How Federal Government Stimulus Destroyed 77,000 Manufacturing Jobs
Millions of your taxpayer
dollars wasted on home insulation stimulus.After four insulation installers have
been killed - and doubtless tens or hundreds of others have been injured - and
at least 87 fires have resulted from the installations, Environment Minister
Peter Garrett has abandoned the scheme. Of course, already, billions of taxpayer
dollars have been spent on this monumental waste of money.
But here's the thing we don't get. At the time all these whacky schemes were
announced, the mainstream told you that it was necessary to spend money because
spending money was good for the economy.You remember that don't you?
Well, if spending money is good for the economy, then surely the disastrous
outcome of the housing insulation scheme is an unexpected boost for the economy.
Because if simply spending money is good, then surely spending more money is
even better.
The government now has to fork out hundreds of millions of dollars more to
arrange for inspectors to make sure the work on at least 48,000 properties has
been done properly. Doubtless it hasn't - hence the four deaths - so those
inspectors will need to arrange for the work to be fixed up. That will cost more
money.
Then we're
sure that just to be on the safe side, the government will send inspectors out
again to make sure the fix-ups are safe - there's even more taxpayer dollars
spent. According to the lame thinking of the mainstream that should all equal a
boost to the economy, as more taxpayers dollars are spent. Not surprisingly, the
mainstream press haven't mentioned any of this. Either because they're too thick
to work it out, or because they realise how illogical the idea of stimulus
spending is, but they don't want to admit it. After all, spending other people's
money is fun!
Aside from the wasteful spending, the 6,000 job losses suffered in the home
insulation sector is another perfect example of how the misallocation of
resources can permanently damage the economy.
As
Paul Howes, national secretary of the Australian Workers Union points out,
"77,000 jobs went in manufacturing, and the knock-on of that will be felt
for years and decades ahead as factories were shut that will never re-open."
Of course, what Mr. Howes fails to point out is that it's the unions that help
to ensure there are job losses. Their push for higher minimum wages guarantees
that Australian businesses will either go bust or have to ship the work
offshore. And he doesn't mention the millions of other manufacturing jobs that
have vanished over the years thanks to the trade union movement.
But here's the bigger problem. All the excitement about the stimulus programmes
'creating' new jobs masks the fact that those jobs which didn't benefit
from direct stimulus spending - such as manufacturing - lost jobs.
Not only that, but once a factory has closed down, as Mr. Howes correctly points
out, they "will never re-open."
If it was uneconomical to maintain a manufacturing business, it will be
ten-times more uneconomical to try and re-start one from scratch.
Yet, all those jobs that were 'created' by the government to install insulation,
what's happened to them? Oh, that's right, the programme has been cancelled. So
the billions of dollars spent on 'creating' jobs have not only destroyed 77,000
manufacturing jobs, but it's not even benefited the industries that were
supposed to gain.
As we wrote a on
4th February 2009:
"The government economic stimulus package will have no positive impact on
the broader economy whatsoever. None."
Yet again we've been proved right, and the mainstream press proved wrong.
At the time we also quoted some of the shrill headlines from the mainstream
press:
"Rudd throws $42bn at economy" - Australian Financial Review
"Schoolyard blitz to avoid recession" - AFR
"We're all in this together: except Turnbull" - AFR
"Rudd and the Reserve free up billions to beat recession" - The Age
"Rudd splashes the cash" - The Age
Every last one of them cheering for the government to spend your money to save
the economy. Not a single journo was capable of expending one brain cell to
figure out what the terrible consequences for the Australian economy would be An
economy that believes the best solution to national wealth is to build, and then
buy and sell houses between each other.
But there's the consequence for you. One industry gets a bunch of stolen
taxpayer money to keep prices sky-high and the credit bubble growing. The other
industry gets swamped and ravaged by trade unions and minimum wage legislation
which forces it to close down forever.
The upshot is the Australian economy hasn't benefited one jot from the billions
spent in the stimulus programme. All it's done is allocated resources to prevent
a bubble from popping - for now - and ensure thousands of people have received
training for an industry that can't possibly sustain them without the presence
of taxpayer money.
Because if it could, then they wouldn't need the stimulus to begin with - it's
not rocket science Despite the complete failure of stimulus spending we've
little doubt the spin doctors will continue to call for more taxpayer dollars to
be thrown at the economy - especially the housing sector And as long as that
happens then we'll continue to see headlines such as this:
"Housing debt Anthony Keane, "Total housing debt is set
to reach $1 trillion within a year. The figure itself is not a worry, but there
is concern the pace of borrowing is exceeding household income growth in
overdrive" -
News Ltd
According to journalist.""Not a worry"! Is he mad? Nearly $1
trillion isn't a worry? Oh Lordy. We've heard it all now
Kris Sayce Economics Editor Money Morning