Australia
Will Rudd Government's high immigration program turn Australia into Argentina?
This short article was originally posted as an anonymous comment with the title Australia: The Next Argentina? to the short article The rich get richer whilst the Australian middle-class is out-sourced.
To consider the effect of sustained high levels of immigration on a country's middle class, one only has to look at Argentina.
In his book, The Case Against Immigration (pdf 1.4M), American writer Roy Beck notes:
One need only look to Argentina this century to see the possible perils of waiting too long to scale back immigration. During the late twentieth century, most observers have tended to lump Argentina with other Latin American countries, their economies characterized by small economic elites, a vast class of impoverished citizens, and a weak middle class. The economist Carlos Diaz-Alejandro wrote that some modern commentators have even classified Argentina with less developed nations such as India and Nigeria. Such comparisons would have been thought ludicrous just eighty years ago, he said: "most economists writing during the first three decades of this century would have placed Argentina among the most advanced countries-with Western Europe, the United States, Canada, and Australia.... Not only was per capita income high, but its growth was one of the highest in the world.”
How did Argentina cease to be one of the world's richest countries? That puzzle was the challenge for Allan M. Taylor, the Mellon Fellow at the Harvard Academy for International and Area Studies and the Department of Economics at Harvard. "More compelling and mysterious examples of failure than the ruination of Argentina are hard to imagine," Taylor said in a 1992 paper published in the journal of Economic History. He concluded that a key factor for Argentina's economic disintegration was the continuation of high European immigration to Argentina after the United States, Canada, and Australia began ending their eras of mass immigration early this century.
No single explanation could account for such a sustained and deep economic demise, Taylor said. But a crucial factor surely was the country's remarkably low savings rate, as compared to Australia, for example. Taylor linked the low savings rate to the high rate of immigration and the high fertility rate of the immigrants. Both immigration and fertility were higher than in Australia and contributed to Argentina having higher consumption and lower savings, Taylor found. The country made up the shortfall of capital for a while by heavier reliance on foreign capital. The differences in Argentina's circumstances-with their roots in the difference in immigration rates-left the country much more vulnerable than the other advanced nations to international events. Argentina's rich, middle-class economy was not able to survive.
Like early 20th Century Argentina, present day Australia has unremittingly high levels of immigration combined with a woefully low domestic savings rate. Thus, the money needed to fund the larger stream of imports and additional infrastructure projects generated by immigration has to be imported from overseas, adding to Australia's current account deficit. This has been a major factor in giving Australia one of the highest per capita foreign debts in the world.
The whole unsustainable edifice is a house of cards, just waiting to come crashing down. And when it happens, it will inevitably drag the Australian middle class down with it.
See also: The Case Against Immigration (pdf 1.4M) by Roy Beck, www.numbersusa.com, The rich get richer whilst the Australian middle-class is out-sourced of 9 Jul 08, Online Opinion forum Greens lose the plot on population issues of 11 Jun 08, Larvatus Prodeo discussion Will “the great immigration debate” take place? of 21 May 08. The cost of multiculturalism of 1992.
Peak oil prices cause South Australian Farmers to call for 'fair market forces'
In a Submission to the Select Committee of the Legislative Council on the Impact of Peak Oil on South Australia
Summary, the South Australian Farmers Federation has stated that, and I quote, "The rise in 'Peak Oil prices' has had a significant affect on the farmers and rural communities in this state."
They explain that the effects have been experienced as:
"• Higher costs of farming and using machinery
• Higher costs of farm inputs as a result of petroleum products used in their production, for instance fertilizers
• Higher freight costs
• Supermarket Duopoly forcing farm gate prices down
• Higher transport costs affecting rural families for basic social activities for sport and relaxation
• Drop in volunteer labour due to travel costs
In their executive summary they state:
"Unless something is done quickly to address this situation there is a danger of farmers leaving the land and food production dropping. Recently the UN stated that lower production in developed countries and rising demand for food could cause serious global problems due to food shortages.
It seems incongruous to the SAFF that given the world wide situation that our farmers are finding it so hard to make even a reasonable living, when market forces should be driving the price they receive for produce up, not holding it down at a level below the increase in costs.
The South Australian and Australian markets need to be reviewed as a matter of urgency to ensure that fair market forces are allowed to operate in the state so that producers can earn a fair return for their effort and ensure their future viability."
The submission-writers recommend "that the South Australian Government:
• Review the fuel excise system with a view to reducing the excise levied on fuel
• Invest in research into viable alternative fuel sources.
• Create a system that ensures the supply of fuel to the state in general and to farmers in particular at crucial harvest / sale times
• Review the current system of moving freight, looking for an innovative new approach that can benefit all industries in the state
• Undertake a program to improve the ability of rural people to travel to basic family activities such as sport and recreation as well as other necessary travel
• Ensure the elderly in rural areas are supported to reduce the cost of travel to essential appointments
• Volunteers are supported."
Full submission is available here.
