We have equal or more wealth from resources - but we went the UK route and sold it for cents on the dollar.Norway also has enormous wealth from oil and we are 25x larger in area.
Someone is making a fortune - sadly it is not Australians.
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We have equal or more wealth from resources - but we went the UK route and sold it for cents on the dollar.Norway also has enormous wealth from oil and we are 25x larger in area.
We have equal or more wealth from resources - but we went the UK route and sold it for cents on the dollar.
Someone is making a fortune - sadly it is not Australians.
….The Baillieu/Napthine Governments ran on the premise that the budget must be in surplus, and when the bottom fell out of revenue in early 2011, Baillieu spent the first half of the year locked in 1 Treasury Place finding the savings to preserve the surplus. That's why a bunch of projects were reduced, delayed or cancelled. It was also the genesis for the brand for Baillieu of being "do nothing" which was not able to be refuted before the 2014 election.Baillieu/Napthine also cut down the Regional Rail Link scope to the bare minimum, basically a 10 year horizon for rail projects which are usually 20, minimum. Considering it was only finished 10 years ago, it's already become a constraint on the network including de-scoped overpasses becoming at-grade junctions which were clearly going to struggle. That's on top of next-to-no planning or delivery of anything else.
The SRL (the entire thing from Werribee to Cheltenham) is fine as a visionary project. It's just absolutely not what should be next - that should be quadrification and electrification from Melton, and plenty of independent experts have said the same thing.There still needs to be change from the majors in the public transport space.
Theres still very much a car centric attitude and reactive when it comes to public transport.
SRL is a rather proactive for a change.
Free will only work when frequency is there.
Brisbane is actually giving good data on it.
The frequent stuff has explored in patronage. The not so frequent stuff hasn't as much.
Paying for it will be a different too. Queensland can lean on its mining to pay.
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Yeah, well the inability of the leader of a $40bn organisation being unable to plan 10 years in the future because of a short-term revenue shortfall was a huge part of the problem and has always been the problem for conservatives. A refusal to look into the future and a steadfast commitment to the past. It's practically why the party exists and how 90% of its members and MPs behave and govern.The Baillieu/Napthine Governments ran on the premise that the budget must be in surplus, and when the bottom fell out of revenue in early 2011, Baillieu spent the first half of the year locked in 1 Treasury Place finding the savings to preserve the surplus. That's why a bunch of projects were reduced, delayed or cancelled. It was also the genesis for the brand for Baillieu of being "do nothing" which was not able to be refuted before the 2014 election.
Are there any examples anywhere in the world of austerity actually making any economy better?Yeah, well the inability of the leader of a $40bn organisation being unable to plan 10 years in the future because of a short-term revenue shortfall was a huge part of the problem and has always been the problem for conservatives. A refusal to look into the future and a steadfast commitment to the past. It's practically why the party exists and how 90% of its members and MPs behave and govern.
Would any private company abandon a 1-year product launch because the week 1 figures don't meet expectations?
Robodebt was the same thinking. Let's traumatise a million people for a theoretical billion in savings.
Net Zero is the same thinking. Why should I pay a little more for energy now, just to stop a whole bunch of awful consequences in the next 20 years?
It got more traction when people could save for a house in a year, didn't take much fore-sight. Now you have to not only save for 5-10 years, but also invest your savings wisely to keep up with inflation. Anyone with a <5 year outlook is doomed. Which is exactly the problem of the Conservatives, never want to look more than the next election into the future.
On the other hand, we do have our $2m per day interest bill, servicing debt which a sizable portion of it is not due to infrastructure spending but the bloated levels of the upper public service, executives on $500k salaries, providing no service to the public but all recurrent expenditure with no acquisition of an asset at the end of it.Yeah, well the inability of the leader of a $40bn organisation being unable to plan 10 years in the future because of a short-term revenue shortfall was a huge part of the problem and has always been the problem for conservatives. A refusal to look into the future and a steadfast commitment to the past. It's practically why the party exists and how 90% of its members and MPs behave and govern.
Would any private company abandon a 1-year product launch because the week 1 figures don't meet expectations?
Robodebt was the same thinking. Let's traumatise a million people for a theoretical billion in savings.
Net Zero is the same thinking. Why should I pay a little more for energy now, just to stop a whole bunch of awful consequences in the next 20 years?
It got more traction when people could save for a house in a year, didn't take much fore-sight. Now you have to not only save for 5-10 years, but also invest your savings wisely to keep up with inflation. Anyone with a <5 year outlook is doomed. Which is exactly the problem of the Conservatives, never want to look more than the next election into the future.
On the other hand, we do have our $2m per day interest bill, servicing debt which a sizable portion of it is not due to infrastructure spending but the bloated levels of the upper public service, executives on $500k salaries, providing no service to the public but all recurrent expenditure with no acquisition of an asset at the end of it.
Infrastructure spending was ticking up under Napthine, who commenced the level crossing removal project. Andrews took it to the next level, and made it needlessly more expensive by choosing CFMEU labour over AWU labour.
Whomever lent the Victorian Government the money.Who are we paying that $2m a day to?
What is this thing where you keep talking about the AWU like they'd be the saviour of the debt or construction blowout problems?On the other hand, we do have our $2m per day interest bill, servicing debt which a sizable portion of it is not due to infrastructure spending but the bloated levels of the upper public service, executives on $500k salaries, providing no service to the public but all recurrent expenditure with no acquisition of an asset at the end of it.
