I’m not sure if it’s happening by accident or design, but we may be about to convince ourselves that, though our democracy isn’t nearly as stuffed up as America’s, we’re fast making ourselves ungovernable, unable to agree on how to fix our problems.
I fear that Treasurer Jim Chalmers’ economic roundtable in a fortnight’s time won’t reach agreement on any measures of substance. The players – business on one side, the unions on the other, plus assorted experts – confidently assume that the Albanese government will use this indecision to come up with its own set of solutions.
But what if it doesn’t? Everyone complains that this government’s too timid, unwilling to risk losing votes by making the controversial changes we need. Surely, it could use the roundtable’s failure to agree on anything as its justification for doing nothing. “When you guys can agree on what we should do, we’ll do it.”
Initially, the roundtable was to discuss the great worry of our times – productivity. Almost every year since forever, our economic production machine has got a fraction more efficient at turning economic resources into goods and services, thus raising our material standard of living. But for the past decade or so, it seems to have stalled. Why? And what can we do to get it going again?
But Treasury would have been quick to remind Chalmers that the budget is expected to be in deficit for as far as the eye can see. Something needs to be done about this, and the government is certainly in no position to try to fix productivity by cutting taxes.
And, led by former Treasury secretary Dr Ken Henry, the nation’s economists will tell you our biggest economic problem is that our tax system, which is little changed since the introduction of the goods and services tax 25 years ago, is no longer working properly. It needs a major overhaul.
In economics, you can’t get away from tax. Our productivity is determined largely by what happens inside the nation’s factories, mines and offices. Ask any economist what can be done to make our businesses more productive, and they’ll want to do it by changing the “incentives” businesses face. Translation: pull some kind of tax lever.
So it’s no surprise that, when the Productivity Commission was asked to offer some suggestions, its first was to rejig company tax in a way that encouraged greater business spending on more and better machines for the workers.
Almost all our companies would pay less tax, but this loss to government revenue would be covered by making the big tax-dodging foreign multinationals pay more.
Trouble is, when you boil it down, the (big) Business Council of Australia exists to protect the interests of big foreign businesses, which want to make profits in Oz but pay negligible tax. Amazingly, the Business Council has persuaded Canberra’s 23 other business lobby groups to join it in rejecting the company tax changes.
Now the ACTU has proposed curbs on negative gearing, the capital gains discount and the use of family trusts – all of which allow the well-off to minimise the income tax they pay.
The financial press seems to think this means the Labor government will rush off to do the unions’ bidding, even though Albanese has explicitly rejected these reforms, and the well-off would fight them tooth and nail.
Somehow, I doubt it. I think it will confirm Albo in his resolve to do very little.
What depresses me is realising the way our democracy has devolved into a self-interested fist-fight. Every interest group goes all out to extract as many benefits as possible while paying as little tax as possible – and may the deepest pockets win. Which they often do, by way of bribes to the political parties. This triumph of self-interest over co-operation is promoted by a small army of lobbyists and an increasingly partisan media.
The politicians themselves have fostered this notion that we should vote for the party that’s offering us the best deal. “Vote in the national interest? Vote for the party that would try to be fair to everyone and protect the poor? What kind of sucker do you take me for?”
It hasn’t got them far, but for years the Liberals have promoted themselves as the party of lower tax. What’s more, they can do it without any reduction of “essential services”. This has always been no more than wishful thinking – and Labor’s not much better.
The result is people convincing themselves that taxation is the great evil, that asking me to pay more tax is outrageous, and expecting tax cuts at every election is no more than my due.
In truth, what we’re saying is “I want to pay less, so find someone else to pay more”. Those who fondly imagine government spending involves huge waste and could easily be slashed with no harm to anyone are deluded. And they never come up with specifics on what spending could be cut.
When businesses demand lower company tax, they’re arguing that consumers should pay more GST. When well-off individuals (like me) demand lower taxes, what they’re really saying is: “Please stop asking me to subsidise people less fortunate than me. I don’t care how hard they’re doing it.”
And now, would you believe, we have Professor Ross Garnaut popping up last week to warn that Australia’s transition from fossil fuels to renewable energy is happening too slowly, so we’re not on course to get our emissions down to net zero by 2050.
The private sector isn’t building many new solar and wind farms because there isn’t enough money in it, and the solution is to bring back the carbon tax abolished by that man of great foresight Tony Abbott.
Really, another tax? I don’t see Albanese doing that, either. And the notion that governments should have the courage to force on us things most of us oppose is another idea from Fantasyland.