Peak Oil: India, Australia, London - it's a short road to poverty for many
India: Oil prices to increase by 11%
Diezel goes up by 9%
Cooking gas goes up by 17%
The Indian Government is reported to fear that the price of oil may cost it the next election1.
Such are the politics of petroleum. There is nothing it does not touch.
The 'rich countries' appear to have much more of a buffer than most of India, but their road transport and agriculture industries are already in trouble. It is well-known that starvation is never far away for many people in the tropical Asian countries, but less well-known is the large class of people living in precarity elsewhere, especially in the Anglophone countries.
In London around 10,000 finance workers have lost their jobs this year and it is anticipated that perhaps up to 40,000 will lose their jobs in the current months. (France2 8pm News, 21 May).
In "Job loss a sure road to skid row"2 in the Herald Sun of Tuesday May 27, 2008, it was reported that a Citibank survey showed that, in Australia, "one in two workers would face financial ruin within four weeks of losing their jobs;… almost 20 per cent of workers would not last a week. Only one in four workers would be able to survive more than three months."
Some 'rich countries' don't know when to stop and part of their population is sliding ever so quickly into third world status. For instance, the Australian government has become a 'banana republic' massively endebted and engaged in energy-intensive infrastructure expansion programs everywhere. Under the behest of the Australian academy of Technology and Engineering Sciences, the Property Council of Australia, The Australian Population Institute, and its own state governments, all heavily peopled by big development lobbyists, Australia is trying to double its population as soon as possible, planning new megacities. For these 'programs' of infrastructure building and population increase, worker, business and family reunion immigration have been stepped up, and families receive baby bonuses for having children, just as though the days of cheap oil were just beginning, instead of in their twilight. Yet, as in the USA, evictions and personal debt are sky rocketing.
And really, what is three months security in a century of oil depletion? Who is safe? We all need more solidarity. France, so far, shows the best example.
Footnotes
1. ↑ Rhys Blakely, "India concedes in battle to keep oil price down", The Times, 6 Jun 08
2. ↑ Craig Binnie, "Job loss a sure road to skid row" in the Victorian Herald Sun(Australia) of 27 May 08
The question remains: What accounts for David Suzuki's silence?
On September 22, 2006 an Australian interviewer asked Dr. David Suzuki on public airways, "Are you saying that Australia is overpopulated?" Suzuki replied, "You bet".
To date, May 28, 2008, he has not given any indication that it is his belief that Canada is overpopulated. Publicly that is. Privately he has revealed to the Population Institute of Canada by correspondence that that indeed is his position. But he won't take a public stance. Why not?
He knows that Canada has a limited carrying capacity. He has spoken of it many times. His foundation is aware that only 7% of our land base is arable, and that land is marginal by West European standards. And the Suzuki Foundation knows that a fifth of our best farmland has been built upon. So why hasn't he spoken out? He can go down to Australia and tell them they are overpopulated, but he can't tell us that we are overpopulated?
Tim Flannery had the guts―at one time―to tell the truth about Australia's carrying capacity. But Canada's opposite number doesn't. That is the difference.
Perhaps someone can interview Flannery here in Canada and get him to tell the truth to Canadians―since no one of eminence or credibility with a Canadian passport has the courage to be candid about population growth in the country.
Victorian treasurer mentions population growth
from The Age, 28th April 2008
link to article from The Age
The last 3 sentences are of interest:
Mr Lenders, who grew up on a Gippsland dairy farm and was briefly a Young Liberal, said there should be a debate on how Victoria handles population growth.
But it was the Government's role to help make Melbourne liveable, not to determine how big it grew.
"I'm not quite sure what governments do about that," he said. "If we are trying to have a vibrant economy, people will want to come and live here."
First sentence above is not controversial, but at least a debate could give an airing to the issues that are impacted by population growth.
The second sentence shows how governments in this country "govern", by excluding themselves from issues that governments should deal with. Lenders is using the TINA (there is no alternative) argument, he probably means that because the ALP is funded by the growth lobby we should allow the lobbyists to set policy and the governments role is purely one of management.
In the last sentence he purposely confuses the reasoning behind the current rate of immigration, there is no question that Australia is an attractive destination, it is the role of governments (state and federal) to govern for all Australians and set about creating and implementing policies to that aim, instead of allowing those who are able to give big donations to political parties and have a large lobbying infrastructure to do it for them.
Treasurer John Lenders: "I think a state of excitement in treasury can imply that you are not doing your job."
Full article:
Mr Excitement? Not me, says state money manager
Treasurer John Lenders: "I think a state of excitement in treasury can imply that you are not doing your job."
Photo: Roger Cummins
Melissa Fyfe
April 27, 2008
JOHN Lenders wants you to know he is not an exciting kind of guy. In fact, the state Treasurer admits people may think he is dull and, yes, he loves spreadsheets.
Mr Lenders, who will step out of the shadow of Premier John Brumby, Australia's longest-serving state treasurer, to deliver his first budget on May 6, also wants you to know that his non-excitable pair of hands is a safe place for the state's finances.
