Welcome to the Australian Ford Forums forum.

You are currently viewing our boards as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions and inserts advertising. By joining our free community you will have access to post topics, communicate privately with other members, respond to polls, upload content and access many other special features without post based advertising banners. Registration is simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

If you have any problems with the registration process or your account login, please contact us.

Please Note: All new registrations go through a manual approval queue to keep spammers out. This is checked twice each day so there will be a delay before your registration is activated.

Go Back   Australian Ford Forums > General Topics > The Pub

The Pub For General Automotive Related Talk

Reply
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 12-08-2012, 06:26 PM   #31
JG34JA
Regular Member
 
Join Date: Jun 2010
Posts: 487
Default Re: cheap labour

Quote:
Originally Posted by bobthebilda
Well Bill, all you need to do is come up with a plan
Let me try. We continue on our current course. High AUD, one-way open markets, high wage and entitlement, high regulation, high taxation for domestics, plus real incentives for entrepreneurs to manufacture overseas and import here will mean more and more domestic manufacturing closures. That won't matter too much until minerals prices fall, or China diversifies its supply base, and the current mining CAPEX ends.

Australia wakes up in debt, with a crushed AUD, without a manufacturing base, without as beneficial offshore earnings from mining production which as we all know is cyclical.

Some people bitterly realise Australia had a real red hot go at securing intergenerational wealth but blew it on consumption and housing with leverage and in the meantime allowed its productive industry to vanish. Hardship like what the US is going through ensues. A total about-face in how we view our employability, entitlement and worth will have to occur before change can take place, and is most likely borne by our children. Policies change and Australia begins to invite investment, setting up as a low cost, low tax, industry friendly location to produce. Manufacturing thrives.

If this end sounds familiar it's what we had and built before we started tearing the foundations for manufacturing prosperity down. History is cyclical.
JG34JA is offline   Reply With Quote Multi-Quote with this Post
Old 12-08-2012, 09:30 PM   #32
Bill M
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
 
Bill M's Avatar
 
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 1,212
Default Re: cheap labour

Some will get it ...
http://www.ausinnovation.org/publica...-a-future.html
__________________
AUII XR6 VCT ute
20 years and still going strong!
Bill M is offline   Reply With Quote Multi-Quote with this Post
Old 12-08-2012, 09:43 PM   #33
melv1n
Starter Motor
 
Join Date: Jul 2011
Posts: 19
Default Re: cheap labour

How can we compete with that.
Really makes me worried for my kids.
melv1n is offline   Reply With Quote Multi-Quote with this Post
Old 12-08-2012, 10:16 PM   #34
BPXR6T
FF.Com.Au Hardcore
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 3,910
Default Re: cheap labour

The term banana republic comes to mind. Isn't Australia making the same mistakes of Argentina all those years ago...
BPXR6T is offline   Reply With Quote Multi-Quote with this Post
Reply


Forum Jump


All times are GMT +11. The time now is 09:48 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.5
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Other than what is legally copyrighted by the respective owners, this site is copyright www.fordforums.com.au
Positive SSL