The Irish have been an oppressed people. They were also, as soldiers of the white imperial push, oppressors. So it seems allowable to say that Alan Joyce, that dementedly cackling leprechaun, managed to spirit his obscene pot o’ gold over the end of the rainbow, bejesus and begorrah, his maroon velvet top hat wobbling as he laughed and laughed, smoothing out his big green bowtie.
Yes, yes, he’s suffered the terrible fate of having to leave the company two months early, rather than hit retirement, the horror the horror. People close to this malign sprite say that he is devastated at leaving under a cloud, rather than being celebrated as the man who saved Qantas. Well, maybe. But that sort of thing has always sounded like school suspension: “You’re totally disruptive and you hate being here; as punishment, you can’t come in for a week!”
The trouble with all this spirit hunting is that it is serving as cover for the deeper structural problem, which any CEO of Qantas would have had to address over the period of Joyce’s tenure: it is a private company, whose officers have a fiduciary duty to its shareholders. Whether Joyce has fulfilled that well or badly, compared to what could have occurred, is another question. The point to make is that a private company has one purpose and one purpose only: to make a profit.
That is the central paradox of capitalism that few can get their minds around. The actual activity of the company is a secondary effect. The essence of the thing, by use, becomes the contingent extra. At some point in the life of a large company, it must become the best possible fiduciary decision to do your stated purpose “badly”, with no regard for the customer.
It’s easy enough to say, “Yeah, I know”. But clearly in the discussion over Qantas, some ghost of “public expectation” — a spirit of the bog, eh Alan — hangs over the carrier, some idea of a capitalism of public spirit. This refuses to acknowledge that a private CEO can consider “public spirit” only if it coincides with maximisation of return.
This is an illusion that lingers in Australia, almost as folk memory, because our economy was a national capitalist one for so long, with the notion of some sort of social contract between heavily protected companies with near-monopolies and their customers. Look at any photo of a city street scene from the 1950s and ’60s, and you’ll notice the cars: they’re all Holdens. Bumper to bumper.
Such protection wasn’t a great deal in consumer terms, with higher prices, lack of range, innovation, etc. But it protected itself as a way of life by enforcing a certain idea of modest prosperity grounded in security: high, affordable home ownership, wage protection and the like. It enforced the famous great Australian boredom that so many exiles wrote about. But that image of it is self-selecting: many people liked it just fine.
The series of privatisations unleashed by Paul Keating in the early ’90s, of which Qantas was one, was thus a piece of cultural engineering as much as it was economic. The claim was that such national companies, in a globalised age, were chronically undercapitalised, and that part private ownership would serve their long-term health. Keating, as many will remember, was big on this transforming Australia and Australians thing.
His dissatisfaction with what Australians were was barely disguised. “Wimps are out,” he said once in a Four Corners interview. Since another word for “wimps” is “the meek”, this was a reversal of the secularised Christian impulse that underlies social democracy, a little touch of the Down Under Nietzsche that hangs ’round Sydney like sulphur in the air of a refinery town.
Well, we got the world Keating wanted. Vigorous, thrusting, accumulative. But we also got what Keating doesn’t appear to have anticipated would occur (and which various recent statements suggest he might have got the hang of now): a dissolution of social solidarity that has made us one of the most functionally atomised societies in the world, yet one that still yearns for a lost collective purpose.
Thus, Qantas management is expected to operate off a morality separate from their capitalist function, as regarding union contracts. That’s despite the fact that Qantas’ owners are overwhelmingly mum ‘n’ dad Australian shareholders, including many people investing their wages. This too expresses the cracked way in which privatisation was sold to us in the early ’90s: that we would have a chance to own a piece of the national carrier.
But we did own it, of course, all of us. Now some of us own it, and that is class structured. For all the palaver about ownership revolutions and democratising stakeholding, only a third of Australians own shares (separate to their superannuation holdings), and only 13% own more than $5000 in shares. Superannuation fund investment in Qantas is vanishingly small. Some cashed-up building and other workers aside, Qantas was gifted by Keating to the bourgeoisie, the portfolio people.
But wait, it gets worse. The whole point of privatisation was to address the chronic undercapitalisation of state-owned assets. But Qantas has done what every large company has been doing in recent years, and which has greatly contributed to the slow stagnation of the West: it has been buying back its own shares as a way of placating shareholders otherwise denied dividends.
This hollows out the company and diverts reinvestment in plant or fare reductions, but maintains capital market confidence — so once again, its logic as regards capital is very arguable. Fail again, fail better, mint the blarney coin.