"If the accusation against a treasurer is that they he is a dull person but has an addiction to spreadsheets, it is probably a very good addiction for a treasurer to have," said Mr Lenders, in response to a comment once quoted from an unnamed critic.
"I think a state of excitement in treasury can imply that you are not doing your job, which is to prudently manage resources."
In an interview with The Sunday Age, the career politician and former state Labor Party secretary saidgovernment revenue would be about $37 billion, up from $34.3 billion last year.
He said Victoria's economy was still growing strongly despite global financial problems. The drought recovery forecast in last year's budget, however, had turned out to be "patchy".
Mr Lenders, who had held the portfolios of finance, education, industrial relations, WorkCover and major projects, said there would be no money in this budget for the Eddington transport plan, as it was still up for public discussion, and the Government had not formed a response.
He said there would be no extra money — beyond an already committed $150 million — for the construction phase of the channel deepening project.
He would not be drawn on relief for home buyers in the forms of cuts to stamp duty, or the business wish list of tax cuts, such as land, payroll and WorkCover.
Mr Brumby decided to give the Treasury job to Mr Lenders over a younger colleague, Tim Holding, partly on the grounds that Mr Lenders is a family man. As such, Mr Lenders said, he was guided by thinking about opportunities for his three adult children.
Mr Lenders, who grew up on a Gippsland dairy farm and was briefly a Young Liberal, said there should be a debate on how Victoria handles population growth.
But it was the Government's role to help make Melbourne liveable, not to determine how big it grew.
"I'm not quite sure what governments do about that," he said. "If we are trying to have a vibrant economy, people will want to come and live here."
Channel 7 markets unlivable Melbourne to a helpless audience
A couple of years ago there was a long fight against a proposed development on the corner of Royston Ave. and Tooronga Rd. East Malvern to replace a modest sized Edwardian house on a medium sized block with large trees ( habitat for birds and possibly some native wildlife and a bit of breathing space along a busy road.)
The fight was obviously lost by the opponents and I attach recent photos of what has been done to the block. Unfortunately I do not have a "before" photo.

As can be seen, there is complete disrespect and disregard for land as an entity in itself. The block has been treated simply as a space to be filled. It will obviously have underground parking for many cars whereas before only one or 2 cars would have been accommodated. One big concern I have with such developments is that as permeability of blocks is dramatically decreased, street trees will have less water and eventually we will lose these as well as the private gardens from which we all benefited.
The proposed changes to the residential zones are of course like many things the State government does- a complete disregard for residents and constituents and a removal of democracy.
Melbourne 2030 is the plan to fit in a million more people by 2030 (from about 2002) Melbourne will have even more than this 1 million increase by 2030. The State Government encourages and pushes for population growth. This is totally detrimental and undemocratic social engineering. Our city will be ruined and our children and grandchildren unfortunately will have far less than we did. This is the last thing we would wish for them but it is happening every day. Each old house for sale whether in my area or not, wears a stamp of vulnerability and I wait to see the debris from the destroyed trees and garden and the empty block looking like a wasteland as it lies in wait for exploitation by a greedy developer as yet more tasteless oversized, overcrowded housing is placed on it. There is an "army" of developers at the ready to descend on these properties, denying the ordinary person a chance to have a bit of space in a modest house in the suburbs and capitalising on the State Government's policies of continual and rapid population growth with planning to match.
Post script
On the Channel 7 Today Tonight program 16 April 2008 the audience was told that by 2030 Melbourne would be "unrecognisable" and that owning a house and garden would a "thing of the past."
Editor's comment:
Channel 7 Today Tonight might have chosen not to make these statements, or it might have chosen to have made them whilst pointing out their unreasonableness and urging Melburnians to fight them. That Channel 7 apparently promoted this outrageous attitude as an unquestionable given puts Channel 7 squarely in the propaganda field. Channel 7 is part of a corporate group with many investments in property development and the lifestyle commodities that go with the package.
It seems obvious to us here at candobetter that no group should be granted a commercial broadcasting license to market dystopia.
Article by Jill QuirkA couple of years ago there was a long fight against a proposed development on the corner of Royston Ave. and Tooronga Rd. East Malvern to replace a modest sized Edwardian house on a medium sized block with large trees ( habitat for birds and possibly some native wildlife and a bit of breathing space along a busy road.)
The fight was obviously lost by the opponents and I attach recent photos of what has been done to the block. Unfortunately I do not have a "before" photo.
As can be seen, there is complete disrespect and disregard for land as an entity in itself. The block has been treated simply as a space to be filled. It will obviously have underground parking for many cars whereas before only one or 2 cars would have been accommodated. One big concern I have with such developments is that as permeability of blocks is dramatically decreased, street trees will have less water and eventually we will lose these as well as the private gardens from which we all benefited.
The proposed changes to the residential zones are of course like many things the State government does- a complete disregard for residents and constituents and a removal of democracy.
