Scott Morrison’s second budget as a leader elected in his own right marks a historic moment in Australian history, and perhaps a footnote to world history.
The tsunami of borrowed money sent rolling towards favoured sectors — aged care, women’s safety — and allowing for tax cuts and direct grants to the corporate sector is a final abandonment of the notion of “prudence” that once underpinned the political right, both liberal and conservative. The government is betting that the global theorists are right: world growth will continue at its steadily expanding rate; the money supply will be reopened via quantitative easing as required; the price of credit will remain zero for years to come.
Whether it’s China that buys our iron ore or not, the world’s going to want it, so we may well be tailgating on global growth but we’ll get there nonetheless. Deficit spending on services that have been in the news, at the expense of infrastructure and productive resources — including education — will run down the national base, even as it piles up the debt depending on it.
Wages will be squeezed relentlessly and everyday savings worn down as the money floods in. But the low unemployment rate, the rush to the housing market, and the availability of ever-expanding resources of personal debt will both hide this decline or rely on changing patterns of cultural acceptance to avoid any sort of confrontation.
Ever greater global growth rates, related to ever-expanding automation, will float the debt away with the simple effect of time and reinvestment.
In response, the commentariat have near-unanimously concluded that Labor has nowhere to turn. This is to take politics as a one-dimensional, two-setting game. The right cuts spending, Labor opens it up. Well, it’s probably right about that too, but only because Labor accepted that framing some time ago and stopped offering any critique of what the Coalition was doing — essentially de-developing the country by killing any possibility of being a research and development country in order to kill the sectors it produces because they are reliably left-wing.
The Coalition wants a big, simple country, with a static education level, mid-level industries and a lot of un-value-added raw materials dug up and sold.
Despite all this, some in Labor believe it is in a far better position than polling and public image suggest. They believe there is more exasperation with Morrison et al than is showing up, that the Voices movement may play a small but crucial role in transferring preferences to them, and that there are very specific demographics who are responding to their message of fiscal restraint — basically older working-class voters, especially in the regions. Gone to the Libs for culture wars reasons, some, enough, will come back because the Libs are a rabble.
But beyond that they’ve got nothing to say, as became painfully obvious this week. They’ve eschewed any sort of narrative of how the economy works and how it should work. That would involve talking more about how much development should be paid by debt, how much by tax — on large non-paying corporations, not a few folks getting windfalls from franking. It involves talking about how the productive base relates to the creation of a society with more opportunity. Instead, they’ve presented the party as the better technocratic manager of a whole economic system, quite a different thing.
The crucial event in this was the creation of the Fair Work Commission in its current form, by a government of Labo(u)r lawyers so desperate to get industrial relations out of the hands of actual union memberships they were willing to risk a structure that the Coalition could stack. Which it duly did.
When we scream at them that the political success of the Hawke/Keating era was the willingness to make a case against the Coalition — based on its refusal to nation-build or attend to the productive base, as much as on redistribution — Labor insiders say that yeah, that was then. It was an era of big broadsheet newspapers that people read, long current affairs shows that people watched, big workplaces where people argued the toss, and so on. That world, they say, is gone. A broad mass of people attach to image, myth, moment. The “social” has disappeared as a horizon.
That does not mean people are simply individualistic economic calculators. But it does mean that the narratives of life are overwhelmingly individualistic, often drawing in notions of trauma, victimhood, tests of self, etc. Stories such as the Christine Holgate saga linger and represent in a way that even Keating-style concretised “banana republic” arguments don’t.
I don’t think that’s true. I reckon a lot of such insiders have fallen into a sort of “focus group” vicious circle, in which they continually adjust their framing to feedback sought within the terms of that framing. Which is why they have the appearance of a party going down the drain.
The other argument would be that you keep talking about the wrong sort of spending, that the wages squeeze is related to the wrong sort of spending, and that the anti-Labor forces are doing what the anti-Labor forces have been doing since Fusion in 1909: keeping us underdeveloped in every sense of the word, dependent on first the empire, then the Commonwealth, then the US alliance, and then in relation to the global economy as a whole, because they benefit when there is no conception of how readily things could be better, and cater to our desire to be better. Not more moral, but more fully, multidimensionally human.
Yeah, OK, I wouldn’t raise imperial preference on A Current Affair, but you get the drift.
That would not only have been a way Labor could have avoided the atomic wedgie it’s now getting. It would be a down payment on what happens if the whole global plan goes awry. After all, we’re getting into the realm of chaos theory here.
