How those mining super-profits going?

In 2010 the then Rudd government introduced a Resource Super Profit Tax on mining operations to “share” the benefits of the mining boom with the Australian community (or some such propaganda).

Today the ABS put out the latest installment in what is a very occasional data series – 8415.0 – Mining Operations.

Coal mining profits fell by over 88 per cent during 2012-13, according to a report released today from the Australian Bureau of Statistics (ABS).

Mr Chris Thompson, ABS Director of Annual Industry Statistics, said that this was largely due to the value of sales dropping by 16.9 per cent during the year.

“While coal miners reduced expenses by 2.6 per cent, it wasn’t enough to offset the sales decline,” said Mr Thompson.

“Metal ore mining profits also declined by 41.4 per cent and their sales fell by 8.9 per cent. Total expenses grew by nearly 10 per cent, mostly in non-wage expenses, which contributed to the fall in profits.”

Posted in Mining | 10 Comments

ABC apologises

Chris Kenny was won a legal victory against their ABC:

NINE months after broadcasting an offensive skit featuring The Australian’s columnist Chris Kenny by The Chaser team, the ABC will tonight issue a comprehensive on-air apology as part of a formal defamation settlement that includes paying all legal costs and some damages. Despite the ABC and The Chaser team vowing to contest the matter in court, backed by an internal review that found the skit met editorial standards for satire, the apology will tonight be broadcast on ABC1 at about 9pm, before the Jonah From Tonga show.

Kenny said he decided to sue the ABC, production company Giant Dwarf and its presenter ­Andrew Hansen for defamation because of the offensive nature of the skit, and its subsequent damage to his reputation, but also ­because he considered it an ­attempt to silence him.

“I was singled out because I’ve been a critic of the ABC and it was an attempt to silence me,’’ he said.

“People have suggested to me it’s anti-free speech to launch a defamation action, well I think it’s quite the opposite in this case. I was singled out because I dared to criticise the ABC and it (the skit) was an attempt to intimidate people out of criticising the ABC.”

Responding to criticism that journalists should not pursue law suits and commentary that satire should be exempt from defamation, Kenny said he did not “take legal action lightly but in the end you have to draw a line”.

“They can mock me, they can tease me, they can find examples to ridicule me with all they like but somewhere there has to be a line,’’ he said.

“I accept that the line is grey, but I think this case was so ­obviously beyond the pale that nobody would disagree.”

This whole incident reflects very poorly on the ABC – from the initial decision to broadcast the material, to the decision to brazen out any criticism, then the attempt to monster Chris Kenny into dropping the action in the last fortnight.

Posted in Hypocrisy of progressives | 61 Comments

Tiananmen Square: 25 years on

Every spring, an old friend of mine named Xu Jue makes a trip to the Babao­shan cemetery in the western suburbs of Beijing to lay flowers on the tombs of her dead son and husband. She always plans her visit for April 5, which is the holiday of Pure Brightness, or Qingming. The traditional Chinese calendar has three festivals to honour the dead and Qingming is the most important – so important that in 2008 the government, which for decades had tried to suppress traditional religious practices, declared it a national holiday and gave people a day off to fulfil their obligations.

Nowadays, Communist Party officials participate too; almost every year, they are shown on national television visiting the shrines of Communist martyrs or worshipping the mythic founder of the Chinese people, the Yellow Emperor, at a grandiose monument on the Yellow River.

But remembering can raise unpleasant questions. A few days before Xu Jue’s planned visit, two police officers come by her house to tell her that they will do her a special favour. They will escort her personally to the cemetery and help her sweep the tombs and lay the flowers. Their condition is that they won’t go on the emotive day of April 5. Instead, they’ll go a few days earlier. She knows she has no choice and accepts. Each year they cut a strange sight: an old lady arriving in a black sedan with four plainclothes police officers, who follow her to the tombstones of the dead men in her life.

Xu Jue’s son was shot dead by a soldier. Within a few weeks, her husband’s hair had turned white. Five years later, he died. Qisile, she explained: angered to death. On her husband’s tombstone is a poem explaining what killed both men:

Let us offer a bouquet of fresh flowers

Eight calla lilies

Nine yellow chrysanthemums

Six white tulips

Four red roses

Eight-nine-six-four: June 4, 1989.

