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Pearls and Irritations

John Menadue's Public Policy Journal

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Letters
May 5, 2019

ABUL RIZVI. Is the Immigration and Customs Merger an Irretrievable Disaster?

Merger of Immigration and Customs and eventual incorporation into a wider Home Affairs Department has been an extraordinary disaster, at least for the immigration side of things. Whoever wins Government will face a Herculean task to fix things up. Reinstatement of a standalone immigration department, incorporating the traditional immigration functions, may be the only viable option. But what of the current leadership?

June 7, 2018

KIERAN TAPSELL. The ball is in Pope Francis's court over the culture of cover-up.

Pope Francis letter to the people of Chile over child sexual abuse in that country and its cover-up would suggest that he might have read the Final Report of the Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse. Instead of blaming the bad apples amongst the bishops for the cover-up, he acknowledges for the first time that there are problems with the barrel. However, he will never get rid of the culture of cover-up unless follows the recommendation of the Royal Commission and two United Nations committees and abolishes the pontifical secret imposed by canon law over clergy sexual abuse of children. He is an absolute monarch and can do it with the stroke of his pen.

September 5, 2017

MAUREEN TODHUNTER. Imaginations of the world, unite!

As news and other media apparently edge us toward a war-ready footing, we need to think critically about what informs our views, to imagine our way into more enlightened, more peaceful co-existence.

August 22, 2017

BOB CARR. Tribute to Johno Johnson. 'Keep the faith...both of them'

The separation of church and state was not a fetish of John Richard Johnson. He adored the Cross on Calvary. And rallied to The Light on The Hill.

October 3, 2018

MARTIN WOLF. Donald Trump is wrong: China is not Mexico (Financial Times)

When a country (USA) is losing many billions of dollars on trade with virtually every country it does business with, trade wars are good, and easy to win. This tweet of March 2 set out the aims and means of Donald Trumps trade policy.

August 29, 2018

ANDREW JAKUBOWICZ A multicultural whirlwind blowing up for the next election

 

Turnbulls gone and with him, hopefully, his recurrent but incorrect mantra of Australia as the most successful multicultural society in the world. With the next federal election now just over the horizon, understanding how the ethnic vote delivered the last election to the Coalition may help us to understand how Australias multicultural present could shape the next government. Moreover the concerns of these over 150 different ethnic groupings, a mishmash of cultural, familial, human rights and political worries, may become vitally important once more at the tips of the voting tails.

April 17, 2018

PATRICIA EDGAR. The Death of Australian Childrens Broadcast Television Programming.

How many times must it be said that if we do not take action Australian childrens programming will disappear from our screens?

September 21, 2018

GOOD READING AND LISTENING FOR THE WEEKEND

A regular collection of links to writings and broadcasts covered in other media.

May 21, 2019

WALEED ALY. Australia Isnt Right-Wing. Its Cautious. (New York Times 21.5.2019)