Thus it makes perfect economic sense to run a clapped-out fleet, with seething customers, using your too-big-to-fail power to exclude competition, and chance prosecution to list pre-cancelled ghost flights. The logic of capital dictates that any natural monopoly/half-of-a-duopoly, once privatised, will go from being the most ends/use-directed outfit (possibly highly inefficiently) to being the most cynical one; a parody of itself. That is the fate of Qantas over the past 30 years. To paraphrase the king: it’s a Joyce, joke.
In all this, the attention to Joyce’s remuneration has served as a useful distraction. The estimated $125 million he might have taken over his 15 years is eye-watering and ludicrous, but it has occurred during billions in losses, so it’s a drop in the ocean really. The size of it looks surreal if you think of it as a salary. But it’s a salary bonus/share vesting package, so once again, the capital relationship is obscured. It’s another expression of a desire for an enterprise of public spirit, for some spirit of it to exist, without the institutions that undergird it.
Did Joyce have to run Qantas this way, in capitalist terms, to steer it through the past decade which saw the crash and crisis of numerous national carriers, even before COVID dealt many a final death blow? Joyce and his gang can point to the collapse of airlines that were once fixtures of international travel — Avianca, Alitalia — to argue that his success is measured by the fact that Qantas is still here at all.
That is, of course, the government’s reason for giving Qantas whatever it wants. Or one of them. The faintest chance of it crashing and having to be directly run, and the disruption if such occurred, must have ministers waking up screaming.
For a Labor administration, this is not least because industrial relations would then occur directly between government and unions. With the TWU as a major player, this would put its MPs in a major contradictory position and destabilise factional deals. The Albanese government will ship shrink-wrapped cash blocks on pallets to Qantas before it will let it collapse. (M’colleague Bernard Keane will be addressing the aviation green paper, which dropped today, sometime before my hour of rising. One would be very surprised if it proposes any real alteration in Qantas’ position, or any deeper consideration of what aviation in Australia is.)
The airline’s too-big-to-fail character points to another distinctive feature. National carriers in Europe are partly for nationalist purposes: no one in Luxembourg actually needs Luxeair. The US, China and other large countries have sufficient populations to support the industry under any circumstances. For us, airlines are not just national carriers; they are a form of public transport, and that is how they were always understood.
Qantas’ yield in dividends and buy-backs to a privileged slice of Australians has been based on that guarantee. It has thus been a vast transfer of national capital and control sustained over decades, predating Joyce’s arrival. I have no idea whether he has managed the thing badly or well, in capitalistic terms. But the assessment of whether he has managed it well in social terms has no bearing on that judgment.
There is some irony in the head of an airline not anticipating that it might all go wrong as he comes in to land. That’s when most crashes happen. But has this concentration of bluster, blarney and gold-potting served to make clear the necessarily public and social character of a national carrier on a sparsely populated continental nation-state?
Well, maybe, a little. That has certainly started to occur. But questioning the rights of the private sector has been driven more by the profits of Coles and Woolworths, amid rising prices and increased margins, than it has by the travails of the flying kangaroo. Some vague notion of profit controls got a float before drifting away again. Qantas’ lurch between vast losses and profits, wage-stripping and bastardry to consumers obscures the imperative that such an airline should be socially nationally owned, and respond to multiple and competing imperatives.
The overwhelming complex of these would be: that the carrier provide affordable national travel, and part of its current international travel roster, at a certain volume based around some idea of essential travel and with concession rates for health care card holders, the same as state rail offers.
The overall management of the carrier’s size and offerings would have to be considered in relation to net zero targets — any socially run airline would have to be, in part, in the business of diverting travel to rail, or to non-travel, and the conduct of numerous pointless business meetings by Zoom, rather than the ceaseless high-volume ricochet between Melbourne and Sydney.
That would require management by a board composed of different social representatives — consumer, worker, Australian citizen — with the state still occupying a regulatory role. Such a process is entirely at odds with a privately owned corporation.
Not part of the public imagination yet, but your average flight is, for pilots, hours of unchanging boredom with five minutes of intense drama at each end, so who knows how things might go as the global economy encounters fresh turbulence?
Too late for the liddle feller though, as he slides down the tailfin rainbow to land headfirst in the clover. Will he take his final bonus? Ha. Yes, he said, yes I will. Yes. Bejesus and begorrah.
Yep. No one should ever be surprised if a fox acts like a fox. That’s why we build hen houses. If we want different corporate behaviour we should implement different, rules, laws and regulations rather than complain when capitalist entities do exactly what they are supposed (and allowed) to do.
