Gerard
Jackson
In
January 2007 Malcolm Turnbull, the man who would be prime minister, was
appointed Environment Minister. He immediately supported the destructive
policy of a 20 per cent renewable target for 2020. Needless to say, he was a
fervent supporter of an equally destructive carbon tax. In his arrogance he
saw fit to attack consumer choice by forcing Australians to buy expensive
compact fluorescent lights in order to satisfy his sense of moral and
intellectual superiority and statist mentality. To put it bluntly: Turnbull
is an ignorant, egotistical and destructive man.
His
ludicrous approach to natural resources is another example of his witlessness
and intellectual shortcomings and how he would further damage the Australian
economy if given the opportunity. Turnbull publicly stated that raising the
prices of resources would yield greater economic efficiency. This view
revealed an incredible ignorance of economics as well as of economic history.
Unfortunately Mr Turnbull is a typical example of the arrogance and economic
illiteracy of the Liberal Party’s inner circle.
What
Turnbull did not or could not grasp is that greater economic efficiency means
getting more for less. In other words, increased efficiency is another term
for increased productivity. Allow me to phrase this in such a way that even
an economic ignoramus like Turnbull can grasp it. Increased efficiency means
falling unit costs. Thanks to a continuing increase in economic efficiency
that entrepreneurial talent produced we have experienced a steady decline in
the prices of natural resources.
The
above chart is The Economist’s inflation-adjusted
industrial price index with 1845-50 = 100 as its base. One does not have to
be a mathematician to see that by 2004 the index had dropped by 80 per cent.
What needs to be noted is that the decline took place during a period of
enormous industrial growth made possible by the industrial revolution that
began in Britain and then spread throughout the West and then eventually into
Asia.
The
first spike in the demand for commodities was probably the result of the
California and Australian gold discoveries, after which prices fell and then
became comparatively stable despite a significant increase in demand. The
next spike was generated by WW I. Once the war was over commodity prices fell
again. However, this was followed by plummeting prices caused by the Great
depression. The next jump in prices was a product of WW II, after which they
continued their secular fall.
The
likes of Turnbull could argue that this trend is unsustainable because
resources are finite and that means prices must rise. This is an old greenie
argument that has been discredited time and time again. For years the
environmentalist doomsayer Paul Ehrlich had been predicting the emergence of
massive shortages of natural resources, when he wasn’t also predicting global
famine. In 1980 Julian Simon, an economist, offered Ehrlich a wage. Simon
allowed him to choose any five metals worth $1000 and then bet him that in
1990 the value of these metals would have fallen in real terms. The metals
chosen were copper, chrome, tungsten, tin and nickel. Come 1990 the prices of
these metals had fallen in real terms by 18.5%, 40%, 57%, 72% and 3.5%
respectively1.
What
arrogant economic ignoramuses like Turnbull seem unable to understand is that
economic growth is also a resource-generating process. It not only leads to
the discovery of new resources and the development of substitutes, the
process of capital accumulation embodies technological progress. This means
that more and more inferior grades of ore become economic to mine, making
resources infinite from a human perspective. In other words, the quantity of
resources becomes a function of price and technology. The following table
tells us why running out of natural resources is the least of humanity’s
problems.
Economic
efficiency also has the same impact on agriculture, something that nineteenth
century economists understood. The following quote makes this fact clear:
In
1389, in securing the crop of corn from two hundred acres, there were
employed 250 reapers and thatchers on one day and 200 on another. On another
day in the same year 212 were hired for one day to cut and tie up 13 acres of
wheat and one acre of oats. At that time 12 bushels to an acre were
considered an average crop, so that 212 persons were employed to harvest 168
bushels of grain, an operation which could be accomplished with ease in our
time by half-a-dozen persons2.
This
process works fine — until politicians meddle with it. The 2007-08 world hike
in food prices was aggravated by know-all politicians like Turnbull who
stupidly bribed farmers into producing grain for ethanol rather than for
food. As expected, ignorant journalists also played a role in promoting this
fiasco. For instance, as proof that even our conservative journalists are
bloody useless on economics Andrew Bolt wrote:
Look at
our vast fields. All those crops, right to the horizon. See all that? Mulch
it and ferment it and you have a sea of ethanol, a green petrol for the
future3.
As
arrogant and as conceited at ever Malcolm Turnbull still refuses to condemn
the RET (renewable energy target), a policy that would do enormous damage to
the standard of living. Unable to grasp the fact that so-called renewables
cannot work because of the insurmountable natural and economic obstacles they
face he still dogmatically adheres to the greens’ party line. But what can we
expect from a man who thinks that the way to make an industry more efficient
is to raise its costs of production.
Australians
have enough to contend with without having to suffer the consequences of this
man’s idiocy.
* * * * *
1Julian
Simon, Population Matters: People,
Resources, Environment & Immigration, Transaction
Publishers, 1993, pp. 378-80).
2Edwin
Cannan, The History of the Theories of
Production and Distribution from 1776 to 1848, Staples Press,
1953, p. 137).
3Andrew
Bolt, Reap the good oil,
Herald Sun, 11 August 2006. Bolt’s knowledge of basic economics is on par
with his ignorance of economic history. He went ga-ga
over Sinclair Davidson’s views on
Australia and the Great Depression, by doing so he grossly, albeit unintentionally,
misled his readers. When it comes to economic history, and the Great
Depression in particular, it would be very
unwise of anyone to put too much store in Davidson.
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