Ahead of Australias general election on Saturday, one party had campaigned on the idea that politics and the economy were rigged in favor of the elites. It attacked its opponent relentlessly for siding with the top end of town. It insisted that things needed to be shaken up to stop serving multinational corporations and vested interests. That party lost. <!--more-->
The results were surprising. The center-right coalition, led by Prime Minister Scott Morrison, remained in power against the opposition Labor party, which had led in every poll for years. But aside from being an upset, the election here shared little in common with Donald Trumps 2016 victory, the Brexit referendum or other populist insurgencies around the world.
This was a campaign in which the politics of race, xenophobia and immigration played almost no part. (Thats probably because of the atmosphere after terrorist attacks in Christchurch, New Zealand, in March.) There was nothing in Mr. Morrisons election pitch, perhaps other than continued support for coal mining, that seemed particularly aimed at rousing right-wing voters. Even on climate change, a major election issue on which there was some distance between the parties, Mr. Morrison argued his party was acting sufficiently not dismissing it as some elite conspiracy. No, the lesson from Australias election isnt that this country is right-wing but that its conservative as in cautious.
You could, if you were being unkind, call Labors platform populist. And in fairness, the moment seemed right for its agenda: A royal commission into Australias banks recently revealed all manner of unethical practices and underwrote a public sense of disgust at corporate lawlessness. Stagnating wages following the decline of a mining boom have meant that many Australians are facing financial stress. House prices in the biggest cities have galloped wildly out of reach of many would-be first-time buyers.
To address these very real economic concerns, Labor put forward serious, bold policies on complex issues that it argued overwhelmingly benefit the wealthy, in particular tax breaks on investment properties and retirees stock market dividends. It was probably the most ambitious set of reforms any party has taken to an election in a generation.
The coalition contrived to run without a significant policy agenda beyond offering tax cuts. Overwhelmingly, its campaign was a negative one, attacking Labors platform as reckless and anti-aspirational. But this wasnt a populist message, either. In fact its a message of contentedness and caution. Its fundamental assumption is that broadly speaking, the system works fine: Trickle-down economics brings prosperity, and to the extent things could be better, such as wages, the answer is patience and more of the same. Labor couldnt be trusted precisely because it wanted to shake things up.
That this argument delivered the coalition a stunning victory in what appeared to be an unwinnable election does not represent some new Australian political logic. Rather, it follows a well-established tradition and conventional wisdom: The Australian electorate is averse to big change.
It is no coincidence that the last time an opposition attempted a policy platform this bold was in 1993 and the result was the same, only with the parties reversed. At that time, Labor was in government, and the coalition managed to lose what is frequently described as the unlosable election. It is also no coincidence that Labor, which is Australias party of reform, has been in power for only 29 of Australias 74 postwar years. It also tends to come to power when a moment of crisis is brewing: world wars, the Great Depression, the global financial crisis.
In ordinary times, Australia votes for mild, slow change. Usually that gives power to the coalition, but even the coalition tests Australias conservative temperament at its peril. The last time it lost power was in 2007 when it undertook sweeping labor reforms, which amounted to a significant attack on workers rights and tilted the power balance hugely in favor of employers. Labors problem this time proved to be that it tried too many big ideas at once.
Thus did Labor lose significantly in outer suburbs, including among several lower-income electorates. Perhaps the most underappreciated predictor here seems to be debt: Those seats that are experiencing heavy mortgage stress almost entirely swung sharply against Labor. That suggests that even though those voters might be financially stretched, they were spooked by Labors proposed changes to tax policy, which were subject to a scare campaign warning that they would cause house prices to collapse.
Perhaps that might have been countered had Labor run a better, more focused campaign. That post-mortem is now underway. Even so, the fact that Labors narrative of fairness failed before the coalitions story of aspiration suggests Australia has not called time on neo-liberalism in the way that voters elsewhere seem ready to. Certainly there is disillusionment, evidenced by a record vote for minor parties and independents. But ultimately, 27 years of economic growth and only six years of wage stagnation (rather than the decades of it in the United States) mean that while skepticism of the corporate world and trepidation about the economy exists, Australia isnt prepared to experiment with its economic formula just yet. Australians may not be entirely happy with the status quo, but they are clearly still prepared to vote for it.
Waleed Aly, a contributing opinion writer, is a columnist, a broadcaster and a politics lecturer at Monash University in Melbourne.
 
 
 
August 11, 2019

The cup that slipped: Here are some cricket lessons my country of citizenship can teach my country of origin (Times of India 3-8-19)

As an Indian, after the semi-final loss in the Cricket World Cup, an old refrain from a 1948 song entered my head: Ek dil ke tukde hazaar huye (one heart shattered into a thousand shards). As a Kiwi, after the finals loss, came the second line: Koyi yahan gira, koyi wahan gira (some fell hither, some thither). Yes, a match for the ages! But oh, arent the ICC geniuses who chose the worst possible option for deciding the championship in case of a tie certifiably stupid? Englands triumph their first World Cup victory had its beginnings immediately after their disastrous match against NZ in Wellington four years ago. They consciously modelled a future team around NZs spirit of adventure; chose captain, coach, team and tactics accordingly; and honed the skills and players over four long years of preparation. Does the BCCI have the wisdom, will and wit to do the same and begin preparing now for 2023 when India hosts the championship or will it retreat into familiar alibis and procrastination?

September 26, 2019

MARION BENNETT. Working together to end homelessness in Cairns

A new Mission Australia evaluation has highlighted that when people experiencing homelessness in Cairns have the support of strong, caring relationships and when services work collaboratively and seamlessly together, their standards of living and personal relationships improve, they feel safer and they are more positive about their future security.

July 7, 2019

MICHAEL KEATING. Can we trust Scott Morrison?

 

Scott Morrison is on record as saying that no programs or services will be cut to pay for the tax cuts. The evidence, however, suggests that real government outlays will decline on a per capita basis, which would seem to mean that services will contract.

August 27, 2019

ERNST WILLHEIM. The saga of Bernard Collaery and Witness K continues.