Melbourne 2030 is the plan to fit in a million more people by 2030 (from about 2002) Melbourne will have even more than this 1 million increase by 2030. The State Government encourages and pushes for population growth. This is totally detrimental and undemocratic social engineering. Our city will be ruined and our children and grandchildren unfortunately will have far less than we did. This is the last thing we would wish for them but it is happening every day. Each old house for sale whether in my area or not, wears a stamp of vulnerability and I wait to see the debris from the destroyed trees and garden and the empty block looking like a wasteland as it lies in wait for exploitation by a greedy developer as yet more tasteless oversized, overcrowded housing is placed on it. There is an "army" of developers at the ready to descend on these properties, denying the ordinary person a chance to have a bit of space in a modest house in the suburbs and capitalising on the State Government's policies of continual and rapid population growth with planning to match.
Post script
On the Channel 7 Today Tonight program 16 April 2008 the audience was told that by 2030 Melbourne would be "unrecognisable" and that owning a house and garden would a "thing of the past."
Editor's comment:
Channel 7 Today Tonight might have chosen not to make these statements, or it might have chosen to have made them whilst pointing out their unreasonableness and urging Melburnians to fight them. That Channel 7 apparently promoted this outrageous attitude as an unquestionable given puts Channel 7 squarely in the propaganda field. Channel 7 is part of a corporate group with many investments in property development and the lifestyle commodities that go with the package.
It seems obvious to us here at candobetter that no group should be granted a commercial broadcasting license to market dystopia.
Article by Jill Quirk
Submission to Australia 2020 Summit says we cannot afford more population growth
by Jennie Epstein, from her submission to the Australia 2020 summit.
Academics debate What Population Australia and Our Region can Sustainably Support
Article below is based on a report by Australia’s Olympic Poet, Mark O'Connor :
Demographer, Peter McDonald, is famous for presenting extreme projections of population implosion. His contributions to a debate at ANU on April 1 were predictable and are now on line. (The PPT versions are the easier ones to read). Peter's ideas suit big business and corporatised government and have thus become very influential. The criticisms and analysis below are therefore very important, since the Murdoch and Fairfax media, and sadly, even the ABC, market these attitudes uncritically and approvingly. Sheila Newman
Peter McDonald's piece, "Australia’s future population: planning for reality," is unlikely to impress environmentalists, according to Mark O'Connor.
In case you haven't time to scan it on line, here are some exerpts, organised and analysed by Mark O'Connor around 5 keywords that McDonald uses:
McDonald's Five Keywords:
Environment
Growth
Labour
Fatalism
"Realism"
"Social cohesion"
Those last two concepts probably really do need to be in inverted commas. The first 3 concepts are mixed together as follows:
The first sheet of his presentation summarises his line on environment:
"Environment and economy
• Australia will achieve a better result in relation to its own
environment and its contribution to the reduction of global
greenhouse gas emissions if it has a strong economy.
• A strong economy will provide the capital that is necessary
to invest in improvement of environmental infrastructure,
repair of degraded environments, and a shift to alternative
sources of energy that are not fossil-fuel based."
The next sheet proclaims:
"Capacity constraints are Australia’s biggest economic problem
• Much of the infrastructure required to support a strong and
productive economy is in short supply in Australia at
present.
• This includes water, transport for people, transport for
goods, ports, energy supply, housing and office space, and
state-of-the-art communications.
• These shortages may be artificially reduced in the short
term by increasing interest rates to slow demand.
• However, we do not want to live in a continued forced
recession. So, higher interest rates are not a long-term
solution. In the long term, the capacity constraints must be."
Notice that this, like most of PMD's talk, is not demography, but growth economics.
Next sheet:
"The requirements for new infrastructure
• New infrastructure involves technology, capital, good
planning and commitment, and labour.
• The technology is available now in most instances and
more will come on line.
• Capital also is in relatively good supply.
• Planning is improving, commitment is stronger.
• Shortage of labour is the problem."
"Why we need labour
• Conservation is highly desirable as far as it goes, but we
shall only solve our water, energy and environmental
problems in the long run through construction of new
infrastructure.
• If we want solar or wind energy, then the solar panels and
windmills have to be made and constructed.
• If we want secure urban water supplies then whatever
policy mix we use to do this involves construction.
• If we want to ease the housing crisis, we need more
houses.
• If we want the economy to run productively and
competitively, we need better transportation of goods and
people, better ports, and better communications
infrastructure."
Which leads, as you've guessed to:
"Why we need labour (continued)
• Conservation is highly desirable as far as it goes, but we
shall only solve our water, energy and environmental
problems in the long run through construction of new
infrastructure.
• If we want solar or wind energy, then the solar panels and
windmills have to be made and constructed.
• If we want secure urban water supplies then whatever
policy mix we use to do this involves construction."
In short, according to Peter McDonald, we need vast population growth in order to provide more labor, so we can have more energy efficiency. Oh, and more mining (presumably solar powered mining).
Well it was April Fool's Day, but Peter didn't seem to be joking:
"Labour demand
• Almost right across the Australian economy, workers are
short supply.
• This is especially the case in the construction industries
(15,000 builders from the USA?).
• The mining industry is desperately seeking workers to
commence new projects (Chinese work gangs?). Note,
revenue from mining is the source of much of our public
capital for environmental and social development."