Global inflation could jump out of the mix like a quantum event, the exciting new world of cryptocurrency derivatives sounds oh so familiar, a war that got warm and then hot would play havoc, and we might wake up tomorrow and find that China, India and a few others have created a global reserve currency as an alternative to the greenback. And so on.
And the profit arrow of any system of galloping automation must be downward — which is why it is tilted back up by the state just giving money to corporations, using intellectual property laws to build multiple rents back into the necessary products of everyday life (Office 365 subscription, anyone?) and so on.
Such attempts to preserve existing social-economic relations by “wasting” borrowed money, i.e. burning through it on social programs, builds up unintended consequences, which eventually play havoc with pricing, and economic steering. On that Marx and Hayek agree. Which is certainly an interesting place to be.
Morrison has become a historically significant prime minister (poor old Tony, the great Christian knight of the Southland, turned into Arthur Fadden the Second, warm-up joke to the main act) by setting off the money tsunami. Now he is going to have to surf it.
Gosh, guy, this is more than usually hard to understand.Allusions flung here and there, including a mysterious one about “wasting” borrowed money on social programs that will lead to “havoc”, according to “both Marx and Hayek”, left me wondering what you thought about education, child care and aged care.
Spending on education, including higher education, child care and aged need not be a waste of money. Educated workers can be more productive than uneducated workers, women can be more productive, with child care to give them free time for work.True, spending on aged care can be seen as a waste of money, since the very elderly provide no economic input apart from demand for goods. Some great minds deplore spending on protecting the elderly from Covid-19, since they have but few years of high quality left. However, a simple utilitarian view, to which some economists seem very attached and unaware that they are talking about morality rather the “objective facts” of what an imaginary perfectly competitive would be like, does not take into account that the elderly are owed as much respect as persons as those younger and that society should respect what they have contributed over their lives and the feelings of those who have been cared for by them. So, I do not think spending on aged care is “wasteful”. My fear about the Morrison govt is that remedies for the appalling neglect exposed in the Royal commission on aged care is to be tackled in a few years time, with minimal and probably inadequate measures to remedy the neglect. The problem with the Morrison budget is not wasteful spending on social programs but its spending to the ensure that the rich get richer and the poor get poorer. It is a budget for greater social inequality and that leaves the majority of people in the lurch.
Will this bother Morrison and Co? What nobody mentions is that a Murdoch fostered myth of conservatives as good household budgeters who do not spend beyond their means is felt to be a plus by all those people in Australia who are trying to buy homes and fear that losing their jobs will crush that dream. It is better to vote for what their bosses like for fear that they might otherwise be first in line for job loss and consequent loss of a dream of owning one’s own home. Marx (and Engels too) were wrong if they thought that workers in Australia today have nothing to fear but the loss of their chains. They fear loss of their chance to own their own home and being dragged down by debt.
Commodified customer clientcitizen comrade consumer ..It is writ large over the gates of Oz..” in your consumption is your production & your indebted mortgaged existence is your freedom “..And the #McScotty bloke is a prime mofo pomo fomo..;-)
ian
surely you noted i put “waste” in quotes? by which i mean, in standard economic terms. Yes, it’s a social good. But if it’s done by simultaneously a) borrowing money, b) not taxing corporations and c) cutting investment in production, ie r and d, universities etc, then it is undermining future autonomy. Social democratic parties have to have a programme that has a production answer and a spending plan. To just spend, even on good stuff, isnt enough
One of the things I like about Crikey is the interaction between reader and journalist. Thank you for participating and not only submitting.
If i were the leader of the opposition i would just show up in a jokers suit and laugh maniacally at everyone.
It would be more coherent, informative and revelatory than anything AA will mumble.
..”It was an era of big broadsheet newspapers that people read, long current affairs shows that people watched, big workplaces where people argued the toss, and so on. That world, they say, is gone. A broad mass of people attach to image, myth, moment. The “social” has disappeared as a horizon.”
I couldn’t agree more that Rand D and focusing on multidimensionally human is a better future.
But this is not possible when the media is owned by the same people that dictate and give blessing to Coalition policy.
Labor must accept that they need to build a mainstream media player to show their alternative..
Australians will always enjoy an alternative and conversations can begin again.
This whole article is alluding to this without acknowledging it.
And so is nearly every article on politics written here, is it because it could wipe out little Crikey and therefore musn’t be discussed for its own survival ?
