Our current politics is an intensely adversarial, short-term, zero-sum game.
Is this what is best for the country?
The federal budget is due in a few days.
Based on the selective leaking and conversations happening, the budget will be focused, or at least the political narrative will be focused, on cost of living, housing, male violence against females, and the build-up of national security assets, military and technology.
All worthy topics, demanding attention, understanding, and investment.
However, if anybody in Canberra chose to take a helicopter view of the strategy of Australia Inc, as it would be in a business, there are only two questions that should be the framework that drives the tactical choices that are made every year in the budget.
- What are we building that will deliver long term capacity, resilience, and innovation to the economy?
- What are we doing now to optimise the way we invest resource is against those long-term priorities, and the shorter-term tactical investments necessary to achieve them?
The first is a drag on current expenditure that is designed to deliver a long-term outcome.
The second is an imposition on the long-term outcome to deliver in the short term.
At the best of times this is a delicate balance, and you never have all the right answers.
However, in the absence of asking the question, there will be no answers other than a knee jerk response to whatever happens to be in the headlines today.
Let’s not worry about our children and grandchildren, they will find a way to recover the can we have so solidly kicked down the road.
On that can are the words: we have a revenue problem.
This means tax, as that is the only way governments have the resources to deliver to the country.
Unfortunately, Tax is a noxious three letter word, and no politician who desires to remain one, (they almost all do) will touch, unless accompanied by the word ‘Cut’. Besides, no politician is short of a bob, superannuation entitlement, negatively geared investments, and the largess of party donors. They live comfortably on the teat, while often complaining about how hard the job is, which is no doubt true for those few who are trying, easy for those who are just seat warmers.
The header is courtesy of DALL-E, my artful helper.