Next we get a dubious graph showing labor falling:
"NOM = Net Overseas Migration
Note: Assumes fertility constant at 1.8 births per woman and labour force"
participation constant at July 2007 levels
Except that labor, in McDonald's own projection, is actually rising. It is only the rate of increase of labor ("Labour force annual growth rate") that is falling. (If you can't say a figure is falling, you can always go to its first or even its second differential to find a function that is falling.)
What about automation, computerisation, machines? Why do we need so very much labor?
Well, you see, there is a multiplier effect:
• If we had all of these [mining and construction] workers, they will demand more
services and hence more workers in retail, hospitality and
personal services. There is a multiplier effect (foreign
students and working holiday makers?).
The nations of the world will soon be competing fiercely for labor, and hence for immigrants.
Hence we must be fatalistic:
"Inevitable population growth for Australia
• We can improve our productivity and we can raise labour
force participation rates somewhat, but it is inevitable that
overseas migration to Australia will remain high and the
population will grow by 2050 to something in excess of 30
million people.
• In comparative terms, this will be much lower than the
population of California and the population of the USA will
be around 440 million. Canada’s population will be over 50
million."
Apart from economic growthism and a strong streak of fatalism, Peter McDonald now shows a new emphasis on "realism", cf. his paper's subtitle:
"Australia’s future population: planning for reality"
The subtitle seems borrowed from business lobbies like APOP, The Australian Property Council, and the Scanlon Foundation (the latter which funded his recent paper with Glenn Withers). Such groups emphasise "realistic" (= fatalistic) planning on population. i.e. accept that huge growth is coming, and plan for it. (In debate Mark O'Connor called this a bully's argument: "Since we're going to put you in the stocks anyway, why don't you co-operate and then we'll do it more nicely.")
Hence Peter's line: what we have to fear is not population growth but our failure to plan for it.
Hence Peter McDonald's concluding "overhead" runs:
"Conclusion
• Australia will be a better country in its economic,
environmental and social dimensions if we accept the
inevitable and plan for it.
• Not planning properly for future population growth is part
the Australian way of mucking things up."
• The present Australian Government seems to have accepted this message. It has set up an infrastructure council and my educated bet is that it will increase the official migrant intake in the May budget."
cf. APOP's "opinions" page: http://www.apop.com.au/opinions.html
• A recent expert study concluded that there are no insurmountable engineering, scientific or environmental barriers to reaching an Australian population of 30 million in 2050, assuming that thorough analysis and planning occur and that leadership is exercised, especially by governments.
• Long-term planning is imperative to ensure timely and orderly provision of needed infrastructure, and leadership from governments is essential in setting clear policy directions.
--
One other element in Peter McDonald's thinking is worth noting.
Both APOP and Scanlon may be worried that lack of social cohesion might force a halt to such rapid immigration, because they are promoting the need for certain kinds of social cohesion. (Hence the conference that Scanlon Foundation funded recently, with Jupp, Nieuwenhysen, and frequent flyers at such immigration-growth-promoting events.)
As APOP puts it:
"The future prosperity of Australia, underpinned by population growth, will depend on our ability to maintain Social Cohesion in a society with even more cultural diversity than we have successfully accommodated historically."
"Since overpopulation tends to destroy social cohesion (e.g. food riots, water riots, road rage) this line is probably what is known in marketing circles as "advertising against the perceived weakness of the product" --i.e. trying to present your weakness as your strength."
Mark O'Connor
Peter McDonald now styles himself:
"Peter McDonald, Director, Australian Demographic and Social Research Institute, ANU"
and remarked at one point "Mark presents me as an economist, but I think of myself more as a sociologist." Wishful thinking, perhaps. Peter seems like someone who would offer little resistance to the APOP line on social "reality".
Australia and Canada: two demographic bulimics?
Poet and author Mark O’Connor has written another important analysis of Australia’s ecological eclipse at the hands of the growth cult. While the continent is obviously unique in its botanical character with problems that don’t challenge Canadians, the similarities with Canada that O’Connor reveals in his description of the evolution of the growth ethic are simply astounding.
Like Canada, “Australia was, and still is, even though much trashed and abused, a treasure house of biodiversity,” toward which the people have a somewhat schizophrenic attitude. On the one hand, “Australians are genuinely proud of their wildlife…many people assign a very high, almost religious value to conserving nature”, as evidenced by their tolerance of crocodiles which make it impossible to swim in their waters. 10.7% of Australia is incorporated in a strategic network of parks.
Yet, O’Connor writes, “Attitudes to Australia’s biodiversity remain mixed.” It may be inspirational to watch them in flight but “people don’t appreciate kangaroos eating their crops.” Sadly Australian experience shows that democracy is not good at preserving other species---they don’t vote. "(There is) a theme that runs through Australia’s ecological history: the clash between the desire to protect biodiversity versus the need of an ever-growing human population to make a quid from it.”