If you watched the program [ABC 4-Corners] you will already know this is a talk about some shameful events in Australias recent history. And I very much fear the shameful saga is about to continue. It is about Australian commercial espionage. [SPEAKING NOTES, ADDRESS TO AUSTRALIAN INSTITUTE OF INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS. CANBERRA. 27 August 2019]

January 16, 2017

GEOFF MILLER. Foreign policy in our own interests.

We need to take decisions based on our own national interests. But we should take those decisions based on a knowledge of what regional countries think.

July 8, 2019

JACK WATERFORD. Not quite Custers last stand, yet

Australia must have an independent defence policy as American power in Asia and the Pacific wanes. But theres no reason to think us friendless.

Hugh White is travelling the nations highways and byways trying to scare Australians out of their complacency about the nations security – not least by raising again the prospect of Australias being naked and abandoned, particularly by our once great and once powerful friend, our bones being picked over by China, or perhaps Indonesia.

March 13, 2019

TONY SMITH. The environment - top issue for New South Wales voters

Traditionally, New South Wales election campaigns are tightly controlled affairs. Perhaps because the major party planners think that most elections will be close, they concentrate on one or two key statewide issues and hope that local campaigning will see them through in marginal seats. Law and order auctions dominated through the late 1990s and corruption has been the theme of several polls. In 2019 the issue which should determine the outcome is the environment.

August 29, 2019

We asked for footballers, but we got people instead. (with apologies to Max Frisch)

It is said that if we misunderstand our history, we wont solve todays problems. Much in The Australian Dream the new film about the booing of AFL star Adam Goodes and its aftermath reminds us of the need for truth-telling, including the policies of indigenous extermination and soothing the dying pillow.

February 21, 2018

Turnbull and Trump: Meeting of Mates

It is not clear what this weeks US/Australia summit meeting will achieve. Both participants might welcome its optics, but each have other political needs. The critical issue for Australia is likely to be what exactly will Trump ask of Turnbull and will he get it. It is depressingly unlikely that Turnbull will address any of the areas in which Trumps policies have been destabilising, destructive and widely rejected.

May 26, 2019

RICHARD BUTLER The Ostrich in the Room: The Alliance

The ostrich buries its head in the sand in the belief that what it can’t see isn’t there; won’t harm it. If perception is everything, the Ostrich has a point. But it isn’t and, the wilful exclusion from our recent election campaign of any debate about Australian foreign policy, especially the demands being placed on Australia by the US, did the ostrich credit. Like it or not the new Government will have to lift its head.

_

September 17, 2018

BIANCA BRIJNATH. Improving dementia awareness in Australias multicultural communities can mean better care for all.

Sheila holds 10 teaspoons in her hands and every time the cooker whistles, she puts one down. After 10 whistles, she switches the cooker off. The rice is done. She takes down two pots and prepares one of the five vegetable dishes she remembers. When dinner arrives at the table, there are two places set for five people but she is resolute about particular people being assigned particular plates. There is to be no intermingling or sharing of plates; everyone must know their plate and place at this table.

May 29, 2019

PETER DRYSDALE. Getting the AustraliaChina relationship right (East Asia Forum)

Theres no more important issue for Australia at this time in the history of its international economic and foreign affairs than to get the relationship with China right. Its an issue that went through to the keeper during the election. But for the new Morrison government, forging a viable, credible strategy in its dealings with China will be a priority that plays into all its foreign relations strategies, prominently also with the United States.

June 13, 2018

HANS HENDRISCHKE and WEI LI. Chinese investment in Australia falls as political debate hits confidence

Chinese direct investment in Australia has declined, according to a new report by the University of Sydney and KPMG. In 2017, the value of investment fell by 11% in US dollar terms, from $11.5 billion in 2016 (A$15.4 billion) to $10.3 billion (A$13.3 billion).

July 9, 2017

Kim Jong-un and Donald Trump: The godfathers of the UN treaty to ban the bomb

With a protector-in-chief like Donald Trump, who needs enemies like Kim Jong-un? Clearly, history does irony: the president with the least previous foreign policy interest and experience could end up having the biggest impact on global affairs in a century.

September 4, 2019

Congresss choice: Does it want to go for a Gandhi-mukt Congress or a Congress-mukt Bharat? (Times of India 31.8.2019)

May 29, 2019

SANDI KEANE. The bank cat is out of the bag.

The cat is out of the bag. Bank shares have shot up since the surprise election result as new investors pile onto the great franking credits bandwagon.