Except Joyce has been doing lots of stuff he isn’t allowed to do, as the hundreds of millions of dollars of possible fines and the various court actions demonstrate.
And part of his job is maintaining reputational value, which he has failed utterly at.
Is that right? You say Joyce did things ‘he was not allowed to do’, but he’s just the CEO and it looks to me he was allowed to do all that. There’s no sign of Joyce being charged with anything. All the regulatory action is being directed at Qantas, which is legally a different person. So, if Qantas is found to have acted outside the law it might be fined, but ever since limited liability companies were invented some of them have been choosing illegality when they calculate the profits will more than cover the legal penalties. It’s one more cost of doing business, not that different to paying taxes or other overheads. It’s just another business decision, entirely rational, and in general companies are allowed to do it, so long as they either pay their fines, or else declare themselves bankrupt after the shareholders, the executives and the board have cleared out all the loot before the regulator or the court could get in.
If I were a shareholder looking for a longer term of investment, perhaps I would want some ongoing security for that investment. I might rebel at the idea of Joyce turning a quick quid, and ask for more sustainability in the organisation that holds my money.
So where were the long-term shareholders while Joyce wass trashing Qantas’s fleet and its brand?
I sympathise, but you and I are obviously not anything like typical investors. They either welcome the ridiculous remuneration of CEOs like Joyce or at a minimum do not object, because they associate it with both rising share prices and dividends. Which is quite correct, because the shareholders, through the board they vote for, set up the bonuses of the CEOs to reward consistently rising share prices and dividends. Who cares about tomorrow? Take the money and run. Or, to get biblical, Isaiah 22:33:
As I have often pointed out (see posts passim) that would be Isaiah 22:13.
I prefer the more cerebral Ecclesiastes 8:15 as at least commending joy rather than the misanthropic Isaiah who was eagerly awaiting of fire & brimstone on those who had, rightly, spurned his doom & gloom.
EG to DrSmithy,Aug 20 – “Depending on one’s outlook, “I commend mirth for there is no better thing under the sun, than to eat,drink & be merry…” Ecclesiastes 8:15.For the more gloomily inclined, the highly unrecommended Isaiah 22:13 appends “…for tomorrow we shall die.”All talk of mitigation of climate change is a sop to the ignorant Pollyannas & grifters selling EVs…..”
Thanks for the considered response SSR. I fear you are right – poor Qantas.
The article seems to agree with imported ‘Kochonomics’ via IPA etc., authoritarian survival of the fittest rent seekers, masquerading as ‘free market’ & libertarian ideology based on imported ‘segregation economics’….
The article misses something essential about Finance 101 and (nominal) public companies ‘which has greatly contributed to the slow stagnation of the West: it has been buying back its own shares as a way of placating shareholders otherwise denied dividends’
Not only is that a significant but unsupported by evidence statement i.e. ‘stagnation of the west’ (try demographic decline?), ‘share buybacks’ are a common method of increasing the value of company shares/future dividends, and often occurs before key management &/or shareholders cash in on their stocks/bonuses……
Of course Joyce has been a good CEO if your parameters are based entirely on money. These days of course we are concerned with a triple bottom line but pure hard capitalism cares nought for such niceties because anything that compromises profit is of no significance.
Joyce did what he was paid to do; it’s just that what he was paid to do was in direct conflict with everything Qantas has long claimed to stand for.
An Australian airline that doesn’t employ Australian staff because they require being paid fairly is not Australian.
An Australian airline that rips off its Australian customers by suppressing competition and charging Australian customers more than those overseas is not Australian.
Qantas is a private, rapacious corporation that has as its prime motivation satisfying, not its customers, but its shareholders. Customers are simply the source of the money that makes the profits. Anyone who expects service, fair ticket pricing or any other namby pamby treatment should look elsewhere.
Perhaps we should tell Qantas to call somewhere else home so Australians can get access to a few decent airlines with better service and lower airfares…….
We no longer have national or state shipping lines or railways which used to be essential public services – those that didn’t pay were flogged off wholesale then closed in part by new private owners. This fixation of protecting Qantas is wrong. Let it go belly up and let other airlines have a go, such as Singapore, if they wish.
My own preference is for NO flights at all. Airoplanes are inherently evil contraptions, wrecking the environment, polluting, dropping bombs, spreading disease and moving millions of people around the planet because they are bored and ‘need’ a fatuous ‘holiday’ during which the English complain they can’t get fish and chips and Americans complain if they can’t get McDonalds’ horrible products, disguised as foods.
Bloody Rundle, set me off again.
