A business that does not make money will not be around for long. While money is just the mechanism to count success, or failure, the lack of it is terminal in every case.
Well, every case but one.
Government.
They just keep on putting it on the national credit card, building debt to garner approval and votes.
As we approach the 2015/16 budget the blathering goes on from both sides of parliament, with occasional irritating rejoinders from the peanut gallery.
It is easy to poke fun at the pollies, and to be utterly cynical about their motives. Their collective and often individual behavior and demeanor make that cynicism almost mandatory, and it seems to make us feel better. However, it rarely adds any value, as the real issues become clouded by rhetoric, blathering, bullshit, and outright, bald faced lies.
Where are the facts, the data to support the various notions put by various interest groups?
We call ourselves the lucky country, as we are.
Supported as we have been particularly in the last 30 years by continuous growth, which we largely put down to the luck we had in being in a place well stocked with resources, but the worm seems to be turning, and we have little wriggle room.
Unlike a business, where the sustainability of the business relies on commercial decisions, and the impact collectively they have on their budgets, the sustainability of the Australian budget seems to rely on our political sustainability.
Up until the last few years we have a pretty good record, but the last few, powered by the fragmentation of the media and increasing ability of individuals to have a say and gather tribes of like minded people to their cause has changed all that.
I am concerned at the level of political unsustainability that seems too be evolving, and driven by that lack of a solid foundation, the sustainability of the national budget.
Roll on the May 12 crunch and hopefully after the debacle last year, there will be some sensible debate that adds to the political sustainability as well as to that of Australian small businesses, upon which the sustainability of the national budget relies.
Sorry, I have reverted to my Don Quixote mode, the chances of any of that must be almost zero.