Ian Johnson

Posted in History, International | 20 Comments

Denis Napthine’s finest hour

A bit of a crisis in Victorian politics with a rogue MP threatening to bring down the State government with only 5 months to go before the next scheduled election.

The premier Denis Napthine was just on national television putting up a passionate defense of his government and promising to continue governing.

At the minute the Napthine government is behind in the polls and also on the betting market – I’m not expecting them to be re-elected. Yet if Napthine campaigns like his performed tonight he might just pull it off.

Posted in Elections | 115 Comments

Simon Chapman being a bit naughty

So there is a bit of a debate on the value of e-cigarettes. This morning Christian Kerr had a piece in the Australian:

The smokeless devices administer nicotine to users in a similar way to patches or gum, but face legal bars in some states due to a Therapeutic Goods Administrat­ion ban on their liquid nicotine.

A major study last month by University College London found smokers who use e-cigarettes to quit tobacco were 60 per cent more likely to succeed than others.

Now the immediate past director of the National Drug and Alcohol Research Centre, Richard Mattick, University of Queensland senior research fellow Coral Gartner and two other Australian experts have joined more than 50 international nicotine science and public health policy specialists in signing an open letter to the World Health Organisation warning against taking an “activist” ­approach to the devices.

“We have know for years that people ‘smoke for the nicotine, but die from the smoke’,” the letter reads. “The vast majority of the death and disease attributable to tobacco arises from inhalation of tar particles and toxic gases drawn into the lungs.

“There are now rapid developments in nicotine-based products that can effectively substitute for cigarettes but with very low risks.”

This afternoon Simon Chapman had this in The Conversation:

This “real world” English study examined 5,863 smokers who’d made a quit attempt in the past year. It found 93 out of the 464 people who used e-cigarettes were successful (20%), while 194 out of the 1,922 people using nicotine replacement therapy made it (10.1%), and 535 out of 3,477 of the people trying to quit unassisted did so (15.4%).

Let’s look at these numbers another way. In this large study, 80% of smokers trying to quit by vaping were still smoking compared with 84.6% of those tried to quit on their own. That hardly looks like a champagne-popping difference deserving the accolades abounding in narratives about vaping.

Chapman is telling us that the 4.6% difference is trivial or unimportant. Well perhaps – without a formal test who can tell? But is that the correct comparator? Actually no.

Rather than compare everyone who tried to quit smoking with an e-cig to any other method of quitting he should have compared the e-cigs to the alternate nicotine replacement therapies. 20% v 10.1% is starting to look a lot more respectable.

The others more or less quit cold-turkey. Those who do are serious quitters – the nicotine replacement quitters are less serious. Within the group who choose to attempt to quit smoking via nicotine replacement it appears that e-cigarettes are a lot more successful. In any event, that 4.6% might be significant and e-cigs might be better than cold-turkey too.

Posted in Hypocrisy of progressives, Take Nanny down | 115 Comments

Malcolm for leader

Last night on PM Live Graham Richardson made the point that he was likely to get more votes in the Liberal caucus room than Malcolm Turnbull would. Harsh. Probably true right now – but that could change very quickly.

Anyway – Essential Media have done a preferred leader of the Liberal Party survey:

Malcolm for leader

Before anyone gets too excited – the support for Turnbull comes from non-Liberal voters.

I have been watching the spat between Andrew Bolt and Malcolm Turnbull with some interest. I’m not sure what Turnbull is up to, if anything, but it wouldn’t worry me if he was. After all if the PM is travelling well he would have nothing to worry about. If the PM is not travelling well, then others need to step up.

Posted in Federal Politics | 151 Comments

Guest Post: Fisky – Was Thatcher a pinko*

Right-wing governments are falling into the austerity trap of raising taxes to cut their predecessors’ deficits, harming growth and jobs. What is really needed is a growth-first, supply-side solution and a resounding ‘No!’ to the politics of austerity.

Ronald Reagan and Margaret Thatcher have gone down in history as the two greatest right-wing leaders of the free world since WWII, and every right-wing activist will have read at least one biography about the Gipper or the Iron Lady. Historians can almost run Reagan-Thatcher together as a single political entity that embodied the strategic/economic renewal of the West in the 80s, and the cultural confidence that went along with it. However, that tends to obscure the very real differences between the two leaders, and I think aspects of Thatcherism deserve critical scrutiny.