I’m not so sure that it’s not possible. Many of the under 45s aren’t used to getting their news or commentary from broadsheets. Even I (over 60) find myself not watching tv news or reading MS papers anymore. I found myself listening to the news on a non ABC radio station today and it was like listening a long ad for the libs. I go online for just about everything now.
if, by some miracle, Labor did get some bold ideas like social housing, free dental, student fee reform or real climate change policies together, it would be very simple to promote them using social media, plus of-course spruiking your agenda where that demographic congregates like markets, parks, campuses, even local beaches on weekends. Geez it ain’t brain surgery!
And not just during election time!
Related to media and budget, inc. outcomes, how likely is it that media would bother following up on budget statements and claims at a later date to test not just policies but announcements or the truth when most support the LNP?
A new media outlet, even loosely related to the Labor Party, would be targeted by other media, LNP, Greens and business; the super fund supported New Daily has already been coming under the LNP microscope via briefings by a former IPA graduate, against industry super funds; so much for freedom of speech.
As commenters suggest, I know few if any at the bottom of the baby boomers or younger generation who seriously follow legacy media whether tv, radio or print; those who do in especially baby boomer and oldie demographics are what keep the LNP and legacy media viable, for now…. less education helps to keep them loyal
The Anglosphere of Trump/GOP, UK Tories and the LNP, along with ideologues and NewsCorp etc., will not rest till they have gamed ageing democracy to death for a nativist authoritarian nirvana….
The new media does not control the way people think who watch mainstream media as much.
With an ageing population owning most of the wealth and the votes is why Rupert and other Neocons are so influential.
No, the article’s more about a shift in public mind, the whole structure of thinking, that appears to undermine the capacity for more sustained social thought – rather than particular political angling. Its more about age/smh and abc, and commercial news than murdoch.
“the whole structure of thinking”
The media, yes, Murdoch and non-Murdoch, but I keep coming back to the third element in your trifecta “big [unionized] workplaces where people argued the toss”. My experience is that in large face-to-face discussions you think differently, you think things you would not otherwise have thought.
Thanks for replying Guy ,I’m saying that Neocon strategies are responsible for undermining structural thought and the only plausable way to counter , develop an alternative is a player that reaches the same audience.
I feel like my point is finally gaining traction, thanks again, even if you don’t see the immediate connection with your article.
It has been apparent for a long time now that the only thing the ALP stands for is waiting for the miracle of getting elected into government.
Thankfully since the advent of Albanese there has been a quelling of the group identity politics and fashionable wokish nonsense which had previously short circuited the possibility of resonance with the bulk of population. However the next step of providing a vision of policy relevant to the bulk of voters or in fact any kind of vision or policy has not been on the horizon.
The old saying that oppositions don’t win elections, governments loose elections is mostly but not entirely true. At this point, despite its dreadful handling of the pandemic in particular the vaccination procurement and rollout, and a plethora of other screw ups, the government is showing signs it may well survive the next election.
Labor needs to offer something more than not being the LNP to win the next election.
Really? Why is it that demands are placed on Labor to metaphorically spin plates on sticks and perform astonishing acrobatic feats to win over the slack-jawed voters in Australia?
The LNP, albeit under thick cover provided by a heavily partisan and therefore useless MSM, led by the appalling anti-journalism mob that is the Murdoch media, is engaging in wanking on desks, covering up and/or otherwise disgracefully mishandling an alleged rape in a ministerial office, lying and dissembling on a vast array of issues, misspending millions if not billions through their various sports and community funding rorts, handing out hundreds of millions to billionaires through Jobseeker, chucking money at fossil fuel companies, strangling higher education, killing people with Robodebt, not sacking Andrew Laming, and the “plethora of other screw ups” including the truly buggered up vaccination debacle but also the covid-related deaths in aged care, their truly useless covid app and a complete abrogation of responsibility for quarantine. Christ the scandals and policy and service delivery failures and f*** ups go on and on and on and on. Yet Labor “needs to offer something more than not being the LNP” to win? How about pledging to just not wank on desks? That’d do me.
Very well said, Meg! And how much of this EVER appears in the MSM for the sheeples to even know about what is really going on?
Journalists, by and large, have just given up their right to inform us of the truth…they just keep repeating the lies of the Coalition and their fellow travelers. In particular, the ABC could once have been relied upon to inform and educate the masses…now it has joined the herd mentality of the MSM, spewing out right-wing propaganda with the best of them. But, of course, it’s all Labor’s fault!
Outrageous!!
Fine line from Gleeson on Hard Quiz, last eve.
Got to his round, which he opened with;
‘I’ve really been getting into Meghan Markle lately, cos I really like people who bring down houses from within…….
just like Ita……………..!’
It’s called the Samson Option.
In boxing it is copping one to give one – a proven losing tactic.
