Subsidies

It’s not easy being green

As Kermit the Frog famously sang "It's not easy being green". Well, it certainly isn't if you're a politician. Green policies may be popular and they may even win you votes. But the flipside is that such policies usually come at a price to the consumer and the taxpayer. So the temptation for politicians is to find a way that will make them look green without actually hurting anyone.The Australian government's policy towards the car industry is a good example. [...]

Taxpayers pay billions for Govt’s car trip

The Commonwealth's car plan was built around three policy objectives: to strengthen Australia's industrial base, help the environment, and support jobs. None of these arguments hold up to closer scrutiny. In fact, all that the Rudd Government's car plan amounts to is an old-fashioned, protectionist industrial policy, neatly hidden behind a giant green smokescreen. [...]

Goodbye GM, hello Rudd Car

Committing $100,000 of taxpayer money to saving each job in the car industry was already a prodigious waste of money but this will look cheap compared with the cost of nationalising Holden. In time, Australians will come to rue the day Rudd decided to treat the car industry as an issue of systemic significance. [...]

Time to stand up to Detroit

It is time our politicians stand up to the highway robbers of General Motors and protect Australian taxpayers. And it would be far better to help Holden's workers directly rather than handing out money to an American company on the brink of bankruptcy. [...]
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