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1 July
2002
TRANSCRIPT
OF THE PRIME MINISTER THE HON JOHN HOWARD MP ADDRESS AT GERMAN BUSINESS
LEADERS DINNER, FRANKFURT
E&OE
Thank you
very much Ambassador, Mrs O'Sullivan, Minister, ladies and
gentlemen.
I would
like to thank all of you for coming here tonight to give me the opportunity of
saying a few things about the bilateral relationship between Australia and
Germany, and sharing a few brief thoughts with you about the journey of
economic reform that Australia has travelled over the past few
years.
May I first
of all though, as the Prime Minister of a self-confessed sports loving nation,
extend my commiserations to you on the outcome of the soccer World Cup.
Everything is relative. Unfortunately because of the superior play of Uruguay,
Australia didn't qualify - in soccer that is. But I would of course hastily
remind my German friends here tonight that we do hold the World Cup currently
in both cricket and rugby. They are not sports that have deep penetration,
particularly the former, here in Germany.
But ladies
and gentlemen, it is an occasion to say something about a very important
bilateral relationship to Australia. The Ambassador traced some of the personal
links between our two countries. Britain and Ireland aside, Germany is, after
Italy and Greece, the third largest tributary, if I can put it that way, to the
modern Australia. Some 750,000 Australians would owe their ancestry to Germany.
And over many years in every walk of life, Australians of German descent have
made an enormous contribution.
Our
cultural links are of course overwhelmingly European and when I come to Europe
I am reminded of those links and they are links that are not only found of
course in the United Kingdom and in Ireland. They are also found in every part
of Europe, and very particularly here in Germany. And the influence of German
literature, of German thought and of German music has been immense not only in
Europe but of course around the world and Australia has been very much a part
of it.
So it is a
relationship that is well founded in the things that matter, and that is a
sense of identity and of shared links and shared attitudes. But it is also a
relationship that has a great deal of contemporary economic
resonance.
As I look
around this room tonight, and I've had the opportunity of talking to you, I'm
conscious of how deep is the German investment and the German economic state in
the modern Australia. Just before I left we announced the sale of Sydney
Airport. It is the largest airport privatisation I think in the world and a
German company has a major holding in the consortium that bought the airport. I
think of the great construction works that have been undertaken in Sydney in
particular in recent times and the role of German capital and German
engineering and German know-how has been very evident. And the investment of
Germany in Australia is very deep-seated. Siemens, a very well known German
company, in fact has its headquarters in my own electorate of Bennelong in
Sydney. And I'm very conscious of the German involvement in many of the
pharmaceutical and high-tech companies that also have their headquarters in my
electorate in Sydney.
So what I
want to do in the time that I have here in Germany and broadly of course in
Europe, is to emphasise not only the collective link between the European Union
and Australia, but also the individual characteristics of the bilateral
relationship between our two countries. And what I want of the relationship
with Germany and I will be expressing this view to your Chancellor, Herr
Schroeder, when I see him in Berlin tomorrow, is that Germany can be a growing
and even more important partner in her own right with Australia in so many
areas of economic endeavour.
Australia's
economic performance over the past few years has been very gratifying. Last
year we had I think the fastest economic growth of any developed country. And
I've been asked on occasions, what is the reason. Every country has a share of
good fortune but also successful economic managers make their own luck. The
main reason why I believe the Australian economy is performing so well at
present is that we are now enjoying the cumulative benefit of widespread
economic reform across all of the relevant areas. And I'm quite happy to say
that some of those economic reforms have been carried out by Governments of the
opposite political persuasion to mine. But they have been successful because in
those areas where our political opponents acted, they had our very strong
support from Opposition.
In five
key areas, we have reformed the Australian economy over a period of 15 to 20
years. We have deregulated our financial system and floated the Australian
dollar and that occurred late in 1983. Importantly we carried out very
significant reforms in the area of tariff reductions in the late 80s and early
1990s. Under my Government, the single biggest enduring reform I believe has
been the changes that we have made to the labour market. When I became Prime
Minister, we had a very rigid, inflexible labour market. It is still too rigid
and too inflexible from my point of view, but it is infinitely less rigid than
it used to be. And that has made a very big contribution to boosting the
productivity performance of the Australian economy.
We have
also, as the Ambassador said, converted a large Budget deficit into a Budget
surplus. In Australian dollar terms we have paid off something like $57 billion
of Federal Government debt in six and a half years. And our Government debt to
GDP ratio now is only 4.6% against an OECD average I think of somewhere in the
order of 35 or 40%. Some of that of course has been achieved through
privatisations but it doesn't alter the fact that the Government debt has been
eliminated and privatisations have become an instrument of economic policy in
most countries around the world in recent times.
And
finally, and very importantly, it is now two years almost to the day - in fact
it's two years to the day here on European time - since we introduced the new
taxation system in Australia, which involved the introduction of a broad-based
indirect tax or a Goods and Services Tax, levied at a uniform
never-to-be-altered rate let me say - I never lose an opportunity of making
that point - never-to-be-altered rate of 10%. The introduction of that new
taxation system was accompanied by extraordinary prophecies of gloom and
despair and despondency. The stars were sort of meant to change their position
and all sorts of strange things were to occur, and people were to go mad in the
process. But it didn't work out that way, and two years on it is barely talked
about because it has been very successful and it has made a very great
contribution to improving the competitiveness of Australian exporters because
as you would know, as a value-added tax community for many years, one of the
great advantages of such a system is that it does make your exports more
competitive.
