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Economic catastrophe?

One problem in measuring the economic impact of these closures is that the Australian labour force is vastly larger than the workforce of the whole automotive sector.

The Australian labour force is presently comprised of around twelve million workers.  Unemployment fluctuates seasonally, and with many other non-seasonal factors, and currently stands at around seven hundred thousand, so three, or even ten or twenty thousand additional job seekers, staged over five years, will be invisible, completely swamped by normal fluctuations.

The foreign multinationals that manufacture cars in Australia regard the World as their oyster and make rational decisions about where to manufacture to maximise shareholder returns, taking into account temporary changes and perceived long term trends.  The plant and equipment has a finite lifetime and new investment can take place anywhere in the World that maximises returns.

Both Ford and General Motors (Holden) have been quite explicit.  Unless Australia makes it worth their while to keep operating here, by subsidising their inadequate returns with taxpayer money, they are prepared to scrap or relocate their aging manufacturing facilities in Australia.  No doubt they will relocate key human assets, like key members of their design teams, to the US, Europe or Asia and to concentrate their efforts, and remaining Australian workforce, on the sales, distribution and marketing of overseas built cars. But in the event that economic or technological conditions change sufficiently to make manufacturing here profitable, they will promptly move them back again.

Today a medium sized retail shopping mall employs more people than the largest Australian manufacturers.  And many employees in the mining and mining equipment industries; as well as in electronics; and scientific and medical equipment manufacturing; are on average both more skilled and better paid than automotive workers.

So manufacturing will never disappear entirely.  Many businesses enjoy the protection of distance and transport costs or market proximity or a high service component or proprietary technology or local inputs.  Many medium sized, home grown, Australian firms are world leaders in their field   Australia exports mining and medical and other scientific equipment to the World.  Unlike foreign multinationals, these businesses have their roots here and are motivated by lifestyle, family and business relationships, and dare we mention it, patriotism, in addition to purely commercial considerations.

And you never know, there may even come a time when technology advance makes ‘cars to order’ from boutique manufacturers feasible.  Then we may find an economic justification for local automotive manufacturing and see a revival of the industry.  But it will quite a different beast to the one presently consuming taxpayer and car buyer’s money. Money that can be spent better elsewhere. 

The factors that make manufacturing viable are well understood.  To read my earlier paper on this subject click on: The growing controversy around manufacturing in Australia   

 

But I have a personal problem.

I am an industrial patriot at heart so I have always supported the Australian automotive industry through my past purchases.  But now, with both Ford and Holden gone, what am I to buy in future?  

Given that a purchase by me seems to be the kiss of death, are there any other iconic brands you would like to see disappear from these fair shores?  Toyota perhaps? 

 

 

 

Richard McKie
2013/2020

 

 

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Travel

Malaysia

 

 

In February 2011 we travelled to Malaysia.  I was surprised to see modern housing estates in substantial numbers during our first cab ride from the Airport to Kuala Lumpur.  It seemed more reminiscent of the United Arab Emirates than of the poorer Middle East or of other developing countries in SE Asia.  Our hotel was similarly well appointed.

 

Read more: Malaysia

Fiction, Recollections & News

Napoleon - the movie

 

As holiday entertainment goes, one could do worse than spend two-and-a-half hours (157 minutes) with Napoleon.

Wikipedia tells us: "Napoleon is a 2023 epic historical drama film directed and produced by Ridley Scott and written by David Scarpa. Based on the story of Napoleon Bonaparte, primarily depicting the French leader's rise to power as well as his relationship with his [first} wife, Joséphine, the film stars Joaquin Phoenix as Napoleon and Vanessa Kirby as Joséphine."

The many battle scenes are spectacular and have been praised for their accuracy.

Read more: Napoleon - the movie

Opinions and Philosophy

Electric Cars revisited (again)

  

Electric vehicles like: trams; trains; and electric: cars; vans; and busses; all assist in achieving better air quality in our cities. Yet, to the extent that the energy they consume is derived from our oldest energy source, fire: the potential toxic emissions and greenhouse gasses simply enter the atmosphere somewhere else.

Back in 2005 I calculated that in Australia, due to our burning coal, oil and sometimes rural waste and garbage, to generate electricity, grid-charged all-electric electric cars had a higher carbon footprint than conventional cars.

In 2019, with a lot of water under the bridge; more renewables in the mix; and much improved batteries; I thought it was worth a revisit. I ran the numbers, using more real-world data, including those published by car companies themselves. Yet I got the same result: In Australia, grid-charged all-electric cars produce more greenhouse gasses than many conventional cars for the same distance travelled.

Now, in the wake of COP26, (November 2021), with even more water under the bridge, the promotion of electric cars is back on the political agenda.  Has anything changed?

 

Read more: Electric Cars revisited (again)

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