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Productivity and infrastructure the big issues in 2012
Productivity and infrastructure the big issues in 2012
Posted : Monday, December 05, 2011
CEDA's annual Big Issues survey unsurprisingly has highlighted
the major issues confronting Australia in 2012 will be productivity
and infrastructure, but also provides insight into the economic
downside of having a Federal minority government.
The Survey is based on responses from over 1100 CEDA trustees
and Big Issue readers.
Rather than focusing on the substantive underpinnings of
economic reform, we have witnessed a continued focus on policies
that have been unresolved during several terms of government of
different political persuasions.
The carbon tax is the primary example of this - a policy
compromise adopted as a consequence of being part of minority
government and an unresolved issue from two previous governments.
The emotive issue of Refugees is another. Both are important, but
considerable time has been wasted on political point scoring,
leaving little capacity for robust public discussion on their
implications for economic reform.
This policy housekeeping has meant that there has been little
focus on the major economic policy issues confronting Australia,
such as productivity, and unsurprisingly as a result, respondents
to the Big Issues survey rated the Federal Government's policy
decisions as relatively ineffective.
Productivity was the number one issue survey respondents thought
would determine Australia's future prosperity. While there has been
increased noise around productivity in national debate, genuine
moves to examine or address this issue have been negligible.
What Australia needs is meaningful reforms that will enhance
Australia's economic flexibility and capacity. This includes
reducing the regulatory burden on business and providing suitable
infrastructure, the second most highly rated issue by survey
respondents.
Infrastructure underpins our economy's capacity to respond to
external shocks such as the China resources boom, the European
sovereign debt crisis or radical changes in weather patterns
experienced at the beginning of the century.
Better planning from Government was a key imperative identified
by survey respondents for ensuring the delivery of adequate levels
of infrastructure.
If we fail on this front, our cities will become clogged, our
ports and rail network will not be able to deliver goods with the
speed and efficiency needed, and our trading partners will go
elsewhere to source their goods and services.
CEDA is exploring the importance of infrastructure delivery in
two major research reports: A Greater Australia, looking
at issues around population, and the Australian Water
Project. Final reports for both are due next year. In
undertaking this research CEDA has found a major disconnect between
what is needed on the ground and the political decisions being
made.
The reality is that the last major economic reform was the
introduction of the GST. Australia has been riding on the
substantial successes of economic reform from the 80s and 90s for
too long.
It has carried us through until now, despite a reform hiatus.
However, with growing international uncertainty and increasing
competition from emerging and developing economies our hard won
economic prosperity will be short lived if action is not taken
soon.
It is time for both major parties to return to a bipartisan
commitment on economic reform. Both parties must acknowledge
the need for such reform and engage in meaningful, robust and
evidence-based public debate. If not the hard-won gains of the past
will be but a fleeting memory as we are mired in political
point-scoring, policy vacuums and Green anti-development
rhetoric.
Professor the Hon. Stephen Martin
Chief Executive
CEDA
Click here to read the Big Issues
Survey 2011 analysis.
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