October 28, 2018

IAN McAULEY. The finance sector value creation or value extraction?

The Government and the finance sector would have us believe that the finance sector makes a valuable contribution to our economy. But is it simply a bloated overhead? Economist Mariana Mazzucato, who will deliver the second John Menadue Oration in December, reminds us that its claimed role in value creation could be eclipsed by its actual role in value extraction.

August 14, 2019

TONY BROWN. Who calls the shots? Dont mention the 'C' word

It should come as no surprise that those who trivialise our nations deadly alcohol toll or seek to inculcate and normalise alcohol into every aspect of Australias culture, regardless of the true cost, are the very same who profit from its promotion and consumption.

August 12, 2019

Alcohol industry calling the shots on Australian health policy

Shocking scandals continue to roll through the media cycle, featuring abuse of power and influence by the addictive industries, and alleging corruption and worse. Who hasnt read or heard about Crown Casinos high roller operation or the ABCs investigation into the National Alcohol Strategy (NAS), which broke on Friday 26 July.

August 21, 2019

JIM COOMBS. Crime is down,Gaols are bursting. Why?

It is essentially a failure of administration.The nations foremost collector of information on this, the NSW Bureau of Crime Statistics (BOCSAR) recently reported that nearly a third of the NSW prison population is on remand, i.e., awaiting trial.

June 25, 2017

FRANK JOTZO. Reviewing the Finkel Review and the political response

Alan Finkels electricity review offers a chance to break the political impasse over climate and energy policy. Its key recommendations, including for a clean energy target which would support a gradual transition from coal to renewables are supported by cabinet, accepted by the Labor party, and embraced by large parts of Australias energy industry. But some Coalition parliamentarians are pushing for new coal fired plants, which would further weaken the environmental ambition of the package and lessen the prospect for a bipartisan approach.

May 14, 2019

MARK CROSYBY. Trick question: whos the better economic manager? (The Conversation)

In 1995 I co-authored a paper with Diane Brown and Louise Malady which examined economic outcomes under Labor and Liberal governments in Australia to that time.

May 2, 2017

Making Housing Affordable Series. ROB KOCZKAR. How institutional investment could help housing affordability

Competition between first home buyers and investors is dominating the discussion about housing affordability, but its whats happening a few rungs down the property ladder that is perhaps the greatest cause for concern the challenges for people trying to rent in major cities and low-income earners waiting for social housing.

Paradoxically, greater institutional investment could be key to easing their housing stress.

September 8, 2019

LINDY EDWARDS. NSW Political Donations Scandal would not have been exposed at the Federal Level

To the seasoned observer of political donations in Australia, the most remarkable thing about the recent NSW Labor scandal is that is has been exposed and people are being pursued. At the federal level this behaviour would have gone under the radar.

June 27, 2019

JOCELYN CHEY. "A Solution of Sorts"

Public trust in China as a responsible international player has declined dramatically according to the Lowy Institutes annual poll released this week. The reasons for this are not hard to find since there has been ongoing anti-China propaganda in the media over the last year. Just as the orators in C.P. Cavafys 1904 poem Waiting for the Barbarians whipped up the good people of their city into tremulous expectation and dread that the barbarians were about to enter their gates, Australians have fallen for the line they have been fed. For the wordsmiths, the defence and security analysts, it has been a solution of sorts.

December 13, 2018

Indias 2019 general election suddenly becomes a lot more interesting

Indias recent elections in five states (Chattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh (MP), Mizoram, Rajasthan, Telengana) were largely a contest between the Congress as the countrys grand old party led by Rahul Gandhi, and the Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) led by PM Narendra Modi. Congress did not just lose office in 2014, it was routed, winning just 44 of the 543 seats in Parliament. Now it is back as a serious contender once again.

January 8, 2018

STEPHEN LEEDER. Alcohol and sport. A REPOST

Queensland’s victory over NSW in the 1 June game lin 2016 was reported as the highest rating State of Origin match ever and ’the top TV event of 2016.’ Both teams carried alcohol advertising on their clothing into the match. The association of alcohol with sport is deep, complex and profitable. Sport provides a lucrative vehicle for advertising and in turn many codes have come to depend heavily on the support of alcohol sponsors. The relationship is one of co-dependency.

August 28, 2019

Monthly digest on housing affordability and homelessness July/Aug 2019

This is a monthly digest of interesting articles, research reports, policy announcements and other material relevant to housing stress/affordability and homelessness with hypertext links to the relevant source.