I’m with Rundle here. In Australia, airlines are really a form of public transport. Someone who needs to get from Hobart to Darwin probably isn’t going on holiday, and it’s pretty difficult without flying.
Yep, my preferences went out the window long ago. Cats, rabbits, foxes, the toads from hell, atom bombs and a bunch of other bits of wishful thinking might-have-beens.
Qantas v. Singapore Airline? No contest.
Me too. The public transport view of air travel should have been written into contract when government first went with 80’s fashion and privatised. I agree that the failure of the privatised entity to achieve basic functions of a national airline is not surprising, which begs the question as to why this was overlooked in the sale, especially as we are now talking about better options that are still wholly or majority owned by other governments.
National strategic interests are critically under-valued in the neo-liberal world view. We don’t seem to have learnt much from the pandemic or Putin driven supply-chain fractures. Drastic mentions shipping, now 99% foreign owned. Buying squillion-dollar subs is a waste when China could bring Oz to heel by embargo on any vessel or shipping company that served Australia – without their navy even leaving port.
The dismay that has followed the hollowing out of air-transport would seem trifling if we were exposed as a maritime nation with no maritime fleet or skills (scuttled to save a dollar on price of new fridge, 7cents on a bag of sugar). The skirmish over barley, wine, etc, was just a warning shot over our export bows. The nuclear option of halting all imports and exports is unlikely, but we’d grind to a halt (literally, as liquid fuel supply is now mostly import) in an economic quarter.
Thanks for this. Qantas is operating exactly as any private company would – maximising returns for shareholders. There is no such thing as compassionate capitalism; there is only profit maximisation. Maybe it is easier for us to hate on a CEO than to come to terms with the fact that the entire existence of Qantas as a (heavily subsidised) private company is not compatible with social good.
Perhaps that is where a solution could be found. Let’s discuss adding a paragraph to the Qantas charter which would include its social licence and social obligations. This deficit is perhaps where the pile-on is coming from.
Absolutely! Limited liability was originally provided to incorporated entities because they were expected to provide public benefits. This seems to have been forgotten and is certainly no longer expected. Perhaps we should amend legislation of incorporated entities.
I have no idea why your comment is getting downvoted. You are absolutely right that when limited liability was first devised it was intended as a privilege that would only be permitted to incorporated bodies that benefited society generally. At some point after that it seems to have become accepted that businesses, and particularly limited liability businesses, are ipso facto a public benefit, regardless of any contrary evidence. It might even be argued that the original intended relationship between the public (of natural persons) and businesses has over time become reversed. In recent times our main political parties and ministers often say they govern or serve in the interests of business, and frequently show contempt or hostility to members of the public who they suspect do not benefit business.
I had no idea that limited liability was provided to corporations because they were expected to provide public benefits. Amending legislation of incorporated entities is a logical solution.
I envisage whole teams of PR using media to show public benefits that actually do very little benefit while lobbyists erode away the use of the legislation, it would have to be watertight.
Thank you for your comment.
Well yes of course I know a of altruism , but my adult life only sees it in the empty pr sense in relation to corporate good.
At the risk of sounding cynical, the amendment of the Corporations Act (2001, from memory) to tighten up these sorts of loopholes is about as likely as pigs flying. In a roundabout way, I suppose focusing on tax evasion by large corporations (let’s call it tax minimisation strategies, to avoid shouts of slander, libel etc) and greater enforcement powers, than fiduciary penalties, might go some way towards evening out the playing field here.
But whether anyone has the political will to do so is questionable.
I have a theory about why CEO’s get paid the big books.
They provide another layer to the corporate veil beyond the legal limited liability. They allow the corporation to distance itself from its actions by using the CEO as the fall person.
In this age of superficiality people fall for it. Look at this.
According to John Kenneth Galbraith, ‘The salary of the chief executive of a large corporation is not a market award for achievement. It is frequently in the nature of a warm personal gesture by the individual to himself.’
There are two types of Australian; those who are employing Keating’s ‘vigorous thrusting’, and those on the receiving end of it. Personally, I just wish they’d use more lubricant.
…and how did this get through the modbot when my completely harmless comment (no names, no inuendo) on Keane’s article is still languishing in the judgement dock?
Perhaps the modbot has shares in lubricant.
Short and sweet seems to be the key…..
It pulled me over on a one word reply (“”journalism”?”) yesterday.
Spot on. Allow market concentration? Then do not be surprised at capitalism following its imperative of private self interest.
The oligopolies that dominate the Australian economy would prefer not to have too much competition, regardless of the public spruiking of neoliberal rhetoric.