O’Connor reminds readers that Australia’s ecology was dynamic. While “we might prefer to praise the Aborigines’ achievement in living sustainably with the land for millennia, and contrast this with the damage eight generations of European lifestyle have wrought,” Aboriginal hunters had already modified ecology by the fire regime they imposed before Europeans arrived. Paul Watson, it should be pointed out here, asserts that Aborigines killed off 85% of the continent’s megafauna before the British hit Botany Bay, an assertion that has been contested. Nevertherless, Watson is one of the very few Canadians not given to romantic illusions about indigenous stewardship of precious resources.
The foundation of Australia’s current ecological crisis, and that of Canada, is their false self-perception as vast empty lands desperately in need of more people: two bloated bulimics who look in the mirror and see themselves as Twiggy with lots of room to grow. The myth is best captured by Australia’s national anthem “Advance Australia Fair” when it says “For those who’ve come across the seas. We’ve boundless plains to share.”
But as O’Connor notes, Australia has only 6% of its land mass proven
as arable. For Canada it is 7% with soils marginal by European standards. As for wheat, because Australia provides 20% of the world’s wheat imports, feeding 40 million people, “boomers” argue that Australia could feed a far higher resident population than its current 21 million. But they forget that much of that foreign exchange is needed to pay for the fuel and nitrate fertilizer used for production, and soil loss, acidification and climate change will diminish yields. “Every tonne of wheat still costs some tones of eroded soil”, O’Connor observes.
Even so, with the drought tolerant wheat grown in fertile soils in a good year Australia produces less wheat than France, and in a bad year sometimes less than Britain. And all at the cost of ‘fascinating’ bio-regions cleared and species eliminated.
So if the big empty land in fact suffers from a limited carrying capacity, if food self-sufficiency is a myth, if biodiversity is taking a beating, why then does Australia seem in a frenzy to add to its numbers? (Canada could be asked the same question). Who drives growth? Qui Bono? Who Benefits?
The answer might be found in research done by the Australian Green Party that revealed that the governing Labor Party of New South Wales received $8.78 million in 1998-99 from property developers, while the opposition Coalition Parties received $6.35 million. Not surprisingly then, Sydney’s councils have been instructed to accommodate an extra 1.1 million people (24%) in 25 years so that Australia offers the paradox of a huge country with urban housing prices comparable to New York or London, where land prices double in a decade and its 1.5% population growth is higher than Indonesia’s and indeed many Third World countries.
“Local and even national newspapers run a depressing spiral of puff pieces about how we are desperately short of skilled and willing workers---alternately with pieces about how we are desperately short of projects to provide employment. The intended solution is of course an endless cycle (or spiral) of increasing population and increasing construction. If only politicians could give Australia the construction industry its population needs, rather than the population its construction industry would like.”
O’Connor cites Australia’s Anglo-Celtic property system for fuelling the drive to “fill the country with people” by rewarding private speculation in land. “By contrast, the nation’s capital, Canberra, was built on a French-style system, with the government resuming land from farmers at fair but moderate prices, auctioning it as cheaply as possible, and using the profit it couldn’t help making to provide roads, schools, services and an elegantly planned layout. Canberra remains one of the world’s most livable cities, and (for the developers who control much of Australia’s politics) an embarrassing proof that there is a better way.”
To footnote this observation, it should be noted that Australian population sociologist Sheila Newman has ably documented the relationship between the British property system and the population growth lobby on the one hand, and the French property system and the absence of anymeaningful lobby for growth in France on the other hand. Students of Canadian civic politics know that developers virtually own city councils. What sinister role do they play behind the scenes in framing federal immigration policy or influencing it? The Urban Futures Institute, a high profile Vancouver-based think tank, is a consistent cheerleader for massive immigration. Its former mouthpiece was “demographer” David Baxter who couched his arguments in demographic statistics to prove that he was in possession of a crystal ball. In fact, he had no credentials as a demographer. He was merely a front man for the real estate industry which fully funds the institute. He was guaranteed an interview by every media outlet when occasion demanded it.
Has any voice of caution or restraint been raised against this mad rush to ecological oblivion? Well there was the Whitlam Labor government of 1972-75 which reacted to the first Global Oil shock by limiting immigration and population growth. Then the Australian Academy of Science made a major public statement in 1994 that advised that Australia’s population not exceed 23 million and that immigration be half of what it was during the Hawke-Keating era. The Science Council of Canada issued a similar report in 1975 when it warned that Canada’s population should not go beyond 30 million. The government responded by abolishing the Science Council and then proceeding along a path that saw the land of frozen tundra, lakes and mountains fill up one-fifth of its Class 1 farmland with subdivisions and become a nation of 33 million with the fastest growth rate in the G8 group.
The Australian Democrats came out in favour of zero-net-migration, but the political culture was poisoned. Under the Hawke-Keating Labor governments of 1983-1996, Australia was essentially a “plutocratic democracy” where voters were presented with a Hobson’s choice between parties who were “servants of business-growth lobbies”. While cognizant of conservationist sensibilities, “Hawke dared not offend the growth lobby.” But even the large immigrant communities were among the 73% of voters who in 1991 said immigration levels were too high, or the 71% in 1996 who held to this opinion. Again, Canadians have affected consistent opposition to immigration in the same proportions, but like Australians, have been presented with a solid parliamentary front in favour of a policy they detest.