We have I
think created as a result of all of these reforms a more business-friendly
environment. We reduced as part of tax reform our company tax rate to 30%,
which is quite competitive internationally. I think we have seen very great
productivity growth in Australia. Without boring you too much with statistics,
let me tell you that labour productivity in the second half of the 1990s grew
at an average rate of 3.7% a year and in the 12 months to March of this year by
4.2%.
We have
also become a world leader in the application of new technology. It's very
important I stress application. We're not great manufacturers of IT but we are
great adaptors. Australians are very adaptive in having new invention and new
idea readapted and use it. And we have some of the highest rates of internet
and other IT usages of any country in the world.
I think the
practical demonstration of the strength of the Australian economy is to be
found when in 1997 and 1998 the Asian economic downturn took many countries
with it. And many of us thought that the same thing would happen to the
Australian economy. But we were able to weather that storm and that owed
something to the fact that we had a very flexible exchange rate that took some
of the economic adjustment on the exchange rate, and the cumulative effect of
those economic reforms was also beginning to bear fruit. And equally last year
when there was a dip in the United States and other economies, that did not
effect Australia.
The reform
process of course is an ongoing one. Once a Government loses the appetite for
economic reform, it loses some of its rationale for existence. And we would
like to see more reform of the labour market and we are embarking upon some
major reforms of our welfare system. Like all societies, we are an ageing one.
The demographic challenges for Australia are not quite as sharp as they are for
many of the European societies, but we are nonetheless trending in the same
direction. We have a low fertility rate of 1.7% and although as I say the
dimension is not quite as acute as it is in many European countries, it is
nonetheless of the same broad order of magnitude. And we have to come to terms
with ways of dealing with that particular issue.
Another
thing that pleases me very much about the Australian economy is that over the
last year we have become a net direct foreign investor. And this has not been
achieved because of a slump in direct investment to Australia. But we are in
fact investing a lot in other countries. I understand that tonight in I think
Dusseldorf, I may be wrong, there will be a merger consummated involving a $2.8
billion Australian investment by Amcor, one of our highly successful paper
companies and Schmalbach-Lubeca, a very significant example of what I just
mentioned. This is $2.8 billion of direct foreign investment from Australia
coming into Europe. And it is an example of the sort of modern partnership that
can build a better and closer relationship because Australians and Germans when
they do business together, do it efficiently, do it on the basis of trust and
confidence, and do it to their mutual benefit.
There is
just one other thing that I would like to mention and that is the broader
agenda of reform. Reform is not just a nation specific thing, it is also, dare
I say it, a European Union specific thing, and also a world specific thing, and
we do as a group of nations, we do as a world community need, hard though it
will be, to address the challenge of trade reform.
It will
come as no surprise for you to hear a prime minister say that he doesn't like
the Common Agriculture Policy - and I don't. If you will forgive me, we don't
find very acceptable a situation where the level of subsidy to agriculture from
the european union is 35% of the total value of agricultural production in the
European Union - 35%. In the United States it is 21%, and in Australia it is
4%. We have very efficient farmers, they feel aggrieved by the current world
trading system and we think it ought to change and we will argue very strongly
and very passionately to the European Union. I'll be in Brussels next week and
I will put the same views to individual government leaders in Europe, difficult
though it is, we do need to address as a world community, the challenge of
trade reform.
We've just
had a meeting of the G8 in Canada and pleasingly one of the things that came
out of that was a new commitment to economic development of assistance in
Africa. Very worthwhile, very laudable, and something that Australia strongly
supports. But can I gently but nonetheless relevantly make the point that
removing trade subsidies is worth by degrees of three or four the total value
of current foreign aid by the developed countries
to the
developing countries. You get a far greater return for developing countries by
reducing trade barriers than you do by increasing direct foreign aid and
foreign assistance.
Finally,
ladies and gentlemen, can I say on a personal note how different it is to be
here in Frankfurt than it was on the occasion of my first visit. I spent Easter
of 1965 at a youth hostel somewhere here in Frankfurt, I've forgotten exactly
where, it was my first visit to Germany. I was not then in government. I hadn't
long left university and I was doing what most Australians of that generation
did, they went and worked for 6 or 9 or 12 months in London and to use the
vernacular of the time they spent another 6 months 'doing Europe', travelling
around. It was my first experience of your country. I had a very warm and
friendly reception from the Germans I met there and the Germans I met
subsequently in Berlin in both the then West and East Berlin and subsequently
other German cities. And although the circumstances of my being here, and I've
been several times in between, particularly when I was Treasurer, given
Frankfurt's status as the financial capital of Germany, on every occasion I've
been received with very great warmth and very great friendliness, and I want to
thank all of you for coming along tonight to give me a few opportunities to
speak of the importance I feel for that relationship and share with you some of
the things that Australia has endeavoured to do.
I think we
can build a stronger, even better, more purposeful distinctive economic and
social and political partnership between our two countries and I'm sure that in
the room tonight there are many men and women who are very strongly committed
to that goal.
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