Infrastructure spending was ticking up under Napthine, who commenced the level crossing removal project. Andrews took it to the next level, and made it needlessly more expensive by choosing CFMEU labour over AWU labour.
The CFMEU contracts are more generous than the AWU contracts. AWU workers were well paid. It's why infrastructure is cheaper in other states. It was a conscious decision of the Andrews Government and is the thing that is not like the other thing. The financiers, construction companies and government agencies are all alike across jurisdictions.What is this thing where you keep talking about the AWU like they'd be the saviour of the debt or construction blowout problems?
a) I don't know why you think the AWU are cheaper or better than the CFMEU. Are the AWU considered squeaky clean by the Libs or something. What makes you think they're better than the CFMEU?
b) I don't know why you think it's not the financiers, construction companies and Govt agencies who are mostly responsible for cost blowouts.
The CFMEU are the Construction Union, where the majority of construction workers work and work on most non-Govt construction builds as well across Victoria.The CFMEU contracts are more generous than the AWU contracts. AWU workers were well paid. It's why infrastructure is cheaper in other states. It was a conscious decision of the Andrews Government and is the thing that is not like the other thing. The financiers, construction companies and government agencies are all alike across jurisdictions.
Also, to the best of my knowledge, the AWU don't like 19 year old kids in sheds for four hours for the mistake of working for the wrong company. Kids who kill themselves that evening.
This is a misrepresentation of what I wrote. But what I have identified is clearly a problem that was only of the Andrews Government making and easily avoidable.But this whole "If only the Govt chose the AWU instead of CFMEU, there wouldn't be any construction project problems" just seems more like wishful thinking than based on evidence.
Aren't they on the same Award, working in construction whether they're AWU or CFMEU?This is a misrepresentation of what I wrote. But what I have identified is clearly a problem that was only of the Andrews Government making and easily avoidable.
There are plenty of commercial construction jobs for the CFMEU where they have traditionally plied their trade, and companies were happy to make commercial decisions with their own money on whom to employ. It's a little different when it is taxpayer's money.
They are all on enterprise bargaining agreements.Aren't they on the same Award, working in construction whether they're AWU or CFMEU?
For a 9-5 shift, the highest minimum wage is $53. There's a bunch of loading and add-ons, but all the construction companies were paying a hell of a lot more than that during the boom, so not sure how the Union would matter more than the company's pay rates.
What % difference do you think there is between the AWU EBAs and the CFMEU EBAs?They are all on enterprise bargaining agreements.
About 50% in base rates.What % difference do you think there is between the AWU EBAs and the CFMEU EBAs?
It can't be refuted after the 2014 election either - the public sector of the state's economy just stopped and that meant mass redundancies in many industries, including the one I was in at the time.The Baillieu/Napthine Governments ran on the premise that the budget must be in surplus, and when the bottom fell out of revenue in early 2011, Baillieu spent the first half of the year locked in 1 Treasury Place finding the savings to preserve the surplus. That's why a bunch of projects were reduced, delayed or cancelled. It was also the genesis for the brand for Baillieu of being "do nothing" which was not able to be refuted before the 2014 election.
Highest wages to get the best workers? Bikies using standover tactics, threatening contractors not approved by the CFMEU, endorsed "ghost shifts"...What % difference do you think there is between the AWU EBAs and the CFMEU EBAs?
And what % of these job costs are labour?
And, if we follow Liberal logic, shouldn't we be paying the best wages to get the best workers from interstate to move to Victoria. Shouldn't the Liberals be celebrating that we pay the highest wages so that we get the best workers? That's what their execs tell us about their wages. Why are site workers any different?
I have been making the point that Baillieu prioritised fiscal discipline over almost everything else.It can't be refuted after the 2014 election either - the public sector of the state's economy just stopped and that meant mass redundancies in many industries, including the one I was in at the time.
Labor swung the pendulum as far as possible the other way, which has led to massive overspending and debt - but it did at least get the economy moving again which the Liberals could/would not do.
The number of engineers on these big build jobs is obscene.What is this thing where you keep talking about the AWU like they'd be the saviour of the debt or construction blowout problems?
a) I don't know why you think the AWU are cheaper or better than the CFMEU. Are the AWU considered squeaky clean by the Libs or something. What makes you think they're better than the CFMEU?
b) I don't know why you think it's not the financiers, construction companies and Govt agencies who are mostly responsible for cost blowouts.
c) Who are the execs providing no service?


Theres nothing stopping them doing both at the same time.The SRL (the entire thing from Werribee to Cheltenham) is fine as a visionary project. It's just absolutely not what should be next - that should be quadrification and electrification from Melton, and plenty of independent experts have said the same thing.
And as I have said before, getting people out of their cars also requires a more nuanced approach than "eat your vegetables". I say this as a lifetime user of public transport.
Isn't their a skill shortage issue on them doing both at the same time? I understand the money thing isn't an issue, the government can just borrow more to do both at the same time.Theres nothing stopping them doing both at the same time.
Electrification of an existing line isnt hard in the grand scheme of things.
That side of town does have Sunshine as an issue and capacity through it.
Electrification will be rather underutilised until the rebuild of the station and track layout happens
Whomever lent the Victorian Government the money.
Have you read about the investigations of Shorten and Gillard at the AWU?Highest wages to get the best workers? Bikies using standover tactics, threatening contractors not approved by the CFMEU, endorsed "ghost shifts"...
The CFMEU is a a melting pot of corruption and industrial thuggery. Have you not read any of Nick McKenzie's reports?