I agree and an alternative labor backed mainstream player that is aimed at the same audience is the logical way to create a fairer and more relevant discourse. The ABC is at the mercy of any government cynical enough to remove its independence.
Exactly Meg, there is nothing wrong with Labor and Albo just as there was ( and is) nothing wrong with Bill Shorten. We still aren’t really sure why and it’s never been really explained but the voting mob preferred a ‘cap of the day wearing’ religious nut who is hopelessly unqualified and out of his depth as PM over an intelligent and resourceful opposition leader with great policies. There is still hope. Morrison only acheived a one seat majority and I feel he will struggle to maintain that and will at least go into minority government. Being the arrogant fool that he is, that will be an unstable government and will probably fail leading to another early election, finally delivering Labor the victory that we all badly need.
I’m with you and Meg, Ray. Nobody really knows what caused the ridiculous win for Morrison last election. His preferred ‘miracle’ is as good an answer as any, although we all know Murdoch fear campaigns, Clive Palmer fabrications, Facebook lies and plenty more had a lot to do with it.
Nobody has a clue what will happen next election, but a larger majority for Scotty FM and the LNP looks quite unlikely. To me at least.
History suggest the election they shouldn’t have won will be followed by the election they get a surprise hiding in. History is also bunk, so I don’t hold too many hopes, but there is the fact that this has been the most corrupt, ill-disciplined and myopic government we’ve had in my lifetime. That has to count for something.
I’ll tell you, RB and DB, what went wrong with the last election. In the days before polling Shorten stood in front of high schools promoting whatever. The entire election process was as boring as b*tsh*t. If he and the labor party had been remotely relevant to what the younger (and not so younger) generations were interested in they would have romped it in!
As a (long ago) former ALP branch chair, and union state council member, I suggest, rather than bleating about the lack of recognition given to the ALP, you cotton on the ‘debate’ going on in Parliament this arvo.
The ALP are side by side with Morrison et al in passing into law the “Clarifying International Obligations Bill”.
To quote David Burke, from the HRLC;
1. There is no safeguard against refugees spending the rest of their lives in detention.
People will be left with the unthinkable choice of spending years or decades in immigration detention or returning to a country to be persecuted
2. These laws would give the Minister a new power to overturn refugee status.
This undermines the concept of refugee protection. It is a clear breach of international law.
We urgently need reform to protect people who are recognised as refugees from being locked up forever by the Government without any safeguards
All progressing within 2 days of a budget that allocated halfa $Bil to upgrade detention facilities.
And, the ALP stand shoulder to shoulder with Morrison to wave it on through.
Shameful.
If I could ‘+’ this multiple times I, would.
A few years ago, in Launceston, the Labor and Liberal leaders walked side-by-side in a Pro-Pulp Mill march. The Mill had no social license and anti-Mill protests were many times larger than their pro-Mill counterparts. Despite this, the Labor party refused to listen to the voting public and differentiate itself from the Liberals. I am a lapsed Labor voter – not since the 90s – and Labor’s continually insipid, and oftentimes cowardly, performances mean they are zero chance of having me return to the Labor fold.
Pick one of the oppressive and authoritarian, security state laws from the past decade which ‘Labor’ has opposed when it came to the vote.
Occasionally it will mewl, weakly & ineffectually, about “aspects” during the initial stages but always lock arms & march lockstep towards the same end, dominance of the State over the citizen.
For the simple reason that, one day, they might be able to use themselves when next in office.
Never mind that their next PM has probably not yet been born.
It would have been advantageous for the Liberal and/or National Parties to have lost fairly last election and regroup, refreshed for the future vs. clutching at every straw to hang onto power…..
Apparently Morrison is on the nose in most Labor states now, if you ignore opinion polls with wafer thin margins, including QLD…..
However, this does not satisfy let alone support their corporate sponsors for whom they are the policy delivery system or lobbyists on the inside of govt. to pass and/or block legislation.
Well, when you put it like that…
Comment of the day. No, week… maybe month? Anyway, you’ve hammered a nail into something, probably the delusion of the ‘level playing field’.
People want Labor to offer a ‘vision’; they want it to return to its original ‘values’; they say it has to ‘stand for something’; it has to develop ‘coherent policies of broad appeal; blah, blah, blah. The onuses placed on Labor are never, NEVER, placed on the LNP for whom everything, every failure and disgrace, is smoothed over and blurred out of existence and out of memory by its propaganda arms in the the media, including the ABC. In a nutshell, Labor’s winning an election is ten times – nay, a hundred – more difficult than for the LNP, regardless of its policy platform and ‘vision’.