But nevertheless, given the scale and persistence of this discontent, Labor’s spin-doctors needed to give the old myth of Australia, as an empty land, a make-over. There was no farmland available and urban land prices were beyond reach, so alright then, it would no longer be Australia’s manifest destiny to build a “great” nation but rather a “diverse” one. It would become a United Nations of ethnicities and races, sustained by permanent immigration, long after the pioneering period had passed. But the obsession with cultural diversity would trump concern for preserving biological diversity.
“Thus instead of being ashamed that we have lost so many of our marsupial species, many Australians on the left seem more ashamed that we do not have a flourishing Inuit or Bantu community in their particular city. Quite why it should be Australia’s duty to turn itself into a representative sample of the cultures of the earth is never explained. Instead, there are constant shouts that any reduction of immigration will lead us tumbling back into an abyss of ‘racism’ and ‘boring monoculturalsim’.”
“Hawke’s and Keating’s spin doctors even took advantage of the Anglo-Celtic guilt over having immigrated upon the Aboriginal tribes without their permission and violently displaced them. Somehow this became a further reason why high immigration, so long as it was no longer Anglo-Celtic, was essential--as if inviting in the rest of the world would legitimize it.”
O’Connor forecasts that the incoming Labor government of Kevin Rudd will continue the traditional quest for economic growth, only addressing GHG issues if they do not compromise this goal. He compares Australia to “a cruise liner whose captain is required to sail in the direction chosen by a deck-steward whose priority is to keep the sun shining on the deckchairs in the saloon section, so that their occupants will order more drinks.”
The metaphor is an interesting one, for Canada too could be compared to a cruise liner: The HMS Ecological Titanic still robotically stopping to pick up more passengers as it ploughs forward toward the iceberg of over-population.
We may, albeit in diminished numbers, adapt to climate change, but we will not adapt to biodiversity collapse. O’Connor spoke of Australia’s botanical and ecological fragility, but this is what environmentalist Brishen Hoff said of Canada: “Our boreal forest continues to experience wholesale clearcutting and relentless road expansion. More water is being diverted from the Great Lakes watershed than what is being replenished, causing the highest lakes (Nipigon, Superior, etc.) to dramatically drop their water levels. I could go on with thousands of examples of species extinctions and worsening environmental quality right here in Ontario and Algoma-Manitoulin all because of human population growth.”
In fact most of the more than 500 threatened species dwell within the range of Canada’s major urban centres where they are imperiled by sprawling subdivisions, roughly 70% of which are occupied by immigrants. But remember, mass immigration is to be celebrated in Canada as, in the words of Green Party leader Elizabeth May, “our great multicultural project.” Like Sydney, Vancouverites are told that they must move over and accommodate another 800,000 migrants in the coming 23 years (24% growth) and appreciate the newcomers for the “diversity” they bring. But at what cost this “cultural diversity”? An infinitely richer, more vital heritage. The biological diversity of the species that this growth will extinguish.
What’s the answer? O’Connor quotes Gordon Hocking of NSW: “As long as we stick with an economic system that needs to perpetually grow we will remain trapped on the road to ecological and climate disaster.” Brishen Hoff would add “None of these symptoms can be reversed without shrinking the size of our economy and then moving to a steady state economy.”
Bulimics gorge, then purge. Let’s hope our national binging ends soon and our demographic weight loss is progressive and incremental rather than dramatic and deadly.
Watch for Mark O’Connor’s upcoming book, “Overloading Australia”.
Tim Murray
Director of Immigration Watch Canada
8 January 2008
Your help needed to prosecute for wildlife massacre in Northern NSW
End Australian culture of contempt for wildlife
Tell www.candobetter.org of outstanding cases and neglect by government departments. Register, Log in and Write. Under current law people who harm protected habitat and species are criminals. Yet they almost always go unprosecuted, despite the widespread support for wildlife among the common people of Australia.
Political pressure needed for Prosecution for massacre of Wildlife
Wildlife activist, David Pinson, (stickeebatz|AT|gmail.com); FFICN|AT|yahoogroups.com.au;
needs help to obtain prosecution against clearing of endangered ecological community and flying-fox habitat and habitat for other threatened species at Dulguigan, near Murwillumbah, in northern NSW. See details below.
Put politicians' names to the crime: Make them enforce the law
Public pressure needs to be placed on the NSW and Commonwealth Departments responsible for prosecution and enforcement of laws to protect wildlife and habitat in this case as in many others. Flying foxes are, of course, not the only animals suffering from the negligence of our government towards protecting native wildlife from cruelty and outright extermination and extinction.
Politicians’ names: Malcolm Turnbull, Phil Koperberg, Morris Iemma, Justine Elliot. Contact details end this article.
