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View Full Version : Steve Bracks to head review in to Australian Car Industry



sandmanls1
14-02-2008, 05:43 AM
Mr Bracks will today be appointed to head a wide-ranging review of the automotive sector in the wake of Mitsubishi's recent decision to pull out of Australian production.

The new inquiry will examine the competitiveness of the vehicle manufacturing industry, which has been hit by high petrol prices, a strong Australian dollar and substantial competition from imports.

There has been mounting speculation within the car industry that Mr Bracks would be chosen to head a panel of experts investigating the viability of the sector.

Yesterday, following a tip-off, the Opposition raised questions in Parliament about the imminent appointment of the high-profile Victorian.

Federal Innovation Minister Kim Carr would neither confirm nor deny the looming appointment when quizzed by Tasmanian Liberal senator Eric Abetz.

Treasurer Wayne Swan also told Parliament he was not in a position to confirm Mr Bracks' new task.

But Senator Carr described the review process — which was an election commitment by Labor — as "long overdue".

"The fact of the matter is this: there have been 7000 jobs lost in this industry since 2002," Senator Carr said in parliamentary question time.

"I have stated on numerous occasions that we will establish a review into the whole industry and its sustainability," he said.

"This industry is facing acute challenges. But what we saw from the previous government was a government essentially on automatic pilot."

The appointment of Mr Bracks, expected to be confirmed late today, will be welcomed by the vehicle industry, which has been keen to keep the review away from the Productivity Commission.

The commission is a Treasury agency that has driven the process of micro-economic reform in Australia by recommending bold changes, such as the dismantling of tariff protection.

Car industry tariffs are due to be cut from 10% to 5% in 2010, but some sections of the industry want to freeze the current level of industry protection — a move unlikely to be endorsed by the Productivity Commission.

Ahead of Mr Bracks' appointment, the Deputy Opposition Leader, Julie Bishop, said Mr Rudd was embarking on a "jobs for the boys season" and claimed Mr Bracks would be paid a salary of $10,000 a week.

Sources have told The Age that Mr Bracks will be paid at a much more modest rate determined by the Remuneration Tribunal, in the order of $570 per day.

Victoria is a key centre for the car manufacturing industry in Australia.

Marco
14-02-2008, 07:13 PM
Sounds like good news to me. Hopefully this can all be done without spending billions of dollars propping up the car industry. All the money that Howard and co pissed up against the wall on Mitsubishi was bad enough!

clubbie
14-02-2008, 07:26 PM
Sounds like good news to me. Hopefully this can all be done without spending billions of dollars propping up the car industry. All the money that Howard and co pissed up against the wall on Mitsubishi was bad enough!

Obviously you have got the inside info on this. Could you please share. I would really like to know how much (approx) Howard and Co put in as we in Adelaide get told a different story.

Cheers

Clubbie

Marco
14-02-2008, 08:04 PM
Sorry, I have no idea how much was spent on Mitsubishi - but I seem to remember that every couple of years when they threatened to shut the plant, more Federal money was promised.

Just to quote from one news article found after Googling:

While Mitsubishi has finally brought down the axe, the company has ruthlessly used the threat of closure to wring multi-million dollar subsidies out of the SA and federal governments over the past seven years. In 2002 it extracted a joint state and federal government handout worth $A84 million, after promising to maintain its presence in Australia.

One year later, it received $200,000 in Australian federal grants and a $20 million interest-free loan from the SA government, after again putting a question mark over its Australian operations. It also received funds from Canberra’s $2 billion Automotive Competitive and Investment Scheme and, like other local car manufacturers, gained from existing tariff protection.

Admittedly that one's not from the mainstream media - the World Socialist Web Site of all things! - but I have no reason to think the figures are made up. Just to provide balance, here's another one from "Business Spectator" that quotes from the Financial Review:


Meanwhile, questions are also being asked over the effectiveness of the $7 billion support package to the industry by the Howard government, reports the The Australian Financial Review.

According to the paper, the Automotive Competitiveness and Investment Scheme (ACIS) will also come under review, with a planned overhaul of the federal tariff credits scheme.

The scheme has come under increased fire after the federal auditor general pointed to a lack of transparency in ACIS and called for clearer disclosure on how the scheme measured incentives paid to manufacturers.

Mitsubishi had received more than $215 million in state and federal government grants in the past seven years, through research and development subsidies, the paper said

However, the car maker is expected to pay back only $35 million to the SA Government, despite breaching a promise to keep the plant going until 2010.