Thatcher was the original austerian, a hard-line monetarist and deficit-cutter, and an argument could be made that her first-term macro-economic policies caused political damage to her far more successful deregulation/privatisation agenda that followed. From 1979-1983, taxes rocketed from 33.1 to 38.2% of GDP, an astonishing increase that, along with other measures, knocked the stuffing out of the economy and caused the number of unemployed to soar over 3 million by 1983. The woman who campaigned against long dole queues in 1979 on the slogan “Labour isn’t working” ironically left Britain with an unemployment rate 2% higher than when she took office 11 years earlier. This is part of the reason that the Tories are now unelectable in Northern England and Scotland, areas which bore the worst effects of 1980s austerity.

Reagan’s strategy was almost diametrically opposite. Influenced by supply-siders like Art Laffer, the Gipper believed that growth and low inflation were reconcilable so long as supply-side policies were adopted via slashing taxes and regulations first, with initial and temporary demand side measures (interest rate rises) being applied in order to kill off inflation. Reagan cut taxes from 19.2% to 17.3% of GDP in his first two budgets and kick-started a defense build-up without much care for the deficit. Accordingly, the US came out of the recession of 1981-2 (caused by the Fed’s interest rate hikes) just as quickly as it went in, and net 15-16 million jobs were created during Reagan’s remaining six years, a remarkable record.

In this, there are some important lessons. The economic lesson is that austerity is no good economically, and a political trap for right-wing governments. In an entrenched low-growth, anti-business environment, politicians need to focus on the immediate problem at hand by repealing the low-growth policies that are holding back business, rather than the secondary problem which is the deficit. Taxes must come down, impediments to investment must be abolished, and unnecessary labour market regulations should be scrapped. In short, we must legalise prosperity first, and worry about fiscal retrenchment later. Thatcher’s approach caused unnecessary social strife because her real supply-side measures came later in the game and, by then, millions of people had already been made irrelevant to the British economy. It could be argued that the “chav” culture of entrenched welfare dependence and hooliganism is very much a product of Thatcherism.

Unfortunately, the Abbott government is repeating the errors of Thatcher although on a far less drastic scale. Firstly, there are unnecessary spending cuts that are hitting the weak instead of the strong and powerful enemies of the government (e.g. highly-paid ABC propagandists, and human rights commissioners whose job description is mainly to restrict liberties), without having any significant impact on the deficit. Secondly, there are tax hikes on the very skilled workers that Australia needs to attract for the country to prosper. No one should be surprised if the net revenue take from the high-income tax hike will be zero or even negative. Third, the real supply-side measures that this country needs are still lacking. The “develop the North” mantra we heard during last year’s campaign seems to have gone nowhere. Freeing up land, cutting penalty rates, and yes, slashing taxes across the board, should all be the first business of the government prior to any reductions in welfare entitlements. If the government are not sure where to start, they could simply issue a survey to a couple thousand small businesses across different sectors asking them how much time they are wasting on compliance issues, and in what ways.

The politics of austerity, where conservative governments risk short-to-medium term recessions in order to clean up the fiscal mess of their Left-wing predecessors, should be abandoned. Labor never take responsibility for their irresponsible spending and it is maddening that the Liberals always get suckered into bearing the political costs of being the “mean party”, the tax-hikers and the penny-pinchers. What is needed instead is an unapologetically belt-loosening pro-growth agenda of the kind that carried Reagan to the biggest electoral landslide since WWII, the supply-side economic policies to match, and a simple slogan to knit the whole thing together – such as “Legalise Growth!” or, better still, a resounding “No to Austerity!

*with apologies to the late P.P. McGuinness

Posted in Guest Post | 118 Comments

On the GP tax and medical research rort

I have an op-ed in the AFR this morning that talks about the GP tax and the proposed Medical Research Future Fund idea.

-*-

When Julia Gillard imposed a price on carbon, most people recognised this as being a broken tax promise. Notwithstanding the professed nobility of her cause, few could credibly justify the breach of trust that had occurred, and Gillard suffered the consequences.

The problem for Tony Abbott is that his proposed Medicare co-payment is a tax, and constitutes a broken promise as well.