July 3, 2019

HUGH WHITE. With Chinas swift rise as naval power, Australia needs to rethink how it defendsitself (The Conversation, 2 July 2019)

Visiting Wellington in April 1996, I fell into conversation with a very wise and experienced New Zealand government official. We talked about the still-unfolding Taiwan Straits crisis, during which Washington had deployed a formidable array of naval power, including two aircraft carrier battle groups, to the waters around Taiwan. The aim was to compel China to abandon a series of missile firings near Taiwan intended to intimidate voters in forthcoming presidential elections.

April 24, 2019

Churches Support for the Boycott, Divestment Sanctions (BDS) Movement

 

Bernie Sanders, US Democrat candidate for the Presidency has caused controversy by criticising what he calls the cruel, racist policies of the government of Israel towards Palestinians. But it’s time that such comments were seen as not unusual, even taken for granted.

May 20, 2019

Labor must look in the mirror

In foreshadowing Donald Trumps victory six months before the 2016 election, I had written: Of all the candidates in both parties, Trumps appeal seems to reach the broadest and deepest with respect to region, class, education and income… They are looking for an in-your-face champion who will stick it to the snobs (elites) and scolds (political correctness warriors). Labor was guilty of the same mindset as Hillary Clintons disastrous comment on the basket of deplorables and reflected a similar hubris. The same hubris was obvious in Bill Shortens response that asking for costings of climate action policies was dumb.

September 21, 2018

DENIS MULLER. Media power: why the full story of Murdoch, Stokes and the Liberal leadership spill needs to be told (The Conversation, 20.09.18)

The first German chancellor, Otto von Bismarck, said there were two sights the public should not see: the making of laws and the making of sausages. To this list of enduringly nauseating spectacles we should add one more: the political machinations of media moguls.

April 5, 2018

JOHN WARHURST. Mud-wrestling the Catholic elephant.

The Catholic Church is so big and complex. That is one of its defining characteristics yet the media and society at large, much less the Catholic community itself, often fail to grasp its consequences.

July 5, 2018

DENNIS ARGALL. A comparison of the DPRK now with China in the early 1970s

Public discussion of issues relating to North Korea and dtente with the United States is largely deprived of any sense of history unstudied or seen through prisms by the lawyers, commerce graduates and high priests of strategic analysis who command discussion with airy speculation and terror talkwith an adversarial sense of our justness and wisdom, the enemys wickedness and folly.

September 4, 2019

TONY SMITH. Pre-dawn raids find a ready place in our nasty political culture

There are many precedents for the thuggish pre-dawn raid in Biloela to remove a harmless Sri Lankan couple from their home and support base. While the incident has shocked fair minded Australians such heartless behaviour has become increasingly normalised as part of an uncaring political culture.

July 29, 2019

Speaking out loud for the silenced

Scott M. has a new group of faves. It used to be that hard working Australians were top of his pops, along with those who benefit from the hard work of others through tax, negative gearing,canny investments and superannuation perks. They are still cherished and protected but even closer to Mr Morrisons heart are Quiet Australians": people who feel no need to speak up, protest, argue, or even point to facts when there are issues harming not the quiet Australians but the silenced ones.

June 16, 2019

RICHARD BUTLER The Espionage Olympiad and the Art of "Plausible Deniability".

If there was a competition between the key ways in which international relations is conducted, aside from the use of military force, then the area of intelligence gathering and the covert pursuit of national objectives - all-round spookery - would easily win gold. It is widespread, has been entrenched for centuries and, nothing matches its deployment of hypocrisy, moral relativism and, all round obscurantism. It is also an endless source of fascination and entertainment; in both fact and fiction.

September 13, 2018

GEOFF RABY. Prometheus bound: How Chinas power is constrained

The more Australia positions itself as if there is only a binary choice between US or Chinese hegemonic influence in the region, the more likely conflict becomes.

July 8, 2018

IAN WEBSTER. Government and the medicalisation of disabilities

Each year two thirds of applications for a Disability Support Pension are rejected; a rejection rate which has doubled in 8 years (Christopher Knaus, Guardian, 8 June 2018).

May 13, 2018

MUNGO MacCALLUM. Nicknames

Treasurer Scott Morrison got very excited last week, bouncing and bubbling all over the place.And it wasnt just because of his pretty ordinary budget: building a stronger economy may be a worthy slogan, but it is hardly inspiring. What was really turning him on was that he (or someone talking to him) had invented a new nickname for Bill Shorten: Unbelieva-Bill.

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