Education: See here on youtube for an educational film about a flying fox featuring wildlife carer, Julia Buch.
The crime
Two hectares of endangered Swamp Sclerophyll ecological community has been cleared on private property. This vegetation was the roosting habitat for about 6,400 (December 2006 count) Grey-headed flying-foxes and Black flying-foxes (both of whom are listed as vulnerable species in NSW), and functioned as a maternity site.
Apparently evidence exists to think that the vegetation was cleared in order to get rid of the flying-fox camp.
The suspects
There appears to be a trail in records of complaints from human residents on the property or properties about the presence of flying-foxes; anti-flying-fox meetings held regularly; intervention by the local DECC ranger to stop further instances of purposeful harassment of the flying fox population with loud noise in 2006, and two other instances of land-clearing of ‘bat camp’ habitat without permits in the Tweed area. These took place in 2004 at the Dallis Park colony and at the Chinderah Road camp.
Apart from prosecuting the perpetrators of this damage to local and aggregate national and international biodiversity and natural amenity caused by the Dulguigan clearing, the Department should be reinforcing protection of wildlife and their habitat against further harassment and destruction. Members of Parliament need to come out in force to ensure that the law is visibly and seriously enforced to condemn cheap contempt for wildlife of all kinds, also bearing in mind that land-clearing, as well as being cruel, leads to soil destruction and carbon-gas emissions increase, which are of great public concern.
The Laws
The clearing probably constitutes breaches of the National Parks and Wildlife Act of 1974 - harming a threatened species or endangered ecological community (s 118A); and damage to the habitat of threatened species (s 118D)-and the Native Vegetation Act 2003-clearing of remnant vegetation (being protected native vegetation) without approval (s 12). This clearing may also breach the EPBC act 1999.
Role of Department of Environment and Climate Change (DECC)
DECC has been requested to fully investigate and seek to have the perpetrators punished sufficiently to deter others and required to revegetate the area cleared.
DECC has also been asked to properly implement their policy on management of flying-fox camps by undertaking education and media campaigns to foster better understanding of flying-foxes and support for their conservation.
DECC has been requested to explain why, despite legislation, illegal acts of habitat clearance for threatened species such as this, are still going un-prosecuted.
Information regarding the clearing, and current state of investigation into the matter can be obtained from DECC offices in Murwillumbah and Grafton.
Why humans should love and protect flying foxes and all wildlife
Flying foxes, as well as being delightful social animals with complex societies, are also, like birds, major agents of soil renewal through their rich droppings. (So are all other wildlife forms, including the huge contribution of soil organisms, but the avian creatures have a particular role to play which human beings cannot reproduce.) The work of such animals is far more efficient and effective than any modern fertilizer dissemination. Unfortunately it is free and, in our commercially focused society, anything free generates contempt and disbelief about its benefits.
Wildlife population control
Just about everything humans are doing to regulate wildlife populations of other animals as well as flying foxes is making matters worse. Flying foxes like all animals are capable of regulating their own populations if those populations are not fragmented. Increasing fragmentation leads to disorganization of population spacing algorithms, leading to opportunistic small-scale ‘plagues’ and then busts, with the final outcome being extinction. These animals need large protected areas and human economies are dysfunctional if they cannot perform without destroying such areas; we need to integrate with the local biodiversity, not expect them to integrate with us. We are impoverished culturally by our inability to enjoy the wildlife around us. And the cruelty involved depraves us.
Farming needs to be adapted locally to cooperate with these populations. The benefit of flying fox guano as with bird guano needs to be understood. See Montgomery, D., Dirt, The Erosion of Civilisations, UCP, Berkley, 2007, pp 185-88. For some literature to start with on population spacing, apart from my own research in progress, which I intend to make available at candobetter.org/sheila soon, see, for instance: Jerry .O. Wolff, “Density-dependence and the socioecology of space use in rodents,” Department of Biology, The University of Memphis, Memphis, TN 38152, USA. Note, however, that flying foxes are not rodents.:-)]
Sheila Newman
Vice President, Sustainable Population Australia, Victorian Branch
SPA Vic is a member of the Coalition for Wildlife Corridors see www.awpc.org.au
Malcolm Turnbull M.P. - Federal Minister for the Environment and Water Resources
malcolm.turnbull.MP|AT|aph.gov.au,
PO Box 1840, Bondi Junction NSW 1355
PO Box 1840, Bondi Junction NSW 1355;
The Hon. Phil Koperberg M.P.
- NSW Minister - Department of Environment and Climate Change
office|AT|koperberg.minister.nsw.gov.au
Postal Address: PO BOX A290 , SYDNEY SOUTH NSW 1232;
The Hon. Morris Iemma M.P. - NSW Premier thepremier|AT|www.nsw.gov.au Governor Macquarie Tower. Level 40, 1 Farrer Place, SYDNEY NSW 2000
The Hon. Justine Elliott M.P. - member for Richmond - House of Representatives
Justine.Elliot.MP|AT|aph.gov.au
Electorate Office Postal Address: PO Box 6996. Tweed Heads South NSW 2486
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