As with the carbon price, the intentions behind the broken promise are noble. Zero-price at point of sale government services tend to be over-used. Federal governments of both persuasions have long attempted to restrict GP services; co-payments have been suggested before, putting restrictions on the number of foreign doctors, rationing provider numbers, and so on.

The fact of the matter is that welfare recipients are living beyond the means that taxpayers are able and willing to provide.

The proposed co-payment is a transactions tax. Going to a doctor is a transaction that is now taxable at the flat rate of $5 (the doctor gets $2 of the $7 charge). How the tax is payable is complex, but the government always gets $5 per taxable visit. The mechanism is that government will withhold $5, from already collected tax revenue, from the Medicare rebate and divert that money into a medical research fund. The GP may choose whether or not to charge the co-payment. If it is charged, the tax is paid by the patient. If it isn’t charged, the tax is paid by the GP. Either way, the tax is always paid; but the incidence and application of the tax is arbitrary.

Adam Smith identified arbitrariness as the biggest problem a tax system could face. It makes tax collectors – now GPs – particularly unpopular and promotes all manner of corrupt behaviour. We can easily imagine some patients, meant to be rationed out of the Medicare system, over-emphasising their ailments in an attempt to appeal to the GP sympathy. In short, the GP might bear the cost of the Medicare over-use through reduced earnings and not the government. In any event, GPs are now being required to formulate both medical opinions and prop up the welfare state.

TAX IS A RATIONING DEVICE

 
Some could argue that it doesn’t matter that the co-payment is a tax and not a price. The incentives are much the same; but only if the intention is simply to reduce the number of people attending a GP. Prices are charged in markets between willing buyers and sellers – prices convey information. Taxes do not. This tax is designed as a rationing device only and the revenue is being used to finance a medical research fund, not to finance healthcare or even pay down debt.

This part of the government’s proposal is particularly incoherent. The Abbott government has been particularly good on corporate welfare. They said “No” when the auto-manufacturers and SPC asked for handouts; they even refused to guarantee Qantas’s debt. Good decisions. Yet here we see a $20-billion fund being established – money being ripped out of current healthcare expenditure to finance something as vague as medical research.

To be fair – medical research is very popular. That doesn’t mean, however, that medical research is a good use of public funds.

In a report published last year, the Department of Health and Ageing suggested the return to medical research could be as high as 117 per cent. That number doesn’t pass the snigger test and when you dig down, you find that is a generously estimated return over 10 years and less generous assumptions generate estimates as low as –42.7 per cent.

CO-PAYMENT TO PAY HIGHER SALARIES

 
The lower estimate is more likely than the higher.

Arthur Diamond writing in the 2006 European Journal of Law and Economics found that government grant agencies weren’t very good at selecting important research projects compared to the private sector. In a 2011 Journal of Public Economics paper Brian Jacob and Lars Lefgren found that a grant from the US National Institutes of Health was associated with 1.2 additional publications over the next five years. It gets worse; in a 1998 American Economic Review paper, Austan Goolsbee found that increased public research funding results in higher salaries for researchers but little increased output.

In other words, the net result of the co-payment is to take money from patients or GPs to pay higher salaries to medical researchers who will, more or less, continue to do what they would have done anyway. This is likely to crowd out private medical research. It is an open question whether rationing some people out of the Medicare system is a good idea and the co-payment concept should be considered on its merits. The medical research fund idea should be quietly abandoned.

-*-

Last week Terry Barnes had a proposal that will get the Abbott out of the hole it has dug for itself – at least on the GP tax.

First, ditch the $5 cut to GP and other affected Medicare rebates. …
Second, remove bulk-billed pathology and radiology services from the co-payment net. …
Third, turn the MRFF into a comprehensive health infrastructure fund, reinvesting co-payment savings in healthcare here and now. …
Fourth, avoid unintended consequences for the less well-off. …
Lastly, having so modified its co-payment package, the government should ask the Productivity Commission to examine the measure, reporting by the end of 2014. …

In short – strip out the aspects that make the co-payment a tax and more of an actual co-payment.

Posted in Budget | 65 Comments

Tuesday Forum: June 3, 2014

Posted in Open Forum | 582 Comments

Q&A Forum: June 2, 2014

Posted in Open Forum | 394 Comments