A Labor leader, what’s more, has to offer infinitely more than any Liberal: intelligence, personality, charisma, peerless articulation, the ‘common touch’, unimpeachable character and probity, unflustered confidence, resilience in the face of interrogation and public mockery, a complete absence of rivals or enemies within the party. By contrast, the Libs can offer up any old nasty nutcase or incompetent nincompoop. Yes, a Labor leader has to climb a mountain, and even that isn’t enough if the Liberal mass media won’t stand for a Labor government.
What it all means is that the Liberals can be unutterably venal, nasty and incompetent, incomparably opprobrious, knowing that they can get away with anything and everything and still win.
Agree, too many Australians have been brainwashed by LNP media (often via sport, news headlines, dog whistling and tv/radio on all day) to be dismissive of anything Labor, while either ignoring LNP, or encouraging respect for middle aged white men, and some women… does not say much for Australians’ individuality or ability to think…. but more about respect for authority?
Everything you say is true, and was before the last election as well, yet labor LOST. They clearly need bold policies which will bring voters to them. They need to include the younger generations who are feeling utterly forgotten amongst all the wrangling over minor things such as seniors’ tax matters or corporate tax cuts.They’re dealing with unaffordable rents, tiny or no incomes, outrageous hex payments and a myriad of other matters which seem to have no bearing on current decision making in either party.
So they vote LNP instead of Labor?
Have a look at the age pyramid of enrolled voters – the under 25 cohort has never been smaller.
This has much to do with there simply being fewer of them breathing but the proportion of those sufficiently sentient to fill in an enrollment form has never been lower.
About 300K turn 18 each year but enrollments for 18 to 34 have only grown by around 135,000, or 3% in the 3 years prior to the 2019 election, last figures available.
In fact a drop of about 50K in total UNDER 30 is shown compared to 2016.
Probably didn’t vote or didn’t bother to enroll. Put social housing, rental regulation or hex debt on the agenda and see how motivated they’ll be.
I’d like to think that is correct but never underestimate the tendency of many people to vote against their own best interests, as demonstrated severally here.
Also, you are assuming a level of sentience in the young (say under 30) of which I see little evidence.
Not that it is exactly widespread amongst the population in general.
Seen as labor has lost several elections in a row, maybe try something different. Can’t get any worse, could get a whole lot better.
The old Mortein ad showed a marshfly on the dog’s tail – “When you’re on a Good Thing, Stick to It!” so the converse for ‘Labor’ would apply – “Ditch the FAILED Strategy!”
How about truth – honesty – decency – accountability – morality – competency and a separation from the church?
Yeah, nah, all non starters for yer avraj ocker.
“If you believe in a thing and know it to be right, fight for it, whatever the cost, and truth and justice wil always prevail”.Joseph Benedict Chifley.As a aside when I go to my local football club every Saturday to enjoy a few convivial ales with my old mates, (we are all in our eighties), we always greet one another with “Truth and justice, comrade”.Unlike a lot of so-called Labor supporters, we are still seeking the Light On The Hill.
Its the ‘if you believe in a thing and know it’s right’ phrase that’s a problem. It all depends on which side of the fence the person is or how deluded they are, doesn’t it? Over 4000 religions in the world and everyone of them know theirs is the real truth…
I think our societies are no better than a bunch of chicken. Every country is a chicken coup nowadays, with the leader a rooster, who decides the pecking order of the day and who gets the first bite of grain and lettuce. Such are the primal instincts of “liberal” and “dictatorial” roosters. Marxistic roosters don’t exist, no rooster would set up alliances for the benefit of all.
A good example of the peril of using metaphor/cliche from our forgotten, bucolic past.
Hens decide on pecking order, not the rooster.
He occasionally seems to think that he rules but they know better.
Well, when you put it like that, maybe not such a bad metaphor after all.
Ah, maybe a forest of apes then 😉
You are still missing the point that it is only among humans that the male is dominant over all.
In civilised species that spend the majority of their time fighting amongst themselves until required for a brief moment.
Works well because, come (a Northern,eurasian) winter the most macho die off, having failed to put on condition to survive.
Next season the females have a new genetic buffet from which to choose.
If you are talking about dominance hierarchy you are not entirely correct. Plenty of cases where human females dominate their tribes. And plenty of cases where males are dominating animal tribes.
But thank you for correcting me about the chicken.
Your misapprehension seems to be deliberate.
I don’t really care ban. Your comment is so trivial and stuck into the need for reality and order that any form of creativity is immediately dismissed.