructure will be driven by marginal seats.
But the bigger problem is that, if the Government is going to allocate funding purely on the basis of the maximum economic and environmental benefits, then an awful lot of money will go into Sydney and NSW. Last year, Infrastructure Partnerships Australia released a report on the priorities for national infrastructure investment. The bulk of the projects identified — 13 of 20 — were in Sydney or NSW, where population, economic density and years of infrastructure under-investment mean the greatest productivity benefits will be obtained.
It’s also likely to be where the greatest carbon-mitigation benefits are obtained from the provision of more mass transit options for commuters.
Directing 65% of infrastructure funding into NSW isn’t likely to go down too well with anyone outside the NSW ALP and NSW Federal backbenchers. So political considerations will come into play in distributing the funding more “fairly”. And no one is likely to object to that other than Nathan Rees and Eric Roozendaal.
Venise I think, um, the fault lies with you for, like, driving into that car.
But yeah, APART FROM THAT, I’m telling my kids to get into panelbeating. It’s amazing how much that stuff costs. And they jack up when the insurance companies try to enforce a bit of competition. Remember when the NRMA tried that in Sydney? The NSW Government forced them to return to the old uncompetitive system.
Between that and chemists and banking, there’s your perfect no-competition careers right there.
The intended largese of the Rudd government towards NSW should come as no surprise. They are the most important state. I, as a truly humble Victorian, acknowledge this fact. Politicians aren’t famous for being fair but we peasants of VIC should stand up to King Rudd; by pointing out something that is also bleeding obvious.
As Kevin, and his little, busy, Catholic soul plans to allow another million migrants into this country, over the next three years, it is only fair that NSW should be the benefactors. If, for no other reason, than VIC is already wall-to-wall concrete. And NSW is the natural choice of the discerning migrant.
If our Kevin wants to put some solid foundations to his pie-in-sky ‘Nation Building’ scenario. Why doesn’t he make sure that our existing systems are HONEST and VIABLE.
FOR EXAMPLE: Instead of importing more and more labour, let’s teach the Oz working people some craftsmanship. THIS MORNING, I was easing out of a parking spot when my foot slipped off the brake and onto the accelerator. Traveling at a speed too low to register, I drove into the car in front of me. Being stupid I admitted my error. The man whose car I was driving rang me to tell me he had received a quote from the RACV insurance, the quote? Common Kevin you’re so blo-dy smart. A minor piece of panel-beating. $3000
Where does the fault lie? With the workforce? I doubt it. It’s the crookedness of the insurance racket. and if Kevin Rudd could take his eyes off naked little girls long enough to straighten out a corrupt industry he would be helping to build some strong foundations; for our ‘Nation Building’.
Sorry, just being a word nerd here, but ‘skipping the semicolons’ is perfectly alright. There are two styles of punctuating bullet points, the old, semicolon fashion and the newer, and preferred ‘open’ style that forgoes the semicolons, and just has the single full stop at the end of the list, as if the whole list were one sentence.
That said – in using this style the ‘And’ should be omitted.
Good article.
I suspect after an ETS this will be the issue of the next election.
With the structure of these ‘future’ funds (unlike Costello’s) pork barreling on an hitherto unheard of scale is almost inevitable unless the media and opposition ‘can keep the bastards honest’. Seeing as how the Coalition under Howard were guilty of the same crime the media need to stand up to the plate.
Pollies as much as the rest of us can give into nothing except temptation.
Didn’t know that, Kate. I’m a bit old-skewl and prefer my lists to be like sentences that have just been assaulted with paragraph marks.
Funny how usage innovations always require LESS work, not more. Well, not funny at all, in either sense. Still.